Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The faith will pervade everything - prayers before each class, practice, game. Frequent Mass as a school and expectation to attend Sunday Mass as a family. Know that going in.
We saw a slightly older culture - addressing me as “Mrs DH last name” automatically; using cursive; no individualized instruction. Conservative isn’t the right word exactly, but it was different.
It's old fashioned and it's absolutely the thing that I like best. Manners, discipline, dressing up (belts and collars! My nephew can't deal for 1 meal and that drives me crazy). Addressing adults properly, shaking hands, making eye contact. Memorization, public speaking. It's what most of us remember as being the norm but isn't anymore.
+1 to all of this. You wouldn't find any of these skills in a curriculum, but it comes with the Catholic school package.
+2. Catholic school is how I remember school. Homework, tests, projects, cursive, respect, dress codes. It’s everything public school should still be, but isn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The faith will pervade everything - prayers before each class, practice, game. Frequent Mass as a school and expectation to attend Sunday Mass as a family. Know that going in.
We saw a slightly older culture - addressing me as “Mrs DH last name” automatically; using cursive; no individualized instruction. Conservative isn’t the right word exactly, but it was different.
It's old fashioned and it's absolutely the thing that I like best. Manners, discipline, dressing up (belts and collars! My nephew can't deal for 1 meal and that drives me crazy). Addressing adults properly, shaking hands, making eye contact. Memorization, public speaking. It's what most of us remember as being the norm but isn't anymore.
+1 to all of this. You wouldn't find any of these skills in a curriculum, but it comes with the Catholic school package.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids go to an Arlington diocese Catholic K-8. I would guess you would be similar to 75% of the families. There aren’t that many super devote.
This. There are a ton of lapsed Catholics at these schools.
Then it varies because at our Arlington diocese K-8, most are devout if you define devout as attending Sunday mass, taking kids to confession when they get in trouble at school, praying at home, etc. The newcomers who came during COVID but never left are the outliers.
OP, don't go unless you want the faith formation first. Catholic schools can be great, but a kid with iffy behavior will get punished into submission. Which could be what you want but often does a number on boys.
I would guess that fewer than 25% attend Sunday mass on a regular basis. No one takes the kids to confession but the teachers take them once a year during religion class time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The faith will pervade everything - prayers before each class, practice, game. Frequent Mass as a school and expectation to attend Sunday Mass as a family. Know that going in.
We saw a slightly older culture - addressing me as “Mrs DH last name” automatically; using cursive; no individualized instruction. Conservative isn’t the right word exactly, but it was different.
It's old fashioned and it's absolutely the thing that I like best. Manners, discipline, dressing up (belts and collars! My nephew can't deal for 1 meal and that drives me crazy). Addressing adults properly, shaking hands, making eye contact. Memorization, public speaking. It's what most of us remember as being the norm but isn't anymore.
Anonymous wrote:The faith will pervade everything - prayers before each class, practice, game. Frequent Mass as a school and expectation to attend Sunday Mass as a family. Know that going in.
We saw a slightly older culture - addressing me as “Mrs DH last name” automatically; using cursive; no individualized instruction. Conservative isn’t the right word exactly, but it was different.
Anonymous wrote:There are quite a few threads on this. It's totally fine to put your kid in Catholic school if you're not that religious. Just know they will have to learn the prayers and go through the rituals.
Anonymous wrote:The faith will pervade everything - prayers before each class, practice, game. Frequent Mass as a school and expectation to attend Sunday Mass as a family. Know that going in.
We saw a slightly older culture - addressing me as “Mrs DH last name” automatically; using cursive; no individualized instruction. Conservative isn’t the right word exactly, but it was different.
Anonymous wrote:There are quite a few threads on this. It's totally fine to put your kid in Catholic school if you're not that religious. Just know they will have to learn the prayers and go through the rituals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, it’s fine especially at the high school level. I’m sending my non-Catholic kid to a Catholic high school. Never once, did I hear any administrator say only Catholics need apply. If they had, their enrollment would be down to about 1/4 of what it is now. In fact, during the application process, I don’t think anyone talked about at all. Most referred to educating the whole child to become an adult. Some talk of Christian service requirements, but honestly, the Christian service requirements are applicable to any faith community (serving the poor, hungry, etc).
If you want Catholic schools to become only for Catholics, you should advocate for administrators to restrict enrollment rather than coming in here to tell people to go away.
I suspect your concern is really about abortion rights and you wouldn’t even want progressive Catholics in your Catholic school.
So many Catholics are pro-choice. Not really pro-abortion, but many do not believe it is something that the government should be legislating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids go to an Arlington diocese Catholic K-8. I would guess you would be similar to 75% of the families. There aren’t that many super devote.
This. There are a ton of lapsed Catholics at these schools.
Then it varies because at our Arlington diocese K-8, most are devout if you define devout as attending Sunday mass, taking kids to confession when they get in trouble at school, praying at home, etc. The newcomers who came during COVID but never left are the outliers.
OP, don't go unless you want the faith formation first. Catholic schools can be great, but a kid with iffy behavior will get punished into submission. Which could be what you want but often does a number on boys.
I would guess that fewer than 25% attend Sunday mass on a regular basis. No one takes the kids to confession but the teachers take them once a year during religion class time.