Anonymous wrote:I think it's cultural. A lot of expressive gregarious cultures are commonly Catholic. Hispanics, Italians, Irish, Filipino, etc. These are typically not quiet people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know in my own kid's school there is a lot of emphasis on public speaking and leadership.
This! My kids who did Catholic for at least part of their education are not naturally extroverted, but they had so many oral presentations that they are poised and fluid orators. Even my kid who stuttered had to present orally and was taught to remain calm and keep going.
My kids are at a Catholic school and I was sold on the tour when the impressive 8th grader showed us around. He looked us in the eye, seemed very mature, and was just had a presence about him, and seemed confident and comfortable with other adults. Most of the teens I saw around town were nothing like that. They mumbled when speaking, avoided eye contact and would certainly never call us Mr or Mrs. I'm sure for some manners are old fashioned and unimportant, but it made an impression on us.
Interestingly, we experienced the opposite. Our visits to the Catholic school we were considering showed us kids who were more checked-out than any others. They were placed in every hallway and stairway and intersection to supposedly talk with visiting families or help people find particular rooms, and they all stood around talking only among themselves, not making eye contact, no “can I help you?” to families clearly looking around confused about where they should go. I felt like I was bothering or interrupting them anytime I had a question. In contrast, the private school DC ended up attending had students who were engaged with visiting families, articulate, really gave the impression that they were happy to speak with us about their experiences at the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know in my own kid's school there is a lot of emphasis on public speaking and leadership.
This! My kids who did Catholic for at least part of their education are not naturally extroverted, but they had so many oral presentations that they are poised and fluid orators. Even my kid who stuttered had to present orally and was taught to remain calm and keep going.
My kids are at a Catholic school and I was sold on the tour when the impressive 8th grader showed us around. He looked us in the eye, seemed very mature, and was just had a presence about him, and seemed confident and comfortable with other adults. Most of the teens I saw around town were nothing like that. They mumbled when speaking, avoided eye contact and would certainly never call us Mr or Mrs. I'm sure for some manners are old fashioned and unimportant, but it made an impression on us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know in my own kid's school there is a lot of emphasis on public speaking and leadership.
This! My kids who did Catholic for at least part of their education are not naturally extroverted, but they had so many oral presentations that they are poised and fluid orators. Even my kid who stuttered had to present orally and was taught to remain calm and keep going.
Interestingly, we experienced the opposite. Our visits to the Catholic school we were considering showed us kids who were more checked-out than any others. They were placed in every hallway and stairway and intersection to supposedly talk with visiting families or help people find particular rooms, and they all stood around talking only among themselves, not making eye contact, no “can I help you?” to families clearly looking around confused about where they should go. I felt like I was bothering or interrupting them anytime I had a question. In contrast, the private school DC ended up attending had students who were engaged with visiting families, articulate, really gave the impression that they were happy to speak with us about their experiences at the school.
My kids are at a Catholic school and I was sold on the tour when the impressive 8th grader showed us around. He looked us in the eye, seemed very mature, and was just had a presence about him, and seemed confident and comfortable with other adults. Most of the teens I saw around town were nothing like that. They mumbled when speaking, avoided eye contact and would certainly never call us Mr or Mrs. I'm sure for some manners are old fashioned and unimportant, but it made an impression on us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know in my own kid's school there is a lot of emphasis on public speaking and leadership.
This! My kids who did Catholic for at least part of their education are not naturally extroverted, but they had so many oral presentations that they are poised and fluid orators. Even my kid who stuttered had to present orally and was taught to remain calm and keep going.
My kids are at a Catholic school and I was sold on the tour when the impressive 8th grader showed us around. He looked us in the eye, seemed very mature, and was just had a presence about him, and seemed confident and comfortable with other adults. Most of the teens I saw around town were nothing like that. They mumbled when speaking, avoided eye contact and would certainly never call us Mr or Mrs. I'm sure for some manners are old fashioned and unimportant, but it made an impression on us.
Anonymous wrote:Some play CYO sports, but the vast majority of kids that don't go to Catholic school do not.
FYI- this varies greatly from parish to parish. For some it the majority of students come from the parish.
Some play CYO sports, but the vast majority of kids that don't go to Catholic school do not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the culture, not the school. Being Catholic means accepting and practicing social norms which are currently seen as optional at best by many other children (and adults) today. Families with many connections who are out and about with other families, at church, doing sports, etc. are more likely to produce more socially competent children. The lack of respect and even disdain for traditional social interactions among the urban intellectual elite today (dressing well, making conversation, eye contact, being polite to elders, attending events and ceremonies) is really hurting a large cohort of kids today; Catholics have the social infrastructure to provide a bulwark against some of this. Same goes for Jews, by the way.
You are describing a minority of Catholics. You probably would consider my large Catholic parish in Upper NW to be no better than the heathens you deride.
Don't think there aren't conservative hierarchies in Catholicism...my mother would often make derisive remarks about various "liberal" Catholic churches.
Maybe it's fewer than it was in the 1970s, but I doubt it's a minority of practicing Catholic families. I also think "liberal" parishes are still very normative. I didn't say anything about faith; I was making an argument about cultural norms being positive--literally any norms at all other than "anything goes". Your "heathen" comment is a strawman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the culture, not the school. Being Catholic means accepting and practicing social norms which are currently seen as optional at best by many other children (and adults) today. Families with many connections who are out and about with other families, at church, doing sports, etc. are more likely to produce more socially competent children. The lack of respect and even disdain for traditional social interactions among the urban intellectual elite today (dressing well, making conversation, eye contact, being polite to elders, attending events and ceremonies) is really hurting a large cohort of kids today; Catholics have the social infrastructure to provide a bulwark against some of this. Same goes for Jews, by the way.
You are describing a minority of Catholics. You probably would consider my large Catholic parish in Upper NW to be no better than the heathens you deride.
Don't think there aren't conservative hierarchies in Catholicism...my mother would often make derisive remarks about various "liberal" Catholic churches.