Anonymous wrote:The only reason is because it is far cheaper than other privates. That’s all. So you get a private school for the $25k range instead of the $50-$60 k range.
Anonymous wrote:… there are other independent (not tied to either parish or diocese) Catholic schools in the area, but they go beyond K-8, for example Brookewood and Avalon are K/1 through 12
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:… there are other independent (not tied to either parish or diocese) Catholic schools in the area, but they go beyond K-8, for example Brookewood and Avalon are K/1 through 12
Georgetown Prep, Stone Ridge, Gonzaga, Visitation, Holy Child, Holy Cross, Mater Dei, St John’s, the Heights… all are independent Catholic schools
Anonymous wrote:We are sending our child to a Christian school despite not being religious because it is normal. It’s focused on education, not on cramming the latest woke social emotional nonsense down our throats. I would not previously have considered myself conservative, btw, but schools around here have lost their minds.
Anonymous wrote:… there are other independent (not tied to either parish or diocese) Catholic schools in the area, but they go beyond K-8, for example Brookewood and Avalon are K/1 through 12
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of public school parents, even the fairly liberal ones, are uncomfortable with the progressive indoctrination that is now occurring in the public and private schools. They are seeking a more balanced, moderate environment where kids are taught to think for themselves. And yes, it’s completely ironic that the best place for this is actually a Catholic school.
This is not why. The pandemic exposed the priorities of public schools and school boards and it was not the children so people looked for alternatives. Catholic high schools are cheaper and provide structure so fewer behavioral issues. Also many Catholic high schools are feeders to top schools like Georgetown (Visi has a dual enrollment program), Notre Dame and Boston College.
I think it is definitely a combination of both. The progressive indoctrination was exposed during the pandemic when parents were in the same room as their kids during virtual learning and could overhear what was being taught.
What was being taught? Be specific and provide an example. Many of you are repeating Fox News talking points but cannot point to a specific example in Maryland, Virgnia or the District.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of public school parents, even the fairly liberal ones, are uncomfortable with the progressive indoctrination that is now occurring in the public and private schools. They are seeking a more balanced, moderate environment where kids are taught to think for themselves. And yes, it’s completely ironic that the best place for this is actually a Catholic school.
This is not why. The pandemic exposed the priorities of public schools and school boards and it was not the children so people looked for alternatives. Catholic high schools are cheaper and provide structure so fewer behavioral issues. Also many Catholic high schools are feeders to top schools like Georgetown (Visi has a dual enrollment program), Notre Dame and Boston College.
Yours are additional correct reasons, but the PP’s comment is also true. We left public because school time was wasted on DEI stuffs instead of strengthening kids’ academics, making sure they’re reading and doing math at levels they should be. Also, class sizes in the publics are ridiculously large. Kids get lost and are overlooked. Parents’ concerns are disregarded and not respected. Teachers are overworked and overwhelmed. For the large amount of taxpayers money thrown into our public schools, it’s still a disaster.
I don't believe you. Name the school. And if you weren't upset about the absence of accurate Black history in your history books and lack of inclusion about how other races and cultures contributed to the core subjects your kid(s) study, please stop acting like you can now feign offense to DEI efforts. It makes you sound dumb and uneducated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of public school parents, even the fairly liberal ones, are uncomfortable with the progressive indoctrination that is now occurring in the public and private schools. They are seeking a more balanced, moderate environment where kids are taught to think for themselves. And yes, it’s completely ironic that the best place for this is actually a Catholic school.
This is not why. The pandemic exposed the priorities of public schools and school boards and it was not the children so people looked for alternatives. Catholic high schools are cheaper and provide structure so fewer behavioral issues. Also many Catholic high schools are feeders to top schools like Georgetown (Visi has a dual enrollment program), Notre Dame and Boston College.
I think it is definitely a combination of both. The progressive indoctrination was exposed during the pandemic when parents were in the same room as their kids during virtual learning and could overhear what was being taught.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of public school parents, even the fairly liberal ones, are uncomfortable with the progressive indoctrination that is now occurring in the public and private schools. They are seeking a more balanced, moderate environment where kids are taught to think for themselves. And yes, it’s completely ironic that the best place for this is actually a Catholic school.
This is not why. The pandemic exposed the priorities of public schools and school boards and it was not the children so people looked for alternatives. Catholic high schools are cheaper and provide structure so fewer behavioral issues. Also many Catholic high schools are feeders to top schools like Georgetown (Visi has a dual enrollment program), Notre Dame and Boston College.
Yours are additional correct reasons, but the PP’s comment is also true. We left public because school time was wasted on DEI stuffs instead of strengthening kids’ academics, making sure they’re reading and doing math at levels they should be. Also, class sizes in the publics are ridiculously large. Kids get lost and are overlooked. Parents’ concerns are disregarded and not respected. Teachers are overworked and overwhelmed. For the large amount of taxpayers money thrown into our public schools, it’s still a disaster.
Anonymous wrote:Ssomeone mentioned independent, Catholic K - 8 schools, do those exist in the DC area? I thought all the Catholic K - 8
schools were affiliated with a parish.