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goofyjim
Guest
I don’t have children but if I did I would probably be forced financially to send them to a public school. I see nothing wrong with it as long as I would be active in what they are being taught.
Wow… that is amazing! Are they very expensive as far as tuition?It’s a private school, but more importantly it’s a style of teaching. That’s as much as I can say about the teaching philosophy of the school. As a graduate of Montessori, I can say that I knew all the continents and some countries by the time I left kindergarten, not to mention many other things my peers did not know because of what I was taught at Montessori. It was a school that challenged students and when I entered first grade I, along with other Montessori graduates, were moved to advanced classes because we were ahead of the other first graders (like I had to go to second and third grade classrooms for reading and math, as well as my peers who I graduated with from Montessori). Whatever there teaching philosophy, it definitely worked and promoted learning.
In the city I live in, tuition at the private Montessori is competative with for profit and non-profit private and parochial schools.Wow… that is amazing! Are they very expensive as far as tuition?
Montessori’s View on Religious Educationwww.montessori.edu/
www.montessori.org/
and what reference would be complete without wikipedia??![]()
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montessori
Jennifer
Wow, sounds like you have a wonderful school… you are so lucky!Myth: All religious material,themes and songs are removed from Pulic school curriculum.
Truth:
Not in all districts. My kids go to Public School. I love the school and am so please with the district. At Christmas, 2 out of the 4 songs my son sang were religious based. One was sung in Hebrew. Yes, all the kids in 8th grade learned Hebrew. Fabulous.
They have a Christian prayer support group that meets after school in the lounge - led by a teacher. The Principal sat next to us this past Sunday at mass.
Fabulous - I am one happy person and grateful for the district we live in.
thank you for the linksMontessori’s View on Religious Education
wiki.montessorimom.com/index.cgi/Montessori_20and_20Religion
Unfortunately, there is only one Catholic Montessori school in the US that I am aware of. It is in Oragon and is ran by the Franciscian Sisters of the Holy Eucharist.
THAT is so true. There is no one size fits all - I have done all three as well and have had a love/hate relationship with each one.I can say with certainty that each schooling choice presents it’s own sets of pros and cons. Nothing is perfect. As parents, we need to take our set of circumstances, and raise our children in the Faith as best we can. It would be a much easier task if we would all support each other in this endeavor.
THAT is so true. There is no one size fits all - I have done all three as well and have had a love/hate relationship with each one.
For me, the parochial school is the easiest - I trust my kids’ teachers (very conservative school) - they get lots of religious instruction & the whole uniform thing takes the pressure off buying the “right” clothes. But public school was good too - FREE - always a plus, and we live in a good district - very organized - not as gossipy as the parochial school (parents not kids gossip - well, not really gossip so much as complain about this or that)
Homeschool was what my kids liked best by far. I thought their teacher was a little nutsy at times though.
Every year I question what to do for the following year - right now I’m trying to discern if I should homeschool just one of my children who begs the most - she’s going into 6th grade and would give anything to be homeschooled again. Time to pray again…
Parenting - it is sooooo NOT for wimps.

I’m in the same boat.My teen went to both Catholic and public schools and I can tell you that they both have their PROS and CONS. We are still pretty much up in the air about our 2 year old at this point and I shall pray on the subject since we still have 2 years left. LOL
I too have always thought we should support each other… but I am finding that “others” don’t feel quite that way… sad to see that… but I’m glad that we can find support from parents who choose to private and public school their kids and find it to be awesome as we do… my 3 in Catholic school have had all A’s this year and two of them were in the regional spelling beeVery good thread, kamz. I have parochial schooled, homeschooled, and public schooled my children. When I parochial schooled, a lot of parents wanted to “justify” their choice to parochial school by saying negative things about public school. When I homeschooled, some parents there “justified” their choice saying negative things about public AND parochial schools. In public school, some parents “justify” their choice by speaking negatively about parochial schools. It seems in every milieu, there were SOME parents who felt they needed to justify their choice in a negative way.
I firmly believe that most parents choose the educational path for their children very carefully. It hurts when a “friend” feels the need to constantly tell me why my choice is bad or not as “caring” or “responsible” or “Catholic” as her choice. My dh and I prayerfully came to each every decision we’ve made.
Since I’ve experienced hsing, public schooling, and parochial schooling, I’m in a very unique position. I can say with certainty that each schooling choice presents it’s own sets of pros and cons. Nothing is perfect. As parents, we need to take our set of circumstances, and raise our children in the Faith as best we can. It would be a much easier task if we would all support each other in this endeavor.
they feel that somehow their choice to public school or private school is being questioned or frowned upon,
This seems to result from some misintepretation. We can say time and again that people can also prayerfully make a decision to send their kids to public school and that we believe that all must do what they believe God wants them. We can also say that we know people to have graduated from traditional schools who turn out great and that others can have the same thing happen to them. For some reason the fact that we find benefits to homeschooling always seems to be twisted by some schoolers to mean that we think they are wrong, bad parents, etc. It would seem that the only way we can’t have a superiority complex is to agree that traditional schooling is the best for everyone.
I am a parochial school graduate. For my family I see many more benefits to homeschooling. We have a smaller class size (can anyone actually deny this), we have more individual attention (can anyone deny this one too), we have less negative peer pressure (at least in my family - can anyone deny this?), etc. Notice that NONE of this says that you are a bad parent, not prayerful in your decisions, that your children will turn out horribly, etc. It is what it is. We find our way of schooling beneficial for our family. If we found ourselves in a situation where we no longer felt that God wanted us to homeschool then we’d research and find the best school situation possible for our family just as I’m sure that most of you have done.
As far as supporting each other’s decisions…I frankly don’t think that this is necessary or always possible. We can have no knowledge of what goes into someone’s decisions. Whether they be homeschooling or traditional schooling, they could be the wrong one. What we do need to do is to support each other through prayer. It would seem that praying that we ALL raise devout Catholic children would be the most important and to pray that they be as educated as at all possible would be secondary.
kamz,I too have always thought we should support each other… but I am finding that “others” don’t feel quite that way… sad to see that… but I’m glad that we can find support from parents who choose to private and public school their kids and find it to be awesome as we do… my 3 in Catholic school have had all A’s this year and two of them were in the regional spelling bee
By the way… why did you stop home schooling if I may ask?![]()