J
jeannetherese
Guest
Point taken. I agree. Differing schools and regions may have access to different types and degrees of resources. How to allocate what is available to meet the needs of student populations can be challenging and there may be cases (as there are now) where parents may decide that the resources available are insufficient, given the needs of a particular child.
Addemdum: Sorry Meltzerboy, I didn’t address the salary/tuition challenge, and it is a challenge.
Catholic schools in my area peg their salaries against the public school district. Many are a 99% or 100% but others cannot achieve this goal as yet. It is a challenge. Tuition also varies from school to school and, of course, there is a connection between staff salaries and tuition costs. On the positive side, many of the school ‘plants’ are paid off, as Catholic schools have existed in my area for many, many decades. It helps to be paying upkeep rather than buying a new plant.
Schools attempt to help families afford tuition by creating a tiered system where there is a decreased tuition amount for a second child and a further decrease for additional children. This is helpful but there are still families who find themselves priced out of Catholic education.
In some cases (but not, by any means, in all cases), this is due to parents confusing wants with needs. In our culture, it is no uncommon to consider nice cars, all sorts of electronics, cable TV, and/or meals out/ vacation trips/ trendy hair/clothing updates as the basics that everyone has or does. What were once considered add-ons after food shelter and clothing (the basics) were dealt with, are competing with Catholic tuition. Some parents, may choose against givingup such items in order to send their children to Catholic schools. Material priorities can crowd out the spiritual and our culture is quite materialistic.
We have many challenges to overcome.
Addemdum: Sorry Meltzerboy, I didn’t address the salary/tuition challenge, and it is a challenge.
Catholic schools in my area peg their salaries against the public school district. Many are a 99% or 100% but others cannot achieve this goal as yet. It is a challenge. Tuition also varies from school to school and, of course, there is a connection between staff salaries and tuition costs. On the positive side, many of the school ‘plants’ are paid off, as Catholic schools have existed in my area for many, many decades. It helps to be paying upkeep rather than buying a new plant.
Schools attempt to help families afford tuition by creating a tiered system where there is a decreased tuition amount for a second child and a further decrease for additional children. This is helpful but there are still families who find themselves priced out of Catholic education.
In some cases (but not, by any means, in all cases), this is due to parents confusing wants with needs. In our culture, it is no uncommon to consider nice cars, all sorts of electronics, cable TV, and/or meals out/ vacation trips/ trendy hair/clothing updates as the basics that everyone has or does. What were once considered add-ons after food shelter and clothing (the basics) were dealt with, are competing with Catholic tuition. Some parents, may choose against givingup such items in order to send their children to Catholic schools. Material priorities can crowd out the spiritual and our culture is quite materialistic.
We have many challenges to overcome.
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