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TheLittleLady
Guest
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I do not correlate sin, or criminal activity, with race. The point I was making is that having a diversity of people among the spectrum of morality is not desirable to all. That type of diversity is the problem for most parents who do not use the public school system. It has zilch to do with race or ethnicity. A public school in a mostly white town with almost all white students is just as likely to have drugs, bullying, and sexual immorality. On the other hand, a diversely attended Catholic school with multiple ethnicity, is just as likely to be free of most of this stuff as an all white school. The two issues are entirely separate.And yes, claiming that a school the is ethnically and economically diverse is probably also “diverse in sin” is a racist statement.
That hasn’t been my experience at all, nor my kids’. Bullying exists everywhere…it’s worse when it happens at religious schools since they typically preach against such behavior. Drugs, parties, alcohol, sex…these things exist everywhere and Catholic schools are NOT immune.A public school in a mostly white town with almost all white students is just as likely to have drugs, bullying, and sexual immorality. On the other hand, a diversely attended Catholic school with multiple ethnicity, is just as likely to be free of most of this stuff as an all white school
My experience is quite different. There have been zero drugs, alcohol or sex there, and the “bullying” would not even hit the radar of what the public schools call bullying.Drugs, parties, alcohol, sex…these things exist everywhere and Catholic schools are NOT immune.
I agree with that…I think the reason for it is that the public schools have to take everyone…Catholic schools can expel people more easily.I went to public school, there was definitely more violence in the public facility than in the local Catholic institutions.
There is nothing elite about morality. The poor are not more immoral than the rich, not by a long shot. If you are speaking of “elite” as in those whom God sees as elite, that is, those who strive to follow him, I would just have to disagree, not that Catholic schools are a “bubble.” There are still moral challenges everywhere.but honestly I don’t think that kids should be kept in an elite bubble.
Exactly.potential thought or accusation of bullying or assult, the Catholic school could expel imediatly.
Well, if we’re just sharing personal anecdotes, we had to pull our son out of his very orthodox Catholic school because of bullying. Sadly, the public school at which I teach had stricter rules on discipline than the Catholic school.My experience is quite different. There have been zero drugs, alcohol or sex there, and the “bullying” would not even hit the radar of what the public schools call bullying.
Surely, a parent needs to know the school to see if it is really Catholic, and really different.
So true. I was pushed and all I ever wanted was to be a secretary… too late now.One of the problems in our society is that we push all students toward an academic high-school education with the goal of attending a four year college afterwards.
Only 30% of the students are driven toward such goals.
Jim
I went to public school and so did my siblings.Not everyone is fortunate to be able to get to a private or parochial school like that. What is to happen to them? What is their fate?