otjm:
Some schools may be failing children. However, children are far more failed by their parents than their schools. I have seen it both in the schools, which teach the Faith, and in the religious education programs which teach the Faith; both sets of kids have parents who cannot be bothered to get their children to Mass on Sunday.
The family is the primary source of teaching children; perhaps not math and science, or even necessarily reading. But they most certainly are the primary educators of morals and behavior. I can’t think of how many parents with teenage children I have heard say " But I can’t get my kids to go to Mass". That problem didn’t start with the teenage years; it started when they were out of the cradle, and no one could set parameters to their behavior. add to that helicopter parents, and all the other variations of “If I correct them, I might damage their (apparently weak) psyches” and you have kids who have no moral guidance of basic right and wrong.
Well, yes you are another step deeper into the problem. I think the the corollary to that is that schools cannot solve the problems that families are causing.
Parishes spend an incredible amount of money for what have become private schools.
I am sorry. But our schools are not turning out Christian disciples in any great percentage. It may be primarily the family’s fault, but in any case, maybe it’s time for those resources to be put in other areas.
The children where I live who continue in the faith are not doing so because of the school, but rather because their parents instilled the faith in them at home and live it outside the home. Most of them are involved with the Mass in some way. That is the influence of priests and deacons, sisters, nuns, and some of the lay pastoral associates.
This is a hard thing to think about and the cause of a lot of sadness, but the results speak for themselves.