All you have said is very true. I would imagine that most Catholic secondary schools across the US are in similar straits. As people are calling for a return to the time when nuns and priests taught classes, we have to be quite realistic. I doubt that will ever happen again.
So what is the answer? How do you create a religious school that is not just an expensive private school? Where are the models? Who is doing this? Perhaps some of the Orthodox Jewish schools in NY. I don’t know who else.
I don’t think we’ll see anything much more than a gradual transition of some Catholic schools to private, essentially secular, very expensive, academies. I, for one, do realize the lack of sisters has something to do with the lack of affordability, but one has to realize that many the dying orders left teaching a long time ago for “other ministries”.
All the same, one also needs to realize that those schools that were magnificent in their day, along with the sisters’ residences, very impressive churches, etc, were all built by the contributions of Catholics that were far less prosperous than Catholics today. Catholics, by and large, didn’t enter the middle class in numbers until after World War II.
And yet, they managed even so to support the sisters with good housing, medical, food, clothing, money for their essentials, as well as the physical plants themselves.
I don’t think it’s entirely because of lack of teaching orders, though that’s part of it. I think it’s because American Catholics are less generous than we once were. I’m not saying it’s a good excuse, but some Catholics in America are wary of donation because too many have seen their money go to outfits like ACORN, abortion-promoting organizations and purely political organizations, as well as church tear-downs and replacement with warehouses-in-the-round.
But it varies. I realize this is elementary school, but in the parish where my grandchildren attend, tuition is $500/semester, and the education is better than in the public schools. The people in the parish are mostly rural people; some well-off, some not. They do have a lot of fundraising events.
They don’t need to go recruiting well-to-do protestants or homosexual “couples” just to keep it open, and don’t. Now and then a protestant couple will send their kid, and the parish accepts that, but at a higher tuition. It’s usually a Lutheran, as I understand it, and they go to Mass too. But I don’t think Lutherans mind that.