There is a false dichotomy in the * either *memorizing facts
or thinking argument. I doubt than many would wish to concentrate exclusively on one factor to the exclusion of the other.

I’m also noticing that this discussion is moving between countries and wondering if some of the challenges we are dealing with in Catholic formation and education might be greater challenges in one geographic location than another?
Speaking as a product of Catholic education (3 generations in my family in the western United States) my pre-VII parents recieved outstanding formation from the Sisters who taught in their Catholic School. My siblings and I , educated in the 70s and 80s, were casualties of the belief that all Catholic schools provided the same degree of formation as that of my parents.
Fortunately, we had excellent examples at home, lots of bible reading at home, and enough formation to reclaim our faith -a continuing process. We did receive good sacramental preparation in grade school, but it is frustrating to think of all of the sacrifices made to provide us with an education which was more oriented to the secular, at the expense of the faith, than my parents anticipated.
They began intervening in high school, moving some of us to other schools in pursuit of teachers who were well catechized and able to provide solid formation.
By University, they were calling other parents to find out what professors at the local Catholic University were aligning their teaching to the Magisterium-something they had assumed would be a non-issue at Catholic schools throughout our childhood.
The following generation, educated in the 90s, had schools which no longer engaged in sacramental preparation.
Efforts are currently underway in my geographic area to get local Catholic schools to reclaim their Catholic identity. We have a long way to go.
It would be really exciting to see schools providing strong catechesis and apologetics. The need to know their facts *and *to be able to defend and extend their faith. It will be helpful to have our Catholic schools prioritizing these issues, working with parents to provide sound formation.
May it be so. Amen.
P.S. As I think of the contrast between recent posts and our thread title, I wonder if the reason so many SSPX threads turn into discussions of education and catechesis might not relate to a sense that, while we do not want to endorse disobedience and pray that the SSPX will find its way home, we share concerns with the SSPX about the necessity of how best to pass on the deposit of the faith to the next generation and the methodologies which will best achieve this goal. However we choose to argue, souls are at stake, and thus the stakes are high.