Dear Readers,
{mosimage}Among Pope BenedictƵapp many thought-provoking speeches during his spring visit to the United States was a particularly important one . Though it received some coverage, the PopeƵapp insights into the role of Catholic schools were too often lost among the attention given to the most visual and spectacular aspects of his visit.
Catholic schools top public counterparts
By Michael Swan, The Catholic Register{mosimage}TORONTO - In separate research, two economists with ties to the have found Catholic schools are outperforming public schools in Ontario on standardized tests.
The economists believe competition between the two publicly funded systems may, in part, explain higher success rates for Grade 3 and 6 pupils in Catholic schools when compared with their public school counterparts.
African AIDS orphans to get a new school
By Catholic Register Staff{mosimage}A Catholic high school in which every student has lost at least one parent to AIDS has turned the sod on a new permanent home on the edge of Africa’s second largest slum.
Education integral to church
By Pope Benedict XVI{mosimage}Editor’s note: The following is the complete text of Pope Benedict XVI’s speech to American Catholic educators in Washington, DC, on April 17.
“How beautiful are the footsteps of those who bring good news” (Rom 10:15-17). With these words of Isaiah quoted by St. Paul, I warmly greet each of you — bearers of wisdom — and through you the staff, students and families of the many and varied institutions of learning that you represent. It is my great pleasure to meet you and to share with you some thoughts regarding the nature and identity of Catholic education today.
Catholics schools threatened by hostile secularism, bishop says
By Catholic Register Staff“If we want to save our Catholic schools, what we have to save is the place of religion in Canadian society,” the bishop of said Sept. 28.
Virtues should trump values in character education
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterThe August paper by the OCCBƵapp Education Commission led by Alexandria-Cornwall Bishop Paul Andre Durocher, entitled Character Development and the Virtuous Life, said a focus on virtues “helps us re-acquire a valuable concept in our tradition, compels us to recognize GodƵapp role in the character development of our students and helps us focus on specific habits that foster and protect the freedoms to which we are called.”
School boards going green
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterAt least 10 environmentally friendly schools are being planned within the next two years to accommodate new students, although concerns about declining enrolment are still on the horizon.
Voicing Catholic education concerns for 70 years
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterAnd that, says Brian Evoy, is what the OAPCE has been doing on behalf of Catholic parents for the past seven decades. The organization celebrates its 70th anniversary next year.
Catholic education has value of a pearl
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic Register“If we believe that Catholic education is a pearl of great wisdom, we need to guard it,” Bergie said in a keynote address to a packed auditorium of more than 1,300 teachers Oct. 24 at the 13th annual When Faith Meets Pedagogy conference that ran Oct. 23 to 25. The conference at Toronto’s DoubleTree Hilton was organized by the Catholic Curriculum Co-operative, which includes 17 Ontario school boards, the Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Association and the Catholic Principals’ Council of Ontario.
Project offers poor students equal chance
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterSpence called the six-year-old’s mother to ask why he didn’t bring a lunch and the angry mother’s response was that she expected the child to pack his own lunch.
Ontario needs to learn Newfoundland's lessons
By Fr. Carl Matthews, S.J., Catholic Register SpecialIf, in a year or two, Ontario Catholics get worked up so that even a few shout, “We’ll show them that Catholics won’t be pushed around,” it will make headlines and we lose our own schools. They enrol 660,000 students today. The entire system will disappear just as it did in Newfoundland in 1998.