The challenge to schools in an age of knowledge explosion can be met only by continuous improvement.
Catholic schools have changed a lot since the middle of the 20th century. Education is no longer a static
entity with a contained set of facts. Catholic schools are continually improving to keep up with the times.
A walk into a classroom today often promises an exciting and perhaps mind-boggling experience for
parents—and especially for grandparents. Although many of the Catholic signs are still there—the
crucifix, a statue or two, a prayer corner, gold stars and charts— there might not be a chalkboard, but
instead a smart board; there might not be a teacher's desk, but instead an electronic information station.
Reading shelves are there but room has been made to house electronic discs and videos. Many times
the teacher will not be found in the front of the class, but rather on the move, close to the children,
sharing learning with them as well as guiding them along the paths of the knowledge-seeker.
Solid academics have always been a hallmark in Catholic schools. Excellence is the norm. Teachers are
expected to teach; students are expected to learn. These expectations are met by doing more than
government standards require, more than just passing tests. The Catholic school strives to equip its
graduates with the best tools possible to fulfill the role of good citizen, productive and caring employee,
competent professional.
Cincinnati Archbishop Daniel E. Pilarczyk, in an address to the Chief Administrators of Catholic
Education, said it best when he said, "Every Catholic school is to be, first, a school, that is, where
learning is paramount, where teachers are to teach, where subject matter is to be learned." This notion is
reinforced throughout the Church. In 1997 the Vatican Congregation for Catholic Education wrote, "The
Catholic school should be able to offer young people the means to acquire knowledge they need in order
to find a place in society which is strongly characterized by technical and scientific skill. But at the same
time, it should be able, above all, to impart a solid Christian formation."
How do we balance our need for solid academic and technical training with developing the whole
person? One teacher in a Catholic school described the key to successful schooling as similar to the
business slogan: "Location, location, location." For Catholic education, though, the slogan must be,
"Integration, integration, integration." It all comes down to the mix. The child is a whole being; a child's
mind cannot be separated from his or her soul. To integrate the spiritual with the secular makes the
student in a Catholic school a saintly scholar.
Some parents worry that Catholic schools cannot accommodate their children who have special needs.
The Education Department of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, by working with the federal
Department of Education, makes certain that the provisions of the legislature are inclusive of children in
non-public schools. The No Child Left Behind program and the Americans With Disabilities Act are
currently helping to provide financial assistance for these programs in Catholic schools.
While special education remains a challenge for the future, much progress has been made. Programs
have been developed for children with special needs. More and more of these children are being served
in Catholic schools.