Priests Are Needed in Faithful Catholic Education

by Rev. Peter M.J. Stravinskas

It seems that most priests either do not know or fail to comprehend the critical importance of Catholic schools in the life of the Church, particularly as a vehicle of the new evangelization. At a bishops’ meeting nearly a decade ago, Archbishop George Lucas and Bishop Daniel Flores lamented the fact that too many clerics over the past three decades have grown weary of the struggle to keep our schools viable, appealing, and accessible. “As Bishops, we must make every effort to assign pastors to parishes with schools who are champions of Catholic schools,” Bishop Flores said.

At the Catholic Education Foundation (https://catholiceducation.foundation), we have responded with an annual seminar to help seminarians, priests, and bishops be a powerful and energizing presence and influence in our schools. We also recently launched the Priestly Society of Christ Priest and Teacher, for priests engaged with Catholic high schools. In support of the effort, Mary Pat Donoghue, executive director of the U.S. bishops’ Secretariat of Catholic Education, said, “In this apostolic age, our schools must vibrantly witness to the teachings of Christ in every aspect of the school’s mission, from its curriculum and pedagogy to its culture and social elements. The guidance provided by a priest—an alter Christus—is critically important to this effort.”

In this work, I have found that the majority of the “junior clergy” are most supportive of Catholic schools, but they do not know exactly what they can or should be doing to advance the cause. This is either because they did not attend Catholic schools themselves, or they went to Catholic schools in an era when clerical involvement was low or even non-existent.

In fact, a very interesting study surfaced in 2019 on the attitudes of seminarians toward our schools. It was both encouraging and disturbing: encouraging, in that—unlike the older generation of priests—they are quite supportive of Catholic schools; disturbing, in that they say they have been given no tools in the seminary to prepare them for any role in the schools.

More Important than Ever

In one of St. John Henry Newman’s lectures which became his famous Idea of a University, he makes the point that, without the presence of the “institutional” Church in the life of a Catholic university, the project is bound to lose its moorings. That is equally true of Catholic education at the elementary and secondary levels.

With the absence of priests, orthodoxy and Catholic identity waned in many places, leading to a further crisis in the schools. The mass exodus of women religious from the schools is yet another reason why the presence of priests is more important than ever.

The involvement of a priest, however, is not simply or even primarily that of a watchdog. His involvement is needed to provide pastoral support for faculty and administration; to teach religion or other subjects according to his abilities; to be part of the lives of the students on the playground, in the cafeteria, and at social and athletic events; and, of course, for sacramental/liturgical services.

Not a few bishops—precipitously and very foolishly, in my opinion—withdrew priests from high school work, yet the presence of priests there provided one of the most effective “recruitment” devices we ever had for priestly vocations. Dioceses that have kept priests there—or which are putting them back—know that.

A priest is faced with many challenges as he navigates the waters of the school apostolate. The first is that of regularly reminding his people that the Catholic school is an essential element of Catholic life—whether or not there is a parish school, whether or not individuals have children of school age—and, therefore, deserving wholehearted support, as the Code of Canon Law reminds us.

Second, he must say some potentially unpopular things. For instance, families need to be told that attendance at the government schools (the so-called “public” schools) places the souls of children in jeopardy—a point highlighted in a study five years ago, which documented that Catholic children in the state schools most often lose their faith in God and the Church as early as fourth grade, due to the type of science classes they experience. And when we begin to consider topics related to marriage, family, and sexuality, the need for Catholic schools becomes more obvious than ever before. The aggressive promotion of “gender theory” and “critical race theory” in government schools across our nation should give any intelligent parent reason to make the local Catholic school the educational home for one’s children.

Third, the priest must ensure that no child is ever denied a Catholic education for want of financial resources.

Fourth, and this is often a very neuralgic piece of the whole project, he must help parents establish clear priorities: Is a winter vacation more important than a Catholic education for one’s children?

 

Priest Challenges:

  • Remind people that the Catholic school is an essential element of Catholic life.

  • Be prepared to say things unpopular regarding the threats of public school.

  • Ensure no child is ever denied a Catholic education for want of financial resources.

  • Help parents clearly prioritize a Catholic education.

 

A Saintly Example

John Henry Newman was a newly minted Cardinal in 1879, when he was asked by Archbishop Roger Bede Vaughan of Sydney to lend his voice to the defense of Catholic schools in Australia. With great eloquence and insight, he wrote:

It is indeed the gravest of questions whether our people are to commence life with or without adequate instruction in those all-important truths which ought to colour all thought and to direct all action;—whether they are or are not to accept this visible world for their God and their all, its teaching as their only truth, and its prizes as their highest aims;—for, if they do not gain, when young, that sacred knowledge which comes to us from Revelation, when will they acquire it?

Indeed, if not “when young… when?”

Reflecting on his involvement in the early years of his Oratory School in an 1862 letter to the President of St. Patrick’s Seminary in Ireland, Newman acknowledges:

I am overworked with various kinds of mental labour, and I cannot do as much as I once could. Yet it would be most ungrateful to complain, even if I were seriously incommoded, for my present overwork arises from the very success of a school which I began here shortly after I retired from the [Irish] University. When we began it was a simple experiment, and lookers-on seemed to be surprised when they found we had in half a year a dozen; but at the end of our third year we now have seventy… As all other schools are increasing in number, it is a pleasant proof of the extension of Catholic education.

An “Old Boy” of the Oratory School, Arthur Hungerford Pollen, recalled:

At the Oratory we saw a good deal of the Cardinal. Nothing pleased him more than making friends with the boys, and the many opportunities we had of personal contact with him made the friendship a real one. Of course, to us he was the greatest of heroes. . . . In the Latin plays which he had prepared for the boys to act he always took the keenest interest, insisting on the careful rendering of favourite passages, and himself giving hints in cases of histrionic difficulty. In the school chapel he from time to time appeared, giving a short address, and assisting at the afternoon service. It is curious that it should have been in connexion with these two widely different occupations that we should have seen most of him. It is, perhaps, characteristic of his disposition, in which playfulness and piety were so sweetly combined. (Cited in Wilfrid Meynell, Cardinal Newman, 86f.)

In 1879, a representative of the Oratory School Society observed in a letter to Newman:

Just twenty years ago you generously founded the Oratory School, and you have always cheerfully shared in the burden of toil and self-sacrifice which that act has entailed. We, on our part, gratefully acknowledge the benefits derived from the privilege of your personal influence and guidance after the wise and gentle way of St. Philip.

To which, Newman responded with a most priestly heart, placing the role of the priest in a Catholic school directly within one’s pastoral ministry and giving it preeminence: “No other department of the pastoral office requires such sustained attention and such unwearied services.”

St. John Henry, pray that our priests may imitate your selfless love and sacrifice on behalf of our beloved Catholic schools.

 

Rev. Peter M.J. Stravinskas
is president of the Catholic Education Foundation, which strives to preserve and expand Catholic elementary and secondary schools. He has served as an advisor to The Cardinal Newman Society and co-edited Newman’s Idea of a University: The American Response (Pine Beach, NJ: Newman House Press, 2002), a compilation of papers presented at a CNS conference in 2001.

 

Case Study I (North Carolina); Transforming a Parish School

“Don’t give up on your parish schools. Schools are great challenges, but don’t be afraid to make the hard decisions,” urges Father Lucas Rossi, who serves as pastor of St. Michael’s Catholic Church and School in Gastonia, N.C.

“It’s worth it to go through the difficult times,” Fr. Rossi continues. “Remind yourself that it’s Jesus’s school. If He wants it to succeed, it will. In the varying challenges that come from year to year, keep your eyes fixed on Christ.”

Fr. Rossi has seen his fair share of challenging times at St. Michael’s and other Catholic schools that he has been affiliated with, yet he still loves being involved with the schools. “As long as Jesus Christ remains the center of everything we do, I’m confident that the blessings will be rich and abundant.” 

A ‘clarification of mission’

Fr. Rossi was ordained to the priesthood in the Diocese of Charlotte in 2010. He has served at Catholic churches in Winston-Salem, Charlotte, and Salisbury, N.C., and spent a brief time discerning a monastic vocation with the monks at Belmont Abbey College, which is recognized in The Newman Guide. Since 2018, he has served as pastor of St. Michael’s Catholic Church and Parish in Gastonia, N.C., which has a PK-8 parish school.

St. Katharine Drexel was a generous benefactor of the school, and the Sisters of Mercy staffed it for many years. Initially started in a parishioner’s five-bedroom home, the school moved to its permanent campus in 1952. In 2018, the school received a large private donation and a grant from the Diocese of Charlotte to undergo a major renovation of its facilities. 

But the physical renovation wasn’t the only change that the school was undergoing. There was also a deeper revitalization that was beginning to take place.

Fr. Rossi and a group of committed parents—many affiliated with Belmont Abbey College—set-out to clarify the mission of St. Michael’s Catholic School. He strongly desired for students to experience “wonder” and be “shaped by encountering the true, good, and beautiful” through an integrated curriculum. He believed that “every subject ought to point to God.”

“The school needed a clarification of mission. What do we offer? Was saying ‘We are a Catholic school’ enough to set us apart from other schools in our area? Not really,” said Fr. Rossi.

And so began a three-year transition of the school’s curriculum and training of its teachers to strengthen the school’s academics and Catholic identity. Unfortunately, the first year of the transition happened to coincide with the COVID pandemic in 2020. The school’s enrollment took a hit and dropped to about 85 students, from about 140 the prior year. Still, the efforts moved forward. 

Putting first things first

Despite initial low enrollment numbers, Fr. Rossi still felt the support of much of his staff and many Catholic families who desired strong Catholic education.

Together with the academic revival, Fr. Rossi embarked on a sacramental revitalization as well. He added both Confession and Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament six times each week. Ahead of the 2022 academic year, he announced that the school day would begin with a daily 8:00 a.m. Mass. 

Families from all over the Charlotte area began to hear about the changes happening at St. Michael’s, and many were drawn to it. For some families, the addition of daily Mass was the final sign they needed to enroll at St. Michael’s. In the 2022-23 school year, enrollment was impressively up to about 165 students. 

“Jesus is our Master Teacher, and so He gets the first class of the day,” Fr. Rossi smiled. “It’s not about losing time; we’re gaining the best ever at the feet of Christ. It feels right. I hope more Catholic schools do this.”

Now, after a year of daily Masses to begin the school day, Fr. Rossi believes there’s been a big impact on the culture of the school. The daily Mass has been “unbelievably transformative,” he stated. 

Fr. Rossi believes he has a much better relationship with students because he sees them at least at Mass every day. He also loves seeing many parents staying for Mass and attending with their children.

Building strong families

“What we do at the school needs to be reinforced by the parents at home, otherwise our efforts are nearly pointless,” says Fr. Rossi. “Our mission is to ‘build strong families,’ and that’s why we’re here.”

One devotion encouraged among St. Michael’s families is the First Friday devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. On the first Friday of each month, homeschoolers are welcome to join the school community for Mass and Adoration, catechetical activities, and athletic activities led by student-athletes from Belmont Abbey College. Students are split into “households” named after Saints Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, so that they can enjoy the day with students of different ages and families and “compete” against other households in friendly competitions.

Fr. Rossi enjoys being involved in First Friday activities, greeting the children on the playground, reading books in the classroom, and even bringing his “Sacristy Road Show” into the classroom.

The students—and the responsibility he feels as a spiritual father—have kept Fr. Rossi committed to the school, despite the challenges of the past three years. He’s excited to help St. Michael’s in continuing to “strive to be the best classical, Catholic school that St. Michael’s can be.”

“I don’t think any saint would have ever said they’re holy enough,” he says. “You have to keep adapting year after year. You have to keep enhancing what you’re doing well and what you can do better.”

Another bright light for St. Michael’s was the addition of a new headmaster in 2023: Jacob Nolan, who previously served as assistant principal of Lumen Verum Academy in Boston and earned his master’s in Theology at Franciscan University of Steubenville, which is recognized in The Newman Guide. 

“We’re very excited about the leadership he’s bringing to the school,” said Fr. Rossi, who sees the relationship between pastor and headmaster as a “key piece” in building up a faithful school. Nolan and Fr. Rossi will meet and pray together weekly, and both will strive to set an example of “living the faith on and off campus” as “spiritual leaders” for the community.

“The ultimate goal is Heaven,” Fr. Rossi says. “We’re not just here to impart knowledge and to give facts, but to help students encounter Christ through their education, their teachers.”

Second Annual ‘Newman Guide Virtual College Fair’ Invites High School Students, Parents, Educators

CNS is grateful for the sponsorship of the St. Robert Bellarmine Fund.

High school students, their parents, and Catholic educators are invited to register now for The Cardinal Newman Society’s Newman Guide Virtual College Fair, which will take place on Wednesday, September 27, 2023. “Live” sessions will run from 10:00 a.m.—12:00 p.m. ET, as well as 7:00 p.m.—9:00 pm ET. Registration is free and available now but is required to attend the event.

The Cardinal Newman Society is grateful to the St. Robert Bellarmine Fund, which offers annual scholarships of $8,000, renewable for four years, to ten students who are attending a Newman Guide college, Kolbe Academy, a Catholic classical homeschool program, and Hallow, a Catholic prayer app, for their sponsorship of the Virtual Newman Guide College Fair. The first 1,000 registrants to the Newman Guide Virtual College Fair will receive a free 3-month trial subscription to the Hallow app, and three registrants will be randomly selected for a free year of Hallow. 

CNS is grateful for the sponsorship of Kolbe Academy.

Last year, The Cardinal Newman Society held its first Virtual College Fair, with great success. “I enjoyed the virtual college fair—thank you for this opportunity! I liked how I could easily chat with people from different colleges about my questions, see info and videos from the college on each college’s section, and attend presentations,” one student said.

CNS is grateful for the sponsorship of the Hallow app.

Overall, a follow-up survey showed that among those who took the survey, 93 percent of participants said they would consider attending or encourage someone else to attend a Newman Guide Virtual College Fair.

This year, students, parents, and educators will have the opportunity to visit the virtual booths of the colleges recognized in The Newman Guide, “chat” with admissions representatives, learn about unique scholarship opportunities, and attend “live” presentations.

The “live” presentations include:

10:30 am ET: “How to Make a Good Campus Visit” with Tom McFadden, Vice President for Enrollment & Student Success at Christendom College in Front Royal, Va.;

11:30 am ET: “Preparing for a STEM and Other Careers at a Faithful Catholic College” with representatives from several Newman Guide colleges;

7:00 pm ET: “‘Newman Center’ or Newman Guide College?” with Patrick Reilly, President of The Cardinal Newman Society; and

8:00 pm ET: “You’re Not Choosing a College – You’re Choosing a Formation” with Dr. Andrew and Sarah Swafford, Newman Guide college graduates who found Jesus Christ in a powerful way during college.

Homeschooled students, parents, high school classes, and educators are invited to log-in for the daytime session, as well as the evening session of the Newman Guide Virtual College Fair. Catholic families are encouraged to spread the word about the virtual event with friends and family, as well as their local Catholic high school and parish youth group.

 

Catholic College Graduate Helps Women Understand ‘God-Given Dignity’

A graduate of a faithful Catholic college relies on the formation she received to help educate other Catholic women on the nature and dignity God has given them.

Laura (Billeci) Zambrana serves as Director of Content for Endow (Educating on the Nature and Dignity of Women), which is an international apostolate founded in 2003 that reaches more than 40,000 women across the globe.

“I know I was created for a purpose and that I have my mission—to love God and make Him known—first in my vocation to marriage and family life, and then let this overflow into my work on the Endow team and with our faithful hardworking generous hosts around the world,” explains Zambrana, who graduated from Thomas Aquinas College (TAC), which is recognized in The Newman Guide, in 2009.

James and Laura Zambrana, and their children Peter, Jane, Brigid and Helen. James is a graduate of Franciscan University of Steubenville and Laura is a graduate of Thomas Aquinas College, both of which are recognized in The Newman Guide.

“TAC prepared me for my role at Endow as I navigate which topics to cover, how they should be covered, and most importantly how to curate the material such that the discussion is the focus and the fruit of the experience,” says Zambrana. Endow offers studies on Mulieris Dignitatem (St. John Paul II’s letter on the dignity and vocation of women); on the writings of female saints such as St. Therese of Lisieux, St. Catherine of Siena, St. Hildegard and St. Edith Stein; and other writings of the Church like Catholic Social Teaching, St. John Paul II’s Letter on the Rosary and his Letter on the Christian Meaning of Suffering.

“We want to make the truth beautiful and interesting,” Zambrana continued. “How do we help women on their journey? Not everyone had an education at TAC or a faithful college and all women deserve to know their dignity. We focus on making the riches of our inheritance accessible.”

Going back to when Zambrana was deciding on which college to attend, she explained, “I was a naturally dissatisfied student with textbooks at age 14… When I heard about this school that had no textbooks, it intrigued me.” Zambrana attended the TAC summer program, and it was there that she was able to meet “people like me who also wanted to know the answers the hows and the whys. I became excited to learn after attending the summer program.”

Zambrana says that education, prayer, and friendship are what she values most from attending TAC. “TAC opened my eyes to new horizons. Study for study’s sake, for my humanity, to feed my soul. I am a better wife, mother, friend, and employee because of this unique course of study.”

“I had never experienced the unity of faith and life until I went to TAC. Things like being surrounded by students who make it a point to pray every day, didn’t eat meat on Fridays, and the seamlessness of my teachers and my friends going to class and then to Mass” made a deep impact on her life.

Zambrana also described the “amount of spontaneity and fun that arises at a place where you are all studying for studying sake and praying because that was what we were created to do… a wholeness and not studying just to get a job. The fun and comradery builds bonds of friendship to last a lifetime.”

Now in her work with Endow, “we call women together to study the documents of the Church and the lives of the saints. It is text-based like TAC. The text is the teacher—not the Endow host. The commentary is on the text. It is so similar to my undergraduate experience.”

“Questions for the discussion are an important part of the study guide,” she continued. “The friendships that emerge from Endow hinge on these questions, which are based on the text in the same way that TAC tutors were there to ask the deeper questions.”

Zambrana wants Catholic women across the globe to get a taste of what she experienced during her undergraduate years, through her work with Endow. “We really want to create a culture where women are reclaiming the time for study, prayer, and friendship.”

Checklist for Evaluating Sexuality Programs in Catholic Education

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Checklist for Evaluating Sexuality Programs in Catholic Education

To assist parents in the delicate area of instructing children with regard to affectivity and sexuality, some Catholic schools and other Catholic education programs may choose to include human sexuality programs at the middle school or high school level. The Church has provided specific parameters for such instruction.

The checklist below may be used in conjunction with The Cardinal Newman Society’s Policy Standards for Sexuality Programs in Catholic Education which provides historical and theological background, Church expectations, and principles and standards for Catholic school human sexuality programs.

 

Checklist for Evaluating Sexuality Programs

Determine whether the program and materials:      

 

are delivered under the attentive guidance of a student’s parents with their knowledge, collaboration, and approval. (Consider having parental consent forms on file.)

Yes / No   

 

are grounded in a clear and convincing Christian anthropology that respects man’s God-given nature as a body/soul unity that cannot be manipulated at will.

Yes / No

 

fully reflect, without ambiguity or reservation, the moral precepts of the Church regarding human sexuality, as presented in the Catechism of the Catholic Church.

Yes / No

 

are presented from a Catholic worldview of the sacramentality of marriage, as a lifelong union between a man and a woman.

Yes / No

 

present the beauty and dignity of the marital act as proper only within the confines of marriage for the procreation of children and bonding of the spouses.

Yes / No

 

address and negate practices and behaviors which are contrary to Christian morality, including sexual activity outside of marriage (including same-sex activity), contraception, abortion, transgenderism, masturbation, sex trafficking, and pornography.

Yes / No

 

specifically and clearly promote the virtue of chastity.

Yes / No

 

promote self-control, modesty, temperance, fortitude, and respect for self and others.

Yes / No

 

present all information at an age-appropriate developmental level carefully protecting a child’s natural latency period and prudently introducing relevant material during adolescence to guide a child through development and change.

Yes / No

 

when possible, separate students by biological sex.

Yes / No

 

refrain from sexually explicit materials, images, or language that might create emotional disorientation in students or unhealthy curiosity which may lead to sin.

Yes / No

 

make a distinct effort to counter harmful or false information students receive from mass media, social networking, and peer groups which may be beyond their comprehension, or which may lead them to premature assumptions about their own possibly misguided sexuality.

Yes / No

 

protect student modesty and purity by avoiding flippant, cynical, ambiguous, or indecent approaches to the topic.

Yes / No

 

utilize various instructional approaches that retain the modesty and dignity of the person, such as role-play, discussions, and stories that invite a student to make a personal commitment to chastity.

Yes / No     

 

is delivered by well-trained and well-formed staff in the proper context.

Yes / No

 

Human sexuality programs should be rejected if they explicitly violate any of these areas. In some cases, if a program simply omits an area without contradicting it, the program might still be considered but should be richly supplemented in that area.

Publisher of Newman Guide Releases 2023-24 Edition of College Search Handbook

The Cardinal Newman Society (CNS) is thrilled to release the 2023-24 edition of My Future, My Faith, a full-color, 40-page handbook to help Catholic families navigate the search for faithful Catholic colleges. It includes advice on how to make a good campus visit, how to pay for college, and so much more!

First published in 2012, My Future, My Faith is a helpful companion to The Newman Guide online, where families can find full profiles on all the colleges and schools recommended by The Cardinal Newman Society for their fidelity and strong Catholic formation.

Featured on the cover of this year’s My Future, My Faith are joyful students from Holy Spirit Academy in Monticello, Minn., an outstanding Catholic high school recognized in The Newman Guide.

My Future, My Faith makes the case for a truly Catholic education that is faithful to Catholic doctrine, morals, and practices in all that it does, integrates the insights of Catholic teaching in every discipline, and forms young adults in virtue and Catholic living. The handbook also features the Catholic colleges that generously sponsored printing and distribution.

This year, 50,000 copies of My Future, My Faith will be provided free of charge to Catholic high school students at schools recognized by The Cardinal Newman Society for strong Catholic identity, at events hosted by Catholic speaker Jason Evert on the virtue of chastity, and in dioceses and youth groups across the country.

Last year, CNS released a 7-minute video version of My Future, My Faith, which can be found online here. A trailer version of the video has received more than 40,000 plays on social media.

Catholic families are encouraged to share a pdf version, e-book version, or hard copy (with limited copies remaining) of My Future, My Faith. All versions can be accessed or requested here: https://cardinalnewmansociety.org/my-future-my-faith-magazine/

 

The Cardinal Newman Society Podcast – Teaser Episode

We preview our upcoming podcast season in The Cardinal Newman Society Podcast trailer.

Conservative Leader Prepared at Faithful Catholic College

“When you look at society today, it is a direct result of secularism being taught as a religion,” says L. Brent Bozell III, who is founder and president of the Media Research Center, the largest media watchdog organization in the United States.

“And I think that if everyone were taught in a genuine Catholic school, all of the world’s problems would go away,” Bozell continued.

The Cardinal Newman Society recently caught up with Bozell, who formerly served on the CNS board of directors, to discuss the impact of the education he received at the University of Dallas in Irving, Tex., which is recognized in The Newman Guide for its strong Catholic identity.

“Had it not been for the University of Dallas, I don’t know if I would have been able to pursue my career as I did. The closer you can be to understanding black and white, you are better prepared for life. It’s the secular grey area that can make life very confusing,” said Bozell.

L. Brent Bozell III

CNS: Why did you choose to attend the University of Dallas? What was your experience like? 

Mr. Bozell: It was because of a long family association with Dr. Frederick (“Fritz”) Wilhelmsen, who was the director of theology at the university. He was a family friend, but also an editor at Triumph magazine, which my father started.

CNS: How did your education prepare you for your career and vocation?

Mr. Bozell: Fritz Wilhelmsen’s daughter, Alexandra Wilhelmsen, was my advisor when I declared my history major. I remember her asking me what I intended to do with it. I remember telling her I had no idea, at which point she burst out laughing and told me I would make a fine history major; the point being, unless you’re going to teach it, or write about it, you really can’t apply it, other than giving you a broad cultural understanding of the world.

CNS: How did attending a faithful Catholic college help you grow in your faith? How did it help you grow as a person?

Mr. Bozell: I don’t know that I was the most faithful Catholic in college, but I suspect that’s what 99 percent of Catholics in college would tell you. But you were surrounded by Catholicism at the University of Dallas, and they gave it—along with my family’s structure—great direction as I embarked on my career.

CNS: How has the education you received influenced your work?

Mr. Bozell: Had it not been for the University of Dallas, I don’t know if I would have been able to pursue my career as I did. The closer you can be to understanding black and white, you are better prepared for life. It’s the secular grey area that can make life very confusing.

CNS: From the classes to dorm life to student activities, what had the most impact on you during college?

Mr. Bozell: The friendships I made that I still have to this day. And that’s 50 years later (since I began at the University of Dallas). And that includes my wife—I still have her, too!

CNS: How were you formed mentally, spiritually, and physically by your faithful Catholic college? 

Mr. Bozell: Mentally: the education was second to none; I wish only that I had taken greater advantage of it. Spiritually: Catholicism was not just taught; it was lived, which distinguishes it from most Catholic colleges. Physically, I broke every bone in my body due to bad luck growing up, so that didn’t help!

CNS: Why do you think faithful Catholic education is important? 

Mr. Bozell: When you look at society today, it is a direct result of secularism being taught as a religion. And I think that if everyone were taught in a genuine Catholic school, all of the world’s problems would go away.

CNS: Do you think the liberal arts are valuable? Was studying the liberal arts helpful to you after graduation? 

Mr. Bozell: I think it’s tragic when I hear of colleges cutting them back or cutting them out—they say that “it is not a career path!” The liberal arts may not train you how to use a wrench, but they train you how to use your mind.

CNS: Do you have any special memories from college?

Mr. Bozell: Yes, but I can’t tell you any of them! You know, they would revolve around times spent with fellow students who would become lifelong friends. But also, time spent with professors who were truly iconic—not just at the University of Dallas, but in their fields! You knew in their company that so many of them were genuine Catholic educators both inside and outside of the classroom.

CNS: After studying the liberal arts in college, how did you make the transition to employment?

Mr. Bozell: Well, I went from college directly into the career path I am now; I went directly into politics. My first job was working for a fellow who was a deeply spiritual Catholic, a conservative Catholic.

CNS: What have been some of the most exciting projects to be a part of at your current job?

Mr. Bozell: The Media Research Center is alone in the field of public policy, in that it is the only organization in the entirety of the conservative movement that is focused entirely on what I believe to be the greatest enemy of the conservative movement: the Left within the news media. This has been an exciting time over the last 35 years.

CNS: What advice would you give to students who are navigating the college search? 

Mr. Bozell: Follow the Newman Guide is what I would say! There are Catholic colleges that are Catholic in name only, but a few that live their Catholicism. And Newman Guide colleges are where every Catholic should consider going. This is not to say that only Catholic schools offer a good education; however, when you have a school like the University of Dallas, you can’t go wrong.

CNS: What do you think was key to helping form you into the leader you are today? 

Mr. Bozell: I think, a well-rounded understanding of the world. And also, focusing more on conviction than on consensus.

The Rise of Independent Catholic Education

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Independent Catholic education[1]—Catholic, because its schools are committed to
Catholic fidelity and formation, yet independent, because they are not owned by a Catholic religious order or diocese—has scarcely caught the attention and admiration of the Church it serves. But for those Catholic families who have benefitted from it, this growing phenomenon is enlightening the minds of children and leading their souls to God.

Independent schools are a relatively new phenomenon in the history of American Catholic education. Even before the parochial school movement of the mid-19th century, Catholic schools were established and operated under the auspices of ecclesial entities, most often religious orders devoted to teaching and evangelization. However, amid the crisis of faith and authority following the Second Vatican Council and the rapid decline in parochial school enrollment since the 1960s, lay Catholics began establishing their own schools. Often these were motivated by a lack of institutional will or ability to open a Catholic school nearby, compromises to faithful teaching and practice at local Catholic schools, or concerns about the cost of parochial education following the abdication of teaching nuns and clergy whose support had made Catholic schools affordable to the lowest-income families. Today several trends are converging to drive the increase in independent Catholic education, including societal changes effected by gender ideology, critical race theory, relativism, and materialism as well as the increased availability of funding through school choice programs.

 

Laity in Catholic Education

Catholic schools in America were established as early as 1606 by the Franciscans in Florida, followed by others associated with the Spanish missions of the West and Mexican territory, the French settlements in Louisiana and Canadian territory, evangelization of Blacks and Native Americans, religious toleration in Maryland and Pennsylvania, and other scattered Catholic communities. With the rapid expansion of parochial schools in the 19th and first half of the 20th century, the bishops fought to differentiate and establish Catholic schools as a viable option to the Protestant influence embedded in the public school system.[2] They declared that Catholic schools were essential for the teaching of faith and morals,[3] each parish was to have a school, the lay faithful were to send their children to them,[4] and “Catholic children were not to attend non-Catholic, neutral, or mixed schools.”[5] Catholic schools expanded for the next hundred years until falling into a sharp decline that began in the 1960s.

When Pope John XXIII called for the Second Vatican Council in 1959, the thought of religious sisters leaving Catholic schools wasn’t foreseen, since the Council’s first and foremost goal was “to impart an ever-increasing vigor to the Christian life of the faithful”[6] and the “universal call to holiness”[7] for all men and women, laity and religious alike. Unfortunately, for reasons too numerous to describe here, men and women religious began leaving Catholic schools and their religious orders after Vatican II. In 1965, there were more than 100,000 religious sisters in Catholic schools, comprising 69 percent of teachers;[8] by 1980, their number dropped to fewer than 40,000. Today, it is fewer than 4,000 or 1.3 percent of teachers.[9]

Amid this crisis, the laity stepped up to the challenge. Today there are more than 140,000 lay teachers and administrators in Catholic schools.[10] The Vatican Congregation for Education has issued several documents guiding this transition to laity, and it is now the norm for laypeople to staff Catholic schools.

 

Emergence of Independent Schools

Independent Catholic education came about in the 1970s and 1980s, amid the increased involvement of laypeople in Catholic schools and in response to changes in the Church and society after Vatican II. Founders perceived a dilution of religious instruction in available Catholic schools and sexual immorality making its way into Catholic education. There were also concerns that Catholic schools were trying too hard to mimic public schools, especially in the inner cities, while suburban schools seemed too focused on test scores and getting students into high-end colleges and careers. Many Catholic schools seemed to focus on maintaining economic stability and becoming schools for the elite.[11] For some, including groups of families seeking to start a school, there was simply a lack of Catholic schools in their area. In some cases, an altruistic and entrepreneurial individual sought to establish a school in an economic environment conducive, at the time, to small business start-ups.[12]

St. John Paul II’s 1981 document, Familiaris Consortio (On the Role of the Christian Family in the Modern World), had a significant impact on these early founders. It warned against contemporary ideologies and taught how to fight against them. “If ideologies opposed to the Christian Faith are taught in the schools, the family must join with other families, if possible through family associations, and with all its strength and wisdom help the young not to depart from the Faith” (40).

According to Eileen Cubanski, a founder and long-time executive director of the National Association of Private Catholic* and Independent Schools (NAPCIS),[13] the first independent school providing a Catholic education was Holy Innocents Academy in Kinnelon, N.J., founded in 1967 by Dr. William Marra.[14] Parents with children in Catholic schools had alerted him that objectional sexual materials were being presented to students.[15] Dr. Marra’s good friend, philosopher Dietrich Von Hildebrand, encouraged him to open Holy Innocents Academy. He had previously founded Catholic Media Apostolate[16] and hosted a radio series often featuring Von Hildebrand. It is not certain when the school closed.

Our Lady of Victory School opened its doors in 1973, initially as a small, lay-run school of 30 students in Panorama City, Calif.,[17] and later as a homeschool curriculum provider. It operated as a school for 12 years before this transition and continues to provide a curriculum published exclusively through its company, Lepanto Press, which opened in 1995.[18]

Also in 1973, a small group of families near Louisville, Ky., sought the assistance of Dominican Sister Elise Groves, O.P., to help them open an independent school faithful to the Church’s teachings. Holy Angels Academy, dedicated to the angels surrounding the throne of God, received recognition as a Catholic school at its opening by Archbishop Thomas J. McDonough. It currently serves 101 students and appears to be the oldest operating independent school, going strong after 50 years.

Another early independent effort was Colorado Catholic Academy, a K-12 school which opened in 1974 and operated for 33 years before closing due to financial constraints. Like Holy Angels, it received recognition by the Archbishop of Denver. It proclaimed that it was established “to serve families in raising grace-filled children [and] dedicated to the traditions of the Roman Catholic Faith including the sanctity of human life and the pursuit of eternal life.”

No one knows exactly how many initiatives were undertaken since then. Cubanski estimates that there were more than 150 independent schools operating in the Catholic tradition at any one point in time, but this has not been documented, aside from the membership in NAPCIS. According to Cubanski, enrollment in independent Catholic education has slowly and steadily increased, with many of the schools adopting a strong emphasis on the liberal arts and/or classical education. (Table 1)

 

Table 1

Current NAPCIS Member Schools and Year of their Establishment

 

Years 1970–1980 1990–1995 1996–2000 2001–2005 2006-2011 2012-2023
Number of Schools 7   12   13   14 12 24
Note. Data obtained from Eileen Cubanski, Exec. Dir., NAPCIS.

 

NAPCIS counts a total of 169 member schools throughout its history. Thirty percent of these schools closed after about 7 years on average.[19] Nevertheless, NAPCIS school membership has incrementally increased since its founding. As schools closed, others opened, with a net effect of a slow and steady upward trend. Adding the non-member independent schools that we know exist today, we estimate between 200-300 independent schools were in operation at some point during the last 50 years.

These are primarily brick-and-mortar schools, but NAPCIS also includes two fully online schools as members: Queen of Heaven Academy in Gilbert, Arizona, and Veritas Christi High School in Ann Arbor, Mich.—the latter a school for students with special educational needs. Two member schools are affiliated with Regnum Christi, a lay religious apostolate: Everest Academy of Lemont, Ill., and Everest Collegiate High School and Academy in Clarkston, Mich. Rhodora Donahue Academy in Ave Maria, Fla., began as an independent school but was later adopted by the local parish.

In 2013, the Chesterton Schools Network was established to help Catholic laypeople use the same curriculum and approach as the first Chesterton Academy started in 2007 by Dale Alquist and Tom Bengtson in Minneapolis, Minn.[20] The Network has grown to 44 schools in the United States and Canada, under the Society of Gilbert Keith Chesterton, a Catholic lay apostolate recognized as a canonical private association of the Christian faithful. Each school must apply to the local bishop for recognition, and 10 are members of NAPCIS.[21] Their charism revolves around the Catholic convert G.K. Chesterton and includes a heavy emphasis on philosophy and the arts.

Another network of independent schools is the Regina Academies. The first school, Regina Coeli Academy in Wyndmoor, Pa., was founded in 2003 by a lay-led board.[22] The desire of the founders, Barbara and Paul Henkels, was to “provide a rigorous Catholic education firmly rooted in the Magisterium of the Catholic Church.”[23] Three of the four schools in the network are NAPCIS member schools, and all four are recognized as Catholic by the Archbishop of Philadelphia.

We are also seeing the rise of “flipped” hybrid schools, in which students study at home two or three days a week and attend a brick-and-mortar school the other two or three days.

Interestingly, the growth of independent Catholic education seems to have coincided with a similar growth in other Christian classical schools. In the 1970s, there were three separate efforts by entrepreneurial individuals, operating in three different parts of the country, who decided to join forces to act as a hub for others interested in starting classical Christian schools. (Table 2) The Association of Classical and Christian Schools (ACCS) incorporated in 1994, one year before NAPCIS, to address the “overwhelming demand for training and information on classical Christian education.”[24]

 

Table 2
ACCS Member Schools in Operation[25]
Years 1970–1980 1990–1995 1996–2000 2001–2005 2006-2011 2012-2023
Number of Schools 3 <50 110 <175 229 502
Note. Data obtained from https://classicalchristian.org/out-history/

 

 

Leadership of NAPCIS

Throughout the 1980s, the seeds of the independent school movement were planted in the heart and mind of Eileen Cubanski, the future director of the National Association of Private Catholic* and Independent Schools (NAPCIS).[26] She recounts a time[27] when, as a first-grade teacher in a Sacramento parish school, she attended a faculty in-service and was shown a film by the dissident Fr. Richard McBrien, chairman of the University of Notre Dame’s department of theology. McBrien advocated women’s ordination, the repeal of priestly celibacy, the use of birth control, and defiance of the papal doctrine of infallibility.[28] After 15 years of teaching and eight in school administration, including founding St. Maria Goretti Academy in Loomis, Calif., Cubanski clearly saw that something needed to be done to provide families a more faithful education.

NAPCIS started to take shape when Cubanski met and joined forces with Fran Crotty, who had been working for several years helping lay Catholics figure out how to start small independent schools. He sought out, encouraged, and cajoled prospective school entrepreneurs, while laying bare the hard facts of running a private, independent school operating on the edges of the diocesan system.

Crotty provided the crystalizing vision behind NAPCIS and the independent Catholic education movement. In 1995, he stepped forward to direct the formation of NAPCIS with four founding schools: Kolbe Academy in Napa, Calif. (opened in 1980), Manresa Academy in Reno, Nevada (opened in 1993 and closed in 1995), St. Maria Goretti Academy in Sacramento, Calif. (opened in 1993 and closed in 2007), and Thomas Aquinas School in Tahoe City, Calif. (opened in 1994 and closed in 2005). The original board members included John Brennan, Carol Coyne, Fran and Margie Crotty, Eileen Cubanski, Chuck and Margaret Day, Michele Jenkins, Jerry and Diane Muth, Chris Potter, Doug and Janet Sherman, and Robert Spencer. It was Diane Muth who coined the association’s unofficial motto, “It’s all about the salvation of souls and academic excellence.”[29]

Within its first five years, NAPCIS membership went from 4 schools to 32 schools (2000); adding a net 14 more schools in the next five years (2005); 16 in the following five years (2010); and 20 in the next 13 years (2023), for a total of 82 current and active member schools (two schools merged).

Member schools are not required to use a particular educational methodology or curriculum, as long as they adhere to the teachings of the Catholic faith and work in obedience to the Pope and the Magisterium. They also must advocate excellence and professionalism in the curriculum and the faculty they employ, maintain stability and a degree of permanence for the institution, have designated responsibilities for their administrative staff, demonstrate fiscal responsibility and accountability, fulfill the school’s philosophy, and have a clear mission statement, goals, and objectives.[30] The trustees, chief administrator, and essential professional staff must be practicing Catholics—which is often one of the biggest challenges for these schools, finding practicing Catholic teachers.

Independent schools can show the seriousness of their educational efforts through membership in NAPCIS, which provides a sense of credibility and legitimacy of their efforts to parents and the community. A third-party agency focused on Catholic identity is available to the school administration and provides support and networking. NAPCIS understands their special needs as small, autonomous schools faithful to Catholic teaching and embracing traditional methodologies.

Members also have the opportunity for accreditation through NAPCIS, designed to be efficient and affordable for small schools. NAPCIS accreditation reviews the school’s mission, objectives, and educational philosophy; standards for moral behavior of faculty, staff, and students; institutional policies and governance; facilities; and financial management to help its employees fulfill its educational mission. The first criterion is how the Catholic faith is taught and lived throughout the school.[31] Schools must adhere to the Catholic faith as “set forth in the Catechism of the Catholic Church and other documents of the Magisterium,”[32] and “the administrator, faculty, and staff [must] demonstrate the practice of the Catholic Faith, especially in the action of prayer, which initiates and directs all activities in the school.”[33]

All board members, administrators, faculty, and staff must make an oath of fidelity to the

Magisterium and a profession of faith to the Catholic Church.  Also, “religious services and activities are directed toward ensuring the adherence and participation of the students, including non-Catholic students, [as] an effort supported fully by their parents.”[34]

 

Recent Motivations for Independent Schools

Long after the turmoil of the post-Vatican II years, there has been a steady growth of independent schools providing faithful Catholic formation. While the reasons seem as varied as the laypeople founding these schools, there are some common motivators.

Following the 2009 release of the Common Core State Standards, there quickly followed a revised SAT college entrance exam that conformed to the Common Core. This deeply concerned Catholic school leaders, as they did not want their students testing at a disadvantage below public school students. The Common Core appeared to be the future of public education at that time, and Catholic schools did not want to be “left behind.” As a result, more than 100 of the 175 diocesan school systems implemented the Common Core Standards to some degree. With the standards came new aligned textbooks, and some parents began to wonder what the true difference between a public and Catholic school education was when so many of the instructional components in both types of schools were identical. Parents also struggled with the Common Core math approach. Many had concerns about the Common Core leading to a centralized and political federal takeover of education.

More recently, we have seen the shockingly rapid ascendency of radical gender ideology and critical race theory. These ideologies have infected those Catholic schools that lack a firm grounding in Catholic teaching, clear internal policies, and teachers and administrators with a thorough understanding of Christian anthropology and human dignity. Parents are concerned about transgender ideology influencing their children and racial division and resentment fostered by current ideology.

The Covid-19 pandemic also seems to have spurred interest in independent schooling. School shutdowns led to student mental health issues including depression, anxiety, and attention deficit disorder, exacerbated by unmonitored and limitless access to technology and social media. Many Catholic schools were quick to return to in-person learning, but others remained closed for many months and provided only online classes. Even at schools that opened, there was substantial disagreement about masking policies. All this encouraged parents to seek schools that are independent of diocesan operational policies while fully adhering to Church authority on faith and morals.

Finally, the “classical” movement has attracted many Catholic parents to independent schools with a traditional, Catholic liberal arts focus. “Classical” has become a way of

signaling that a school is faithful to Catholic teaching, conservative, patriotic, and rejects the current culture push. These schools mitigate the impact of the common culture by reducing screen time in school, persuading parents to not give their children early access to cell phones, and reducing or eliminating student use of social media.[35] Instead, they focus on good literature and the sources of Western culture.

 

Lack of Church Approval

Many independent schools, although fully devoted to Catholic teaching and often even exemplary models for the reform of weaker Catholic schools, are not formally recognized as Catholic by their local bishop. This can be a cause of confusion and disappointment among Catholic families and educators, but clearly it is important that bishops uphold their authority to determine what may be labeled “Catholic.”

Some bishops seem uncomfortable with the notion of an approved Catholic school that is exempt from direct ecclesial control, or the bishop may be concerned about competition with parochial and diocesan schools. Parents, on the other hand, may be unwilling to submit to diocesan policies and practices that are outside the bounds of faith and morals, such as demanding certain masking policies under Covid-19. There may even be disagreements that fall within the realm of prudential judgment affecting Catholic identity, such as a diocese requiring catechetical textbooks that do not conform to a school’s classical methodology or to a school’s preferred yet faithful textbooks. Wary of conflict, some independent school leaders have simply declined to ask a bishop’s approval for official Catholic standing.

When efforts to work within a diocesan system are stalled, blocked, or deemed unfeasible, families move to the legal and civil option of incorporation and start a school using a small-business model.  Many schools choose to operate under this civil and legal umbrella as a religious, educational, non-profit corporation. The Catholic Church cannot prohibit such schools from operating and delivering instruction in the Catholic faith, but bishops can withhold the “Catholic” label. Schools may instead use descriptive language such as, “an independent school in the Catholic tradition” or a “private school teaching the Catholic faith.”

Some schools have a de facto or “handshake” relationship with their diocese. Here, the school retains its autonomy as a private association not “acting” in the name of the Church but in their own name or the name of individual members.[36] Canon Law allows for this autonomy: it “is a concrete normative development of a fundamental right, the right of association (c. 215), intimately related to the right to promote and carry out apostolic action” (c. 216).[37] The competent ecclesiastical authority can still intervene, if teachings are “contrary to doctrine, discipline, or integrity of morals.”[38]

Other independent schools seek a recognized status, retaining their position as private associations (under Canon 299 Sec. 1) and their operational autonomy, but benefitting from a closer relationship with the Church. Recognized status means the school may be listed in the Official Catholic Directory, a national directory of all Catholic religious, charitable, and educational entities in the Unites States,[39] as a “Catholic, private school.” This is beneficial when the school seeks funding from foundations and donors requiring this recognition. Still, the school operates financially independent from the diocese. Whereas diocesan schools and parish schools might receive a subsidy from both the local parish and the diocese, independent schools do not. Recognition does not take away the legal responsibility of the independent board for the school’s oversight.

Occasionally, a diocese might require a legal indemnity agreement.[40] This statement of indemnity clarifies the financial and legal arrangement between the independent school and the diocese, allowing both institutions autonomy and independence in operations. These must be reviewed carefully by the school’s lawyer for ambiguities or undesired entanglement.

A lack of diocesan recognition as “Catholic” necessitates continuous explanation as to the school’s relationship to the diocese and the universal Church. A way of explaining this, according to Cubanski, is that the school chooses not to be “independent from” the diocese but “independent to” choose its own curriculum, methodology, and educational philosophy while remaining faithful. The reasons are often practical and not a disagreement with the bishop over Catholic matters. For instance, as school may choose not to adhere to a diocese’s emphasis on STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) courses, a diocesan requirement that all recognized schools provide computers to students, mandatory sex education, state certification for teachers and principals, or immunization requirements for children. In a diocese that participates in state-funded school choice programs, a school may be concerned about legal requirements or the potential for state interference in a school’s Catholic education.

Forty-three (43) or 54 percent of the 82 current NAPCIS schools are recognized as Catholic by their bishops. Although formally Catholic, they remain independent. They can operate efficiently and “lean,” making changes and implementing decisions in an expedited manner according to their particular vision and philosophy, as opposed to working in a larger bureaucratic system where key decisions are made in a central diocesan office.

 

Benefits of Independent Schools

When a family finds an independent school with an educational philosophy, pedagogy, and curriculum that aligns with their own, a strong partnership results. There is generally harmony around the dinner table regarding school topics, activities, and friendships. Families can count on the school to teach and reinforce the family’s values and beliefs, because they come from the same source, the Church and the Creed. It’s when the family’s desires and the school’s mission, vision, and philosophy are misaligned, that the student is caught up in controversy and sides begin to form. Thus, the importance of choosing a school that aligns with family values and beliefs about the purpose, means, and outcomes of education cannot be overemphasized.

Faithful independent schools model a definite Catholic identity and worldview in not only their curriculum and programming but also in how they operate. Sacraments and service are evident along with spiritual programs to deepen the student’s (and family’s) faith life. Catholic programs that emphasize formation in virtue and morality develop good citizens and build up the Church and broader community.

Another benefit of these lay-led schools is that many (47 percent of NAPCIS schools) are configured to support students from PreK/Kindergarten through 12th grade, allowing children from the same family to attend the same school. This structure provides stability for students remaining in the same school throughout their elementary and secondary years.

There is also a public financial benefit to these schools. They typically do not get parish financial support, yet they help satisfy the Church’s obligation to provide for the Catholic education of her children, saving resources that might otherwise be devoted to parochial and diocesan schools. They also save the state and local government resources that might be required for public schooling.

 

Challenges of Independent Schools

Operating at the edge of the diocesan school system can cause suspicion of independent schools. “Why aren’t they diocesan?” “What does the bishop think of this school?” “They must be some kind of charismatic, schismatic, or unhinged cult.” They might be viewed by clergy as financial threats, renegades, inconsequential, unprofessional, a drain on diocesan school enrollment, or as reverts to a pre-Vatican II era. It can be a significant challenge for an independent school to dispel such misconceptions and gain legitimacy and a strong reputation.

Another common challenge is not being able to seek accreditation through the local Catholic accrediting agency, if a school is not officially Catholic. Having accreditation can assist in accessing government funding, grants, and scholarships. Similarly, not being listed in the Official Catholic Directory can preclude a school from qualifying for funding or obtaining services, such as insurance, that are restricted to Catholic entities.

Access to the sacraments, an essential element for a strong Catholic education, can also pose a problem for schools operating outside of the diocesan network. Finding a priest to say regular Mass for students can be a significant challenge. Diocesan priests require permission from their bishop to celebrate Mass at these schools, so unless a priest from a religious order is available, the school must work with the local bishop, who may prioritize his own schools.

Another challenge is interaction with the local diocesan superintendent. Preserving a proper balance between engagement with the diocese and appropriate autonomy can be difficult.

 

Conclusion

The stories of independent schools and their founding by Catholic laypeople are remarkably similar: faithful Catholic parents and others with an American entrepreneurial spirit of “just doing it myself” find a need and fill it. Sometimes the need is highlighted by some new threat to Catholic identity in existing Catholic schools. Sometimes the need, as we are likely to see expand in the growing world of school choice, is to serve a new population or region.

The founders of independent schools seem compelled with a “crazy idea” they say God placed in their hearts; an idea they just cannot shake. With an ardent desire to fulfill this call, and often buoyed by prayer more than financial support, these intrepid school founders set out and find kindred spirits. By their efforts they take up the responsibility of Catholic parents to lead their children to Christ and help build the kingdom of God.

 

APPENDIX A

Profile: Holy Angels Academy

For 50 years, Holy Angels Academy in Louisville, Ky., has remained dedicated to providing an authentic Catholic education to children and families. Inspired and initially led by Sr. Mary Elise Groves O.P., a small group of lay faithful quietly worked to open Holy Angels Academy in 1973 to “preserve Catholic education in accord with the Magisterium of the Church” as the effects of Vatican II, the sexual revolution of the 1960s, and the Land O’Lakes Statement held the public’s attention.

Facing numerous financial challenges throughout its 50 years, Holy Angels Academy has persevered despite moving several times before settling at its current location. The school currently has a student body of 101 students in grades PreK-12 and uses a classical approach, which it adopted even before it gained its current popularity.

The Holy Angels school motto, “Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam” (For the Greater Glory of God), is evident in its religious practices. Students attend daily Mass and recite the Morning Offering, with prayers to St. Michael, their guardian angels, and special prayers for parents and the evangelization of youth rounding out a typical day.

Recognizing the advantage of being small and the disadvantage of not having a parish for financial support, Headmaster Michael Swearingen relates that it was all thanks to those “faithful Catholics so willing to sacrifice for the good of the students” that Holy Angels Academy continues today. With a keen view toward helping its students achieve their full potential on earth and their ultimate destiny of eternal happiness in Heaven, Holy Angels Academy strives, according to Swearingen, to “love students as parents do, willing what is best for them each day.”

The Holy Angels mission statement is, “To educate and form our youth by the means of Catholic schooling in the classical tradition, so as to prepare them to lead holy and honorable lives for God and country and thus attain the end for which they were created, that is, eternal happiness with God.”

The school website boasts endorsements from Archbishop Joseph Kurtz of Louisville and Bishop Joseph Strickland of Tyler, Tex., stating respectively, “Holy Angels Academy is a wonderful example, an example to be imitated” and “Holy Angels is about… passing on Light and Leaven, Truth and Joy to the beautiful children and young people that are here.”

When asked about his hopes for Holy Angels Academy, Swearingen humbly replied, “to serve students, by the grace of God and under the intercession of our Blessed Mother, for another 50 years.”

 

Profile: Our Lady of Victory School

Founded in 1973 by Catholic families, Our Lady of Victory School opened in rented classrooms in Panorama City, Calif., for a small group of 30 students. Upset with changes in their children’s Catholic school, these families decided to start one on their own. They elected William Bowman as the school’s first director; he continued with the school and its subsequent homeschool program until 1991, when Charlotte Jones, an original founding member, took over operations.

Like most independent schools, Our Lady of Victory faced financial concerns and space challenges early on. Three retired Catholic school teachers were the first teachers at the school, but with its growing popularity, the student population climbed and required moves to larger accommodations twice in the first three years. As the student population increased, so did expenses.

After 12 years, in 1977, Bowman and other school leaders made the difficult decision to convert to a homeschool provider program—which at the time was a unique idea. Parents had difficulty finding good Catholic curricula and materials, so Bowman began writing a curriculum and designing courses of study for students. It may have been the first Catholic homeschool curriculum written! The program was a hit, and enrollment increased steadily from 100 to 1,000 students over the next 25 years.

After Charlotte Jones took over the homeschooling program, the group started Lepanto Press. And in 2007, Our Lady of Victory became one of two Catholic homeschool programs accredited by NAPCIS. Our Lady of Victory sought NAPCIS membership, because it “confirms the character and quality of the school and gives witness and support to its philosophy of education. It provides assurance that a school has met the high standards of spiritual and academic excellence which characterize NAPCIS schools.”[41]

 

Profile: Kolbe Academy and Trinity Prep

Looking for an alternative to the progressive school system and its standardized approach, three Catholic families joined together in 1980 to create a formalized day school called Kolbe Academy. Four of the founders of Kolbe later went on to found NAPCIS in 1995 to share their experience and knowledge with others who desired a deeply rich Catholic educational experience for their children.

Fielding phone calls from across the country, these founders just couldn’t keep up with the requests for start-up assistance from homeschool families, so they created a start-up manual, adding all their advice on operating a school and recommendations for curriculum, and started Kolbe Academy Homeschool in 1987.

In 1995, a significant group of families left Kolbe to start Trinity Grammar and Prep. Fortunately, Kolbe was able to subsist on the income from the homeschooling operations until 2008 when Kolbe Academy and Trinity Grammar and Prep reunited. The new school, Kolbe-Trinity moved to the Trinity campus, and Kolbe’s homeschooling operations took over the Academy’s site and added warehouse and office spaces to accommodate its online school operations in 2013.

Both institutions cite prayer and sacrament as signs of strong Catholic identity, with the Catholic faith woven into all academic subjects. Kolbe-Trinity follows a classical model like the original Kolbe Academy. It was recognized by the local bishop in 2014 as a Catholic school, and it takes advantage of the teacher training offered by the diocese. Kolbe-Trinity sees the advantages of being independent as having the ability “to remain faithful to their mission, less bureaucracy, and full control of [their] non-religious curriculum,” states President John Bertolini.

 

About the Author

Denise L. Donohue, Ed.D., is vice president for educator resources and evaluation at The Cardinal Newman Society. She earned her doctorate in educational leadership, with a concentration in curriculum development and a dissertation on the establishment of private, independent Catholic schools. She has served as interim chair and visiting assistant professor of a college education department, founder and principal of a Catholic high school, founder and religion coordinator for a Catholic grade school, and assistant head of a Catholic K-12 school.

 

[1]  The Cardinal Newman Society respects and often defends the rightful authority of Catholic bishops over Catholic doctrine and practice, including the sole authority to declare a non-pontifical institution within their diocese “Catholic.” No school or college can use the label “Catholic” without the approval of the bishop. Canon law, which defines this authority, also acknowledges the existence of schools which may in fact be Catholic in their fidelity and teaching but not approved to formally identify as a “Catholic school.” In this paper, we are concerned with the growing development of schools that are devoted to the authentic mission of Catholic education and conform to the authority of the Church in all matters of faith yet retain legal and operational independence from any ecclesial body—a phenomenon which seems to faithfully carry out the vocation of parenthood and the Second Vatican Council’s call for lay evangelization. We are careful to identify this phenomenon as “independent Catholic education” and not “independent Catholic schools,” as many of these schools may not yet have the formal designation of “Catholic” from their local bishop for reasons other than devotion to the authentic mission of Catholic education.

[2]  Harold Buetow, The Catholic School: Its Roots, Identity, and Future. (New York: Crossroads Publishing Company, 1988) 23-26.

[3]  First Provincial Council of Baltimore in 1829 (Guilday,1932)

[4]  Third Plenary Council of Baltimore 1884 (Sacred Congregations of Propaganda de Fide, 1875)

[5]  Code of Canon Law 1918 (Canon Law Society, 1983) p.7.

[6]  Pope Paul VI, Sacrosanctum Concilium, 1963, 1.

[7]  St. John Paul II, Christifideles Laici, 1988, 16.

[8]  CARA, “Historical Estimates for the Annual Salary-Equivalent of Religious Sisters, in Teaching Positions, in the United States” in 1964. (2018) at http://nineteensixty-four.blogspot.com/2018/10/the-contribution-of-religious-sisters.html.

[9]  http://nineteensixty-four.blogspot.com/2018/10/the-contribution-of-religious-sisters.html

[10] Annie Smith & Sarah Huber, United States Catholic Elementary and Secondary Schools 2022-2023, (Arlington, Va.: NCEA, 2023) 3.

[11] Baker & Riordan, 1998, par. 2   The ‘eliting’ of the common American Catholic school and the national education crisis. Phi Delta Kappan, 80(1).

[12] Kuratko, D. 2007. Entrepreneurial leadership in the 21st century. Journal of Leadership and Organizational Studies, 13(4), 1-11.

[13] NAPCIS includes an asterisk in its name after “Catholic” to acknowledge that some but not all of its schools are formally recognized as Catholic by their local bishops. The following appears on its website: “The word ‘Catholic’ appears in the name of the organization only to reflect the fact that some member schools have received the consent of the competent ecclesiastical authority in their diocese to bear the title Catholic School in accordance with c.803.3. NAPCIS claims no authority to determine if a member school may bear this title, nor does membership in NAPCIS permit a school to call itself Catholic.”

[14] Personal conversations May 5, 2023. See also https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.32133814?seq=1

[15] https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.32133814?seq=1

[16] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_A._Marra

[17] https://www.olvs.org/about/our-story/

[18] https://www.olvs.org/about/our-story/

[19] Statistics provided from Eileen Cubanski, May 8, 2023.

[20]  https://chestertonschoolsnetwork.org/about#:~:text=The%20Origins%20of%20the%20Chesterton,school%20options%20available%20to%20them.

[21] Email conversation with Executive Director, Emily DeRostein. May 26, 2023.

[22]  https://reginaacademies.org/our-schools/

[23]  https://reginaacademies.org/our-schools/

[24]  https://classicalchristian.org/our-history/

[25]  The Association of Classical and Christian Schools has a similar start-up story with three different schools opening as lay-run efforts between 1978 and 1983 in different parts of the country. Each founder expressed it as God’s inspiration calling them to open a Christian school run in the classical tradition. https://classicalchristian.org/our-history/

[26]  See footnote 13 regarding the asterisk in the name.

[27]  Robert Spencer, “Desert Blossoms” Sursum Corda (Spring, 1996) 50

[28]  https://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/29/us/rev-richard-mcbrien-catholic-firebrand-dies-at-78.html

[29]  Personal conversation, 2007. Eileen Cubanski. “NAPCIS History”, n.d.

[30] https://napcis.org/become-a-member/membership-overview/

[31]  https://napcis.org/accreditation/accreditation-standards-of-excellence/

[32]  https://napcis.org/accreditation/accreditation-standards-of-excellence/

[33]  https://napcis.org/accreditation/accreditation-standards-of-excellence/

[34]  https://napcis.org/accreditation/accreditation-standards-of-excellence/

[35]  St. Faustina Academy in Irving, TX (independent school) policy for social media: Social Media: No Social Media (particularly Instagram, Snapchat and Tik Tok) allowed if you are a current student beginning with the school year of 23/24. You are responsible for all postings.  No inappropriate language or pictures should ever be posted on any media outlet. If a student creates a false account, posts, sends or shares inappropriate material on social media outlets, the student may lose their place at Faustina permanently.

[36]  Brian Austin, “Canon 806: Regulation of Catholic Schools and Their Just Autonomy,” Roman Replies and CLSA Advisory Opinions (2021). Retrievable at https://www.academia.edu/59014560/Canon_806_Regulation_of_Catholic_Schools_and_Their_Just_Autonomy. 154-155

[37]  Austin, 2021, 154-155.

[38]  Austin, 2021, 154-155.

[39]  See Official Catholic Directory, Frequently Asked Questions: “What is the USCCB Group Ruling and how does it relate to The Official Catholic Directory” at https://www.officialcatholicdirectory.com/OCD/faq. (Retrieved May 21, 2023)

[40]  See Diocese of Arlington (1997) and Mariamante Academy Indemnity Document in Appendix.

[41]  https://www.olvs.org/about/accreditation/

Celebrating Every Kind of Catholic Education

Classical schools… Great Books colleges… homeschool programs… trade schools…

What are we to make of the wide and growing variety of Catholic education options?

As Catholic education keeps getting better, The Cardinal Newman Society (CNS) believes that we need to celebrate the very best, regardless of form. Exemplary educators deserve to know how much they are appreciated by Catholic families, and others need models to follow. Catholic families should know where to get the best formation. These are all reasons for The Newman Guide.

But is it all “Catholic education”?

Many in the Church today think of Catholic education as the equivalent of parochial schools. And to be sure, parochial schools have held pride of place in the United States for many decades and continue to do so. CNS works extensively to aid parish and diocesan schools and their leaders, whose commitment to fidelity and strong formation is crucial to evangelization in America.

But Catholic education is not a method or institution; it can be served well or poorly by various methods and institutions, just like healthcare or assistance to the poor. Catholic education is an art, a vocation, and a ministry. It cultivates the intellect by the aid of grace and the truth of Catholic doctrine, within an integral human formation that is ordered to full communion with God.

While its mission should remain constant, Catholic education’s response to various family circumstances and student needs has required several methods and school structures including homeschooling, parish schools, monastery schools, boarding schools, trade schools, residential colleges, research universities, online programs, and variations on these. Catholic education simply cannot be limited to any particular method or institution, without unjustly excluding portions of Catholics who were promised formation in the faith as a right of Baptism.

Catholic education also cannot be limited to any age group, as if the opportunity to know God and His creation expires at a certain age. Of course, formation of the mind and character is especially important for young people.

That’s why we are so excited to expand our Newman Guide recognition to include a wide variety of elementary and secondary schools, colleges, and graduate programs—and soon homeschool programs as well. And it’s why CNS eagerly assists and promotes all kinds of educational programs that faithfully serve the Church’s mission of evangelization.

Independent schools

One new and growing segment of Catholic education is independent schools, not affiliated with any parish, religious order, or other Church entity. And the longest-operating independent school is Holy Angels Academy in Louisville, Ky., faithful to Catholic teaching and authority and devoted to the true mission of Catholic education.

In June, marking Holy Angels’ 50th anniversary and more than five decades of independent Catholic schools, CNS President Patrick Reilly and Vice President of Educator Resources and Evaluation, Dr. Denise Donohue, were among the featured speakers at a large celebration in Louisville. Reilly presented a commemorative plaque to Academy headmaster Michael Swearingen and longtime leader Joe Norton announcing to more than 600 educators, parents, and alumni the Academy’s recognition in The Newman Guide. Participants included representatives of other independent schools nationwide and the Institute for Catholic Liberal Education.

Donohue had a dual role at the event, representing both CNS and the National Association of Private Catholic and Independent Schools (NAPCIS). Donohue and our senior fellow Dr. Dan Guernsey are both long-time board members of NAPCIS and founding leaders of independent Catholic schools in Texas and Florida, respectively. Donohue addressed the Holy Angels celebration with a message from Dr. Eileen Cubanski, whose leadership of NAPCIS has been instrumental to the growing independent school movement.

Donohue also researched and authored a special report on the importance and history of independent Catholic schools, which is available on the Society’s website. The report is being shared with dioceses, schools, and Catholic media to promote better understanding of their unique contributions to Catholic education.

Historically, Catholic schools have been affiliated with religious orders, parishes, dioceses, and other Church entities. But independent schools arose in the late 1960s and 1970s, when many religious orders abandoned parochial schools and the schools lost focus of their mission. Since then, the Church has embraced lay vocations in teaching and administration, and today more than 97 percent of parochial school employees are laypeople.

Therefore, parents should be applauded for developing new schools when needed to ensure the sound formation of their children in fidelity to the Church. According to NAPCIS, the first known independent school was Holy Innocents Academy in Kinnelon, N.J., founded in 1967 by Dr. William Marra. That school eventually closed, and thus Holy Angels Academy in Louisville—founded in 1973 by a Dominican nun in partnership with Catholic families—is the longest-operating independent school today.

The Academy has a student body of 101 students in grades PreK-12 and used a classical approach even before it gained its current popularity. The school’s motto, ad majorem Dei gloriam (for the greater glory of God), is evident in its religious practices. Students attend daily Mass and recite the Morning Offering, with prayers to St. Michael and their guardian angels.

Today, according to Donohue’s report, there are 82 member schools in NAPCIS, including 20 that joined since 2010. About an equal number of independent schools have been launched but closed their doors due to financial struggles. Starting and maintaining a school without parish support can be difficult, but it’s all the more reason CNS promotes these schools and helps them develop strong policies and protect against ideological threats.