wizards8507
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Somehow it's the worst of both words. The Catholic preschool program we looked at for my daughter was $3,100 for three half-days per week. The non-religious private preschool we went with was $2,900 for the same schedule and it's orders of magnitude superior. The Catholic program was one grouchy old lady, apparently without a single nurturing bone in her body over a class of 20. The private school is three part-time women (two in the classroom at all times), each with a graduate degree in early childhood education and the most amazing demeanor you could ever want in someone who would be helping shape the character of your four-year-old.When you try to staff Catholic schools with men or women looking to earn a full salary + benefits, tuition goes WAY up. Lots of Catholics can't afford that, and many more don't know why they'd pay for something like that if the Catholicism they serve up is lukewarm.
If Catholic schools need to jack up tuition to compete on quality, fine. Charge what it costs and then subsidize lower income folks out of the collection baskets. But from what I see locally, they're already charging private school prices for an inferior product.
Answering the inevitable counter-point to my statement above, the implication here is that the urban parishes don't have the money to subsidize tuition. Fine then, use diocesan money.I don't think this was a conspiracy, I think they were literally following the mass of Catholics out to the suburbs. Without nuns or priests, Catholic schools can't afford to exist in the poor hoods.
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