Catholic schools, which have seen their enrollments decline, can help themselves financially and academically by borrowing strategies from an emergent competitor—charter schools—a new report argues.
Catholic high school Spanish teacher Jennifer Vintigni speaks to students learning virtually from home and students working on-site during a class at Padua Academy in Wilmington, Del., March 30, 2021.
In this Feb. 28, 2013 file photo Italian President Giorgio Napolitano arrives for a meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany. Giorgio Napolitano, the first ...
Of all the stories she knows about the saints -- and Maripat Donovan knows plenty -- she's especially partial to the one about St. Lawrence. Challenged by his persecutors to deny his faith, Lawrence ...
One of the big surprises from this year’s census was the 10 per cent drop in number of people identifying as Roman Catholic. A surprise because it means 69 per cent of the population still identifies ...
No one at the Catholic high school that fired Carla Hale in March claimed that she was anything less than a terrific physical education teacher and coach, devoted to the kids and adored by many of ...
In 2017 I was invited on a sketching tour of Guatemala with a small group of Americans to observe some of the educational services operated by Catholic Relief Services, or CRS. In August of the ...
Within the 242 pages of Diane Ravitch’s lightning rod of a book, “The Death and Life of the Great American School System,” there appear exactly three references to Catholic education. Which makes ...
The college admissions fraud that was revealed last week brings up an important topic for Catholic families: what should be our priorities in the college search? Actresses, wealthy business owners and ...