Catholic School Matters
January 21, 2018
Synthesizing Church Documents on Education
Monday's (Jan 22nd) podcast marks the conclusion of the podcast series on Church documents. Kristin Melley of Boston College joins me to discuss Educating Together in Catholic Schools, the Vatican Congregation of Catholic Education’s 2007 statement on Catholic education. This has been a fruitful learning journey for me and I have provided links to the documents, the podcasts, study questions, blogs about the documents, and additional resources (click here) which will remain to provide school leaders with a chance to learn from the documents in a PLC format for ongoing professional formation.
I challenged myself to synthesize the project and decided that what would make the most sense is to take the seven Vatican documents and pull out common themes. This project began with Vatican II’s Gravissimum Educationis (Declaration on Christian Education). Vatican II provided the Church with a new mission statement and announced that Catholic institutions (like schools) were no longer bound by the fortress paradigm present in so many Catholic “ghettoes”—which means Catholics were immersed in Catholic institutions from womb to tomb, including neighborhoods, hospitals, schools, churches, restaurants, funeral parlors, etc. The new paradigm was community and schools were challenged to become faith communities first in order to announce the “way of salvation of all men” (paragraph 3).
Schools, then, were given a new mission to evangelize and not simply serve its own. To whom? And how? The Declaration serves to answer both which serve as themes running through the remaining documents. The call to serve all children of God is found in section 2. The explicit answer to how to serve is found in section 8: “May teachers by their life as much as by their instruction bear witness to Christ.” The call to evangelize the world and the means of forming teachers is a consistent theme.
In the next Vatican document, The Catholic School (1977), the bishops state the mission of Catholic schools clearly: “Evangelization is, therefore, the mission of the Church; that is she must proclaim the good news of salvation to all, generate new creatures in Christ through Baptism, and train them to live knowingly as children of God” (7). Later in the document, the bishops warn against a school who only admits students who can afford it and challenges all schools to offer “educational service to the poor or those who are deprived of family help and affection or those who are far from the faith” (58). This is a clear call to evangelization and comes at a time when schools were closing and were becoming dependent on tuition.
The bishops clearly state the importance of forming an intentional faith community formed through relationships (32) and point to the importance of teachers. “The achievement of…the Catholic school depends not so much on subject matter or methodology as on the people who work there” (43). What we see here is a discussion that it’s not simply enough to hire good people—we need to develop a process of continual formation for mission.
Click here to read the rest of the blog post
Want to keep up with the conversations surrounding Catholic education? Set up your own Google Alert, subscribe to this newsletter by clicking "follow," subscribe to the Catholic Schools Daily, or subscribe to the Catholic School Matters podcast.
Dr. Tim Uhl
What I'm Up To
The Church Documents podcast series continues this week with the final (thirteenth) podcast in the series. Educating Together in Catholic Schools, the Vatican document from 2007, is the last Vatican document explicitly written for Catholic schools. I am joined on the podcast by Kristin Melley, the Roche Center's (Boston College) Director of Professional Development.
Last week, the podcast conversation covered the USCCB document from 2005: Renewing Our Commitment to Catholic Elementary and Secondary Schools in the Third Millennium. Bishop Robert Lynch, the retired bishop of St. Petersburg and former general secretary of the USCCB, was the guest. Dr. Terri Greene Henning of St. Anselm College provided a great guest blog last week.
If you are a Catholic school principal, can you take this survey?
Here is the link to the podcast on iTunes. Here are videos showing you how to download and subscribe to a podcast on iTunes and how to download and subscribe a podcast on Android.
Here's what I'm working on this week:
- Sunday: Travel to Riverside, CA for WCEA accreditation visit of Notre Dame High School (Day 1).
- Monday: Day 2 of NDHS visit (Riverside); Podcast Episode 93: Educating Together in Catholic Schools with Kristin Melley
- Tuesday: Day 3 of NDHS visit (Riverside); Blog: Educating Together
- Wednesday: Day 4 of NDHS visit (Riverside) & return to Helena; Wed book blog: Wait, What? (2017) by James E. Ryan
- Thursday: Office (Helena)
- Friday: Office (Helena)
Miles this week: 133 driving miles; 2,278 air miles
Miles travelled in 2017-18: 16,164 road miles; 20,957 air miles
Catholic School Matters
Email: superintendent@montanacc.org
Website: www.montanacatholicschools.org
Location: PO Box 1708 Helena MT 59601
Phone: (406) 442-5761
Facebook: facebook.com/montanacatholicschools
Twitter: @mtcathschools
American Catholic News
Catholic School News
- Arlington (VA) Catholic high school plans to build new campus
- Rural Pennsylvania Catholic school to close
- Odessa Catholic high school opening delayed until fall 2019
- Brooklyn Catholic school to close
- Review of Staten Island's Catholic school closures since 2011; annoucement of Staten Island Catholic school closure
- Parents rallying to save Chicago Catholic school and another Catholic school, too but the Archdiocese of Chicago announces that 5 schools will close
- After announcement that St. Helen's (Napa) will close, parents are rallying to save it
Leadership Links
Teaching & Learning
Miscellany
NCEA News
Events
- FACTS Day of Giving January 30th
- VIsions for Excellence Soul of Youth Sports Conference Feb 21-23
- Convention, April 3-5 Cincinnati
Webinars
- Jan 25: Missionary Discipleship Webinar Series: The Value and Quality of All Life
- Jan 29: Introduction to Singing and Conducting Gregorian Chant
- Jan 30: The Power of Simple Video
- Jan 31: Welcome to the Modern Learning Revolution
- Feb 1: Digital Bullying: What Parents and Teachers Need to Know
- FEb 6: Unlocking Student Talent
What I'm Reading
- Everyone Leads: How to Revitalize the Catholic Church (2017) by Chris Lowney
- Leadership on the Line Ronald Heifetz & Marty LInsky (1989) by Carl E. Larson & Frank M. J. LaFasto
- Building a Bridge (2017) by James Martin, SJ.
- Creativity, Inc. (2014) by Ed Catmull
- America's Original Sin (2017) by Rev. Jim Wallis
Click this link for a full list of my professional reading along with links to Wed Book Blogs
For Montana Administrators & Teachers
- Bishop Warfel's schedule of Masses for Catholic Schools Week
- Here is the slideshow from the Jan 9th Admin Virtual meetings. Next meeting is February 6th
- Stillwater Christian has extended an invitation to their Feb 26th Googlefest. Here is the link to the registration form
Past Issues of Catholic School Matters
January 14, 2018 "What's Brewing in Milwaukee"
January 7, 2018 The 411 on 529's
December 17, 2017 Best of the Fall Issue
December 10, 2017 Serving Hispanic Catholics
December 3, 2017 Building Culture the ND Way
November 12, 2017 "How Are We Building Relationships?"
November 5, 2017 "Journal of Catholic Education"
October 29, 2017 Church Documents
October 22, 2017 Momentum Special Issue
October 15, 2017 "Anthem Protests"
October 8, 2017 Classroom Managment Special Issue
October 1, 2017 "The Un-Themed Issue"
September 24, 2017 "Joy of the Gospel"
September 17, 2017 "ESSA"
September 10, 2017 "On Leadership"
August 27, 2017 "American Catholic News"
August 20, 2017 Back to School Issue