This four-day gathering brings together educators, scholars, and Catholic thought leaders to explore the integral formation of students and teachers in mind, body, and spirit. Each day will focus on a distinct theme, beginning with Sound Bodies & Keen Minds, addressing topics like memory, mimesis, and freedom from technological tyranny. Pure Hearts & Kindled Spirits follows, emphasizing integrity, common sense, and flourishing in Catholic education. The third day will introduce the Adeodatus-Cardinal Newman Society Eucharistic Project and a Catholic Culture Curriculum, centering on the Eucharist as the heart of Catholic education. The conference concludes with the Cornerstone Forum-Adeodatus “Tocqueville” Project, a deep dive into Catholic education's cultural and political landscape in America.
In addition to daily Mass, participants are welcome to join the monks for various prayers in the Liturgy of the Hours, starting with Matins at 6 AM. Belmont’s beautiful Adoration chapel will also be open throughout the day. All meals are included in the registration price, and we have secured discounted room blocks at two nearby Hilton hotels.Tuesday, April 15, 2025
The 2nd Adeodatus Conference on Catholic Education, June 18-21 at Belmont Abbey College
David ClaytonTuesday, May 09, 2023
The First Adeodatus Conference on Catholic Education and Culture
David ClaytonPasadena, California, June 21-24th. Theme for 2023: Major Sources of Catholic Education and its Renewal
I am delighted to be able to bring to your attention details of what promises to be an exciting and influental conference, Adeodatus. You can read about it at their website: Adeodatus.com. There is a star-studded line-up of speakers and numbers are limited to only 150 attendees, so if you are interested please book early.
A deep educator discount is available. Visit the Adeodatus website and use promotional code Educator to receive 50% off the complete registration fee. Streaming options for individuals and schools are also available.
94. The proper and immediate end of Christian education is to cooperate with divine grace in forming the true and perfect Christian, that is, to form Christ Himself in those regenerated by Baptism, according to the emphatic expression of the Apostle: “My little children, of whom I am in labor again, until Christ be formed in you.” For the true Christian must live a supernatural life in Christ: “Christ who is your life,” and display it in all his actions: “That the life also of Jesus may be made manifest in our mortal flesh.”95. For precisely this reason, Christian education takes in the whole aggregate of human life, physical and spiritual, intellectual and moral, individual, domestic and social, not with a view of reducing it in any way, but in order to elevate, regulate and perfect it, in accordance with the example and teaching of Christ.
![]() |
Peter Paul Rubens: The Crowning of the Virgin |
![]() |
Peter Paul Rubens, The Last Judgement |
![]() |
Peter Paul Rubens, St George and the Dragon |
Thursday, October 20, 2022
A New Resource: Children’s First Chants, from Pueri Publications
Gregory DiPippoIt is never too early to start teaching the rising generations of Catholics to live and love their liturgical patrimony. An Australian outfit called Pueri Publications has just issued a new resource to help them do just that, a practical, self-teaching book for young children (7+) to learn to to learn a simple repertoire of Gregorian chants for Holy Mass and various well-known prayers.
Wednesday, October 05, 2022
Two-Part Webinar for Catholic School Pastors, Priests, Chaplains, Administrators, Teachers
David ClaytonSession hosted jointly by the Catholic Education Foundation and the National Catholic Education Association
If you are a priest with a Catholic school, or a school administrator supporting a priest in his engagement with a Catholic school, don’t miss these webinars hosted by Father Peter Stravinskas, president of the Catholic Education Foundation and NCEA President/CEO Lincoln Snyder, with a special greeting from His Excellency Thomas Daly, bishop of Spokane and chairman of the USCCB committee on Catholic Education!
Webinar 1: Oct. 12, 1-2 pm (EDT): Help Session for Pastors with a Catholic SchoolIn this webinar, a panel of veteran pastors will discuss the big picture for working with a Catholic school. The panelists will cover how to manage a Catholic school effectively, with topics including school personnel, faculty faith formation and financial issues. Panelists will also discuss the annual workshop for school pastors. To register and for more information follow link, here.
Webinar 2: Oct. 12, 2-3 pm (EDT): Working as a Priest in a Catholic High School
In this webinar, a panel of priests will discuss working in a Catholic high school. Our panelists will discuss the priests’ roles, including administrators, chaplains and teachers; interfacing with administration; and practical advice for supporting faculty formation and Catholic identity. A particular invitation will be given to join the newly formed association for high school priests. To register and for more information follow the link, here.
Tuesday, August 30, 2022
Pius XI On What Catholic Education Ought to Be, And What It Ought Not to Be (Public Education)
David ClaytonLessons for Today: Why critical race theory and gender theory destroy education, and why even many classical education, liberal arts, and Great Books curricula are not Catholic enough.
In his encyclical on Catholic education, Divini illius magistri, published in 1929, Pope Pius XI told us what Catholic education should aim to do, and what it should not be.
First what it ought to be:95. Christian education takes in the whole aggregate of human life, physical and spiritual, intellectual and moral, individual, domestic and social, not with a view of reducing it in any way, but in order to elevate, regulate and perfect it, in accordance with the example and teaching of Christ.
96. Hence the true Christian, product of Christian education, is the supernatural man who thinks, judges and acts constantly and consistently in accordance with right reason illumined by the supernatural light of the example and teaching of Christ; in other words, to use the current term, the true and finished man of character.
This means that whatever else appears in the curriculum, what makes the education Catholic is the formation that equips the student to be a good Christian. The goal is to equip the student to be free to seek union with God, and so be supernaturally transformed and informed by divine wisdom. Aside from knowledge of the content of the Faith, this means giving all that the student needs to actively participate in the sacramental life of the Church, and most especially the worship of God in the sacred liturgy. This would mean adequate catechesis prior to receiving the first sacraments, and continued mystagogical catechesis afterward. The deep study of Scripture would be an essential part of this, although it is often missing, even at Catholic schools.
What it is not:
60. Hence every form of pedagogic naturalism which in any way excludes or weakens supernatural Christian formation in the teaching of youth, is false. Every method of education founded, wholly or in part, on the denial or forgetfulness of original sin and of grace, and relying on the sole powers of human nature, is unsound. Such, generally speaking, are those modern systems bearing various names which appeal to a pretended self-government and unrestrained freedom on the part of the child, and which diminish or even suppress the teacher's authority and action, attributing to the child an exclusive primacy of initiative, and an activity independent of any higher law, natural or divine, in the work of his education.Catholic and non-Catholic classical schools:
I am an advocate of such traditional curricula, but only if they are taught in such a way that students understand in clear simple terms how what they are learning relates to their participation in the sacramental life of the Church.
If the direct connection to the Faith is not made in such programs, or if they are taught at the expense of more essential subjects that impart a deepening knowledge and understanding of the content of the Faith, then they become, quite simply, alternative forms of pedagogical naturalism, to use Pius XI’s words. Their main value is that at least they are not directly undermining the Faith as public education generally does now.
Good public education?
Until very recently, most public education was based upon the ideas of the American educational reformer John Dewey (1859-1952). He denied the supernatural, so his theories also represent pedagogical naturalism. The main thrust of his thought is that students should be trained for work, and that the only verifiable truth is scientifically proven. This is a diminished understanding of truth and of the role of education, but not necessarily anti-Catholic. Catholic education, as Pius XI stated, can include giving people the skills to earn a living too, and I would argue that it should do so.
However, what Dewey didn’t appreciate is that the supernatural can, to use Pius XI’s words, elevate, regulate, and perfect our activities at work by ordering them to our ultimate end. So a Dewey curriculum will teach life skills, without equipping the student with the wisdom to develop them beyond what is taught and to do so well.
Nevertheless, provided the student is not indoctrinated with Dewey’s worldview and is allowed in addition to study and participate in the necessary aspects of the Faith, then in principle, an excellent Catholic education is still open to him. In many ways, one might argue, a Dewey-plus-Catholicism education would be preferable to a classical education that does not incorporate the Faith. The Catholic elements that are added to a Dewey curriculum might be provided by additional classes at school, through the words and examples of other members of the family, or through a formation at the local parish. This will not always be easy, but at least it is possible.
Jaques Maritain, who critiqued Dewey in his day, thought so. Where this older form of public education prevails within the context of a firm Christian or Catholic culture then a good public education is still available.
In principle.
In practice, however, this is rarely possible for long, given another contradiction inherent with the scientism of Dewey. The scientific method relies on fundamental assumptions, which will only withstand philosophical inquiry if bound to the principle of objective truth, which in turn is only preserved when anchored to the Christian faith. The scientific method grew directly out of the Christian understanding of reality and is inextricably tied to the Faith. When science is separated from Christianity philosophically, it is susceptible to distortion.
I am not referring here to the immoral application of the truths of science. This runs deeper. I am saying that the very capacity of natural science to discern truth, even within the materialistic parameters of the natural scientist, is diminished when the axiomatic truths that form the basis of the scientific method are cast adrift from Truth.
Science imparts an understanding of the natural world; it does not, and cannot, make us masters of it, despite what some might think, for no scientist can alter the natural order that he observes and turn it into the pattern of truth that he or his political masters would like it to be.
However, when separated from the Christian understanding of reality, which is the only one that is consistent with Truth, the scientist is free to assert anything he likes and alter the scientific theories to say what is required, regardless of objective truth. He does this by altering the premises of the scientific method, in accordance with his own, subjective worldview. This is the science of the bureaucrat, the leftist politician, the public health professional and the atheist materialist of any description.
Dewey was guilty of the heresy of scientism, which asserts that the only truths we can know are those that are scientifically verifiable. But this heresy, which is bad enough, leads inevitably to an even greater and more destructive one, that of what I will call, Scientist-ism.
Scientistism is the heresy that says that the truth is what the scientist says it is, regardless of what the science says. It is a form of argument from authority, that rests on a weak authority. Frustrated by the fact that science won’t behave as the Marxist theorists want, they strive to get science to tell them what they want to hear. Corrupt scientists who are controlled largely by government funding (for there is so much of it) assert that the false is true on behalf of their paymasters and call it science, in order to convince us of the truth of their assertion that black is white. Sound familiar?
This brings me to the worst form of education I have seen. This is worse than no formal education at all:
Bad public education
In the most recent iteration of public education, the curricula have been handed over to neo-Marxist theorists, and their ideas dominate public education today from K through to the university level. In the United States it is only relatively recently, as I understand it (I am not American and so I might be wrong), with the Supreme Court decision of Everson v. Board of Education (1947), that Christian prayer was removed from public schools. Regardless, as long as there is no Christian prayer in public schools, and Christianity is not taught by believers to believers or potential believers, then there is nothing to stop the vacuum being filled by any quasi-religious ideologies, provided it is not defined in law as a religion. This is precisely what Marxist ideology is. The goal of the modern manifestations of Marxist ideas, those that have developed since 1947 and are pushed by teachers’ unions, such as Critical Race Theory and Gender Theory, is to form people to be revolutionaries who will destroy every institution they participate in. It is remarkably good at doing this. The theories themselves are not studied directly in classes in public schools; this generally only happens in degree programs such as Gender Studies. Rather, they are assumed to be true, without this being stated explicitly, and then the whole curriculum is built upon its premises at all levels of education, so that each subject is distorted and reflects the Marxist narrative.
No subject, whether it is natural science, fine art, or humanities, is safe from being tainted by this evil. For example, good science that contradicts the Marxist narrative is ignored or condemned, while false science that confirms it is lauded as objective truth.
The moment any of this woke nonsense is tolerated in any form, it steadily works its way into every aspect of the curriculum like an ideological parasite eating away at its host. Teachers and students alike see themselves as victims who endlessly complain and compete with each other for greater victim status, demanding ever-greater concessions to what they demand, which inevitably promotes the Marxist narrative. The teachers are then, in turn, regarded as oppressors by the students. Eventually, all who dissent from their woke worldview will be hectored and chastised as oppressors and haters until they either conform or are removed.
The end game here is not justice, but the creation of conflict, initially with the threat of violence, but ultimately leading to violence. The greater aim is the total destruction of Western values and the world order founded on them. Razing institutions of authentic justice and order to the ground is, they believe, necessary for a new, better order to come in. They never say exactly how the new society will be built or what it will look like. Never, has such an order been observed when they implement their methods, only the destruction and misery that this evil ideology asserts is the means by which the mythical utopia is achieved.
Its power to persuade derives from the fact that it provides a quasi-religious narrative about our lives and our destinies, indulging us in our grievances and resentments and allowing us to blame others for our woes. The false premises of this Marxist narrative are accepted on faith, at the same deep level that we accept the truths of the Faith in our hearts.
Once the desired conflict within an educational institution has been created, the goal is to destroy the capacity of the institution to offer any decent education, as we would understand the word. Instead, students are formed as miserable, bitter, and angry leftist political agitators on a mission to destroy Western society. They go on to cause trouble in every aspect of society in which they participate to an end: greater misery for themselves and those they engage with.
The only way to stop this spread is to stand up to it at first sight and not tolerate it in any form. Otherwise, once it gets a toehold, it will spread like cancer in any institution. This is why Christians must be clear that at every level of life, they refuse the various manifestations of these modern Marxist ideas and the organizations that promote them, whether it is modern Democratic Socialists, teachers’ unions, or the progressives in the Democrat Party who espouse such theories, Black Lives Matter, Jane’s Revenge, or Antifa.
If educational institutions try to accommodate or work with these ideas, they will eventually be destroyed, and being a classical, Great Books, or liberal arts school, or even a Catholic school, is no protection against this effect once these ideas are present.
It takes courage to stand up to it. Verbal abuse, threats of violence, and ultimately the use of it are part of the armory of the left. I pray for God’s grace daily that I will have the courage if needed.
Tuesday, August 16, 2022
The Corruption of Art Education in the Modern Era
David ClaytonThe Church has always seen the need for art as part of the communication and sustenance of the Faith. The Seventh Ecumenical Council which closed in 787AD did not simply permit the use of images, rather it mandated the veneration of images of Christ, Our Lady, and the Saints as an essential aspect of devotional prayer and worship, where appropriate, of the prototypes that the images depict.
Every Catholic church therefore must have images that inspire in the faithful right worship and devotion. Such images will not only have the right content - what they portray - but also must portray that content in the right way - how it is portrayed. The style of the art is just as important as the content, in that it enables the artist who understands what he is doing to convey both visible and invisible realities through his painting.The visible realities are conveyed by conformity to natural appearances. Put simply, we know that we are looking at a painting of Jesus because it looks like what we all believe Jesus to have looked like, as handed on to us through tradition.
The invisible realities are conveyed by partial abstractions - slight deviations from natural appearances that are introduced by the artist in such a way that we perceive truths about that person that appearances alone could not convey. For example, a man has an invisible and immortal soul. It is the ways in which the artist deviates from a strict naturalism that a skilled artist can communicate to the viewer that this person is alive and possess a soul, and is not simply a model that is identical to a man in every visible detail.
The precise way the artist deviates from strict naturalism gives him or her a distinctive and recognizable artistic style. We recognize a Fra Angelico, not by his adherence to natural appearances, but by the way he consistently deviates from them. Further, we recognize Fra Angelico as a great Christian artist because tradition has judged his stylistic vocabulary to comprise a partial abstraction that abstracts, i.e. “draws out”, and hence reveals, even greater truths than mere naturalistic appearances alone could portray. This is why, for example, the modern style of photorealism or the 19th-century realism of artists such as Bouguereau are not considered authentically Christian. They are too naturalistic.
Similarly, this partial abstraction can be done well or badly. Consider, for example, the work of Picasso. His works were a deliberate distortion of naturalistic appearances, originally inspired by traditional west African artistic styles. He wished to portray man as the innocent noble savage, uncorrupted (as he saw it) by a society of Christian values. This Romantic anthropology, which originated with Rousseau in the 18th century, manifests itself in Picasso as both a false (and not to mention highly patronizing) view of west African society and culture, and of Christian society and culture.
Given what Picasso was setting out to do, we should be highly suspicious of any attempt to portray Christian subjects in his style, or those that are consistently wrong in their anthropology. A painting of the Crucifixion in, say, a 20th-century expressionistic style will very likely have within it an inbuilt contradiction. The content might speak of Christ, but style speaks directly against it by design. To admit such works into our churches is to risk undermining the Faith. Picasso himself painted a Crucifixion which is so distorted that it is just about unrecognizable, and one should not be surprised that an avowed atheist should be so disrespectful of the subject. However, we see also what is to my eye a grave distortion of the 16th-century Isenheim altarpiece - or at the very least a significant departure from the Christian tradition - in the expressionistic style of the crucifixion painted in 1946 by the British artist Graham Sutherland. Sutherland was a convert to Catholicism, and so was presumably sincere in trying to portray the Christian message. This ignorance goes all the way to the top - a version of Sutherland’s Crucifixion is held in the Vatican Museum.
The reason that such works of art do make it, and so often in the recent period, into our churches, is that so few artists or those who commission their work, even committed Catholics, understand Christian traditions of art and, most especially how both style and content can work either for against the Gospel. There are some who hate the Faith and seek deliberately to use art to undermine the Church. However, they would not get very far if everyone else understood the traditional ways in which Christian traditions in art balanced naturalism and idealism so as to convey the mysteries of the Faith.
There is a need, therefore, for the re-establishment of the principles of a traditional Christian approach to the formation of taste and artistic skill. The essential elements of such a formation are as follows:
First, the observation of natural appearances, and the study, with explanation leading to understanding, of past works of great Masters. For those who wish to learn to draw and paint, this would involve copying nature and past Masters from a canon of works. The choice of Old Masters copied by artists in their training dictates the natural style of the artist. So while there is always a distinctive individual component as well, those who want to paint icons should copy lots of icons, and those who want to paint in the Baroque style should copy many examples of 17th-century Baroque art.
Second is the study of the mathematics of beauty. This is the traditional mathematical system of visual harmony and proportion that informed art and architecture prior to the 20th century. It comes from the study of musical harmony, the beauty of the cosmos, and the numerical patterns and symmetries that exist within the isolated world of mathematics itself. The figures most commonly given credit for Christianizing this field of study are St Augustine and Boethius.
And third is a general Christian inculturation and spiritual formation. This would involve not only the study of the Faith and Christian culture, but, for the greatest effect, a living of the Christian life according to this pattern. It would not have been so necessary to teach this in the classroom in the past. Artist would have been immersed in a Christian culture in which the very pattern of Christian living impressed itself onto the hearts of the faithful. Even those who rejected the Faith could not but help but reflect unconsciously aspects of a Christian culture in what they did. Today we are not so fortunate, and are at a point where even Catholic artists require such a formation.
Someone who went through such training would immediately understand why this 12th-century crucifixion, the San Damiano Crucifixion in Assisi, looks as it does. Every aspect of this style is carefully worked out to portray someone suffering as man, but immune to suffering as God.
![]() |
The San Damiano Crucifixion; this version is painted by the author. |
Finally, most not only do not offer a Christian inculturation, but also enforce an anti-Christian inculturation. This will be either a modern twist on the Romantic worldview that emphasizes any subjectivity and emotion, provided that it does not coincide with a Christian worldview, which is generally forbidden, or more commonly nowadays, an explicitly anti-Christian, anti-Western formation in which the neo-Marxist theories of Critical Race Theory dominates. Art departments, next perhaps to the English literature departments in our modern universities, are the most aggressive in pushing this propaganda and excluding people who dissent from their orthodoxy.
One thing is certain: I would not willingly send any children to any of our modern universities to study art. They will almost certainly be expelled for failing to conform or emerge as radical revolutionary Marxists.
Posted Tuesday, August 16, 2022
Labels: Art Education Art, Catholic education, David Clayton, Sacred Art
Tuesday, July 12, 2022
The Way of Beauty at St Stephen's Catholic School, Grand Rapids
David ClaytonA Pre-K Through 8 School That Has Made The Way of Beauty a Central Principle of Its Liberal Arts Education. The Parish and the School Work Together for Cultural Change.
One of the heartening aspects of pre-university education in this country is the growth in the number of classical academies. This is a broadly applied term, but they are schools that typically describe themselves as offering either a “great books” or “liberal arts” curriculum.
I recently visited and spoke at St Stephen’s Catholic School in Grand Rapids, Michigan, which is one such school. Under the leadership of its principal, Elizabeth Black, and pastor, Fr Scott Nolan, it offers a Catholic education in which the liberal arts curriculum has been integrated with The Way of Beauty. This is a very carefully thought out program in which artistic creativity is a core part of the curriculum, such that all that is taught in the classroom is enriched by the incarnation of the Good and the True in the creation of beautiful artifacts. The schedule includes:- surveying - students will create a beautiful map of the grounds and buildings
- needlepoint
- gardening - the students grow beautiful flowers that will be used at Mass and they are taught the symbolism of those flowers. So, for example, they grow lilies that symbolize purity.
- drawing and painting
- cooking - students learn to create dishes that are in accord with the feasts and fasts of the Church. They then take the recipes home and teach mum and dad how to cook them too!

![]() |
St Stephen’s, before and after renovation |
Tuesday, May 31, 2022
Catholic Education Foundation Seminar: The Role of the Priest in Today’s Catholic School
David ClaytonJuly 12 - 14th, North Palm Beach, Florida. For bishops, priests and seminarians; participation is limited to 35.
Thank you to Fr Peter Stravinskas of the Catholic Education Foundation for the following information about this wonderful annual event intended primarily for bishops, priests and seminarians. I attended last year as a speaker and was delighted to be part of this event, which is inspiring and full of hope. This offers priests who are involved in or have an interest in orthodox Catholic education practical advice and support.
![]() |
St John Baptist de La Salle, patron saint of Catholic educators |
The Catholic Education Foundation invites bishops, priests, and seminarians to participate in an intensive and comprehensive three-day seminar The Role of the Priest in Today’s Catholic School.
For whom? Clergy who are pastors, parochial vicars, or those directly involved in the elementary or secondary school apostolate (or who wish to be) – as well as seminarians.
When? From 4:00 p.m., July 12 to 4:00 p.m., July 14, 2022
Where? Our Lady of Florida Spiritual Center, North Palm Beach (a ten-minute ride from West Palm Beach Airport)
The Team? Rev. Peter M. J. Stravinskas, Ph.D., S.T.D. (President, CEF)
- Michael Acquilano (Director, South Carolina Catholic Conference) ,
- Sister Elizabeth Ann Allen, OP, Ed.D. (Director, Center for Catholic Education, Aquinas College, Nashville),
- Thomas Carroll (Superintendent of Schools, Archdiocese of Boston),
- David Clayton (Provost, Pontifex University),
- Rev. Sean Connolly (Parochial Vicar, Archdiocese of New York),
- Most Rev. Thomas Daly (Bishop of Spokane; Chairman, USCCB Committee on Education),
- Rev. Michael Davis (Pastor, Archdiocese of Miami),
- Mary Pat Donoghue (Executive Director, Secretariat of Catholic Education, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops),
- Most Rev. Arthur Kennedy, Ph.D. (Auxiliary Bishop Emeritus, Archdiocese of Boston),
- Rev. James Kuroly, Ed.D. (President/Rector, Cathedral Prep, Brooklyn),
- Sister Mary Elizabeth Merriam, OP (St. Michael the Archangel High School, Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph),
- Dr. Margaret Mooney-Suarez (Associate Professor, Princeton Theological Seminary; founder, Scala Foundation),
- Rev. Christopher Peschel (Pastor, Diocese of Fall River),
- Rev. Msgr. Sal Pilato (Former Superintendent of Secondary Schools, Los Angeles Archdiocese)
- Brother Owen Sadlier, OSF (Professor of Philosophy, Cathedral Seminary House of Formation, Diocese of Brooklyn)
- Rev. Msgr. Joseph Schaedel (Pastor, Archdiocese of Indianapolis)
- Lincoln Snyder (President, National Catholic Educational Association) ,
Our seminar will include workshops dealing with the following topics:
• Conciliar and Papal Teaching on Catholic Education
• The History of Catholic Education in the United States
• The Priest’s Presence in the School Community (Students, Faculty, Administration, Parents)
• The Priest as the Public Relations Man of the School
• Financial Concerns
• Models of Governance and Best Practices
For further information: call 732-903-5213 or email fstravinskas@hotmail.com.
“The role of the priest in shaping the identity and mission of our Catholic schools is indispensable. This summer’s CEF conference is sure to give excellent guidance to our priests in carrying out this role with renewed dedication and wisdom.”
Most Rev. James Massa , Rector, St. Joseph Seminary, New York
Tuesday, March 01, 2022
Catholic Education Foundation Seminar for Bishops, Priests and Seminarians, Florida, July 11th-14th, 2022
David ClaytonThe Catholic Education Foundation invites bishops, priests, and seminarians to participate in an intensive and comprehensive three-day seminar entitled, The Role of the Priest in Today’s Catholic School.
- Conciliar and Papal Teaching on Catholic Education
- The History of Catholic Education in the United States
- The Priest’s Presence in the School Community (Students, Faculty, Administration, Parents)
- The Priest as the Public Relations Man of the School
- Financial Concerns
- Models of Governance and Best Practices
Michael Acquilano (Director, South Carolina Catholic Conference)
Sister Elizabeth Ann Allen, OP, Ed.D. (Director, Center for Catholic Education, Aquinas College, Nashville)
David Clayton (Provost, Pontifex University)
Most Rev. Thomas Daly (Bishop of Spokane; Chairman, USCCB Committee on Education)
Rev. Michael Davis (Pastor, Archdiocese of Miami)
Mary Pat Donoghue (Executive Director, Secretariat of Catholic Education, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops)
Rev. James Kuroly, Ed.D. (President/Rector, Cathedral Prep, Brooklyn)
Sister Mary Elizabeth Merriam, OP (St. Michael the Archangel High School, Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph)
Dr. Margaret Mooney-Suarez (Associate Professor, Princeton Theological Seminary; founder, Scala Foundation)
Rev. Msgr. Sal Pilato (Former Superintendent of Secondary Schools, Los Angeles Archdiocese)
Lincoln Snyder (President, National Catholic Educational Association)
The Catholic Education Foundation is an organization providing financial assistance to Catholic high school students and serving as a resource for heightening the Catholic identity of Catholic schools. As well as being President of the Catholic Education Foundation, Fr Stravinskas is the founder and superior of the Priestly Society of Blessed John Henry Cardinal Newman, a clerical association of the faithful, committed to Catholic education, liturgical renewal and the new evangelization.
Jules-Alexis Muenier, “The Catechism Lesson,” 1890 (photo: Public Domain) |
Tuesday, January 25, 2022
New Anthology of Ecclesiastical Documents on Education from the Last 100 Years
David ClaytonIncluding many documents translated from Latin and published in English for the first time.
Published by Newman House Press, The Mission of Catholic Schools: A Century of Reflection and Direction, is recommended for all those interested in Catholic education. This is the first full anthology of all pertinent ecclesiastical documents published in the last 100 years, with a large proportion translated and published in English for the first time. That rubric includes papal teachings, texts from the Second Vatican Council, the Congregation for Catholic Education, the Code of Canon Law, the Catechism of the Catholic Church and the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church.
Fr Peter Stravinskas, the Program Director of Pontifex Universities Masters in Catholic School Administration, and who co-edited this (with Fr Nicholas Gregoris who did all the translation work) told me:Although the Church has been engaged in the education apostolate from her earliest days, it was deemed necessary to take on a reasonable focus—a century of reflection seemed to fit the bill, beginning with the pontificate of Benedict XV and ending with that of Francis.It is a must for libraries of Catholic schools and colleges, and a perfect resource for curriculum development, Catholic identity assessment, professional development seminars and the creation of mission statements.
To order The Mission of Catholic Schools: A Century of Reflection and Direction, go to NCEA.org/store. Product Code: REL-31-1630, here.
Member Price $149 / Non Member Price $225