Caruso affirms the sacrifices and helps us to look with hope to the future of Catholic education in America! Thank you, Fr. When I entered a Catholic High School in 1974, my father got a second job to pay the tuition. Caruso's extensive experience in Catholic education, in administration, recruitment, development, and the classroom make him the quintessential authority to tell this story and illustrate current issues. Caruso wrote this book! The story of Catholic Schools in America is the story of the evangelization and education of generations of dedicated Catholics who lead in every area of American Society. Mary Assumpta Long, Prioress General, Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist, Ann Arbor, MI, OP, Founding Member and Prioress Emerita of the Dominican Sisters of Mary Mother of the Eucharist, Ann Arbor, MI I am so glad that Fr. His thought-provoking book is written from the heart of an educator who cares deeply about passing on the faith to the next generation. Even when naming the challenges, he communicates a vision of Catholic Education that is filled with confidence and hope. Perry, chairman, Empower Illinois former chair of the School Board of the Archdiocese of Chicago Father Caruso gives a raw and realistic portrait of Catholic Education today. Fr Caruso's unique perspective-as historian and administrator of Catholic schools-is well worth heeding. Fr Michael Caruso chronicles how we got to this place and why parental engagement with Catholic schools and laws that allow parents to direct tax dollars to them will be critical to the surviving and thriving of our Catholic school systems. It's true too for state and municipal government: Catholic schools are a tremendous educational asset for them, especially when it comes to serving their low-income families, but they do little or nothing to support them. Ann Carey, author of Sisters in Crisis: The Tragic Unraveling of Women's Religious Communities When it comes to supporting Catholic schools too many families who use them are like birds at the feeder, grateful for the birdseed but, when finished dining, fly away not to be seen again. Father Caruso's analysis can serve as an enlightening guide for Catholic parents, teachers, principals, pastors, and bishops who want to enable Catholic schools not only to survive, but to thrive and produce graduates who know and live their faith and have a positive impact on the church and society. He offers valuable insights from the teachers' and administrators' points of view, while also acknowledging the struggles of everyday Catholics to obtain a Catholic education for their children. TheSurvivability of Catholic Schools: Vigor, Anemia, and a Diffident Flock guides readers through some of the undetected trials and joys of keeping Catholic schools faithful to their mission by candidly acknowledging some of the headaches while encouraging parents, alumni, and stakeholders to reinvigorate this pearl of great price.įather Michael Caruso, SJ, has used his lifetime of experience in all levels of Catholic education to identify key challenges impacting today's Catholic schools. Ever escalating costs and limited funding streams, rising expectations of families, divisive culture battles, conflicting and sometimes mutually exclusive views of Church teachings and beliefs chipping away at the core mission, a growing and hostile secularism all contribute to some of the challenges confronting this largest private school system. However, there many unseen challenges to maintain these hard-won benchmarks that school leaders face daily.
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