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Engaging Latinos to Participate in Catholic Education. To Nurture the Soul of a Nation: Latino Families, Catholic Schools, and Educational Opportunities . A Report of the Notre Dame Task Force on the Participation of Latino Children and Families in Catholic Schools.
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To Nurture the Soul of a Nation:Latino Families, Catholic Schools, and Educational Opportunities • A Report of the Notre Dame Task Force on the Participation of Latino Children and Families in Catholic Schools. • Since 2000, more that 1,400 Catholic Schools have • closed and nearly half a million students are no longer in • Catholic schools. • Yet in many of the areas where schools have closed, • there are school age Latino children within walking • distance of the schools. • Areas that were once largely populated by another • culture, such as Italian or German, now have an area • population made up primarily of Latinos.
Why Catholic Schools? • The Notre Dame study indicates that Latino children • who attend Catholic schools are 42% more likely to • graduate high school and two and a half times more • likely to graduate from college. • Even with that evidence, nationally, only 3% of school • age Latino children attend Catholic Schools. • Why?
Some Statistics • Currently in the United States, Latinos now comprise • 35% of all Catholics. • 67% of practicing Catholics ages 18-34 are Latino. • The Census Bureau predicts that this will grow and • by 2050 more than 30% of Americans will identify • themselves as Hispanic. • And yet, they are still • under-represented • in our schools.
A History of Two Schools St. James the Less and Sacred Heart • Booming enrollment in the 60’s, 70’s, 80’s and 90’s. THEN ~ the perfect storm • Declining numbers of Catholics living in the neighborhood • Families moving to the suburbs • Worsening economy for the residents of our neighborhood, our city, and our state • Declining outside financial resources • Declining numbers of school-age children generally • HOPE comes in the form of Fr. Joe and Latino Enrollment Institute (LEI)
Latino Enrollment Institute • What is it? • Why is Latino enrollment important? • Purpose of the LEI • Founder of the LEI • Progress of the LEI • Can a school be flipped? • What can each of you do?
FLIPPING St. James & Sacred Heart • A connection to the Latino community – pastor starting the Spanish Ministry and the continued support of the entire St. James parish. • Personally invite them! • Recruit from you parish religion program • Go to other churches and preschools, head starts • Go to local businesses where they shop • Hold informational meetings when they can attend • Be visible in their community- Mass, grocery store, shops etc. • Know some Spanish---word ring • Build relationships! • Work to overcome language barriers • Embrace diversity – incorporate cultural icons into décor • Make school affordable, accessible, and available
Everyone Has an Important Role • Pastor • Principal • Teachers • Students • Other Families • Parishioners • RE Director • Secretary • Support personnel
Pastor • From the ambo, tells benefits of a Catholic education • Always speaks positively about the parish school in all venues • Accompanies new families on school tours with principal • Active participation in school activities • Belief that Catholic Education is an important parish ministry • Engaged, visible, and invites families to come and see
Principal • Make the most of every opportunity or event to promote the school • Express expectation that all members of faculty and staff share the responsibility of creating a welcoming environment to all families • Build relationships with DRE, other pastors, and parishioners • Be personable, inviting and friendly – SMILE! • Belief and understanding that Catholic education is an important ministry of the parish • Understanding of the alternative school systems (public, charter)
Principal • Be sure others know what to do/say when they are approached • Provide materials in Spanish • Always have business card with you • Become involved and visible in parish activities • Speak often at Masses championing the school (not just at Catholic Schools Week), advertise availability of tuition assistance • Attend Masses other than your usual Mass • Be willing to fill out required school forms for parents if necessary • Keep immigration status confidential
Teachers • Use Google translator for • notes to parents (be sure to have it • proofread!) • Don’t assume or make generalizations • that parents are not interested in their • child’s education • Learn a few phrases in Spanish, then add a few more • Help recruit volunteers to translate during P/T/S conferences • Learn the Latino culture particular to their school
Professional Development • Command Spanish • Book Studies • ESL for students and parents • Strategies for teaching English Language Learners • Encourage Faculty sharing
School Secretary & Parish Staff • Be personable, inviting, and friendly – SMILE! • Learn a few words in Spanish to speak, and develop a listening Spanish vocabulary • Don’t talk louder • Be resourceful • When new families register, give them school information packet • Provide name and contact information to Principal • Have available information about the school: business card, tuition information, and tuition assistance application • Recommend students in the RE program who would be good students for the school
Challenges • Different culture/value system • Different language • Belief that Catholic education is for the rich (or extreme poor) • Potential for greater financial sacrifice • Potential difference in appreciation of education • Lack of Spanish speaking personnel • Time demands and constraints • Prejudices and biases
Latino Diversity • The Latino community is made up of a diverse variety of people from different: • Countries • Races • Economic backgrounds • Education levels
Tuition Challenges • Accept cash payments for tuition, even large amounts • Enrollment –for those who can’t come up with the entire required enrollment fee, consider: • They pay a portion of enrollment fee to reserve their space • Roll the rest of the enrollment fee into tuition • Consider accepting payments in time frames that work for them, i.e., ad hoc, daily, weekly, twice a month, on their payday • Divide tuition into 12 monthly payments as an option
Tuition Assistance • Consider opening tuition assistance to all students who apply and not limiting to parishioners. • Offer tuition assistance as a means of filling classrooms to capacity • An empty seat = zero income with the same overhead costs. Therefore, a student paying $1,500 is better than an empty seat • More students receive a Catholic education • More operating revenue for school, less parish subsidy • Potential Sources of additional funding • Private Donors • Religious orders • Diocese
Work Grant • The student in grades sixth, seventh or eighth can work and receive credit • Work hour requirements vary by amount of assistance • Work grants – require helping school with time and talent • Need someone to coordinate • Any adult can come to work the hours for the family
Welcoming New Latino Families to Your School Embracing Cultural Diversity
Cultural Celebrations • Las Posadas • Pastorela • May Crowning
We Are Family • We have fun at school! • Every idea has value and we will try anything • Community homerooms • Saint Families • Service learning • Mime Stations of the Cross • Christmas shop, coat and hat drive, food baskets • Legal advice, medical and dental information, immunizations • ESL for adults • Double dutch, drama, chess, bison boot camp • We ask, “what do you need?” we will find a way to get it. • Our Kids are Worth Whatever It Takes!
Catholic Identity • Do we teach them because they are Catholic? • Do we teach them because we are Catholic? • Our faith calls us to do this because truly all are welcome.