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Inclusive Catholic Education. Kathy P. Mears kmears@ncea.org. August 6, 2013. Our Goals. Explore what it means to be an inclusive Catholic School Review some models that schools are using to be more inclusive
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Inclusive Catholic Education Kathy P. Mears kmears@ncea.org August 6, 2013
Our Goals Explore what it means to be an inclusive Catholic School Review some models that schools are using to be more inclusive Examine ways that we are integrating Catholic identity into our schools in 2013-2014
Inclusive Catholic Education List three reasons why Catholic schools are inclusive. List three reasons why some Catholic schools are not as inclusive as other Catholic schools.
Inclusive Catholic Education Making Catholic education accessible -finances -academics -physically -language -mission
Financing Inclusive Catholic Education Grants Fund Raisers Federal and State Funds Tuition Groups of Schools
Academics in an Inclusive Catholic School No lowering of any standards Different types of diplomas or certificates of completion Personal learning Assistive technology GT students
Reasons why Peer mentoring Diverse society Patience
Physical Plants and Inclusive Catholic Education One time costs Assists many students Grants Fundraisers
Language in Inclusive Catholic Schools Bi-lingual education strategies Federal and state funds
Inclusive Catholic Schools What’s your school’s mission? What drives your school’s mission? Do we have an obligation to work with more children? Why not?
Models Pull out programs Teaching assistants Response to Intervention Separate degree/completion programs Schools share
How? Explore resources Utilize state and federal funds Pool resources Educate faculty Communicate, communicate, communicate Tell the stories of success
Where is it working? Paul VI – Virginia Roncalli – Indiana http://www.archindy.org/criterion/local/2013/02-22/friendship.html Cardinal Ritter – Indiana St. Joseph – Washington Bishop Ready – Ohio St. Brigid of Kildare– Ohio St. Thomas – Kansas St. Matthew - Indiana
Blessed John XXIII: “They, too, are a child of God.” Saint Theodora: “Love the children first, then teach them.”
The CCCII Project is not about Catholic Identity; it is about how we teach with Catholic Identity.
National Standards and Benchmarks for Effective Catholic Elementary and Secondary Schools (2012) Defining Characteristic: Distinguished by Excellence
National Standards and Benchmarks for Effective Catholic elementary and Secondary Schools (2012) Standard 7: An excellent Catholic school has a clearly articulated, rigorous curriculum aligned with relevant standards, 21st century skills, and Gospel values implemented through effective instruction.
National Standards and Benchmarks for Effective Catholic Elementary and Secondary Schools (2012) Original Committee: Nicholas Wolsonovich, Lorraine Ozar, Mary Jane Krebbs, Michael Rush, Patricia Weitzel-O’Neill, Sr. Leanne Welch, PBVM (2010-2011) Joined by: Sr. Dale McDonald, Br. Robert Bimonte, FSC, William Dinger, Laura Egan, Carole Eipers, Susan Abelein, Anthony Manley, Ron Valenti (February 2012)
Project Goal: To develop and disseminate frameworks, guidelines, and resource guides that will assist local educators in infusing Catholic values and principles of social teaching into all subjects and integrating the Catholic worldview and culture into curriculum and instructional design using the Common Core Standards
National Standards and Benchmarks for Effective Catholic elementary and Secondary Schools (2012) Benchmark 7.1: The curriculum adheres to appropriate, delineated standards, and is vertically aligned to ensure that every student successfully completes a rigorous and coherent sequence of academic courses based on the standards and rooted in Gospel values.
National Standards and Benchmarks for Effective Catholic elementary and Secondary Schools (2012) Benchmark 7.2: Standards are adopted across the curriculum, and include integration of the religious, spiritual, moral, and ethical dimensions of learning in all subjects.
Catholic Identity Elements include: Catholic Worldview Culture and Tradition Gospel Values Church Social Teachings Moral/Ethical Dimensions
Questions?? kmears@ncea.org