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Originally Posted by J.OT13
At this point, I think it's just in name. As far as I know, there are no priests or Sisters, the religion isn't forced on anyone (in fact, a large proportion of students are from immigrant families and not Catholic). They are some of the better schools.
I don't have any kids of family members in Catholic school. This is just based on what I hear on TV and from some co-workers.
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I went to Catholic school from 1998-2011. AFAIK you have to be Christian, but not specifically Catholic, to attend. It's not uncommon for people whose last time in a church was their baptism, which may or may not have been only for the purpose of getting into "better" schools. But even the Catholic people, by far most were non-practicing. I'd see maybe 5 classmates out of 25 at church on the weekends, and I suppose a few of them could have been going to other churches but well under 50%.
But yeah, no priests or nuns actually teaching. Teachers have to be Catholic (or at least Christian, not sure). We did have a religion class every year, which in elementary school most mostly a lot of Sacrament prep for Reconciliation, Communion, and Confirmation. The non-Catholic kids opted out of the Sacraments but still had to take part in the classes. We had a school mass about once a month I would say, usually on a Tuesday morning.
High school was pretty much the same, except even less people are practicing in any way - I still think you had to be Christian to attend but I'm not so sure about it. We had an in-school chaplain and a small chapel. 1 religion class each year with grade 11 being dedicated to World Religions. We learned about their beliefs, and went on field trips to a Sikh temple, the Islamic education centre/mosque in Mississauga, and I think also a Hindu temple. I found it to be the most interesting year, I don't really remember what the other classes were about very much, except that it got a bit intellectual with philosophy of things.
Until it started getting philosophical it was dead boring because I had heard everything a million times in church, the classes were aimed at the people who weren't going to church. But with typical teenage rebellion, I remember a lot of time being spent with angsty teenagers challenging everything and teachers explaining the Church's views (and honestly, trying to present them in the most palatable way for some things). I mostly wished I could spend that time taking another shop class or something.
Of course I have no way of telling how different it was from public school, since I never attended, and I lived on a farm so I didn't get to just "hang around town" with kids form other schools. My perception was that there was more drugs/sex over at the public school, but there was also certainly drugs and sex at my school too so it was just a matter of degree.