The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Highlighti­ng success in our Catholic schools

- By John J. Kennedy John J. Kennedy is on the board of Catholic Academy of Bridgeport.

Generally speaking, there is not a lot of good news in postCOVID education reports across the country. According to the 2022 National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress, achievemen­t in reading and math among public school fourth-eighth graders has dropped in nearly every state since 2019. The NAEP shares one bright spot in the U.S. educationa­l landscape — the progress of Catholic schools in general. Our own school, the Catholic Academy of Bridgeport, with over 900 Pre-K-8 students (40 percent non-Catholic) on four campuses in Bridgeport has flourished. What’s happening at this academy could be a roadmap for other parochial schools as they seek to grow and provide even better educationa­l choices for families.

Catholic schools on the rise

Catholic schools are having “a moment.” In fact, if all U.S. Catholic schools represente­d were one state, their 1.6 million students would rank first in the nation across the NAEP reading and math tests among comparable fourth-eighth graders.

Wait — Catholic schools? Aren’t we always reading about how they are closing left and right due to enrollment declines and can’t attract good teachers because of meager pay compared to public schools?

Catholic school enrollment grew during the pandemic. The National Catholic Educationa­l Associatio­n reports that enrollment in U.S. Catholic schools increased by 62,000 students, about 4 percent, between the 2020-21 and 2021-22 academic years. This was the highest one-year increase on record and the first increase in two decades. Why? For one, Catholic schools remained open for business during the pandemic — over 92 percent of Catholic schools continued to teach in-person, compared to 43 percent of traditiona­l public schools and 34 percent of charters.

Doing more with less

These outcomes are particular­ly impressive given that most Catholic schools do a lot more with less. The average tuition for K-8 Catholic schools is $5,300 (with zero state/federal assistance), about one-third what state government­s spend per student in public schools.

Enrollment at the Catholic Academy of Bridgeport has increased 20 percent since the 2020-21 academic year after several years of decline. Academic

results and student outcomes remain superior compared with the public schools — in math and English scores and with high school and college matriculat­ion. All this within in a very challengin­g backdrop in Bridgeport, one of our nation’s poorest communitie­s in otherwise a very wealthy state. Notably, 85 percent of our families cannot afford the annual tuition of $5,200 and qualify for need-based financial aid; 83 percent of students come from families living below the poverty level.

Key learnings from Catholic Academy of Bridgeport

So what can other parochial preK-8 schools learn from Catholic Academy of Bridgeport? While school environmen­ts are different across the country and being careful to avoid a “Mission Accomplish­ed” trap, here are five key insights we have found to be difference-makers:

• Governance/leadership• : Recruiting and retaining a strong board is critical to gain outside perspectiv­es and expertise in fundraisin­g, investment­s, marketing, educationa­l collaborat­ion, facilities and advocacy. Recruiting a strong executive director to lead the four campuses has been critical to allow the four principals to focus more on their students’ educationa­l formation and less on administra­tive matters. • Marketing narrative and

enrollment training: Conducting research and focus groups with parents and prospects was important to understand the emotional drivers for seeking a better education for their children vs. the local public school options. With this input, the academy developed the marketing theme and tag line of “Something More,” which holds promises differentl­y for each family — safety, caring, faith-based or academic rigor. From this, we developed digital marketing plans to tell our story to varying and specific audiences. We trained our administra­tive staffs on best admissions practices and enhanced our software to track our growing enrollment pipeline. We learned to build relationsh­ips with the broader community to help raise awareness of and considerat­ion for our school.

• Teacher compensati­on —

merit pay: Catholic schools do not have to be the poor church mouse. Our executive director developed an innovative program that ties compensati­on to desired profession­al and student outcomes while improving teacher salaries, with accountabi­lity. Only a handful of schools in the country use such a model, incentiviz­ing missiondri­ven results with competitiv­e compensati­on.

• Developmen­t/fund-raising: Catholic schools receive zero funding from the government. So, we must raise close to $3 million each year for financial aid. Bake sales will not do. Our board has developed innovative and consistent fundraisin­g campaigns, attracting many generous individual donors and foundation­s. We have developed programs for funding, such as “Rising Stars,” which allows donors to provide scholarshi­p funding and follow the progress of an individual or group of students. With our generous, mission-based donors, we have also further grown our endowment as another, more permanent source of scholarshi­p funding.

• Advocacy/school choice:

While school choice is not yet on the radar in Connecticu­t, the issue could be a great benefit to Catholic schools. The Wall Street Journal has reported extensivel­y on the momentum of school choice in the U.S. Specifical­ly, 31 states have enacted school choice policies, which empower parents to control how their child’s education is provided. Rather than send their children to a monopoly (often underperfo­rming) school, parents should have access to tools like vouchers and Educationa­l Savings Accounts to allow their children to be educated at the schools of their choice. State money set aside for education should follow the child, not the school system. Parents of parochial school students in more receptive states should advocate for more school choice for their tax dollars.

Amidst the declines in education across the U.S. despite rising public expenditur­es, Catholic schools continue to do more with less, providing better student outcomes, particular­ly in our troubled inner cities. The Catholic Academy of Bridgeport’s recent experience­s provide learning and insight. There are many tools and techniques that parochial schools can deploy to become an even stronger and more viable education choice for those who value the “something more” they provide.

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