Monday, January 05, 2009

Catholic Educators Want More Latinos in Schools

A task force at the University of Notre Dame will look for strategies to get more Latino children into Catholic schools.

The University of Notre Dame's Alliance for Catholic Education (ACE) program has established a new task force to examine the participation of Latino children and families in Catholic schools.

While some 75 percent of Latino immigrants are Catholic, only 3 percent send their children to Catholic schools, UND officials said.

However, research shows that Catholic schools serve low-income minority students -- especially Latinos -- far more effectively than comparable public school options, the university said. In Catholic schools, it said such students are 50 percent more likely to graduate from high school and 250 percent more likely to go to college than their peers in public schools.

'Recognizing the obstacles to expanding Latino enrollment in Catholic schools, yet deeply aware of the opportunities, we believe that now is the time for a serious national dialogue and the development of a national strategy,' said the Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., Notre Dame's president. 'Through this task force we aim to catalyze a dramatic increase in the enrollment of Latino children in Catholic schools nationally over the next decade.'