Catholic education in the Diocese of Parramatta explained

There has been Catholic education in the Diocese of Parramatta since the first catholic school was established in the Parramatta area in 1820.[1] There are 80[2] Catholic systemic schools in the diocese (58 of which are primary and 22 secondary) with a total student population of around 43,000 and a staff population of around 5,000. There are also six non-systemic or congregational (independent) Catholic schools.[3]

History

Early expansion

A growing population saw many schools open in the years before the Second World War. Built and staffed without government financial assistance, the schools served Catholic communities in Blacktown, East Granville, Guildford, and Castle Hill.

Baby-boom years

Australia’s population grew rapidly in the 1950s and 1960s. An ambitious school building program was successfully pursued to cater for new families in many developing areas, including Lalor Park, Seven Hills, Westmead and Kingswood.

Government support

Some financial relief came to Catholic schools in the 1960s with the funding of science and library facilities. However it was the 1970s that brought a new era of Australian Government funding for all Australian schools, based on the principles of equality and diversity.

Many new schools opened in the decades that followed. These served numerous parishes, including Winston Hills, North Rocks, Kenthurst, Cranebrook and St Clair.

Education

Schools

Executive Director

The Executive Director of Schools in the Parramatta Diocese is Jack de Groot. Mr de Groot brings significant leadership experience in senior governance roles in healthcare, aid, tertiary education and social services where he has demonstrated a strong focus on Catholic values, social outreach and mission.

Bishop

Most Reverend Vincent Long Van Nguyen OFM Conv DD STL is the third Bishop of Parramatta. Appointed on 5 May 2016, Bishop Vincent was installed as the fourth Bishop of Parramatta at St Patrick’s Cathedral, Parramatta on 16 June 2016.

Enrolment

Catholic Schools Parramatta Diocese accept enrolments from students who are not Catholic. All students enrolled in a Catholic school should be willing to participate in the religious activities of the school.

In the Parramatta Diocese, enrolment preference is given, in order, to:

  1. children of Catholic families who live in the local parish
  2. children of Catholic families from other parishes
  3. non-Catholics, in accordance to the school's enrolment vacancies

Siblings of children already enrolled in the school are considered by the same criteria above. However, within each of these categories, a sibling of a child already enrolled has preference over an applicant who does not have a sibling enrolled in the school.

Special consideration may be given to children of non-Catholic families for a number of reasons, after discussion with the school principal.

Funding

Catholic Schools Parramatta Diocese schools are funded by the Australian and NSW governments, as well as through modest school fees and fundraising.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Our Story . 2023-10-22 . www.parra.catholic.edu.au . en.
  2. Web site: About Us . 2023-10-22 . Diocese of Parramatta . en-US.
  3. Web site: Our Story . 2023-10-22 . www.parra.catholic.edu.au . en.
  4. Web site: Parish links . St Matthew's Catholic Parish, Windsor, NSW . 2014 . 17 June 2019 .
  5. Ghosn, M. . The evolving cultural and spiritual identity of Our Lady of Lebanon College over its 40 years . Journal of the Australian Catholic Historical Society . 34 . 2013 . 105–116 . 27 January 2017 . 15 February 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170215001103/http://australiancatholichistoricalsociety.com.au/pdfs/ACHS_2013Journal%202013_WebMch2014.pdf . dead .