I don't know if you are intentionally trying to be offensive but if so good job. You may be referring to only a specific incident and location but you you leave reason to infer a slander against Faith based education in general.
I have never been a "religious" person, I have my beliefs, my own faith and moral code but am not a practitioner of any religion.
A decade ago my wife and I made the decision to place our daughter in private school. It has a strict religious doctrine, one which I have disagreed with many times. It has, at times, exhibited what I consider an overabundance of fervor on certain issues. However we agreed to obey the rules of the school and so I have done my very best to adhere to them and restrain my dissent to the less agreeable aspects.
Why would I do this you ask? The answer is simple. In the decade my daughter has attended not one student has died of an alcohol related traffic death, drug overdose or suicide. I don't mean not one student in her class, I mean not one student in the entire school.
100% of the current graduating class is going on to college, half of them had a 30 (that is not a typo THIRTY) or above on the ACT.
I live near the Mississippi Delta, please feel free to do a search and see how that compares to the local public schools.
I am sorry you had such a horrible experience, I can understand how that could color ones viewpoint. Again it is entirely possible you were commenting solely on personal experience at one specific location and I am being overly sensitive. I would point out however that "Christian", and "weird morality clauses, behavior codes, archaic dress code", are certainly accurate descriptions of the school referenced above.
Parents are often in a tough position, when it comes to school choice.
The public schools my children attended did not have any alcohol related traffic deaths, drug overdoses, or suicides, either. But, we live in an area with excellent public schools, and a generally high level of education and lots of professionals. Not all of their class went on to college, but most did. And, honestly, I
don't believe that every child should head straight off to college after high school. I don't see that as a "win". In fact, I think educators place entirely too much emphasis on prepping kids for higher education, when many of them would be happier and more successful in the trades.
How many of your current graduating class are going to drop out? How many will end up with degrees they can't use? How many will end up saddled with crushing debt? Has your school really done this class any favours, by pushing them all down an identical path?
I agree with you that private, parochial schools
can be good choices, sometimes. I attended a Catholic convent school where the nuns were terrific educators, open-minded and very kind. When I said to one of the sisters, "But, I'm not Catholic!" She replied, "That's all right. There are many roads to God. We're just travelling different ones." They taught me a version of ecumenical Christianity that I still believe in, to this day, for all that I am now Unitarian.
And, at the same time, there are both nominally "secular" schools ("community standards" can make some so-called-public schools more religiously oppressive than private ones) and private religious schools that are frankly appalling, in their approach to moral education. Schools that stage chastity rallies which compare girls who have sex to "used toothbrushes", that use shame and fear and lies to impose social controls on young people. Schools where gay children live in constant terror of being discovered. Schools that look the other way, ignoring bullying and rape and blaming the victims, because the perpetrators are "good kids" with "futures". Schools that adhere to iron clad "zero tolerance" policies without compassion or sense.
I have compassion for parents making hard choices - a scary public school, a theocratic private school... and not every family has the resources to even consider homeschooling.
I don't give much weight to the fact that this girl signed her school's "honor code". Her parents chose this school. And
every single student signs the code. There's no way to opt out, and no way to make an informed decision about whether or not to sign, which means it's meaningless. Agreement under duress, is not agreement at all. So, I don't actually think the young lady acted immorally when she broke the honor code.
Also, when it comes to reading-and-signing rules of conduct (which I have no issue with, actually - all the public schools my kids attended had them, though they focussed on kindness and compassion, not sex and dress codes), I prefer to see the consequences laid out clearly. And I didn't see anywhere in the sections quoted, a part that says, "If you get pregnant, you will not walk the stage at graduation." Presumably, if she'd got knocked up a year earlier, she'd walk the stage while her baby sat in her mother's lap, in the audience.
I think the choices presented by the school to this young lady are interesting ones from a moral perspective. Want to walk the stage? Get an abortion! The lesson is clear: appearances matter more than actions.
I do not think the nuns at my old convent school would have approved of that message.
