Top 1200 Catholic School Quotes & Sayings - Page 12

Explore popular Catholic School quotes.
Last updated on December 19, 2024.
I'm not Catholic, but I gave up picking my belly button for lint.
My mother talked about the stories I used to spin as a child of three, before I started school. I would tell this story about what school I went to and what uniform I wore and who I talked to at lunchtime and what I ate, and my mother was like, 'This girl does not even go to school.'
I hate school at that time. Now, little did I know that actually if I had stayed in school I would've actually really liked college. I wasn't aware enough to know that the junior high I was suffering through would be school at its worst.
One of the greatest honors of a Catholic and Christian is to meet the Holy Father. — © John Bel Edwards
One of the greatest honors of a Catholic and Christian is to meet the Holy Father.
Going to school is not the same as going shopping. Parents should not be burdened with locating a suitable school for their child. They should be able to take their child to the neighborhood public school as a matter of course and expect that it has well-educated teachers and a sound educational program.
As a former high school teacher and a student in a class of 60 urchins at St. Brigid's grammar school, I know that education is all about discipline and motivation. Disadvantaged students need extra attention, a stable school environment, and enough teacher creativity to stimulate their imaginations. Those things are not expensive.
This is a crisis, but there is an opportunity to help revitalize and renew the Catholic community.
I went to NYU drama school, so I was a very serious actress. I used to do monologues with a Southern accent, and I was really into drama and drama school. And then, in my last year of drama school, I did a comedy show, and the show became a big hit on campus.
I grew up Catholic, and I am a pretty shy person.
I come from a family of Catholic Italians, and that will always be in my blood.
I was raised Catholic, and I can get incredibly guilty about mistakes.
I grew up going to public school, and they were huge public schools. I went to a school that had 3,200 kids, and I had grade school classes with 40-some kids. Discipline was rigid. Most of the learning was rote. It worked.
I think the Catholic and Protestant churches have become very stagnant.
I grew up in Stillwater, Minnesota in a proud Catholic family. — © Denis McDonough
I grew up in Stillwater, Minnesota in a proud Catholic family.
People always think I'm Jewish. Actually, I'm a lapsed Catholic.
My parents were educated in the Turkish system and went straight from high school to medical school; my mom, who had skipped a grade, was dissecting corpses at age seventeen. Growing up in America, I think I envied my parents' education. By comparison, everything I did in school seemed so sort of low-stakes and infantilizing.
George W. Bush is the first Catholic president of the United States.
Neutrinos have mass? i didn't even know they're Catholic!" Robert to Vittoria
To be Catholic is the only way of being fully and utterly Christian.
If you feel your school is failing you, the question is why. Is it a lack of parental involvement, large classes, school violence, poor learning environment? Are there any standards to determine where problems are? Are there tutoring or mentoring programs? If the school is still failing after 3 years then what are your options?
I was brought up Catholic, and my family is still very religious.
Though I was a Catholic, I recognized that Protestant churches had something.
I was in high school, and I was the guy that always got cast in the school play. Theater is huge in high school in Minnesota, and I knew that I was very good at that, and gifted, and I was 'the guy,' but it still wasn't something I ever thought of as 'a job' or something that one could do professionally.
I mean can you walk to school on your own? Can you study science? Can you study math? Can you go to a normal school? Do you need to go to a special school? What is going to become of you when you grow up? Are you going to have to live on social security and SSI?
If you're big at school, you've really got two choices. You're going to be a target. If you go to school, and you're me, you go, 'Right - I'm just going to make myself a bigger target. My confidence, it will terrify them.' That's how I felt in school.
I grew up here in St. Albert, which is a city just north of Edmonton, and I went to Grade 10 here at Paul Kane High School. But then I went to junior in the WHL, Western Hockey League, at age 16. So I left and went to finish school at Norkam High School in Kamloops for grades 11 and 12.
We've always had issues up for discussion at Catholic universities.
I don't really think I got the full high school experience, only because when I got to high school for the first year, it was grades 9-10. We didn't have older grades. But besides that, it was normal. It was a regular public school. We didn't have much going on. It wasn't too crazy.
I went to Paramount High School, Mayfair High School, all types of high schools. I'm not a high school graduate, but it's all good.
I come from a very hospitable, close, Catholic, matriarchal family.
Well, first of all, I grew up in New York City, going to first a public school, then a private school, and when I got to the private school in Manhattan, I learned of what we called 'The Promised Land,' which are the Hamptons. I've always had an affinity for the Hamptons.
In 1968 when I was in high school I built a four-foot-tall remote control robot with pneumatic cylinders that operated his hands. My robot won first place at a science competition at the University of Alabama where my high school was the only African-American school represented. That was a huge moral victory.
I'm Roman Catholic and I believe very strongly in the power of prayer.
I have a foundation where it caters to street children and entices them to go back to school. The street is not a good school for them. They need to go to a proper school.
At the age of 6, a teacher full of ambitions, who taught in the small public school of Biran, convinced my family that I should travel to Santiago de Cuba to accompany my older sister who would enter a highly prestigious convent school. Including me was a skill of that very teacher from the little school in Biran.
I hope my child will be a good Catholic like me.
I'm Irish. That means I'm Catholic. But, truth is, now I'm a retired Christian.
I'm a pro-life Roman Catholic conservative, always have been.
I think there is a sense of last things in my work that probably comes from a Catholic childhood. — © Don DeLillo
I think there is a sense of last things in my work that probably comes from a Catholic childhood.
Don't jump down - folks, contraception in the Catholic Church is a thing.
I'm catholic in the same way, that if a cow was born in a tree, it's a bird!
He who does not believe according to the tradition of the Catholic Church is an unbeliever.
The Guardian,[is] one of the most consistently anti-Catholic newspapers in the world.
My brother was a year younger than I am and he was never in the home with me hardly at all, ... My mom had to take him to every school there possibly was to get him some education. He ended up first in Columbus, Ohio, for grade school, then went to a high school for the deaf and Galludet in Washington.
I was a theater dork in high school and did all the plays. My theater teacher in high school, Janet Spahr, was absolutely incredible and mentored me throughout school. She taught me a lot about relying on my instincts.
I believe in the support of the public school as one of the cornerstones of American liberty. I believe in the right of every parent to choose whether his child shall be educated in the public school or in a religious school supported by those of his own faith.
I grew up Catholic, so I feel guilty about everything.
I was raised Catholic, and I have an aversion to anyone who takes religion to the extreme.
If you're a Catholic you believe what the Church teaches and the climate makes no difference. — © Flannery O'Connor
If you're a Catholic you believe what the Church teaches and the climate makes no difference.
If you're afraid to talk to the other adults in your school it is definitely throughout history the hallmark of a failing school. When I was writing about the teachers' strike in New York City in 1968, the middle school where events triggered that strike was a place where teachers were known to hide in their classrooms.
Yes, I'm Catholic; I'm proud of it. But I had lots of Protestant friends.
I'm Catholic and I can't commit suicide, but I plan to drink myself to death.
I used to be Irish Catholic. Now I'm an American - you know, you grow.
I dropped out of high school three days into my senior year because I hated it because New York City public school is a mess. I certainly wasn't one for sitting in a classroom. Then I went off to college to North Carolina School of the Arts, then quit that after two years.
Hierarchy, as in the Catholic Church, has to do with power, and vertical attention has to do with longing.
As a child, I walked with my friends to Rosa Parks Elementary and then to Ben Franklin Middle School. I rode Muni to Galileo High School. And thanks to amazing teachers who believed in me and supported me along the way, I was able to matriculate to another public school: the University of California at Davis.
I went to public school, and I didn't do well in school. And it wasn't until, actually, I got into school at Juilliard - it was the first time in my life that I thought, 'Oh, maybe I'm not stupid,' because I was so inspired and passionate about what I was learning, and it was the first time in my life I had felt that.
Every Catholic is one good Confession away from potential sainthood.
My parents decided - because they were not going to teach us anything Jewish at home - to send both me and my sister to a Jewish primary school. So I went to Kerem Primary School in Hampstead Garden Suburb. But, for me, that school really didn't work that well.
I was steeped in the understanding that if 'something is Roman [Catholic], it must be wrong.
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