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The Archdiocese of New York and neighboring Diocese of Rockville Centre are partners in promoting good catechesis.
BY JUDY ROBERTS
REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
January 21-27, 2007 Issue |
Posted 1/17/07 at 9:00 AM
Catechism Series at a Glance
WHAT’S IT ABOUT — The
Register is examining 20 U.S. dioceses with the largest elementary school-age
populations.
HISTORY — To improve the
quality of religious education, the U.S. Bishops’ Ad Hoc Committee to Oversee
the Use of the Catechism, which was formed in 1994, began reviewing textbooks
in 1996.
AT ISSUE — In the past,
textbooks have been found to be deficient in 10 fundamental areas: the Trinity,
the divinity of Christ, the magisterium, Christian view of man, an emphasis on
God’s action, not man’s, grace, the sacraments, sin, Christian morality, and
eschatology.
WHAT WE’VE LEARNED — New
Orleans, Buffalo, Baltimore, St. Louis, Miami, Pittsburgh, Milwaukee, Newark, N.J.,
Cleveland, Trenton, N.J., Brooklyn, N.Y., Detroit, Philadelphia, Boston, New
York and Rockville Centre, N.Y., all require texts in conformity with the
Catechism. The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis does not, nor did the
Archiocese of Cincinnati when reviewed in November, 2005. However, in many
dioceses, except New Orleans, Philadelphia and Rockville Centre, outdated and
other nonstandard texts were still found to be in use in some places.
YONKERS, N.Y. — As Catholic
bookstore owners who are devoted to their faith, John and Rosemarie Iazzetti
keep a close watch on their children’s religious training.
The youngest of their four children,
11-year-old Francesca, is learning about the faith at St. Ann’s School in
Yonkers from Sadlier’s We Believe, one of 132
books and series that have been found to be in conformity with the Catechism of
the Catholic Church by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. (Find a
complete list at usccb.org.)
Rosemarie Iazzetti said she sees
evidence that her daughter is grasping the essentials of the faith. Often, she
said, “in day-to-day things, she makes a connection with something she has
learned in religion class.”
Since 1996, the bishops’ Ad Hoc
Committee to Oversee the Use of the Catechism has been reviewing textbooks like
those Francesca Iazzetti is using to assess the completeness of their
presentation and conformity with the Catechism. The effort, which looks to the
Catechism as a model for all catechesis, was undertaken to improve the quality
of religious education in the nation’s parishes and schools.
Through the review process,
publishers voluntarily submit books before publication and agree to make
changes required for a declaration of conformity with the Catechism. Many
bishops have responded by instructing catechists to use books that have been
reviewed and found in conformity. “Almost every bishop that I know is requiring
it,” Timothy Mullner, regional vice president for Catholic sales in the
McGraw-Hill School Solutions Group, said. “It is becoming the new standard.”
Such policies are in place in the
Archdiocese of New York, where Cardinal Edward Egan is the archbishop and where
the Iazzettis live, and the Diocese of Rockville Centre, N.Y., led by Bishop
William Murphy.
As part of an investigation
centering on the 20 largest dioceses in the country in terms of elementary
school-age population, the Register recently looked at the policies and
practices of both dioceses.
In New York, calls to a sample of
parishes and schools showed that most parishes and all the schools were on
board with the archdiocese’s policy requiring use of textbooks in conformity
with the Catechism. Only two parishes were using nonstandard texts; in each
case, the questionable texts were for one or two grades, and materials for
other grades were in conformity. A third parish had no student textbooks for
its junior high program, but used texts in conformity for Grades 1-6.
At Our Lady of Refuge Parish in the
Bronx, Our
Catholic Faith, an older bilingual text from Sadlier that predates
the bishops’ review process, was being used for Grade 7 and Grade 8 along with
Resources for Christian Living’s Faith First, which is
in conformity. Mary Disla, director of religious education, said she tries to
pick books in conformity with the Catechism and thought that everything in use
in the parish met that requirement.
Sadlier spokeswoman Angela Dinger
said Our
Catholic Faith has been revised and is being sent to the bishops’
committee for review, but the updated version is not expected to be available
until the next school year.
At St. Boniface in Wesley Hills, the
eighth grade was using an older confirmation prep text from Benziger called Jesus
Send Your Spirit, which does not have the bishops committee’s
approval.
Deacon Thomas Colton, coordinator of religious education at St.
Boniface, said he was unaware there was a problem with the book. Benziger plans
to have the text reviewed in the next few years, according to Timothy Mullner
of the McGraw-Hill Group, which includes Benziger.
And, at St. Joseph Parish in
Kingston, a module program for Grades 7 and 8 looks to archdiocesan guidelines
for content, but provides no textbook to students. Instead, Gloria Costanza,
director of religious education, said teachers draw from various textbook
series depending on the topic.
Ron Pihokker, director of the
Archdiocese of Newark’s catechetical office, has cautioned against designing
programs from different sources. Textbooks are not just books, he said, but are
based on programs that have various types of ancillary support, including
teacher guides.
“So if you don’t buy into the whole
series,” he said, “you’re running a number of different risks. You’re losing
all that support, losing the continuity of the curriculum as it’s designed for
that particular series, and I think it can be confusing to the catechist.”
Sister
Joan Curtin of the Congregation of Notre Dame and director of the archdiocesan
catechetical office said she would look into the materials in use at all three
parishes cited in the Register investigation. However, in the case of the
program at St. Joseph, she said she knows the director and would expect that
the books being used by the teachers are in conformity with the Catechism.
Furthermore, she said, the archdiocesan guidelines the program follows are
coordinated with the Catechism.
Sister Joan said she sends a list of
texts that have been found in conformity to parishes as they are updated each
quarter and expects religious education personnel to know what is available.
Because of that and regular follow-up with parishes through regional meetings
and visits, she said she was confident that most catechists were using texts in
conformity.
“There is a lot of collaboration in
trying to foster good catechesis,” she said.
Even though the Diocese of Rockville
Centre’s textbook policy requiring materials in conformity with the Catechism
has only been in effect since Sept. 1, 2005, every parish or school checked by
the Register was found to be in compliance.
The
Rockville Centre policy mandates that catechists choose from a list that
includes only texts and series in which both the student book and the teacher
manual have been found in conformity by the bishops’ committee. That still
leaves plenty of choices, George Rand, director of the diocesan office of
catechesis, said. He thinks the biggest contributing factor to the diocese’s
success with the policy is that it gives catechists so many options in
selecting textbooks.
“Any parish, regardless of what
their starting point or philosophy of religious education might have been,
found there were things that could accommodate them and still be in conformity
with the Catechism,” Rand said.
He added that the diocese made sure
everyone involved took part in an in-service training on the new policy.
“They bought into it and saw the
rationale for it, and it has gone very smoothly,” he said. “I would say in this
case, we have close to 100% [compliance] in both schools and parishes.”
The policy, which currently applies
only to religious education in the elementary grades, was deliberated upon and
approved by the Priests’ Senate. It also was phased in to allow parishes and
schools to more easily absorb the cost of changing books, Rand said.
Eventually, the policy will be
expanded to include high school texts, but Rand said that currently there are
not enough high school materials on the bishops’ listing. The bishops started
their textbook-review process with elementary-level books and recently have
begun to address high school resources. The latest conformity listing contains
27 high school texts and series.
Rand credits the leadership of
Bishop Murphy with moving the Rockville Centre policy forward and sees it as
part of a new emphasis on the part of bishops in exercising their role as chief
catechists.
Judy Roberts is based in
Graytown, Ohio.
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