My colleagues and I recently chatted about success in relation to alumni, namely, "What is it? How do we know that we"—meaning our school, a Jesuit college prep—has succeeded? Essentially: what evidence do we look for to reveal that a Xavier College Prep education (a Catholic, Jesuit education) has . . . worked, has been effective, has made a difference?
Moreover, how do we know that it has done so in ways that reflect the uniqueness of Catholic experience? Academic achievement or prestigious graduate admissions are certainly praiseworthy, but they are not uniquely Catholic. Public schools provide the same thing.
One of my colleagues framed it this way: "What do we want for our alumni?" What qualities or characteristics do we want their time at Xavier to have imprinted?
The five of us discussing the matter realized it wasn't easy. It wasn't clear which criteria we should focus on or point to. We all recognized the indispensable centrality of the faith element, the importance of developing lifelong dispositions to prayer, discernment and an unceasing desire for God. At the same time, we also discussed the kinds of matters for which schools are usually held accountable: preparation for additional coursework, job readiness, leadership skills and more. In Jesus we perhaps have a synthesis: he was a carpenter, after all. Practical matters were not beneath him.
We couldn't reach a consensus on any particular criteria, but we did agree that whatever "success" was, it couldn't be quantified or distilled into survey questions. It couldn't be equated to the ranking of a college or the outward expressions of contentment. Success on the terms of the Gospel could look like failure to the eyes of the world. Determining "success" would have to be a case-by-case study, a narrative approach that took into consideration the ways that discipleship can shatter all conventional norms.
Mr. Fitzgerald,
Thank you for reading and for commenting. I cannot speak for all Jesuit high schools, but many Jesuit college preps cost less than $20,000 (although some schools charge more than $20,000 -- e.g., Loyola School in New York City). Additionally, Jesuit schools (including Loyola in NYC) provide financial assistance and many also offer work study programs.
Why do you disagree with a case-by-case analysis? What standard for success would you use?
I'm not exactly sure what Ignatius would say on this, but he wouldn't equate success with a certain salary, career, or college. This isn't to say he wouldn't encourage achievement in all areas. For Ignatius, the goal was to glorify God in all things, and to seek that end above all else. For each person that could mean a different path.
Perhaps a reader can point to a specific document or letter that would give a more specific indication of Ignatius's thoughts on this.