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By Marie Mulvenna
Two more Catholic elementary schools in the archdiocese have
received the coveted accreditation of the Southern Association of Colleges and
Schools. Accreditation was awarded to St. Josephs School, Marietta, and
to St. Johns School, Hapeville, at the 77th annual meeting of the
organization held recently in New Orleans.
The Southern Association is a voluntary, non-profit,
non-governmental regional accrediting organization, one of six in the nation.
It is composed of public and private universities, colleges, occupational
institutions, secondary and elementary schools and has more than 9,000 member
and affiliate institutions.
The actual process of accreditation at the elementary school level
is done by state elementary school committees consisting of volunteer educators
representing elementary schools, higher education, and state departments of
education whose main interest is school improvement. Their findings are
reported to the Commission on Elementary Schools Delegate Assembly, the
group which accredits institutions annually.
Father Daniel J. OConnor, Secretary for Education for the
archdiocese, said he was pleased at the addition of two more schools to the
accredited roster, now bringing the total to six. Father said the Priests
Senate had voted in 1966 that all elementary parochial schools work toward
accreditation and that this accreditation is the current aim of all the 15
elementary schools within the archdiocese. He explained that all the schools
are affiliated with the Southern Association and are presently striving to
achieve the accreditation status.
In addition to the two new schools, the Southern Association has
renewed the accreditation of four other elementary schools in the archdiocese.
They are: Christ the King, Immaculate Heart of Mary, Our Lady of the Assumption
and Sts. Peter and Paul in Decatur. All four Catholic high schools in the
archdiocese are fully accredited.
Attending the New Orleans session were Sister Madeline Roddenbery,
director of elementary education for Atlanta; Sister Martha Mary Whalen,
R.S.M., principal of Our Lady of the Assumption; Sister Susan Bradley, S.N.D.,
principal of St. Thomas More; Sister Zita Helene Stimson, C.S.J., principal of
St. Josephs, Marietta.
Sister Zita Helene said the school was very happy with
the accreditation and said much hard work by the faculty and her predecessors
at St. Josephs, where she has been assigned just this past year,
really did pay off. Sister added it was a difficult task to meet
all the requirements and the final results were much appreciated.
St. Josephs is staffed by four sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet order,
plus 11 lay teachers, and has a student body of 409 in grades K through eight.
The school, which opened in 1953, is also a member of the Georgia Association
of Independent Schools.
St. Johns School in Hapeville is staffed by four Sisters of
Mercy of Philadelphia, plus the principal, Sister Rita, and has six lay members
on the faculty. The school, which opened in 1954, has an enrollment of 250
students.
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