My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Whether you're a permanent teacher, supply teacher or student teacher, you'll find others in the same situation on our Staffroom forum.

The staffroom

Applying for a catholic school?

15 replies

worried23xxx · 30/04/2020 15:54

The application form is asking for my baptism and certificate and baptism date. Unfortunately I wasn't christened as a child and obviously that looks bad.

Is there any point in me applying?

OP posts:
Report
olivo · 30/04/2020 15:59

Email them to explain and ask if you should continue with your application?

Report
ReluctantHillCrester · 30/04/2020 16:08

I was baptised at a few weeks old in a Catholic church, not my choice. You actively chose to be baptised into the Catholic faith.

How long ago were you baptised? Are you worried it looks like you were baptised to get your child into a Catholic school?

Report
elephantoverthehill · 30/04/2020 16:11

I worked in a Catholic sixth form college may moons ago, I had provide 3 references, so I asked my best friend's Dad, who was a Deacon of the local Baptist church to write the 3rd reference. He told me he would write that I had never used contraception. Grin. Anyway as part of my application I wrote that although I was not a practicing Christian I would fully support the ethos of the college. It seemed to do the trick. Good luck.

Report
Frankincense88 · 30/04/2020 16:19

Apply anyway! I teach in a Catholic school and I'm not Catholic. They asked me in my interview now I would embrace the religious ethos and I got the job.

Report
worried23xxx · 30/04/2020 16:49

@ReluctantHillCrester Hi, its not for my child, I'm applying for a job there sorry should've made that a bit clearer and I wasn't baptised.

@elephantoverthehill Haha that is great! Thankyou.

@Frankincense88 Great thankyou I thought as long as I say I will support the ethos it should still be okay.

OP posts:
Report
Sewingbea · 30/04/2020 17:03

I taught in a Catholic school years ago. I'm an Anglican - weekly church attender in normal times- and that was fine. I think it's more about being in sympathy with the ethos.

Report
ReluctantHillCrester · 30/04/2020 17:07

@worried23xxx oops sorry, I thought maybe you were posting in staffroom to find out from staff about policy for admissions Blush

I like to think that in the role of teacher you tow the company line. My friend is Muslim and works as a TA in a C of E school, she is often asked about her religion as she covers her hair and KS2 kids ask a lot of questions! So she talks about her own beliefs but is open about them being her beliefs, she often then backs that up with Christians believe...

Her faith is obviously not C of E due to the hair covering but it isn't like the other teachers wear a badge saying I'm a Pagan!

Good luck in your application.

Report
ElizabethMainwaring · 02/05/2020 06:34

Hi. I teach in a Catholic school and I'm not Catholic. It was hardly raised at interview.
The form is probably generic. At my school you have to be Catholic to be SLT and head of RS, but otherwise it doesn't matter.

Report
Pud2 · 05/05/2020 19:10

They can’t ask for that and nor can they insist a teacher is a Catholic. That would be discrimination. They can expect any applicant to be sympathetic to the faith though and there would likely be an expectation that you teach RE, go to Mass etc.

Report
Barbie222 · 05/05/2020 19:22

If it's for a leadership role, it is often part of the job description. I worked at a fantastic Catholic primary but had to leave as I couldn't see any way of applying for a leadership role not being Catholic.

Report
Pud2 · 05/05/2020 21:33

It is generally only the head and second in command that need to be Catholic.

Report
Howaboutanewname · 06/05/2020 10:23

I worked in a Catholic school as an atheist for years and really loved it. If you think logically, a school wants to employ the best teacher they can. Some great teachers also happen to be Catholic. Some great teachers are not Catholic. No schools wants a reputation of employing second rate teachers because they happened to be Catholic. You will have to answer questions at interview about promoting and upholding the ethos.

Report
Elsa8 · 07/05/2020 10:27

I worked in a Catholic school and loved it. They’re far more interested in hiring a good teacher, as long as you have an understanding of the ethos and can explain how you could uphold it (generally by being a good role model and decent human being!) it’s definitely worth applying!

Report
worried23xxx · 07/05/2020 11:19

Thankyou everyone, in terms of upholding it I would say that I would attend daily prayer and mass as they do that in the school and instil the key moral principles like forgiveness etc in the classroom would that be okay?

OP posts:
Report
olivo · 07/05/2020 13:31

I've just seen this again. I also work in a Catholic school, I am not Catholic, I'm C o E. I didn't mention on application ( it wasn't asked) and at interview, I raised it myself and said about upholding the the values of the faith and school. I go to school masses with the students, we do prayers in tutor time and I support whatever else. Never a problem and there are many of us among the staff who are not Catholic but appreciate and help develop the values.

Good luck!

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.