Sierra Madre Academy in San Marcos gets top honors

By: NOELLE IBRAHIM - Staff Writer
Catholic school recognized for academics, civic education | Tuesday, October 30, 2007 11:47 PM PDT

Kenneth Griswold teaches his ninth grade Algebra class at Sierra Madre Academy, a private Catholic school in San Marcos that was selected as one of the top 50 Catholic secondary schools in the U.S.
WALDO NILO Staff Photographer
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SAN MARCOS -- Sierra Madre Academy Principal Paul Kerekes considers his school San Marcos' best kept secret.

The independent, private Catholic school, which serves kindergarten through 12th grade, may be housed in a small commercial building and strip mall near West Mission Road, but its outside facilities do not match the learning going on inside, Kerekes said.

"It's not about how our buildings look ... it's about what kind of education students are receiving," he said.

And it appears the secret is getting out, Kerekes said.

Sierra Madre's 49-student high school was chosen for the second year in a row as one of the 50 best Catholic secondary schools in the nation. Out of nearly 1,300 Catholic high schools across the United States, roughly 300 applied for the fourth annual Catholic High School Honor Roll, a project of the Acton Institute, an international research and educational organization.

"It's a stamp of approval from someone other than ourselves that says we are doing what we say we are," Kerekes said, adding that more people attended the school's open houses this month. "When someone else says it, people have a tendency to listen."

The award honors schools that excel in three categories -- academic excellence, Catholic identity and civic education, areas in which Sierra Madre has flourished, said Anthony Pienta, the research project coordinator who manages the honor roll.

In addition to being used as a informational resource for parents, the honor roll is meant to recognize Catholic schools that can be held up as examples for others to imitate, Pienta said. However, the list intentionally does not rank the 50 top schools, because the institute wants the "competition to remain constructive," he said.

Rigorous academics is one of the reasons Kerekes believes his school was honored. The school strives to prepare students for college, he said. Roughly 95 percent to 99 percent of Sierra Madre graduates are accepted to universities, and its classes are accepted by the University of California system, Kerekes said.

"They have high expectations for us," said sophomore Meghann Schafer. "Our classes are a grade above what they're doing in public schools."

In addition, small class sizes with a maximum of 25 students allow for more personalized attention for students, which plays a role in their success, Kerekes said.

"Teachers are better able to manage their classes and kids don't get lost in the system," he said.

Sierra Madre also emphasizes a strong Catholic identity in its class offerings, including introduction to Catholicism, church history, Scripture and morality and apologetics, in which students learn how to defend their faith in the outside world, he said.

"The Catholic faith gives them a rock solid foundation to fall back on," he said, adding that one of the school's goals is to make students spiritually strong.

In addition, Mass is held on campus each Friday, students pray four times a day as a class and priests lead confessions once a month on campus, Kerekes said.

"In this day and age in public schools, God is taken out of every single arena," said parent Liz Delgado. "At Sierra Madre, they try to place God in everything we do."

Students also participate in a voluntary Works of Mercy program, in which students are taught to be civic-minded by putting their knowledge into action, Kerekes said. Roughly 70 percent to 80 percent of high-schoolers make sandwiches for homeless shelters, visit retirement homes and volunteer with developmentally disabled children on a weekly basis.

"Being Catholic, we feel we have an obligation to help out those in need," he said.

The program helps students to mature and focus on the bigger picture outside of themselves, he said.

"We want our students to be a benefit to society, not a hindrance," Kerekes said.

-- Contact staff writer Noelle Ibrahim at (760) 740-3517 or nibrahim@nctimes.com.

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Pre-Registration Comments[-]Go to Top

walter wrote on Oct 31, 2007 6:51 AM:Thank God for Sierra Madre! Our children are exposed to such debilitating things in society today. This small, Catholic School is unshaken by trends of our sick, secular culture.

Maria Arg. wrote on Oct 31, 2007 8:18 AM:Thank you North County Times for writing this story. Our cities need more schools like Sierra Madre.

To Walter wrote on Oct 31, 2007 9:35 AM:You're scary.

SanMarcosMom wrote on Oct 31, 2007 1:56 PM:Actually, it's our society that is scary today. Raising a child in it is challenging. How do you keep your kid from being overexposed to all the trash that our culture throws at them at such an early age? My child attends a different catholic school than Sierra Madre and I am very thankful for the positive influences there every day.

tired of it wrote on Oct 31, 2007 3:50 PM:Hey, guess what? My family is a practicing Catholic family. Its still not welcomed into Catholic schools. We have the money. The kids have special educational needs. We have to do our best to keep our kid from being overexposed to the culture than relying on the school. Its one thing to see these kids turned away in secular society, quite another, within the church. :)

Mike wrote on Oct 31, 2007 5:25 PM:Wow...what a concept!!! Smaller class sizes help students be successful. Maybe the 32:1 state average for K-12 education is not the right idea. Class size reduction costs money and we should never throw money at education even though we rank 48th out of 50 for per pupil spending according the U.S. Dept of Education.

Good story! wrote on Oct 31, 2007 8:35 PM:I heard their motto is No child behind left, good to hear they are so focused on academics

tomas w. wrote on Nov 11, 2007 6:36 PM:i think that this is no good without a better building

tomas wrote on Nov 11, 2007 6:37 PM:i think this school needs a real buildng or else its no good

Go to school wrote on Sep 4, 2008 12:30 AM:Well we just got new buildings and are now called St. Joseph Academy. I am learning alot more than I have did in a public school.

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