Why Regina? Our students are formed in an academically challenging and spiritually rich environment to be the person God intends them to be.| The Regina Academies
Our schools have been founded to reignited St. John Neumann's legacy in Philadelphia by becoming a leader in the return to Catholic classical education.| The Regina Academies
God places each of us in the world for such a time as this. The Regina Academies are here for you during the coronavirus pandemic, to be a resource to families.| The Regina Academies
There are many different ides about what a Catholic school should be. How does a parent decide? Is a Catholic education worth the cost, or should parents just put their kids in public school and save their money for college tuition?| The Regina Academies
In Catholic classical schools wonder is encouraged as an essential part of learning. It is made the center of a child’s motivation. Through wonder students are guided to a greater understanding of themselves as God’s unique creation, and to the magnificent design of the world around them.| The Regina Academies
A classical education forms children in Truth, so that they can come to imitate the Truth and share in Christ's divinity.| The Regina Academies
Under the patronage of the Blessed Virgin, the incarnation focus of the Regina Academy's curriculum gives equal importance to faith and reason.| The Regina Academies
It is critically important for parents to remember that, according to the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church, they are ultimately responsible for their children’s education. Children do not belong to teachers, schools, the community, or the government. A school’s only purpose is to enter into a partnership with the family in a very narrow, and delegated capacity, i.e., the education of children in a moral environment and with a curriculum that meets parent’s approval.| The Regina Academies
Are our lives meaningless? Absolutely not. Pope Francis wrote in Evangelii Gaudium that “formation in the via pulchritudinis (the way of beauty) ought to be part of our effort to pass on the Faith.” In the Regina Academies, we have an opportunity to surround our students with beauty, whether it be in nature, the liturgy, or in the classroom.| The Regina Academies
Smartphones have been made an indispensable appendage for anyone who must function in society. But with their necessity, the challenge to discipline ourselves to use them responsibly is great. For children and their parents, that can be especially difficult.| The Regina Academies
Few would question, at least with any credibility, that our culture is experiencing a crisis of manhood. Author and farmer Jason Craig published an excellent| The Regina Academies
Teaching history is fundamental to a classical education. It is a collection of memories handed down in stories that define who we are. Those stories are preserved and come to life in great literature through which we can see the historical struggles and triumphs of our shared humanity. We can only truly know who we are if we know our past.| The Regina Academies
There has never been a more critical time for the Regina Academies. The Incarnation, not Critical Theory or any other ideology, is the foundation of our curriculum. We teach, with absolute confidence, that we can understand and communicate truth through language. Our goal is that students become masters of words.| The Regina Academies
The Regina Academies go beyond vague talking points about about how education prepares kids for college and career, to emphasize the critical importance of a Catholic education on the intellectual AND religious formation of children.| The Regina Academies
The Regina Academies have high academic expectations for our students, but rigor and leisure are not mutually exclusive. If anything, leisure, properly understood, is the complement to rigor.| The Regina Academies
In this rancorous time in which we live, Christmas reminds us of what is truly real: The WORD who was “made flesh”; What is really TRUE: He was “full of grace and truth”; and, what brings us LIFE: “In him was life, and the life was the light of man.”| The Regina Academies
On December 7, 2020, The Regina Academies presented John Brehany, PhD, STL, Director of Institutional Relations at The National Catholic Bioethics Center in an online seminar to discuss how the Catholic moral tradition can be applied to assist Catholics in forming their conscience and evaluating the acceptability of vaccines currently in production for Covid-19.| The Regina Academies