Quantcast

CatholicPhilly.com: News from the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Powered by The Catholic Standard & Times and Phaith magazine

Catholic Philly.com
Sister Virginia Paschall, I.H.M.

Sister Virginia Paschall, I.H.M.

Posted in Local Catholic News, on January 25th, 2012

Principal garners top honors

Lou Baldwin
Special to the CS&T

Sister Virginia Paschall, I.H.M.

Last October, when the annual Catholic school administrators’ conference was held in Avalon, N.J., Immaculate Heart Sister Virginia Paschall was startled when she received a Distinguished Principal Award.

Her school, Blessed Virgin Mary in Darby, certainly isn’t large. It has at this point 214 students K-8, and it’s a struggle; Darby is by no means the most prosperous community in Delaware County.

Maybe that’s the point. At a time when Catholic schools are falling by the way side right and left, little BVM is still in there plugging, and Sister Virginia is a large part of the reason.

Sister Virginia herself is a Delco product, out of St. Joseph Parish in Collingdale. After her 1969 graduation from Archbishop Prendergast High School, she wasn’t sure what she wanted to do, so she worked for an insurance company for a year before entering the cadet teacher program the Archdiocese conducted at the time.

Through this program she attended night and summer courses at St. Joseph’s College while teaching 49 kids in second grade at Sacred Heart School in Clifton Heights.

She discovered she loved teaching and after one year she entered the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

After her novitiate it was back to second grade, this time at St. William Parish in Philadelphia, where she also worked in sacramental preparation.

This was followed by teaching in the seventh and eighth grades at Sacred Heart School in South Philadelphia, principal at St. Mark’s in Bristol and St. Veronica in North Philadelphia, and for the past 11 years at BVM.

Classroom teaching, especially in the upper grades, was a real love but administration presented entirely different challenges.

At St. Mark’s, St. Veronica and now BVM Darby, “I’ve worked with great sisters and lay faculty and I have loved it,” Sister Virginia said. “My experience has been fulfilling.”

The challenge, she said, “is just to maintain enrollment through marketing and development and to offer a high level of Catholic education where Catholic identity is always at the forefront.”

It is also being open to the new technologies, “preparing students for the 21st century,” she said. “It is also teaching the students to work collaboratively. It is taking educational risks and experiencing success which you can see in the faces of the children.

“We have worked hard to improve our curriculum with art education, music education, a strong technology program and a strong science program.”

At Blessed Virgin Mary, “we have a spirit of community which is at the heart of education and it involves the whole community with administrators and teachers,” she said. “We want to be a strong presence in the Darby area because we are needed in the area.”

At this point the BVM school population is only about 39 percent Catholic, which makes maintaining the religious identity especially important.

“We work with the teachers in faith formation,” Sister Virginia said. “We welcome children of all faiths, but we teach them about our religion and let them know prayer is universal.

“They attend our class Mass and our May Procession. Some of our altar servers are not Catholics, and some of them are also members of our children’s choir and our bell choir. We really open them up to the faith.”

Lou Baldwin is a member of St. Leo Parish and a freelance writer.



Post a Comment

Anti-Spam Quiz:

New Google Ad – First Tower

New Google Ad – Second Tower

New Google Ad – Fourth Tower

Photo Gallery

Photo Gallery

  • StJoeIMG_0014
  • Fr. Brian Kean and Msgr. Joseph McLoone, pastor, sprinkle the people of the church as a sign of repentance and as a reminder of their baptism.Fr. Brian Kean and Msgr. Joseph McLoone, pastor, sprinkle the people of the church as a sign of repentance and as a reminder of their baptism.
  • Msgr. Joseph McLoone, pastor, sprinkles the people and church as a sign of repentance and as a reminder of their baptism and to purify the walls of the new church.Msgr. Joseph McLoone, pastor, sprinkles the people and church as a sign of repentance and as a reminder of their baptism and to purify the walls of the new church.
  • StJoeIMG_0133
  • StJoeIMG_0229
  • Archbisohp Charles Chaput places relics of Saint Anthony of Padua, Saint Elizabeth Ann Seaton, Saint John Neumann, Saint Maria Goretti, Saint Patrick, and Saint Peregrine beneath the altar which is then sealed.Archbisohp Charles Chaput places relics of Saint Anthony of Padua, Saint Elizabeth Ann Seaton, Saint John Neumann, Saint Maria Goretti, Saint Patrick, and Saint Peregrine beneath the altar which is then sealed.
  • Archbishop Charles Chaput anoints the altar with sacred chrism which makes the altar a symbol of Christ.Archbishop Charles Chaput anoints the altar with sacred chrism which makes the altar a symbol of Christ.
  • Incense is burned on the altar to signify that Christ's sacrifice, there perpetuated in mystery, ascends to God as an odor of sweetness and also to signify that the people's prayers rise up pleasing and acceptable, reaching the throne of God (Rev 8:3-4).Incense is burned on the altar to signify that Christ's sacrifice, there perpetuated in mystery, ascends to God as an odor of sweetness and also to signify that the people's prayers rise up pleasing and acceptable, reaching the throne of God (Rev 8:3-4).
  • The altar is covered in preparation for the fist celebration of the Eucharist in the new church.The altar is covered in preparation for the fist celebration of the Eucharist in the new church.
  • Parishiners come forward with candles for the altar which will be lit to show that Christ brightness shines out in the Church and through it in the whole human family.Parishiners come forward with candles for the altar which will be lit to show that Christ brightness shines out in the Church and through it in the whole human family.
  • The lighting of the altar is follwed by the lighting of the church which reminds us that Christ is "a light to enlighten the nations" (Luke 2:32).The lighting of the altar is follwed by the lighting of the church which reminds us that Christ is "a light to enlighten the nations" (Luke 2:32).
  • StJoeIMG_0450
  • LIturgy of the EucharistLIturgy of the Eucharist
  • The people of St. Joseph parish pray joyfully in their new church.The people of St. Joseph parish pray joyfully in their new church.
  • Archbishop Charles Chaput puts away Eucharist in the tabernacle for the first time at the new parish.Archbishop Charles Chaput puts away Eucharist in the tabernacle for the first time at the new parish.
  • Parishiners appluad for all the hard work that has gone in to creating their beautiful new church.Parishiners appluad for all the hard work that has gone in to creating their beautiful new church.
  • Knights of Columbus lead the recessional after the beautiful dedication of the new church of St. Joseph Parish in Downingtown, Chester County.Knights of Columbus lead the recessional after the beautiful dedication of the new church of St. Joseph Parish in Downingtown, Chester County.
  • StJoeIMG_9805
  • Representitves from Casaccio Yu Architects hand over the plans for the church to Archbishop Charles Chaput.Representitves from Casaccio Yu Architects hand over the plans for the church to Archbishop Charles Chaput.
  • Msgr. Joseph McLonne, pastor, along with Archbishop Charles Chaput open the doors to the new church for the people to enter.Msgr. Joseph McLonne, pastor, along with Archbishop Charles Chaput open the doors to the new church for the people to enter.
  • Parishioners fill the new church for the first time.Parishioners fill the new church for the first time.
  • Msgr. Joseph McLoone, pastor, and Fr. Brian Kean incense the church during the dedication of the new church.Msgr. Joseph McLoone, pastor, and Fr. Brian Kean incense the church during the dedication of the new church.

St. Joseph Parish in Downingtown, 2nd largest in archdiocese, dedicates new church

St. Joseph Parish in Downingtown, Chester County, dedicated its new church on Saturday, June 15 at 460 Manor Avenue, Downingtown. The celebration was the culmination of planning for future parish and enrollment that began in 2007.
The Rite of Solemn Dedication was celebrated by Archbishop Charles J. Chaput. Approximately 1,200 parishioners, priests, community officials and those involved with building the church were in attendance.

Join the Catholic Philly Community

Join the Catholic Philly Community

New Google Ad – Third Tower