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Our Lady of Guadalupe School The Regis School of the Sacred Heart St. Vincent de Paul Catholic School. Assumption Catholic School; Christ the Redeemer Catholic School (Cypress) Corpus Christi School (Houston) - It is in the Westwood subdivision. [3] [4] Circa 2002 it had 137 students. From 2011 to 2012 enrollment grew by 7%, with 215 students ...
Pages in category "Private K–8 schools in Houston" ... Annunciation Orthodox School; Assumption Catholic School (Houston) I. ... Our Mother of Mercy Catholic School ...
As of 2018, the archdiocesan school system was the largest private school system in Texas. The system had 59 schools, with an enrollment of approximately 19,500 students. [2] In 2005, the school system had 17,000 students prior to Hurricane Katrina; the hurricane meant that an additional 1,700 attended Houston-area Catholic schools. [48]
St. Christopher Catholic School in Houston, Texas (K-8) St. Clare of Assisi Catholic School in Houston, Texas (K-8) St. Dominic Savio Catholic High School in Austin, Texas (9–12) St. Edward Catholic School in Spring, Texas (K-8) St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic School (Houston) (K-8) St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic School (Keller) (K-8)
St. Martha Church Faith Formation Office and Catholic School [62] [63] - Previously the main campus was in Kingwood; it is currently in Porter. St. Mary of the Purification Church - It was established on April 5, 1929. [79] St. Michael Church (West Houston) - It is in proximity to the Houston Galleria. [80]
Catholic elementary schools in Houston (5 P) R. Roman Catholic secondary schools in Houston (6 P) This page was last edited on 2 October 2017, at 04:08 (UTC). ...
Articles about Catholic grade schools in Texas. Since the vast majority of Catholic schools in Louisiana are kindergarten through 8th grade , these schools are the equivalent of both " primary schools " and " middle schools " used in some modernized school systems.
At the dedication ceremony for the new location in 1952, the school was given the new name of Assumption Seminary. In 1967 archdiocesan clergy once again assumed responsibility for the administration of the school. The Mission Road facility was closed, and theology students began taking academic courses at the Oblate School of Theology in 1969