The ubiquitous car line, the trudging of feet in the hallways, the ringing of the first bell, morning prayers and then classroom instruction, are scenes repeated each day at the 15 Diocese of Venice Catholic schools since the start of the 2025-2026 Academic Year on Aug. 11, 2025, with the full complement of 6,700 students engaged in schoolwork by Aug. 13.
The first days were full of everyone figuring out where to go, reuniting with old friends or making new ones, participating in their first academic lessons and taking part in a myriad of extracurricular activities.
At Diocesan Catholic schools, each student attended an opening Mass, either the first day of school, or within the first week, with most taking place on Aug. 15, the Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Father John Belmonte, SJ, Diocesan Superintendent of Catholic Education, celebrated Mass on the Solemnity for the students at Bishop Verot Catholic High School in Fort Myers. Father Belmonte stressed the word “belief” as a keyword to focus on throughout this school year. He described it as the most important word in the history of the world, “it is of course why we are gathered here; we believe.”
Challenging the high schoolers, Father Belmonte said as they go through the school year, and life, there is one question that will guide their spiritual life. “What do you want? God wants to help you answer that question,” Father said.
The STREAM (Science, Technology, Religion, Engineering, Arts and Math) learning model, which was introduced in the 2020-2021 school year, is fully implemented in all classrooms. This effort includes incorporated renewed emphasis on Diocesan Catholic Curriculum Standards as part of the Diocesan curriculum called, “The Gifts of Christ: Truth, Beauty, Goodness, Affability, Fortitude, Humility, and Prudence.”
This approach, fully supported by Bishop Frank J. Dewane, places students ahead of the curve in primary fields while continuing to promote core Catholic virtues by helping students to develop cognitive thought processes and gain skills such as leadership, communication, complex problem solving, teamwork and creativity. The intention is to ensure religion and faith permeate everything in the Diocesan Catholic schools.
All 15 Diocesan Catholic schools work conscientiously to provide Christ-centered learning experiences that are translatable to the real world, providing children with the tools they need to be successful beyond the classroom.
Enrollment numbers throughout the Diocese are up 40 percent over the past four years to a new record exceeding 6,700. The largest enrollment increase occurred at Donahue Catholic Academy of Ave Maria, with the welcoming of 175 students this year thanks to the installation of mobile classrooms.
St. Francis Xavier Catholic School students in Fort Myers returned to the classroom to find their sports/recess field was refurbished during the summer. The old grass was removed and the field leveled, as new grass and a full irrigation system were installed, creating a safer, greener, and more enjoyable space for the students.
St. John Neumann Catholic High School in Naples held a House Retreat Day, where new students are assigned to one of four Houses which will serve as their center of social and school spirit activities. Each of the four teams competes for points to earn different rewards or prizes throughout the year, with a trophy for the winners at the end.
Cardinal Mooney Catholic High School in Sarasota rolled out its new House Program with an Aug. 14 celebratory Pep Rally. Members of each of the six houses gathered in the gymnasium for fun and games.
On the gridiron, the Bishop Verot Catholic High School football team opened their season at home on Aug. 15 against St. John Neumann. Bishop Verot won 38-7.
Just before school began, the three Catholic schools in Lee County were the beneficiary of the Catholic Schools Spirit Night on Aug. 8, at The Mighty Mussels minor league baseball game at Hammond Stadium in Fort Myers. Part of the proceeds benefitted Bishop Verot, St. Francis Xavier, as well as St. Andrew Catholic School in Cape Coral.
For more information about Diocesan Catholic Schools, please visit https://dioceseofvenice.org/offices/offices-departments/catholicschools/.
Keep checking the weekly Florida Catholic e-edition as the school year progresses to learn more about the exciting things taking place for the students at Diocese of Venice Catholic schools.