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Bishop O’Connell High School has the unique opportunity this fall to pilot two new learning opportunities for its students. Although both courses are in the Arlington school’s Technology and Business Department, they came about in very different ways.
I’m at 35,000 feet where, thanks to the miracle of modern satellite technology, I am able to do something I rarely do — watch daytime TV. Specifically, a talk show discussing the recent “trad wife” phenomenon.
St. Paul VI Catholic High School in Chantilly opens its doors for its 42nd year and welcomes the newest Panthers and returning students to its beautiful, faith-filled campus in Chantilly.
As Saint John Paul the Great Catholic High School enters its 17th year of Dominican Catholic education in Potomac Shores, the students and faculty look forward to another year of their bioethics curriculum, rigorous academic, athletic, and fine arts programs, and daily opportunities to grow in the life of faith.
Two recent graduates of St. Paul VI Catholic High School in Chantilly, Katrina Boland and Peter Delacourt, were awarded with the college-sponsored National Merit Scholarships for their achievements in academics, extracurricular activities and leadership roles throughout high school. 
People often ask why I decided to start a school. I wish I could say I had a vision of educating our youths in the fullness of the Catholic faith. The truth is that I needed a job.
Mae O’Neill, a rising college student and active parishioner of St. John Neumann Church in Reston, received a $3,000 scholarship from the Knights of Columbus Family of Man Council No. 7566 for her dedication to her faith, academics and community service.
For more than 12 centuries, pilgrims from around the world have embarked on a physically demanding and spiritually fruitful journey leading to the tomb of St. James the Greater in Santiago, Spain. This summer, nine of those pilgrims were students from Bishop O’Connell High School in Arlington.
With the Blue Ridge Mountains to the west and the lush, green valleys of the piedmont to the east, Madison County deserves one of the top spots on the list of prettiest places in Virginia.