They do this in the UK i think. It seems to e a better foot forward than total removal- after all those with no religion must live alongside others who do have a faith and an understanding of all faiths would be no load to carry in life.Maybe the trend should be to move towards a 'religious appreciation' type class? The teaching of an awareness of different belief systems etc with more of an emphasis on the moral values of each? It might be tricky for teachers to negotiate but it would encourage debate and independent thinking I'm sure.
It still didn't stop the school from barring a friend who was Church of Ireland from attending the class
All primary schools are required to have a religious education curriculum. In Multi-Denominational schools this is interpreted as encompassing all major world religions/cultures but does not include any doctrinal education.I don't believe Educate Together facilities have Religion on the Syllabus.
Actually barred? On what grounds? Happy enough to accept him/her into the school though
I couldnt believe when i heard recently that religion is now a leaving cert subject
Religion is something that the family should have 100% control over. Even within the same religion there are varying degrees of how that religion is followed and the one size fits all course that would be taught in school would not be a good idea.
Leave the responsibility with the parent's and immediate family and let schools focus on the important educational subjects.
Sure, the Church of England is not a 'real' church, anyway ...
If you are a practicing Atheist/Agnostic can you get your child out of religion class?
I couldnt believe when i heard recently that religion is now a leaving cert subject, i think that religion should be replaced as a leaving cert subject with something like drivers education, i would go as far as saying that every school child should leave secondary school with a full drivers licence
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?