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Religious
Education
and the Globalised Economy
There
is a world-wide interest in human spirituality today. This
is to be understood as a reaction against the global domination
of money, and the spread of financial values into every area
of modern life. Although the market promises life and abundance
for all, it is becoming clearer every year that prosperity
is available only to those inside the market. For those outside,
whether in the so-called third world or developing countries,
or within the rich world itself, the market is creating sharp
contrasts between poverty and wealth.
As human
values are challenged by monetary values, there is an urgent
sense of need for the values of the human spirit. This is
the context in which there is a world-wide revival of interest
in spiritual, moral and religious education. Sometimes this
takes a rather specific and narrow form, when a nation seeks
to hold onto its traditional values by creating a very clear
and perhaps dogmatic instruction for school children in the
traditional religion of that country. Sometimes a new form
of educational religious education appears, in which young
people are encouraged to encounter the spiritual and religious
values of several traditions, in order to enrich and deepen
their own human development.
In this
respect, there is a striking contrast between Europe and North
America. While several provinces of Canada make formal provision
for religious education in the state schools, it is generally
only practiced in the Roman Catholic school systems. There
seems to be a fear that the multi-cultural character of modern
Canada will not be reflected successfully in religious education,
or might arouse controversies which would be politically harmful.
Meanwhile,
in the United States of America there has been a traditional
separation between religion and the state. This is often interpreted
as meaning that the state schools cannot offer religious studies
to their children. Thus in the United States of America, religious
education is mainly to be found in the religious communities
themselves, taking mainly Jewish and Christian forms, depending
upon the tradition of the religious community.
In Europe,
things are very different. In most countries of Europe there
is some kind of state-funded religious education provided
in schools. This takes many different forms, ranging from
the recently created world religions curriculum in Norway,
which includes the study of humanism, to the mainly traditional
Christian orthodox religious education of Greece, and the
Roman Catholic religious education typical of Italy and Spain.
However, throughout Europe as a whole there is a tendency
towards re-capturing the European spiritual traditions through
a religious education which will be both descriptive and critical,
and yet at the same time rich in values and spirituality for
all children. In the countries of the former Soviet Union,
religious education has replaced the older communist indoctrination,
and in some European countries such as the Netherlands and
Germany religious education in either the Protestant or the
Catholic tradition may be taken by the student as an alternative
to ethical programmes.
The major
European country which does not have state-sponsored religious
education is France, because of the historical division between
the state and the Roman Catholic church. However, even in
France there is a good deal of discussion today about the
desirability of introducing a new form of religious studies.
After all, it is said, if French young people had received
a good education about Islam, the Muslim minorities of France
would, hopefully, be more easily accepted, and there would
be more understanding between France and her North African
neighbours.
The religious
education of England and Wales is, in many respects, a model
for the rest of Europe. Here, religious education has been
a compulsory school subject for all children, regardless of
their religious faith or lack of it, since 1944. Religious
education is taught from a world religions syllabus, for which
the many local education authorities are responsible. The
emphasis is upon Christianity, but there is also a requirement
that children should learn the teachings and practices of
the principal world religions represented in Great Britain.
This means, for example, that all school children in England
and Wales are taught about Islam, since Islam is certainly
well represented in Great Britain. The six major religions
which usually feature in the local agreed syllabuses are Christianity,
Hinduism, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism and the Sikh faith. The
articles which follow describe several aspects of the English
system.
There
are a number of interesting features of the way religious
education is dealt with in England and Wales. First, although
compulsory religious education is required in law, the implementation
of the syllabus is a local responsibility. This is the only
subject of the curriculum which is decided by teachers and
parents. Second, religious education in England and Wales
is secular. This means that the purpose of the subject is
not to proselytize or evangelise, nor even to deepen faith
in any particular religion. The purpose of the subject is
to make a contribution to the human and educational development
of children by enabling them to understand something of religion
and religions, and to develop their own sense of values in
living through an encounter with the values and the spirituality
of the religions of the world.
Indoctrination
is strictly forbidden; the approach must always be descriptive
and critical. Children are invited to question and to debate.
Moreover, the subject is secular in the sense that the teachers
of religious education are ordinary teachers. They are not
necessarily ordained as ministers of religion. Indeed, it
is not required that the teacher of religious education should
have any particular faith of his or her own. Religious education
is treated as a professional responsibility. Specialist teachers
who must be graduates in theology or religious studies are
trained along side the specialist teachers in other curriculum
subjects.
In the
third place, the religious education we teach in England and
Wales is both critical and spiritual. We seek to enable children
to develop thinking skills, to evaluate evidence, and to become
well informed about the modern world. We also expect children
to develop a critical sense of the values of society, and
thus to develop their sense of citizenship within a diverse
society.
In many
countries, such as in the USA, religious education is part
of a theological course, or is taught within a department
of theology. However, in Britain this is not the case. Since
religious education is such an important part of the ordinary
school curriculum, religious educators are generally located
in departments or schools of educational studies. Thus religious
education specialists work and teach side by side with geography
educators, mathematics educators, and specialists in all the
various educational disciplines.
All this
means that religious education in Britain offers a challenging
area for research. Whether the interest is in the personal
and spiritual development of children and adults or in the
relationships between the state and religion, whether the
interest is in methods of teaching or the question of syllabus
construction, teachers and administrators from many countries
come to Britain.
Not only
is the research student located in a school of education but
there is a continual series of local and national conferences
and consultations, resources and special agencies, new publications
and projects, which offer to the religious education researcher
a wide and stimulating scene. As you read the rest of this
online magazine, I hope that you will gain an insight into
the religious education situation in England and Wales, and
that you will be encouraged to take your interest still further.
By
John M Hull
University of Birmingham England
http://www.bham.ac.uk
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