T
Tao_Equus
Guest
My older son is now in his 2nd year of high school and doing very well in every class except R.E. His school report uses words like dilligent, enthusiastic, hard-working, studious and well-behaved in all but this one class where he is described as argumentative and disruptive. When challenged on this his response is that his teacher preaches and does not teach and that she tries to force God and Jesus down his throat.
By chance I know his R.E. teacher from years back and know her to be a strict Presbyterian, definitely of the 'fear thy God' variety. His school is non-denomenational and is required by law to teach a broad spectrum of faiths without predjuidice. Can a strict Presbyterian really be expected to fulfill the role of neutral unbiased educator and should the criteria in the job description call for an individual without strong religeous convictions?
On a broader note my own personal belief is that all schools by law should be forced to be non-denomenational. I see the school years as a unique opportunity for children of all backgrounds to mingle and fosters a tolerance and acceptance of others at the most important age.
Scotland, though globably not as notorius as Northern Ireland, has strong sectarian dvisions, though admitedly and thankfully they are gradualy diminishing. As a child myself I went to a Protestant junior school and a 1/4 of a mile down the road there was a Catholic one. The only time the two groups of children mixed was to fight each other. Even outside of school we never mixed, for me to play with a Catholic I would have suffered ridicule and bullying from my schoolmates. I remember well the sadness I used to feel when on many occasions I would see a Catholic child, who were in a minority, rushing home to avoid the protestants kids. So my opinion is that single faith schools have no place in a modern society.
Children get religeous education from their parents if they are religeous and should be afforded a school enviroment where they get to learn about the rest of the worlds ideas. The 'faith' schools do not serve to bring genuine faith but rather brainwash children into thinking that is all there is. It strikes me that parents who choose this must have little faith in their faith if they do this to their children. For if the parents have earned the child(ren)s love and respect through being great parents, and they have religeous conviction, chances are pretty good that child will adopt them as their own.
Your thoughts please.
Respect to all
TE
By chance I know his R.E. teacher from years back and know her to be a strict Presbyterian, definitely of the 'fear thy God' variety. His school is non-denomenational and is required by law to teach a broad spectrum of faiths without predjuidice. Can a strict Presbyterian really be expected to fulfill the role of neutral unbiased educator and should the criteria in the job description call for an individual without strong religeous convictions?
On a broader note my own personal belief is that all schools by law should be forced to be non-denomenational. I see the school years as a unique opportunity for children of all backgrounds to mingle and fosters a tolerance and acceptance of others at the most important age.
Scotland, though globably not as notorius as Northern Ireland, has strong sectarian dvisions, though admitedly and thankfully they are gradualy diminishing. As a child myself I went to a Protestant junior school and a 1/4 of a mile down the road there was a Catholic one. The only time the two groups of children mixed was to fight each other. Even outside of school we never mixed, for me to play with a Catholic I would have suffered ridicule and bullying from my schoolmates. I remember well the sadness I used to feel when on many occasions I would see a Catholic child, who were in a minority, rushing home to avoid the protestants kids. So my opinion is that single faith schools have no place in a modern society.
Children get religeous education from their parents if they are religeous and should be afforded a school enviroment where they get to learn about the rest of the worlds ideas. The 'faith' schools do not serve to bring genuine faith but rather brainwash children into thinking that is all there is. It strikes me that parents who choose this must have little faith in their faith if they do this to their children. For if the parents have earned the child(ren)s love and respect through being great parents, and they have religeous conviction, chances are pretty good that child will adopt them as their own.
Your thoughts please.
Respect to all
TE