St. Columban College Pagadian City: A Companion To The Philosophy of Education
St. Columban College Pagadian City: A Companion To The Philosophy of Education
St. Columban College Pagadian City: A Companion To The Philosophy of Education
COLUMBAN COLLEGE
Pagadian city
Submitted to:
Submitted by:
October 6, 2018
Abstract
Religious education is an area that has struggled throughout the past century to become an
academic discipline or at least a topic worthy of academic discussion. The topic, of course, is not what
has struggled; various groups at different times in several places have tried to establish a field of
religious education. Given the inherent complexity of this task, the difficulties of development are
perhaps not surprising. Some people, however, think that a field of religious education is
impossibility. The skeptics come from both sides: religious people who doubt the value of being
linked to education, and educators who doubt that religion is compatible with education. On the
religious side, one can distinguish between those relatively few people who simply reject education
and those people who believe that a religious life is irreducibly particular. That is, a Christian
education or a Muslim education makes sense to this latter group, but a religious education would be a
vapid generality. On the educational side, some people think that education and religion are
contradictories, that education is the modern world's replacement of religion. Other people in
education think that religion is a topic worthy of study but that the term "religious education" suggests
involvement in the practice of a religion. They might acknowledge the academic legitimacy of
"religious studies" in the university while opposing religious education in a high school.
These multiple objections to the existence of religious education cannot be answered here at
the beginning. In the final section of this chapter I propose what might be an academically and
religiously defensible concept of religious education. My starting premise is that as a practical matter,
religion touches the lives of a majority of people in the United States and throughout the world. As a
part of the philosophy of education, religion's relation to both philosophy and education has been and
continues to be an important question. Education in the twentieth century did not succeed in replacing
religion.
Body
The Settlers High School will, where possible, make provision for important holy
days in regard to the setting of examinations and tests, to ensure that learners are not
prejudiced by their attendance at religious observances.
Religious observances may be conducted on the school premises and during activities
provided that it is conducted on an equitable basis and that attendance by learners and
members of the staff is free and voluntary.
In terms of the Act, the governing body has the mandate to determine the religious
observances of the school. As the vast majority of the learners are of the Christian faith, the
governing body has approved Bible readings and Christian singing at ceremonies, assemblies
and meetings.
The intrinsic value of other religious groups shall however be respected and
opportunity shall be given to them to participate at assemblies as well. As it is logistically
impossible for the school to cater for all religious groups’ requirements, a suitable alternative
must be provided by the parents of the affected learners.
This policy, therefore, makes allowance for meetings of religious societies or groups,
as well as the provision of religious instruction by religious bodies and other accredited
groups outside the formal school curriculum on school premises, provided that opportunities
be afforded in an equitable manner to all religious bodies represented in a school, that no
denigration or caricaturing of any other religion take place, and that attendance at such
instruction be voluntary. Persons offering Religious Instruction would do so under the
authority of the religious body, and would not be required to be registered with the South
African Council for Educators.
The Seaview clubhouse is the designated area for the observance of Friday prayers by
the Muslim boys. A parent committee is responsible for arranging the Imam and any other
requirements. Boys apply annually for permission to attend prayers and a register of signing
out and in is kept at reception.
Teaching should, at all times, engender a sense of acceptance, security, and respect
for learners with differing values, cultural backgrounds, and religious traditions.
Educators must ensure that all, irrespective of race, creed, sexual orientation,
disability, language, gender, or class, feel welcome, emotionally secure, and appreciated.
Can any comprehensive and consistent pattern for religious education be drawn from
this confusing array of meanings? Religious groups throughout the centuries have all trained
their members in the practices of the group. A general name for these particular exercises
could be "religious education." But every religious group today faces the challenge of a
modern culture and the critical mindset of modern education.
The critical study of religion could be called "religion education," similar to the way we
speak of science education, art education, or mathematics education. A dichotomy could be
imagined between the closed, "subjective" world of a religious group's discipline and the
secular world's "objective" attempts to explain religion and religions.
In practice, however, there is tension and overlap rather than a total separation
between these two forms of education. Most religious groups today make an attempt to come
to terms with modern tools of education. The struggle around particular issues by particular
religious groups can obscure the fact that the major religious traditions are not functioning in
encapsulated, "subjective" worlds. Religious educators not only in the secular schools of
England but in most religiously affiliated schools are exposing students to a diversity of
beliefs and a search for intelligible answers.
Anyone who assumes that only indoctrination happens in these classrooms is simply
not acquainted with those schools, students, and teachers. From the other direction, an
educator need not be a member of a religious body to be able to teach religion. But neither
should it be supposed that a schoolteacher's ability to be fair to evidence is hindered by being
a practicing member of a religious body. Someone can teach political science even if he or
she is a registered Democrat.
Someone can teach ethics while being a firm adherent of utilitarianism. The tension
may be greatest in religion but some experience of participation in religious activity should
help a teacher in explaining religion. The teacher's relation both to the material and to the
students is not captured by the word "objective." The teacher has to imagine what it is like to
see the world as a Hindu or a Muslim or a Christian does.
The peculiar assumption in the literature of the United States, and echoed elsewhere,
is that "teaching religion" is equivalent to indoctrination and proselytizing.
This assumption raises questions not just about "religion" but about "teaching." If to teach
religion means to tell people what to think, what does teaching history, literature, or ethics
mean? An academic exploration of how to teach religion in private, religiously affiliated and
state schools would be a worthwhile contribution to the classroom teaching of every subject.
For the individual, religious education is a process that begins at birth and continues
throughout life. At a very early age, a child is immersed into a set of religious or quasi-
religious practices. Parents or guardians have an ineluctably large part in how anyone takes
up a stance toward a religious way of life. What goes on in school should not be a denial of
the religion that students bring with them. But the classroom, from the first grade on, should
be a place where every question is allowable and a student learns to think critically about all
phases of life. There should be an increase of criticism as a student moves from primary to
secondary to tertiary schools but nonetheless a continuity in the teaching of religion. If this
school form of religious education is successful it should prepare students to take up an
intelligent and freely chosen attitude to religious participation in adult life. From then into old
age, a balance of activity and continued critical study should be available for every person.
Our country has sufficient expertise and energy to meet the challenge of developing a
distinctively South African approach to Religion and Education. As a matter of priority, we
must deploy our intellect, imagination, talent, and human capacity in the work of creating and
sustaining the relationship between Religion and Education.
Religion can contribute to creating an integrated educational community that affirms
unity in diversity. In providing a unified framework for teaching and learning about religion,
religions, and religious diversity, this policy on Religion and Education does not suggest that
all religions are the same. Nor does it try to select from different religious traditions to try and
build a new unified religion. The policy is not a project in social or religious engineering
designed to establish a uniformity of religious beliefs and practices. The policy does not
promote religious relativism, religious syncretism, or any other religious position in relation
to the many religions in South Africa and the world. By creating a free, open space for
exploration, the policy demonstrates respect for the distinctive character of different ways of
life.
Like the public school, the policy on Religion and Education is designed for diversity.
As we overcome the entrenched separations of the past, we are finding new ways to celebrate
our different linguistic, cultural, and religious resources. We must move decisively beyond
the barriers erected by apartheid; beyond the shields provided by ignorance of the other,
which invariably breeds suspicion, hatred and even violence. It is time for all people of
goodwill to know and understand the diversity of religious and other worldviews that are held
by their fellow citizens. Every child has the right to quality education in this most important
area of human development and social relations. By working together, everyone involved in
education - teachers and pupils, principals and administrators, trade unions and professional
associations, parents and communities - can benefit from the inter-religious knowledge and
understanding cultivated through Religion and Education.
Our policy for religion in education, therefore, is designed to support unity without
uniformity and diversity without divisiveness. Our public schools cannot establish the
uniformity of religious education in a single faith or the divisiveness of religious education
through separate programmes for a prescribed set of faiths. Neither course would advance
unity in diversity. In any event, as we have established, our schools are not in the business of
privileging, prescribing, or promoting any religion. Schools have a different responsibility in
providing opportunities for teaching and learning about our religious diversity and our
common humanity.
Although the goal of unity in diversity must be achieved within the formal learning
programmes of the curriculum, our policy also has clear implications for the role of religion
in the broader life of a public school and even private school. In particular, our policy
clarifies the role that might be given to Religious Observances, and to Religious Instruction.
This policy for Religion and Education upholds the principles of a cooperative model for
relations between religion and the state, by maintaining a constitutional impartiality in the
formal activities of the school, but encouraging voluntary interaction outside of this.
Literature Cited:
See also 3 THE JUDAIC TRADITION; 4 THE EDUCATIONAL THOUGHT OF AUGUSTINE; 22
MORAL
EDUCATION; 26 AESTHETICS AND THE EDUCATIVE POWERS OF ART; 29 CHURCH,
STATE, AND
EDUCATION; 38 SEX EDUCATION
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