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Ban religious schools? (Read 44323 times)
Sprintcyclist
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #210 - Aug 28th, 2008 at 10:35am
 
freediver - the new ideas from sweden will be completely ineffective.
They have obviously realised the dreaful error they made and by are rightly fearful of being overrun.
There is NO way islamic school will stop teaching their world dominating ideals.
As has been displayed repeatedly here by other posters.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #211 - Aug 28th, 2008 at 11:10am
 
I believe that Sprints point is valid, this whole issue would probably have been left in the too hard basket, were it not for the need to counter growing division and extremism because of Islamic migration into europe.

I also believe that other religions' attempts to influence legal aspects of a societies moral  standards has been of concern, and it is a clever way to minimise opposition from christian groups by making it a universal ban on teaching religion in schools.

School should never be a place for proselytising with inaccurate information, irrespective of the religion involved.

I also agree with sprint that I cannot imagine any Islamic school complying with these laws.
Neither could I imagine any evangelical christian school complying.

This raises the point of what do you then do when they do not comply?

Obviously they should not be allowed to teach children.

Personally, that is an outcome that would not disappoint me, on the balance scales, the harm done to young minds is far greater than the good that these sorts of schools can do.

Like Locutious said, remove funding from private schools, and raise the quality of state run schools to a level we can all be proud of.

School for Education.

Church and family for brainwashing your kids to blindly follow your personal doctrine.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #212 - Aug 28th, 2008 at 1:23pm
 
Mozzaok - yes, school is for education.  (fullstop).
teach kids the 3 R's, sports, history, social studies.

I feel a general introduction to "evolution vs creation" is ok.
But no bible or koran classes.
If people want a spiritual education, they can do that themselves.
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Re: public vs private education
Reply #213 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 11:43am
 
Very few, if any, private schools, do not have a religious component to them, and this intertwining of religion with education is an evil thing that deserves to be stamped out.

If people want to choose a religion then they should be free to do so, but that should not extend to having it imposed on children as part of their education.

The basis which so many people defend private schools is upon the fact that they provide a better standard of education, but we should question whether that is something we wish to see continued by providing government support for these private schools.

I would prefer to see a public school system invested in, which offered the best education for our children, accessible by all, and free from individual religious dogmas.

If it means removing funding from private schools to help achieve that goal, then I would be all for it.

Public schools should not be relegated to the position of the perennial poor relation.
Social standing, and financial advantage are currently the primary determining factor for what opportunities our youth may be permitted to access, and in much of society that will never change, but education should be an exception.
All our kids should at least have the opportunity of receiving a first class education, and it should be public schools providing that.
If you look at how many of the scandanavian countries structure their education system, you can see that public education can be world class, it just takes the political will to make it so.
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Re: public vs private education
Reply #214 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 12:20pm
 
Quote:
Very few, if any, private schools, do not have a religious component to them, and this intertwining of religion with education is an evil thing that deserves to be stamped out
.

Freedom of religion, freedom of thought and freedom of speech are fundamental human rights. Furthermore, it is naive to think that it would be a good thing for the government to dictate what our children are allowed to think, or what parents or their agents are allowed to teach their children. This sort of hysteria is no different from religious extremists trying to ban atheism or competing religions. This just reinforces my view that atheism is also a religion, which also has it's extremists who are blinded by their zealotry. It's kind of ironic that those who have the most to gain from freedom of thought are just as keen to deny it to others.

Isn't there already a thread about this?

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but we should question whether that is something we wish to see continued by providing government support for these private schools


Yes mozz, that's what this thread is about.

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I would prefer to see a public school system invested in, which offered the best education for our children, accessible by all


I would prefer that government expenditure be constrained by reality.

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If it means removing funding from private schools to help achieve that goal, then I would be all for it.


But what if it made it harder to improve public education by burdening it with more students?

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Social standing, and financial advantage are currently the primary determining factor for what opportunities our youth may be permitted to access


Can you give some examples of how social standing determines opportunity?
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Re: public vs private education
Reply #215 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 5:30pm
 
Off-Topic replies have been moved to this Topic.
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Re: public vs private education
Reply #216 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 3:46pm
 
Quote:
Freedom of religion, freedom of thought and freedom of speech are fundamental human rights.


My point exactly, that is why religious dogma should not be forcibly imposed upon children, not merely against their will, but when they are too young to even determine what their will is.

Whenever a religious argument speaks of human rights, then look out, because almost invariably they will be seeking to deny someone theirs, and in this case it is the human rights of children, which is not to be confused with those of their parents, but the childrens' own rights as individuals.

All those who seek to see the private school system further propped up with government money will always stress the academic superiority of private schools, as if it is some universal truism, but the fact of the matter is that the Finnish state school system (a secular system as well) is the best education system in the world, and provides brilliant results for students and society, with the removal of stress filled competitve end of year assessments, they still manage to have the highest rate of students in the world go on to successfully complete a degree or better, in higher education.

So, unless you think we are inherently dumber than the finnish people, then I think you could do worse than support a transition from our piecemeal private/religious, and state schools, to a world class state school system which we could all be confident in, and be proud of.

There is not even any need to reinvent the wheel, we have a great model in place we could use as our blueprint, and that would see all our kids getting the best opportunity that we as a society can give them, a great education.

Now once that system is up and running, and delivering the kinds of results we see overseas, then we can look again if we want, or need to invest in a private system outside of that, for those who seek government assistance in reinforcing their personal dogmas onto children.

I know if it were muslim madrassas teaching kids the koran, instead of universal morals, and civil responsibility, the results would be an overwhelming NO, so just because it is jesus stories instead just means that it is prejudice, and not reason, driving their position.
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Re: public vs private education
Reply #217 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 5:17pm
 
Quote:
My point exactly, that is why religious dogma should not be forcibly imposed upon children


Denying parents a choice in how to bring up their children is not supporting freedom of religion, it is denying it. You are the only one here suggesting that the government forcibly impose anything. Religious schools do not 'forcibly impose' religious dogma on children. Freedom of religion includes the freedom to send your child to a school of your choice. Freedom of choice does not mean the government says all children have to be brought up exactly the same way in exactly the same school. That is the opposite of freedom.

Quote:
not merely against their will, but when they are too young to even determine what their will is.


Where children are too young to choose for themselves, the right is always that of the parent, not of the government. Your claim is no less absurd than the government claiming that in the interest of freedom of consumer choice, all parents must be forced to dress their children in white until the child indicates a choice of their own. It trivialises the relationship between parent and child, it trivialises personal choice about spirituality, and it reverses the fundamental nature of freedom. Furthermore, your absurd claim relies on an assumption that denying a child a right to a religious education means that no choice has been made for, or imposed upon them. It has. Freedom of religion does not begin at 18. It begins at birth. Children do not belong to the government until they are 18. Freedom of religion includes the right to bring your children up in a religious environment. By denying this, you deny what freedom of religion really is.

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Whenever a religious argument speaks of human rights, then look out, because almost invariably they will be seeking to deny someone theirs


That is exactly what you are doing now mozz.

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and in this case it is the human rights of children


Mozz, getting your way and taking children away from their parents to 'protect' them from a religious education is not genuine protection. It is a denial of basic human rights. These rights do not begin at 18, allowing the government to choose until then. They begin at birth, and default to the parent, not the government, when a child does not make a choice. Your approach is no less condescending, and no less evil, then historical attempts to steal children from their parents and indoctrinate them into the government approved dogma. That you cloak it in a misrepresentation of freedom just makes it more evil, not less. groupthink and freedom of thought are not the same.

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which is not to be confused with those of their parents, but the childrens' own rights as individuals


Here's the problem Mozz. You replace the choice of the parent with the choice of the government, not that of the child. If the government decided that all children must recieve a Christian education instead, would you consider this just? Why do you think your version of government imposed 'choice' is any less dogmatic?

Quote:
All those who seek to see the private school system further propped up with government money will always stress the academic superiority of private schools, as if it is some universal truism, but the fact of the matter is that the Finnish state school system (a secular system as well) is the best education system in the world


Prove it.

Quote:
with the removal of stress filled competitve end of year assessments, they still manage to have the highest rate of students in the world go on to successfully complete a degree or better, in higher education.


LOL Mozza, this does not mean a thing. The rate of completion of tertiary degrees depends far more on the extent of funding of tertiary degrees than on the secondary system.

Quote:
There is not even any need to reinvent the wheel, we have a great model in place we could use as our blueprint, and that would see all our kids getting the best opportunity that we as a society can give them, a great education.


So you think it would be possible to give all students the best possible education under a government system? Are you aware of the costs involved?

Quote:
Now once that system is up and running, and delivering the kinds of results we see overseas, then we can look again if we want, or need to invest in a private system outside of that


I see a remarkable parallel with your distorted notions of freedom of choice. Rather than judging private schools on their merit, you think we should abolish them, replace them with givernmenment schools, then decide whether they are necessary? Wouldn't it make more sense to decide whether private schools are a good thing before you abolish them?

Quote:
I know if it were muslim madrassas teaching kids the koran, instead of universal morals, and civil responsibility, the results would be an overwhelming NO


Actually, Australia allows Muslim schools as well.

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so just because it is jesus stories instead just means that it is prejudice, and not reason, driving their position
.

Mozz, you are the most prejudiced of all in this debate. You would deny people freedom of choice because you think that the choice that most parents make for their children is 'evil' (your own words). This is nothing more than an attempt to intrerfere in the way other people choose to bring up their children in order to impose your own views upon them.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #218 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 5:32pm
 
For me, my religion is part of my family's culture and I am glad to have been taught since birth. Parents will pass on their culture to their children and it is their right to do so. Also, I didn't go to a private school, but I don't think I would have minded.

Quote:
All those who seek to see the private school system further propped up with government money will always stress the academic superiority of private schools, as if it is some universal truism, but the fact of the matter is that the Finnish state school system (a secular system as well) is the best education system in the world, and provides brilliant results for students and society, with the removal of stress filled competitve end of year assessments, they still manage to have the highest rate of students in the world go on to successfully complete a degree or better, in higher education.


I would like to see the private school system to be further propped up by the government because I know that it saves taxpayer money, and I have never mentioned academic superiority of private schools in any arguments. "Best education system in the world" is very subjective and in the Academic Ranking of World Universities, ANU ranked 59th while University of Helsinki ranked 72nd. Also, Canada, USA and Japan have higher proportions of people with tertiary degrees.

Quote:
I know if it were muslim madrassas teaching kids the koran, instead of universal morals, and civil responsibility, the results would be an overwhelming NO, so just because it is jesus stories instead just means that it is prejudice, and not reason, driving their position.


There is a muslim school near my community and if there really was an overwhelming NO, it wouldn't exist would it?
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #219 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 6:12pm
 
Well if you guys really believe that rubbish, then it is indicative of how little faith you really have in your religions, that you need to seek to impose ot onto children, rather than letting them make their own choices when they reach an appropriate age.

Having children born negro, or asian, or caucasian is natural, having a child born as a muslim, or catholic is sick, and it is merely a perverted way that religion tries to grow it's numbers, in total disregard for human rights.

As for Freediver having the cheek to move my post because he cannot accept my inclusion of the religious element of private education into the debate on public vs private, well that is an offensively stupid attitude to take, as my posts were totally about the topic, and the fact that private schools also run a religious agenda is very much a part of the debate that needs to be considered.
If he also wanted to include my posts in this topic, he could easily do that, but to just move them because he does not agree with their thrust is petty minded.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #220 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 7:02pm
 
Parents have a right (perhaps even a duty) to educate their children by the prescriptions of their honestly held morality code and it's natural for children to want to reciprocate by identifying with their parents. To imagine that parents should (or generally even could) refrain from transmitting their cultural and religious beliefs to their children (including the desire to have them formally educated by that faith or culture) is naive.

Parents violate that right (and their intentions become pernicious) when the child is threatened with ostracism or other emotional, psychological and physical punishments after he freely decides that he does not believe in the religious tenets of his parents.

However, its difficult to imagine a devout religious parent being able to identify and maintain a close bond with a child who chooses a code which is at odds with that parent without a lot of effort, tolerance and understanding. Not all people are capable of expending the time and effort it might take to achieve it.

Nobody should imagine that free choice does not come at a price - both for those who make the choice and others who are affected by it.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #221 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 7:18pm
 
Well why stop at education then?
We could tattoo the parent's religion of choice onto the babies' foreheads when they are born, that why they can have their faith affirmed every time they look in the mirror.

I also think we need to introduce a rule for sports and playtime as well, we would not want to miss out on a chance to reinforce the accident for them of having their parents' choice of faith rammed down their throats when they are playing, we should have denominationally appropriate clothing and equipment only allowed to be used.

It is obviously not good enough for the religious in the community to have the chance to imprint their faith onto their kids at home, and during the 135 odd hours a week that the kids are not in school, it is imperative the faith is reinforced relentlessly, and giving up 32.5 hours a week for secular education is just too much to expect any decent god fearing person to put up with.

The nerve of these militant atheists, trying to have education time actually reserved for education, they are sick I tell you, sick.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #222 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 7:50pm
 
mozzaok wrote on Dec 28th, 2009 at 7:18pm:
Well why stop at education then?
We could tattoo the parent's religion of choice onto the babies' foreheads when they are born, that why they can have their faith affirmed every time they look in the mirror.

Some religions do, don't they? (physically imprint the mark of the religion on the child - males, at least.. sometimes females as well... not that there's anything right with that Grin).

A memory that has tenaciously stuck with me about my years in Catholic schools was the ethic of "an eye for an eye". The protestant and non-religious families in the street always told their kids that if someone hit you... Hit them back. We, however, being Irish Catholics (and therefore morally superior in every way to protestants and the godless Grin) were taught at home and in school without exception that we were to 'turn the other cheek'... Don't know which was righter... Whether we should have been taught by Old Testament standards or, as we were, by New Testament ones... But I can say that no Irish Catholic kid with balls I knew ever took a beating that he didn't pay back in spades.

The morality of self-defence, self-respect, and the desire for dignity and honour transcends any imposed religious moral codes to the contrary.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #223 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 8:54pm
 
Quote:
The nerve of these militant atheists, trying to have education time actually reserved for education, they are sick I tell you, sick.


Surely it is the outcome that matters, not what other things are tought alongside the standard curriculum? I am not aware of any religious schools that get religion mixed up with maths, or woodwork. Children taught in modern religious schools are no less capable academically, morally or socially than their public school counterparts. If anything they tend to come out on top. You are trying to turn religious schools into something they quite clearly are not mozz, in order to further your denial of basic freedoms.

Do you still seriously think that banning religious schools protects freedom of religion? Do you think that religion is nothing more than a decision a person makes at a government approved age?
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #224 - Dec 28th, 2009 at 9:28pm
 
I think banning religious schools is pretty extreme.  For one thing, culture and religion are often difficult to disentangle. The whole idea smacks of a state imposed monoculture. Apart from anything else, it would be incredibly boring.

If kids can make it through a religious education and still maintain independance of thought then that's a pretty good sign. Both my kids went through Catholic school, and despite my efforts, they both turned out to be fairly strong atheists.  They don't teach you how to be a Catholic at Catholic school, but they do provide a very balanced education. I don't know about the other denominations.
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