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Ban religious schools? (Read 44267 times)
freediver
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #60 - Jun 15th, 2008 at 7:20pm
 
I nearly always find that when somebody uses the expression "do-gooder" in an attempt to deride, they usually stand on very shaky ground whilst doing so.

Not in this case. Freedom of religion is very firm ground. You are a do-gooder whose only basis for taking children away from parents is that your belief is somehow better than their belief.

The point is that religious education is by definition inferior

According to you. Not according to those who choose it, as is their right. You can define it any way you want, but that doesn't mean it actually is inferior. The academic standards of religious schools are well above average. As for the relgious part of the education, you just don't like it because you don't like religion. But that is hardly objective or rational. It's just you trying to impose your views on others.

I noticed that you refused to respond to my point about how a parent, say a devout fundamentalist christian, would feel about his child being educated in a devout fundamentalist Islamic school?

You still don't get this do you? Obviously I would oppose that. I support freedom of religion. I'm not sure why I have to explain it. It's got nothing to do with who is right, as the government has no place to decide that for people. It's about freedom of choice. How would you like it if your child was forced into an Islamic or Christian school? That's part of what freedom of religion is there to stop. Once you undermine freedom of religion, you have no way of stopping the government from deciding that atheism is no longer the one true belief and that something else is. Why you cannot see how this is a bad idea even for you is beyond me.

If your belief really was better, you would be able to convince others and they would choose your way. Instead you feel the need to try to force your views on others. People are free to choose what to believe and how to teach it to their children. That levels the playing field.
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mozzaok
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #61 - Jun 15th, 2008 at 8:23pm
 
You keep spouting "Freedom of Religion" as if it is some unquestionable mantra which allows people of any religious belief to take any course of action, if it suits their religious purpose.

School should not be about RELIGIOUS PURPOSE!
School should be about EDUCATION!
Religion is not education.
It is you who does not get that.
I do not seek to restrict peoples rights to believe and follow whatever religion they choose, but neither do I believe that they should be accorded any extra rights because they choose to follow irrational beliefs.
That includes the right to seek any special treatment including setting up schools to indoctrinate kids.

I would like to see kids free to make their own moral and ethical choices based on the best information available, in order to do that, not having an irrational faith based ideology crammed down their throats at school, would give them back at least some of the freedom to make their own life choices, which religious organisations seek to deny them, through lifelong indoctrination.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #62 - Jun 15th, 2008 at 8:57pm
 
You keep spouting "Freedom of Religion" as if it is some unquestionable mantra which allows people of any religious belief to take any course of action, if it suits their religious purpose.

It is an unquestionable mantra. So long as people's actions do not infringe on your rights, there is nothing you can do about it.

School should not be about RELIGIOUS PURPOSE!
School should be about EDUCATION!


Religion requires education as well.

Religion is not education.

Religious education is education.

but neither do I believe that they should be accorded any extra rights because they choose to follow irrational beliefs.

How is this an 'extra' right?

That includes the right to seek any special treatment including setting up schools to indoctrinate kids.

But it isn't special treatment. Anyone can set up a school, so long as they can get a blue card.

Exercising a right you already have is not an 'extra' right or special treatment.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #63 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 9:16am
 
I can't help but feel that there is a hidden agenda for religious schools, and that hidden agenda is to ensure the future of the religion. It's probably not even hidden to be quite honest.

FD mentioned a good point, which is that some of the religious schools provide better standards of education than the public schools.

For most religious schools there is a waiting list which attests to this fact. In Queensland the highest 'OP Scores' come predominantly from Private Schools including religious schools.

In many cases, the parents of the children attending have  no affiliation with the religion concerned, but there is no possibility of opting out of the religious education.  The schools try to get an optimal mix, so that some of the religion rubs off on the non- religious rather than the other way around.

I don't think it's a question of a Catholic plot to produce more Catholics or a Muslim plot to produce more Muslims, but as long as society continues to believe that religious instruction = higher morality, then the current pattern of education will continue.

Personally I found the infiltration of the public school system by Scripture Union sponsored Chaplains to be far more insidious than private religious schools. They are meant to be there as counsellors perhaps, but when I went to our local public school's awards night recently as a presenter, there was the new Chaplain warbling his inane nonsense as a prelude to the event. Under the Howard government, they managed to weevil their way back into the public education system. Now that's a subject more worthy of debate.

I don't share the concept of 'irrational belief' by the way.  People have 'irrational beliefs' regardless of their religious persuasion. People need to have half baked ideas sometimes just to survive. Not everything in life is clear cut.

One final comment on Neferti's definition towards the beginning of the thread:

Quote:
Atheist = a person who denies or disbelieves the existence of a supreme being.


- By that definition, a Hindu is an Atheist.

An atheist doesn't believe in gods.
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Neferti
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #64 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 9:38am
 
muso wrote on Jun 16th, 2008 at 9:16am:
One final comment on Neferti's definition towards the beginning of the thread:

Quote:
Atheist = a person who denies or disbelieves the existence of a supreme being.


- By that definition, a Hindu is an Atheist.

An atheist doesn't believe in gods.


They weren't my definitions, I got them out of the Dictionary.  Wink Tongue
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Acid Monkey
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #65 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 10:28am
 
muso wrote on Jun 16th, 2008 at 9:16am:
- By that definition, a Hindu is an Atheist.

An atheist doesn't believe in gods.


A buddhist would be an athiest as well.

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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #66 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 10:43am
 
muso wrote on Jun 16th, 2008 at 9:16am:
Personally I found the infiltration of the public school system by Scripture Union sponsored Chaplains to be far more insidious than private religious schools. They are meant to be there as counsellors perhaps, but when I went to our local public school's awards night recently as a presenter, there was the new Chaplain warbling his inane nonsense as a prelude to the event. Under the Howard government, they managed to weevil their way back into the public education system. Now that's a subject more worthy of debate.


I was listening to The Religion Report on Radio National last week where they touched on the subject of Scripture Union and pastors/chaplains in schools. Within the program it was mentioned that many pastors/chaplains are not trained counsellors. Most are not trained to counsel kids on school bullying, teenage relationship, suicide, self harm. Pastors and chaplains are not required to be qualified in child psychology, child mentoring courses etc which a bona fide counsellor or any career that involves children must be.

So, what are they really there for? Their qualification is religion so one would assume that whatever guidance they give will be laced with religious doctrine. Imagine a pubescent boy struggling with his identity confiding with a chaplain saying something like:

Boy: "Father, I'm confused. I think I like boys. It that wrong?"

Chaplain: "Well, the bible says that it's an abomination, and goes against the very fabric of nature. It is an unnatural and unholy act. You will have to fight those feelings or you will burn in hell."

Who would deny that should the boy commit suicide 2 days later that that conversation would be the trigger point?
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #67 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 12:30pm
 
I can't help but feel that there is a hidden agenda for religious schools, and that hidden agenda is to ensure the future of the religion. It's probably not even hidden to be quite honest.

This is their agenda, but it is not hidden in any way nor is it sinister. It is the goal of all forms of education - to pass and and thereby preserve the knowledge.

but as long as society continues to believe that religious instruction = higher morality, then the current pattern of education will continue

Only the religious believe this. I'm not sure why the 'current pattern' would depend on society as a whole believing this. I suspect it's more a case that those non-religious parents who send their child to a religious school see religion as benign and think their child is capable of making up their own mind, and appreciate that this can only be done if the child experiences religion from a faithful perspective.

re: chaplains in public schools - I think this is just stinginess. They are probably willing to do it for free, which saves the government the price of a counsellor. When I was in a public high school I'm pretty sure we had a professional counseller at some point.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #68 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 1:31pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 16th, 2008 at 12:30pm:
re: chaplains in public schools - I think this is just stinginess. They are probably willing to do it for free, which saves the government the price of a counsellor. When I was in a public high school I'm pretty sure we had a professional counseller at some point.


Exactly! In fact, the guest on The Religion Report program cited cases of some schools letting go of professional counsellors and replacing them with chaplains. Why pay for a fully-qualified professional counsellor when the govt is going to pay you $20K to have a chaplain (a half-trained counsellor)?



"....you can only get access to the $20,000 that's on offer to each school if you agree to have a religious chaplain. If that money was available to schools to engage a counselor who might do similar pastoral work, then I would be in favour of it, but it's not.

....Hillsong 'Shine' is designed for at-risk girls - and girls in regional areas - is my understanding. And the basis of that program is to build self-esteem, through make-up and discussion about being pretty, being attractive, making yourself beautiful. Now we know that at-risk use whilst they may engage in that kind of activity, will be further at risk by that being seen to be the only way in which they can fit into society. So I think any woman will tell you that problems run a bit deeper than just how to do make-up and how to make up your nails, that it is much more important that some more fundamental work is done on these young people who are at risk to uncover if you like, some of the problems that they might be having, and to deal with that in a professional way. And I don't regard exercises in make-up as being professional for these kids.

....I find it difficult to imagine a chaplain who is engaged with students and young people who have problems, and that's where they will largely be used, to not be involved in counseling. But the Commonwealth does not require chaplains to have any particular level of qualifications, in fact I've heard that chaplains are recruited who haven't even finished Year 12, let alone a course in counseling. So I think that once you bring people into schools to work directly with children who may be at risk, maybe troubled, maybe having a bad time for whatever reason, you've got to be very, very careful about the people who deal with them in that environment."


Source: http://www.abc.net.au/rn/religionreport/stories/2008/2271288.htm#transcript

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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #69 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 2:08pm
 
Back to the government funding issue:

Muso, p4:

Taxpayers should have freedom of choice - freedom not to contribute to the growing division and alienation of other sectors of society by religious extremists.

People never have freedom to decide how their tax funds are spent, on an individual basis. That would defeat the purpose of communal funds. Your money goes into the same pool as Christians, atheists, whatever, and the government has to come up with a fair way to distribute it.

OK the taxpayer may not be paying for the whole service, but if the tax payer were not subsiding the schools, fewer parents would be able to afford this kind of 'elitist' religious education, and society would benefit as a result.

The tax payer is effectively making it possible for these schools to exist in a lot of cases.


See the figures below. The schools would still exist to a similar level if funding was cut entirely - they spend many times more per student but only get about half the government funding. Yes the funding does make some of these schools possible, or at least allow some borderline students to attend. But each student represents a $4000 saving to the government. Not only are they exercising their freedom to choose, they are also saving the government money. If you are going to tax the parents of these students just as much as everyone else, then they should get a fair cut of the education budget. It's not like atheists are propping up religious education - it's the opposite.

The alternative - government making it impossible for a school to exist by treating the parents unfairly or discriminating on the basis of religion, would undermine people's rights.

It should be fair and equal treatment for all, regardless of religious affiliation. The government's role is not to decide whether religion is good or bad, then set about propping it up or dismantling it. A religious school should be considered the same as an unaffiliated private school. The fact that it is religious is a matter between the school and the parents and students who choose to attend. The level of funding should be judged on issues like cost (economics) and fairness to taxpayers, but not used as an opportunity to discriminate against religious groups.

Public school funding short by $8.4bn

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,24897,23869281-12332,00.html

GOVERNMENT investment in public school facilities is about one-third the amount spent by the private school system, representing a shortfall of $8.4 billion, equivalent to $1.2 million for every public school, a report commissioned by the Australian Education Union has found.

The report estimates $22billion on top of current levels of state and territory investment would be required over the next 12 years to enable public schools to match the average expenditure in the private sector.

Federal and state governments allocate more than $10,000 a year for each public school student, compared with $6000 for each private school student.

However, in a comprehensive look at national capital expenditure in both public and private schools, Mr Rorris found that while private sector investment grew substantially in that period, government spending was static.

Over the three years the report's authors studied the issue, the average amount spent by private schools rose from $1380 to $1560 per student in 2008 dollars, while spending by the states and territories only increased from $537 to $542 per student.

In 2005, the NSW Government spent $426 per public student on capital works, while private schools in the state spent $1492 per student.

The report's findings also highlight research in the US and Britain that found school facilities had a significant impact on the performance of students and teachers, and noted that both countries had embarked on significant programs for school building.

Mr Rorris called for a rethink on the way Australian schools operate, pointing to trends in the US and Britain where schools are becoming hubs for a range of community services.

"Schools need to be redefined and repositioned as more than just 9am-to-3pm school facilities," he said.

"There's a historic opportunity to extend the role and position of the local public school."

He said British schools would offer a core set of extended services by 2010, including childcare, parenting support and community access to IT, sports and arts facilities.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #70 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 2:27pm
 
You keep repeating the same fallacy FD.
You keep saying that a school not being religious, makes it Atheistic.

It is just not so.

It merely means that no religion is taught whilst at school.
The fact that you find so terrifying, the idea of kids having the right to be educated without having a religious philosophy crammed down their throats, is very telling.

If people really held decent views they would not impose their beliefs on impressionable kids, but would serve their religious principles by providing a good example in how they live.

Religion is a dangerous subject because while the majority may be quite moderate, the actual teachings, when explored, are rather less moderate, as exampled by Acid Monkey's scenario.

We see the PM, in Indonesia, committing money to support 'MODERATE' Islamic schools, in the hope that this may reduce the tendency of future muslims to embrace terrorism, as taught by less moderate schools.

I would just prefer they left a school as a school, and keep religion where it belongs, as a private philosophy between a person and the god of his choice.
Promoting religion in the public domain of education, is morally repugnant to me, kids rights should transcend those of religious imperialists trying to promote their religious "team"s" beliefs.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #71 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 2:56pm
 
You keep saying that a school not being religious, makes it Atheistic.

Please quote me.

The fact that you find so terrifying, the idea of kids having the right to be educated without having a religious philosophy crammed down their throats, is very telling.

I do not find it terrifying at all. I am standing up for this right. It is a right they already have. What I am against is the government taking away this choice. I'm surprised that after five pages you still haven't grasped such simple points. Stop pretending that taking away people's right to teach a different philosphy to yours equates to giving people more rights. It doesn't.

Religion is a dangerous subject because while the majority may be quite moderate, the actual teachings, when explored, are rather less moderate, as exampled by Acid Monkey's scenario.

So an imaginary scenario is evidence that religious extremists have taken over our private schools? Get a grip Mozz.

I would just prefer they left a school as a school, and keep religion where it belongs, as a private philosophy between a person and the god of his choice.

But it doesn't belong there. Religion belongs where religious people place it in their lives, not where atheists allow them to place it.

You do not get to decide for other people what religion is, only for yourself. You do not get to impose your views on others.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #72 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 3:13pm
 
mozzaok wrote on Jun 16th, 2008 at 2:27pm:
I would just prefer they left a school as a school, and keep religion where it belongs, as a private philosophy between a person and the god of his choice.
Promoting religion in the public domain of education, is morally repugnant to me, kids rights should transcend those of religious imperialists trying to promote their religious "team"s" beliefs.


Hi Moz,

Please note that I was being extreme (and fictitious) in my scenario. I'm not suggesting that such cases occur (nor do I have any evidence for it).

Re above: are you getting muddled up? Religious schools are private institutions not public. What do you mean by "public domain of education"? As far as I'm aware there isn't a public religious school. Also, education provided by private religious schools are often by secular teachers under their employment. Of course, religious rducation (RE) is often conducted by a priest, brother or a nun and often there are "classes" where one goes to chapel for mass and prayer. Being private institutions, the choice of children going to such schools is a personal one. School is compulsory. If one can't afford a private school they would opt for a public school which is secular. I have no problems with private Christian, Muslim, Buddhist (whatever) schools. Voting down the construction of private (Muslim) school or banning all religious schools outright goes against freedom of worship and religion. Banning one schools of one strain of religious doctrine over another is religious discrimiination. Why not have a Muslim school when there are Catholic schools around?

The problem I have is the unbalanced public funding of public schools in favour of private schools and the insidious nature of "bribing" schools to accept chaplains into secular public schools. There is a similar debate the US is having where the religious right is lobbying hard to have school prayer and Intelligent Design included in the public school curriculum.

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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #73 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 3:31pm
 
freediver wrote on Jun 16th, 2008 at 2:08pm:
Back to the government funding issue:

Muso, p4:

Taxpayers should have freedom of choice - freedom not to contribute to the growing division and alienation of other sectors of society by religious extremists.

People never have freedom to decide how their tax funds are spent, on an individual basis. That would defeat the purpose of communal funds. Your money goes into the same pool as Christians, atheists, whatever, and the government has to come up with a fair way to distribute it.


My problem is not with all religious schools as much as the ones who teach the 'One True Religion' as right and don't even discuss other religions. The Catholic school where we sent our boys was not in that category, but I'm pretty sure that they do exist.

I don't believe that the taxpayer should be sponsoring the more extreme forms of religious education, that's all. I don't think I'm in a minority as far as that view is concerned either. If we allow complacency there, what will be next? - Oh they're just teaching that the Earth is flat and that the sun revolves around the Earth. It's part of their religion, and we must be tolerant of their rights to fill their kids' head full of.... whatever they choose.

...but as long as society continues to believe that religious instruction = higher morality, then the current pattern of education will continue

Quote:
Only the religious believe this.


I'd suggest that it's much more general than that. There are many people who believe in religion but personally don't believe in gods.

I was talking to a friend at a barbecue a couple of months ago, and the subject of religion came up for some reason. He had to ask his wife what religion they were, and he hadn't drunk too much either. We all knew that his real religion is fishing, because that's all he does on a Sunday.

Re chaplains in public schools - That would not even be tolerated in the US (In God We Trust) of A. Their public school system is necessarily secular. For once, that's something they got right.
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Re: Ban religious schools?
Reply #74 - Jun 16th, 2008 at 3:36pm
 
If we allow complacency there, what will be next> - Oh they're just teaching that the Earth is flat and that the sun revolves around the Earth. It's part of their religion, and we must be tolerant of their rights to fill their kids' head full of.... whatever they choose.

So long as they taught the dominant paradigm as well, this would not bother me. No school is going to teach their students this because the students would walk out.
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