mozzaok
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OzPolitic
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My assertion that this issue will grow is not without support, here is an article from earlier this year.
"Faith school boom 'creates division'
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Michael Bachelard February 25, 2008
* At the crossroads
THE rapid growth of faith-based schools under the previous federal government has threatened the social cohesion of the nation, according to Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard's most senior education adviser.
The frank comments of Professor Barry McGaw, appointed this month to be the new head of the National Curriculum Board, contrast with the Howard government's celebration of the proliferation of small independent schools, encouraged by generous public funding.
"These people often form a narrowly focused school that is aimed at cementing the faith it's based on … If we continue as we are, I think we'll just become more and more isolated sub-groups in our community," Professor McGaw told The Age.
His comments are likely to worry the independent sector because the Government is reviewing the funding model, which Professor McGaw said had created the "worst of all worlds".
Professor McGaw's remarks reflect a profound shift in education in the past two decades, with more than 200,000 children — almost 40% of non-government school students — now attending a religious school outside the main Catholic, Anglican and Uniting systems.
The change has meant that, for instance, increasing numbers of children are taught creationism as part of their science classes.
And despite mainstream health experts arguing for a "harm minimisation" approach to sex education, many emphasise abstinence until marriage, asking students to sign "pledges" to remain virgins.
But the schools, many of which have rapidly increasing enrolments, say they offer a choice in education.
The principal of Chairo Christian School in Drouin, Rob Bray, said that both evolution and creationism were taught in his school's science class.
"We don't hide the fact that there is a theory of evolution, and that's how we'd present it, as a theory," Mr Bray said.
"We teach it, explain what it is, and at the same time we present clearly and fairly, and we believe convincingly, the fact that our position as a school is that God created the heaven and earth … There wouldn't be any point of being a faith-based school if we didn't think that God was the creator."
Under Victorian law, it is not compulsory for private schools to teach evolution, though it is recommended in the curriculum. In NSW evolution is a compulsory part of the syllabus.
Professor Rob Brooks, the head of the Evolution and Ecology Research Centre at the University of NSW, said the number of biology students holding "irreconcilably strong creationist viewpoints" had grown in recent years. "There's been a big move, big gains made by the creationist movement in the last five or six years," he said.
The two largest Christian school lobby groups, Christian Schools Australia and Christian Parent Controlled Schools, assert that God is the creator. Between them they represent 240 schools Australia-wide, including 38 in Victoria.
In the sex education curriculum, some Christian schools have adopted an abstinence-based program called "No Apologies", which highlights the dangers of sexual activity and encourages students to sign a US-style pledge to remain virgins until marriage. Chairo Christian College uses the program, which has been taught to 5000 people in the past 3˝ years.
Faith-based schools say they also vet staff to make sure they are leading a "Christian lifestyle," and some say they would sack a teacher who admitted to being homosexual.
Critics such as psychologist and educationist Louise Samway say faith-based schools are balkanising the community.
"If we don't have agreed values that everyone can understand and respect … it leads to a whole lot of disparate sub-groups that are suspicious of each other," she said.
The two largest Christian school lobby groups, Christian Schools Australia and Christian Parent Controlled Schools, assert that God is the creator. Between them they represent 240 schools Australia-wide, including 38 in Victoria.
In the sex education curriculum, some Christian schools have adopted an abstinence-based program called "No Apologies", which highlights the dangers of sexual activity and encourages students to sign a US-style pledge to remain virgins until marriage. Chairo Christian College uses the program, which has been taught to 5000 people in the past 3˝ years.
Faith-based schools say they also vet staff to make sure they are leading a "Christian lifestyle," and some say they would sack a teacher who admitted to being homosexual.
Critics such as psychologist and educationist Louise Samway say faith-based schools are balkanising the community.
"If we don't have agreed values that everyone can understand and respect … it leads to a whole lot of disparate sub-groups that are suspicious of each other," she said.
So we do see more than just what FD calls "Fundamentalist Atheists", recognising that what he calls "Religious Freedom", is actually really promoting Religious apartheid.
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