British Library Event (II)
I am talking about my book The War For Children’s Minds tomorrow evening at the British Library, along with three other authors discussing their books (event sold out, I’m afraid). This is roughly what I will be trying to communicate (taken from an earlier op ed piece I did):
In Britain and Australia, faith schools are currently booming as a direct result of Government policy. These schools are popular. British parents have been known to fake religious commitment to get their child into the right school. The Australian Bureau of Statistics has just confirmed that Australian parents are also abandoning public education in favour of the new, government-subsidized faith schools.
This rapid rise in religious schooling has, of course, been accompanied by concerns, not least of which is that faith schools can be deeply socially divisive. While I share that worry, my greatest concern is that that the smoke generated by the battle over whether religious schools are a good idea has obscured a more fundamental question: a question about the kind of religious education schools offer. To what extent should schools be allowed to encourage deference to authority when it comes to moral and religious matters? To what extent should they be able to suppress independent, critical thought?
Before the 60’s, moral and religious education tended to be highly authority-based. Children were typically expected to accept, more or less uncritically, what they were told. Independent critical thought was discouraged. Sometimes the discouragement was subtle, communicated by little more than the reverential tone with which religious ideas were conveyed. Other times it was more overt. A friend educated in the 60’s tells me she was sent to the headmaster simply for asking why the Catholic Church took the position it did on contraception. Many schools had a Big-Brother-like obsession with policing not just behaviour, but thought too. The same friend tells me that even today, 35 years after her Catholic education was complete, she still feels herself feeling guilty if she dares to question a Catholic belief.
During the 60’s and 70’s, Western societies became far more liberal. Individuals were encouraged to throw off the old traditions and authorities and think and judge for themselves. This shift in emphasis, from deference to external authority to moral autonomy, was reflected in the kind of moral and religious education children received.
So what changed? Some educators simply abandoned moral and religious education altogether. Not a good idea, I think. Others, realizing that, when it comes to morality and religion, education doesn’t have to mean indoctrination, developed alternative educational strategies that encourage independent critical thought.
Has this been a good thing? I believe it has. In my book, The War For Children’s Minds I point out the growing empirical evidence that schools that encourage collective philosophical discussion about religious and moral questions don’t just raise the IQs of their pupils, they also help to foster emotional and social skills as well.
Still, many social and religious conservatives profoundly resent this liberalization. They have constructed a complex mythology about it. As they see it, Western civilization is suffering from a ‘moral malaise’ the blame for which falls squarely on liberals and the Sixties (and also on something called ‘relativism’). Although they are unlikely to put it in so many words, what these conservatives want above all is to bring deference to religious authority back into the classroom. They want a return to uncritical acceptance of moral and religious belief, certainly in the earlier stages of a child’s education. It is the increasing influence of these conservatives that worries me most.
Let me be clear that there are some excellent religious schools, schools that dare to educate rather than indoctrinate. But far too many, while officially liberal, are busy applying psychological techniques that, if not quite brainwashing, lie on the same scale.
Some don’t even pretend to be liberal. Just the other day I heard the head of a British Islamic school agree that in any good Islamic school, “Islam is a given and never challenged”.
Any school that insists its religion should be a given and never challenged should no longer even be tolerated, let alone receive government funding.
If you believe that such authority-based religious education is acceptable, then let me leave you with a question. Suppose authoritarian political schools started opening up around the country. A conservative school opens in Sydney, followed by a communist school in Melbourne. These schools select on the basis of parents’ political beliefs. Portraits of political leaders beam serenely down from classroom walls. Each day begins with the collective singing of a political anthem. Pupils are expected to defer, more or less unquestioningly, to their school’s political authority and its revered political texts. Rarely are children exposed to alternative political points of view, except, perhaps, in a caricatured form, so they can be sweepingly dismissed.
What would be the public’s reaction to such schools? Outrage. These schools would be accused of stunting children – of forcing their minds into politically pre-approved moulds.
My question is: if such authoritarian political schools are utterly beyond the pale, why are so many of us prepared to tolerate their religious equivalents?
The answer, I suspect, is inertia. Authoritarian political schools would be a shocking new development. But there have always been authoritarian religious schools, Familiarity, and perhaps a sense of inevitability, has blunted the sense of outrage we might otherwise feel.
I think it high time we got that sense of outrage back.
(from an op ed piece for the Sydeny Morning Herald).
Now I know why Juan Antonio Samaranch said ‘Sydeny’ instead of ‘Sydney’. He was reading a typo.Sorry Stephen, I couldn’t resist it.I pretty well agree with everything you say. I grew up in that period, 50s and 60s, and I know that Cardinal George Pell (Sydney Archbishop) was quoted as recently as last year as saying, ‘Times have changed and many are troubled by the consequences of the revolutions of the 1960s.’ He also thinks that the legal attitude towards homosexuality has been ‘socially disastrous’, according to a reviewer of his book, God and Caesar.Regards, Paul.
The Catholic leopard never changes its spots. The Vatican and its minions are implacable enemies of modernity, progress, tolerance and humanity. I don’t know why anyone bothers to listen to these pathetic people any more. Their teachings bear little, if any, resemblance to those of the Biblical Jesus.See my recent post:http://antarena.blogspot.com/2008/12/racid-rant.html
[Slightly OT I know, but the the RE thread has dropped off the bottom of the page….]Noticed this from the National Secular Society on how the religious establishment is fighting to keep RE as a ring-fenced lesson despite recognition that the primary school curriculum is overloaded:”When I heard that a new review of the primary schools curriculum had suggested that individual subjects could be replaced by six broad “areas of learning”, I immediately saw the writing on the wall for religious education. The review by government adviser Sir Jim Rose suggested that he wants to create a more flexible, less “overloaded” timetable. Religious education would be merged with history and geography under the broad theme “Human social and environmental understanding”.This, you might think, would at last mean that religion could be taught about rather than being indoctrinated as it is often now, despite claims to the contrary.But before you get your hopes up, the religious establishment have, of course, got it covered. The Religious Education Council, the body that acts as gatekeeper to deflect any challenge to religious education privileges, was involved in the review and its head, Professor Brian Gates, was able to assure worried bishops that RE would remain a statutory and discrete subject.Professor Gates told the Church Times: “The learning that takes place in primary RE is a key contributor to human, social and environmental understanding. Primary schools should be encouraged to maximise RE’s unique contribution.” This inflated, meaningless claim, of course, will be accepted by the Government without question. RE is one of the few subjects that must be taught by law. It would take primary legislation to change that, and the Government is in no mood to challenge religion’s stranglehold on our education system… “You would think if RE really was such a vital contributor to human, social and environmental understanding, that there would be a whole host of parents, educationalists, criminologists, psychologists, environmental groups etc.. worried about its loss…
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