Tuesday 24 May 2011

Religious Education in Secular settings

The current debate is about a couple of things, I think, and Christians need to engage in the debate with the utmost honesty about their arguments.

On the one hand it is argued that there is no place for the religious domain in a public school setting; that secular means free from religion; and that the presence of Christian religious people in public schools, in particular, is evidence of a continuation of the cosy relationship between church and government that was supposed to be dismantled by our Constitution. That discourse is the dominant view of the readers and contributors to this GetUp! page.

I am just as uncomfortable as many readers with the cosy relationship between church and state and the not unreasonable perception that the proposal of the NSCP was entirely motivated by a desire to secure political support from a particular constituency as well as creating a pathway into the funding of public schooling in the states, thus influencing policy outside of the national jurisdiction. That is a political discourse which I do not wish to participate in.

I do believe, however, that there are well grounded arguments that create an alternative discourse by which the religious can legitimately occupy a place in our public school system.

Firstly, the presence of the religious in our public school settings is only a threat to the secular nature of those schools when there is coercion involved, when one religious view has structural precedence over others, where the purpose of the presence of the religious is to persuade students to subscribe to a particular religious world-view.

Contributors to these pages have provided sufficient examples to demonstrate that there are situations in which the presence of some Christian religious people and programs is such a threat to the secular nature of our schools. It is not universally the case and it need not be so. My Christian friends need to get used to finding ways to be there that do not pose such a threat.

The Principal of the Separation of Church and State that we believe is somewhat enshrined in out Constitution can be understood or interpreted in several ways. It is clear that for the Americans this means no prayers in school, and that the only way Christians can get close to teaching their "crazy views of creation" in public schools, for example, is to invent something they call "intelligent design", leave any reference to God out of it, as if the God factor is self-evident, and call it science. If you look back at the historical, social and political context in which the American constitution was established, and that the Free World was a place where many marginalised religious groups sought freedom from the religious oppression of the Church-States of Europe, it is no wonder they banned any presence of the religious from schools.

The Australian Constitution was written in a different era, guided by different objectives. The practical outworking of the Constitution on this matter has been to allow the religious to be present without requiring adherence or observance. Even in Victoria and elsewhere, where SRE is compulsory if offered by the church, there is a personal prerogative of withdrawal for parents. I actually believe that public schools should not be bound as they are in Victoria. They are not in WA, and my organisation has much healthier relationships with schools as a result.

As to the legitimate place of the religious/spiritual domain within the syllabus of a public school, it is worth noting that successive Declarations on Education, the latest being the Melbourne Declaration of 2008, all make reference to the need of any comprehensive Curriculum to teach kids, not just about religious diversity and pluralism, as a General Religious Education program would do, but to give them skills to look after their own spiritual welfare. Each state has a Curriculum Framework, and the Commonwealth is trying to overlay a National one at the moment. All these documents make reference in various ways to these matters, providing a way in for schools to address the spiritual and religious world-view. It is interesting to note that in none of the state jurisdictions is a General Religious Education Program delivered by classroom teachers, and at least in WA where the Curriculum Council has created two courses about religion for teaching as a high-school subject - "Beliefs and Values" and "Religion and Life" - these two courses have only ever been taught in faith-based schools. No a single state school has offered them to students.

The absence of the religious domain in the curriculum of public schools makes these schools less than comprehensive schools as there is a major gap in what they offer to students.

If the schools won't offer this dimension, and there is legislative provision for religious groups to do so though volunteer visitors to schools, I see that as an opportunity that should be taken. However, when visiting religious volunteers go into schools, they must remember that they are not in Sunday School. They are in a secular context in which a pluralist approach to world views is prevalent, and that they are there to make a contribution to that in the name of their faith - not to convert students to their particular religion. This is about giving kids information about the religious world-view and some life skills that they may make use of later on in life.

There will be challenges to this discourse, I am sure, but s Christians we need to be able to make a meaningful contribution to the debate. I hope that I am able to do that.

Sunday 15 May 2011

Are Atheists a Persecuted Minority?

In recent days I have been engaging in some of the public forums debating the validity of the Federally funded National School Chaplaincy Program. This has mainly been in relation to a discussion on the Atheist Federation of Australia's forum about School Chaplaincy, and a discussion page on the Get Up web-site.

As a general rule, both of these forums were dominated by opponents of School Chaplaincy and the few supporters who ventured to make a contribution to the discussion were ridiculed, derided and insulted to such an extent that few were willing to contribute for more than a few days - myself included. I concluded that they simply wished to hear from others who reinforced their views of reality rather than inviting them to consider the possibility that there are multiple realities that need to be considered.

I don't like to generalise, because there seemed to be a generalised view that all Christians were on a God-given mission to convert the whole world to Christianity, and even if examples were offered demonstrating this not to be the case, they were dismissed as being fundamentally deceptive - "they really want to, even if they say they don't".

I wondered why these self-appointed advocates of a religion-free public space should feel the need to respond to Christians with such derision. This response is similar to the response of oppressed or marginalised groups in society - they resent the power/influence of the dominant group and the only resort left is insult and an attempt to respond to exclusion with exclusion. We see this on a multi-cultural level, and in the areas of gender and sexuality.

Secular atheists have a world view. In this world view the scientific method relegates religion to the realm of fairy tails because the religious cannot be validated scientifically. It also challenges the divine as no self-evident logically, so therefore it is non-existent. Logic and the scientific method are the only two realms in which truth and reality can be found.

While this world-view may not be a religion, many who hold it do so with a zeal and fundamentalism that is akin to those associated with various religious traditions. In a sense it is true that for the religious and secular atheists "right" and "truth" are held in their hands alone and all others are living in some form of error or delusion.

The fundamentalists of both the secular and religious domains need to realise that modern society requires them both to have an authentic regard for each other that allows us each to have an equal place in society, not a marginalised one. I know this is hard for the dominant group - the religious - but there is already such plurality within the religious domain that making a place for the irreligious is not conceding much ground.

In the world of ideas there must always be room for alternatives as well as willingness to engage in debate about those ideas without feeling coerced to abandon your own views.

What do you think?