Religious Education and the Autonomy of Private Schools

2019 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 231-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sang Jin PARK
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bethany Swanson

<p><b>This study examines the histories of Anglican girls’ secondary schools from 1877-1975, placing them within a social class setting. This thesis argues that these schools, despite the diversity of their location and the dates of their founding, existed largely to educate the daughters of Aotearoa New Zealand’s ruling class. The ruling class can be defined as an active class made up of social elites, who were influential in society and possessed economic, social and cultural capital. This capital appears in the form of the ability to set an agenda in civic society, as membership in networks, and as the possession of a formal education. The Anglican girls’ private schools were a means through which this class replicated itself. The Anglican church possessed many such influential members of society and was driven, on a diocesan level, to establish private schools for girls in defence of a curriculum which included religious education.</b></p> <p>The schools in this study were all founded between 1878 and 1918 and remain in existence today. Over their lifetimes they have remained exclusively girls’ schools, with a mix of day-students and boarders. The thesis uses data collected from school archives, libraries, and school histories as well as a wider literature on education and class theory in order to situate the schools firmly within a class analysis. The thesis makes particular use of admissions registers to analyse the demographic of students attending the schools, situating students within their geographical catchments. Further, admissions registers have been used to determine the social status of parental occupation of students and their relative social class position. Each of the schools engaged in discourses surrounding the purpose of an education for girls. Schools strived to offer students both an academic and a social education. These two goals often existed in tension. The schools grappled with the aim of educating their students to be young Anglican women of good character who were able to fulfil their roles as future wives and mothers in affluent households, whilst also offering an academic curriculum which promised rigour for those most able. As the role of women in the workplace and wider society evolved, so too did the pedagogy of the schools both in terms of curriculum and in the conveyance of symbolic capital through membership in elite ruling class networks. Throughout the time period under examination, 1877-1975, the schools consistently offered an alternative to state schools, an alternative that described the ‘difference’ that private schooling could offer. That ‘difference’, this thesis suggests, was one that signified superiority, locating the schools within the upper ranks of social class hierarchy in Aotearoa New Zealand.</p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 75
Author(s):  
Beti Yanuri Posha

  Islam is a religion that put the principles of truth and justice for all its adherents. Factors that encourage Muslims to achieve independence are factors Ideology, political, economic, social and cultural. In Indonesia, Islam has an important role in education. Islamic education in Indonesia is given in three sectors, namely formal, informal and non-formal. After Indonesian independence, the issue of religious education received serious attention from the government, both in public and private schools, and has established educational institutions, especially schools and a mosque which has become a bastion of Islam that is so strong effect. Therefore, it is important to reassess how the development of Islam in Indonesia as well as the development of Islamic education institutions in Indonesia after independence.


Author(s):  
Qowaid Qowaid

AbstractReligious education in schools must be given to students in accordance with the religion adopted and taught by teachers of the same religion. Religious education for children is also one form of implementation of human rights. Many schools have implemented in accordance with the rules. However, several schools, especially private schools, have not implemented religious education in schools in accordance with the regulations. This research is trying to know the implementation of religious education in private schools, in this case, Vocational High School Bakti Pangkalpinang Bangka Belitung. The results show that Buddhist, Christian, Catholic, Islamic, and Buddhist Education have been implemented in Bakti Vocational High School (SMK) Pangkalpinang according to the religion of the students. However, Confucian Religion Education has not been implemented in this School. AbstrakPendidikan Agama di sekolah wajib diberikan kepada peserta didik sesuai dengan agama yang dianut dan diajar oleh guru yang seagama. Pendidikan agama bagi anak juga merupakan salah satu bentuk implementasi hak asasi manusia. Banyak sekolah telah mengimplementasikan sesuai dengan peraturan. Namun masihtidak sedikit sekolah, khususnya sekolah swasta, yang belum mengimplementasikan pendidikan agama di sekolah sesuai dengan ketentuan. Penelitian ini berusaha mengetahui implementasi pendidikan agama di sekolah swasta, dalam hal ini, Sekolah Menengah Kejuruan Bakti Pangkalpinang Bangka Belitung. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa Pendidikan Agama Buddha, Kristen, Katholik, Islam, dan telah diimplementasikan di Sekolah Menengah Kejuruan Bakti (SMK) Pangkalpinang sesuai agama yang dipeluk peserta didik. Adapun Pendidikan Agama Konghucu belum diimplementasikan di Sekolah ini.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bethany Swanson

<p><b>This study examines the histories of Anglican girls’ secondary schools from 1877-1975, placing them within a social class setting. This thesis argues that these schools, despite the diversity of their location and the dates of their founding, existed largely to educate the daughters of Aotearoa New Zealand’s ruling class. The ruling class can be defined as an active class made up of social elites, who were influential in society and possessed economic, social and cultural capital. This capital appears in the form of the ability to set an agenda in civic society, as membership in networks, and as the possession of a formal education. The Anglican girls’ private schools were a means through which this class replicated itself. The Anglican church possessed many such influential members of society and was driven, on a diocesan level, to establish private schools for girls in defence of a curriculum which included religious education.</b></p> <p>The schools in this study were all founded between 1878 and 1918 and remain in existence today. Over their lifetimes they have remained exclusively girls’ schools, with a mix of day-students and boarders. The thesis uses data collected from school archives, libraries, and school histories as well as a wider literature on education and class theory in order to situate the schools firmly within a class analysis. The thesis makes particular use of admissions registers to analyse the demographic of students attending the schools, situating students within their geographical catchments. Further, admissions registers have been used to determine the social status of parental occupation of students and their relative social class position. Each of the schools engaged in discourses surrounding the purpose of an education for girls. Schools strived to offer students both an academic and a social education. These two goals often existed in tension. The schools grappled with the aim of educating their students to be young Anglican women of good character who were able to fulfil their roles as future wives and mothers in affluent households, whilst also offering an academic curriculum which promised rigour for those most able. As the role of women in the workplace and wider society evolved, so too did the pedagogy of the schools both in terms of curriculum and in the conveyance of symbolic capital through membership in elite ruling class networks. Throughout the time period under examination, 1877-1975, the schools consistently offered an alternative to state schools, an alternative that described the ‘difference’ that private schooling could offer. That ‘difference’, this thesis suggests, was one that signified superiority, locating the schools within the upper ranks of social class hierarchy in Aotearoa New Zealand.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-153
Author(s):  
Tukiyo Tukiyo ◽  
Bayu Indrayanto ◽  
Sri Budiyono

The purpose of this study was to examine the factors that influence the way parents make decisions in choosing their favorite private school for their children during the COVID-19 pandemic. These factors are presented starting from the most influential to the smallest. In detail, the purpose of this study is to obtain answers to the questions: (1) what factors influence the way parents make decisions in choosing a favorite private school for their children, (2) are there differences in the decision-making factors of parents in choosing a school? private sector for children between before the pandemic and after the covid-19 pandemic, (3) is there a difference in the income of parents before the pandemic and after the covid-19 pandemic, and (4) how is the level of anxiety of parents in dealing with the covid-19 pandemic . This study uses a quantitative descriptive approach which is intended to describe the factors that influence parents' decision making in choosing private schools for their children during the COVID-19 pandemic. The results showed: 1. The factors that influence parents' decision making in choosing private schools for children during the covid-19 pandemic are: (1) good religious education factors in schools, (2) good academic achievement, (3) good non-academic achievement, (4) easy access to school locations, (5) schools have complete learning facilities, (6) good extra-curricular activities, (7) school safety, (8) relatively close distance from the school house, and (9) as a solution due to busy parents


1979 ◽  
Vol 74 (2) ◽  
pp. 159-170
Author(s):  
Gabriel Moran
Keyword(s):  

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