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The Equal Participation in Schools Bill

13

Comments

  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,968 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Catholic schools can only turn non catholic kids away if there are no places available once all the catholic applicants have been accommodated. Does that sound unfair?

    Yes.

    OK then, what SHOULD be the grounds on which oversubscribed schools can discriminate?

    2)Proximity to the school?

    This. If you feel that the schools in your community aren't good enough for your child, then perhaps you should look at participating a bit more to helping them improve. You're having a moan about privilege, but driving your kids to a posher school because you think the local one is full of scumbags is also a privilege that others in area may not be able to afford. If you seriously don't want your kids mixing with other kids in their own neighbourhood you should ask yourself what message you're sending out to your neighbours. First house we bought many moons ago was in a rough enough part of town. As it became yuppified the pattern was very much people driving to their doors, not socialising locally, and not letting their kids play on the street with other local kids. If this isn't an expression of privilege and social snobbery I don't know what is.

    One thing that's certainly good for most kids is being able walk or cycle to school and friends houses and be able learn and explore their own locality. Getting the kids up at the crack of dawn to chuck them into the back on an SUV to be stuck in traffic for hours is unhealthy on a lot of levels.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,871 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    volchitsa wrote: »
    I thought that is what you were saying - because nobody is suggesting that parents can't remove their children from a school where they don't like certain other children being educated with theirs, there's no question of that.

    The question is, when you said "some parents may not want (their children educated with children of other religions)" did you mean that publicly funded schools should therefore be allowed to restrict their intake to prioritize children of one religion? That's how I read what you said, but now you appear to be saying it just means they should be allowed to remove their children - but that's not been in doubt.

    As to who makes the decision, that doesn't make any difference, but you're the one who brought in parental choice. But the question is one of principle, whoever makes that choice, whether it's a majority vote by parents, or a school board.


    I think I kind of see where the confusion may have arisen now.

    I'm suggesting that parents who do not want to send their children to schools which are in violation of their conscience, shouldn't be forced to. I'm not making any moral judgement or otherwise on those parents conscience, that's entirely their own business how they choose to raise their own children in their own communities.

    In those communities, they have as much right to apply for patronage of schools as any other patron body. The State is obliged to provide for education, and funding public schools through the patronage system is one way to do this. It's a model I for one agree with. I haven't yet seen an alternative I'd be able to get behind tbh.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,107 ✭✭✭✭volchitsa


    I think I kind of see where the confusion may have arisen now.

    I'm suggesting that parents who do not want to send their children to schools which are in violation of their conscience, shouldn't be forced to. I'm not making any moral judgement or otherwise on those parents conscience, that's entirely their own business how they choose to raise their own children in their own communities.

    In those communities, they have as much right to apply for patronage of schools as any other patron body. The State is obliged to provide for education, and funding public schools through the patronage system is one way to do this. It's a model I for one agree with. I haven't yet seen an alternative I'd be able to get behind tbh.

    Ok I see what you mean, and I'd agree with the main point, but it still doesn't answer the question itself : if part of those parents' principles involved their children being kept away from the bad influence of Traveller children (or black children or whatever), should the state still agree to fund schools applying such entrance criteria because after all, parents are entitled to be racist or anti-Traveller or just to want their children to be in an environment the parents fully approve of, i.e. with no black or Traveller children around?

    "If a woman cannot stand in a public space and say, without fear of consequences, that men cannot be women, then women have no rights at all." Helen Joyce



  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,968 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    In those communities, they have as much right to apply for patronage of schools as any other patron body. The State is obliged to provide for education, and funding public schools through the patronage system is one way to do this. It's a model I for one agree with. I haven't yet seen an alternative I'd be able to get behind tbh.

    Reminds my of the Ron White joke where he's arrested for being drunk in public, and told he had the right to remain silent. The right, but apparently not the ability ;)

    If you look at the report previously discussed, you'll note the following appears in the conclusion
    The detailed analysis of the parental preferences expressed in each of the areas surveyed as part of the survey exercise indicates that there is sufficient parental demand supporting immediate changes in school patronage in 23 of the 38 areas.

    So as of 2013 the DoE was aware that in the majority of areas surveyed there was parental demand for immediate changes in school patronage. Since then, just one school in the country has swapped patronage from the Catholic church, while ET have independently opened up 7 out of a planned 25 schools. See the following IT article for more details. It seems abundantly clear that our government is abdicating its responsibility to provide communities with the schools that they want. Rights and responsibilities are not the same.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 53,269 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    i see no logic to the 'religions are good organisations to be allowed run schools' argument any more than i would see logic in a 'political parties should be allowed run schools' argument.

    would be an interesting societal experiment though...


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,871 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    volchitsa wrote: »
    Ok I see what you mean, and I'd agree with the main point, but it still doesn't answer the question itself : if part of those parents' principles involved their children being kept away from the bad influence of Traveller children (or black children or whatever), should the state still agree to fund schools applying such entrance criteria because after all, parents are entitled to be racist or anti-Traveller or just to want their children to be in an environment the parents fully approve of, i.e. with no black or Traveller children around?


    But the State doesn't fund schools, this is the thing! It provides for the education of all children. That's an important distinction and maybe that's why I'm finding it difficult to follow what you're asking.

    Should the people who want these types of schools be able to apply to be recognised under the patronage system? Absolutely, why not? I wouldn't care if a group got together and decided the ethos of their school was going to be feminism, and they were going to admit girls only. Grand, let them have at it!

    The thing is - the amount of funding and supports the school would actually get, would be dependent upon the number of children enrolled in the school, and from 2017 on, each pupil must be registered on the POD in order for the school to receive it's full allocation, ie - if a pupil isn't registered on POD, instead of the school receiving funding and supports to provide education for... I dunno, the 10 pupils we'll say are in attendance in the school, they'll only receive funding and supports for 9 pupils.

    OK, so why is that important then? Well, the less children are enrolled in a school, the less funding is provided for their education. So, the school which wants to have an admissions criteria that only includes parents who are travellers, or the school that wants to have admissions criteria that only includes parents who are black, are more than welcome to have it IMO, they have their own ethnicity and culture and they are more than welcome to openly discriminate against those parents who are not willing to get on board with the ethos of the school. I don't have a problem with this. The same would apply to any other minority in Irish society who feel in need of their safe spaces.

    smacl wrote: »
    Reminds my of the Ron White joke where he's arrested for being drunk in public, and told he had the right to remain silent. The right, but apparently not the ability ;)

    If you look at the report previously discussed, you'll note the following appears in the conclusion

    So as of 2013 the DoE was aware that in the majority of areas surveyed there was parental demand for immediate changes in school patronage. Since then, just one school in the country has swapped patronage from the Catholic church, while ET have independently opened up 7 out of a planned 25 schools. See the following IT article for more details. It seems abundantly clear that our government is abdicating its responsibility to provide communities with the schools that they want. Rights and responsibilities are not the same.


    This right here is your biggest problem (well, maybe not yours, but certainly a problem for some) -

    The next phase of surveys took place in January 2013 when the remaining 38 areas were surveyed. Of the 43 areas surveyed in total, sufficient parental demand for a wider choice of school patron emerged in 28 of the areas to support change in the patronage of schools. Parents expressed a preference for Educate Together as the alternative patron of choice in 25 of the areas and in 2 of the areas the alternative patron of choice was the local Education and Training Board (ETB). A report on the results of these surveys was published in March 2013 and is available at www.education.ie.

    One area demonstrated sufficient demand for an Irish language national school. 35 of the 43 areas surveyed already have a gaelscoil option available for parents. The surveys also reflected that many parents are happy with the current schools on offer under existing patronage arrangements.


    Parents are all for having a wider choice of schools, but there's no indication given that those same parents would enrol their children in those schools, or make use of them, only the presumption that they would.

    To be perfectly honest though, I wouldn't wipe my proverbial with that report, and I wouldn't be holding my breath for the religious patrons to be divesting patronage any time soon either. I've supported the building of an ET secondary school petition in my area, but then they went and built it out in the sticks, about 10 miles from the primary school! I don't get that tbh?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,107 ✭✭✭✭volchitsa


    But the State doesn't fund schools, this is the thing!
    Yes it does. This is simply counterfactual. Who funds the schools then?
    It provides for the education of all children.
    How would it do that without funding the schools?
    That's an important distinction and maybe that's why I'm finding it difficult to follow what you're asking.
    The distinction you're making is literally incomprehensible to me.
    The state pays the teachers' salaries and the running costs of the schools - in what way does it not fund the schools, and if not then who does?
    Should the people who want these types of schools be able to apply to be recognised under the patronage system? Absolutely, why not? I wouldn't care if a group got together and decided the ethos of their school was going to be feminism, and they were going to admit girls only. Grand, let them have at it!

    The thing is - the amount of funding and supports the school would actually get, would be dependent upon the number of children enrolled in the school, and from 2017 on, each pupil must be registered on the POD in order for the school to receive it's full allocation, ie - if a pupil isn't registered on POD, instead of the school receiving funding and supports to provide education for... I dunno, the 10 pupils we'll say are in attendance in the school, they'll only receive funding and supports for 9 pupils.

    OK, so why is that important then? Well, the less children are enrolled in a school, the less funding is provided for their education. So, the school which wants to have an admissions criteria that only includes parents who are travellers, or the school that wants to have admissions criteria that only includes parents who are black, are more than welcome to have it IMO, they have their own ethnicity and culture and they are more than welcome to openly discriminate against those parents who are not willing to get on board with the ethos of the school. I don't have a problem with this. The same would apply to any other minority in Irish society who feel in need of their safe spaces.

    I may have failed to follow here, but it seems like a very convoluted way of saying that you would be happy enough to have taxpayers' money used to run schools that some citizens are banned from attending, because other citizens don't want them there.

    If I understand right, you would apparently be ok with a school where black children were not taken. Would you?
    It's not a hard question to answer but you seem reluctant to do so.

    "If a woman cannot stand in a public space and say, without fear of consequences, that men cannot be women, then women have no rights at all." Helen Joyce



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,871 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    volchitsa wrote: »
    I may have failed to follow here, but it seems like a very convoluted way of saying that you would be happy enough to have taxpayers' money used to run schools that some citizens are banned from attending, because other citizens don't want them there.

    If I understand right, you would apparently be ok with a school where black children were not taken. Would you?
    It's not a hard question to answer but you seem reluctant to do so.


    I'm just wondering about the other 19 questions to follow.

    It's not a convoluted way at all of saying that I have no issue with anyone who wants to apply under the patronage system to be regarded as a qualifying patron for the purposes of providing education to children. I may not agree with the ethos of the school, but then I'm not being forced to enrol my child in the school, nor would I particularly want to.

    Now, is that your convoluted way of asking have I a problem with a minority demanding that funding be withdrawn from providing education for the majority of the children in this country? Well yes, yes I do. I imagine that if it were put to the majority of parents that way, they would have a problem with it too.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,107 ✭✭✭✭volchitsa


    I'm just wondering about the other 19 questions to follow.
    Hardly. I asked it several posts up and I gather that the answer is yes.
    It's not a convoluted way at all of saying that I have no issue with anyone who wants to apply under the patronage system to be regarded as a qualifying patron for the purposes of providing education to children. I may not agree with the ethos of the school, but then I'm not being forced to enrol my child in the school, nor would I particularly want to.

    Now, is that your convoluted way of asking have I a problem with a minority demanding that funding be withdrawn from providing education for the majority of the children in this country? Well yes, yes I do. I imagine that if it were put to the majority of parents that way, they would have a problem with it too.

    No, my question was simple : when you suggested that it was fair enough for parents to want their children to be educated with children who were all the same as them in some way such as religion, should that right also apply to skin colour or ethnic origin?

    But as I say, by your non-answer you've answered, so I'll take it that you think they should be allowed to do so.

    I'm just unclear as to why you think ordinary taxpayers should have to fund this form of apartheid, even though it may well discriminate against some of them.

    "If a woman cannot stand in a public space and say, without fear of consequences, that men cannot be women, then women have no rights at all." Helen Joyce



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,871 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    volchitsa wrote: »
    Hardly. I asked it several posts up and I gather that the answer is yes.



    No, my question was simple : when you suggested that it was fair enough for parents to want their children to be educated with children who were all the same as them in some way such as religion, should that right also apply to skin colour or ethnic origin?


    Yes, it should. It should apply whatever way the hell those people applying to be considered for patronage would want to apply their ethos. How many more times in how many more ways would you like me to say it?

    But as I say, by your non-answer you've answered, so I'll take it that you think they should be allowed to do so.


    I really, really hope you have a point to make.

    I'm just unclear as to why you think ordinary taxpayers should have to fund this form of apartheid, even though it may well discriminate against some of them.


    I didn't say tax payers should have to fund anything? Various groups may apply to be considered patron bodies if they wish. I'm not going to deny them, nor would I choose to support them either. If, for example a group wanted to apply to be considered for patronage on the basis that they are offering a non-religious education - again, like I said, have at it!

    I'm not going to stand in their way, but I don't have to support it either.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,978 ✭✭✭✭looksee


    You cannot have randomers taking responsibility for being patrons of a school. I have personal experience of how this did not work, though it did require some deviance on the part of a RC order to ensure that it did not.

    Small town/village with a fee paying school run by a religious order. The order suddenly announced that they were going to close the school in two years' time (just time to get the senior cycle through their lc. The juniors could make their own arrangements.) This was before there were any provisions for redeployment of teachers or unemployment pay.

    The local community (whose children had not attended the school - unless they could pay the fees) decided that rather than bus their children 15 to 20 miles as they had been doing, they would apply to the DoE to take over the school. The DoE allowed them to do so and a committee was formed. The order would be paid token rent for the building out of the capitation and the school would continue. After the first year the order (who had left) said that due to insurance costs the rent would have to go up. Meanwhile the committee were organising fund raising events to cover expenses. The second year the order said they would have to raise the rent again, and they did. And the third year and the fourth year. At this point it was obvious that it was not possible to run a school including the now considerable cost of the rent. The school continued for another two years to see the students through leaving cert, then closed. The order then sold the building.

    Meanwhile the DoE had introduced redeployment for teachers, which was fortunate as the local committee had no money to pay redundancy. Since the community had taken over the school the order had not had to pay redundancy either, which was very fortunate for them :rolleyes:

    All these ridiculous notions of everyone starting a school to suit their own agendas are impracticable, expensive and unnecessary. The DoE should be 'patron' - so far as a patron is needed - of the schools it is funding on our behalf.

    The number of schools where the church 'owns' the school should be examined. Those who only own the property because it was 'given' to them by the state would not be entitled to any compensation. If land was involved then it should be subject to CP. Bear in mind that vast amounts of fundraising went on in some of these cases from the local community.

    In the very few cases where an order built and maintained a school in a self funding way (ie they charged fees or had benefactors) other than capitation and teachers, that would have to be negotiated and probably be left to the existing patronage. That would cover some RC schools (not as many as most people seem to think) and schools of other religions.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,976 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    I'm suggesting that parents who do not want to send their children to schools which are in violation of their conscience, shouldn't be forced to.

    They already have such a Constitutional right, as has been pointed out to you several times already.
    In those communities, they have as much right to apply for patronage of schools as any other patron body.

    But they don't, because this only happens in areas with a growing population where new schools are required to be constructed.

    Those who live in areas where there is no choice and no new schools being constructed (or where the population is growing but the DoE simply decides to enlarge the existing schools) can do nothing - unless they're millionaires and can build and run a school without any DoE funding.

    I'm partial to your abracadabra,

    I'm raptured by the joy of it all.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,871 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    looksee wrote: »
    You cannot have randomers taking responsibility for being patrons of a school. I have personal experience of how this did not work, though it did require some deviance on the part of a RC order to ensure that it did not.


    It seems to work well for Charter schools internationally?

    Frequently Asked Questions About Public, Charter Schools
    Who can start a charter school?

    Parents, community leaders, social entrepreneurs, businesses, teachers, school districts, and municipalities can submit a charter school proposal to their state's charter authorizing entity.

    Charter schools in the United States

    I could see the same principle being applied here in Ireland, particularly as we become more multicultural and diverse as a society!

    I couldn't see the patronage system in it's current form being scrapped though.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,976 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    Time and time again we see how crafty and devious the religious orders are when it comes to finanaces. They've been running rings around every government since the establishment of the State, and around the British before that.

    In looksee's example they hived off their liabilities onto the local community, while keeping 'their' (which was no doubt paid for originally by much local contributions and bequests) valuable asset and cashed it in when the coast was clear.

    Bunch of bloodsucking ****s and how anyone can say the motivations of religious orders are altruistic beats the hell out of me.

    I'm partial to your abracadabra,

    I'm raptured by the joy of it all.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,871 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    They already have such a Constitutional right, as has been pointed out to you several times already.


    It didn't need to be pointed out to me though, I didn't think it needed to be pointed out to anyone here that is the case. I was just clarifying because I was making the point that in the same way as nobody should be forced to enrol their children in a religious ethos school, nor should anyone be forced to enrol their children in a school which would be in violation of their conscience. That's what started the line of questioning from volchista as to how and where that line of thinking would apply, and why I clarified that it could be for any reason.

    But they don't, because this only happens in areas with a growing population where new schools are required to be constructed.

    Those who live in areas where there is no choice and no new schools being constructed (or where the population is growing but the DoE simply decides to enlarge the existing schools) can do nothing - unless they're millionaires and can build and run a school without any DoE funding.


    I'm sure people said the same thing when the any of the other patron bodies besides the religious orders were set up. It didn't stop them though, probably because they were able to gain support first of all, and secondly because of that support, they were able to make a valid case to be given funding for setting up new schools.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,976 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    I'm sure people said the same thing when the any of the other patron bodies besides the religious orders were set up. It didn't stop them though, probably because they were able to gain support first of all, and secondly because of that support, they were able to make a valid case to be given funding for setting up new schools.

    Unless they live in an expanding area, they can only succeed by taking pupils away from existing schools, leaving them under capacity.

    It's an extremely difficult process for parents who want change and it's very wasteful of taxpayers' money to fund new schools in the same area the taxpayers are also funding existing schools, which are now under-utilised.

    If you can't see the madness of the whole system, then fine, but at least acknowledge that the fact you find no problem with the patronage model might have something to do with that it works in your favour and over 90% of schools have the patronage/ethos/whatever that you want and that is specifically designed to cater for you.

    I'm partial to your abracadabra,

    I'm raptured by the joy of it all.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,712 ✭✭✭AllForIt


    It didn't need to be pointed out to me though, I didn't think it needed to be pointed out to anyone here that is the case. I was just clarifying because I was making the point that in the same way as nobody should be forced to enrol their children in a religious ethos school, nor should anyone be forced to enrol their children in a school which would be in violation of their conscience. That's what started the line of questioning from volchista as to how and where that line of thinking would apply, and why I clarified that it could be for any reason.


    You are really doing my head in with this 'forced to...' argument.

    Do you really think the state has a responsibility to provide schooling to your offspring based on YOUR religious ethos.

    You mentioned earlier that you are a tax paying citizen and inferred that that fact gives you some rights in the matter. You might be a tax paying citizen but your individual tax contribution does not pay for a segregated schooling system. I am a tax payer and I don't have any offspring and never will - do you think I should have a say in the way schools are organised based on MY strongly held beliefs.

    Until such time that the state accrues so much tax income that can be spent on schooling that provides for every ethos of every parent in the land then I'm afraid your out of luck. And how horrible it would be to have every parents views catered for, Muslims sent to Islamic school, protestants sent to protestant schools. And why stop there, blacks sent to black schools - well why not, if the tax paying black parents demand their offspring being sent there. Why restrict parents wishes only on ethos?

    This 'going against your conscience' malarkey does not hold any more weight that someone simply having a point of view and I'm sick and tired hearing that expression. A cynical tactic to use emotive language in an attempt to have it all their own way.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,871 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    If you can't see the madness of the whole system, then fine, but at least acknowledge that the fact you find no problem with the patronage model might have something to do with that it works in your favour and over 90% of schools have the patronage/ethos/whatever that you want and that is specifically designed to cater for you.


    Of course I can see why it's maddening if I were in your position HD, and of course I acknowledge that I don't have a problem with the patronage system as it is given that it happens to work not just in my favour, but in favour of 90% of the population.

    Now, can you acknowledge what I would see as madness in trying to argue that 10% of the population should control 90% of an education system that would be totally inadequate for 90% of the population?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,871 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    AllForIt wrote: »
    You are really doing my head in with this 'forced to...' argument.

    Do you really think the state has a responsibility to provide schooling to your offspring based on YOUR religious ethos.


    Yes. It also has a responsibility to provide the type of education for the children of parents who do not share my religious beliefs.

    You mentioned earlier that you are a tax paying citizen and inferred that that fact gives you some rights in the matter. You might be a tax paying citizen but your individual tax contribution does not pay for a segregated schooling system. I am a tax payer and I don't have any offspring and never will - do you think I should have a say in the way schools are organised based on MY strongly held beliefs.


    Actually, yes, I do. You're a citizen of the State aren't you? Of course you should have your say in the running of our education system and you should have a say in the way schools are organised!

    Until such time that the state accrues so much tax income that can be spent on schooling that provides for every ethos of every parent in the land then I'm afraid your out of luck. And how horrible it would be to have every parents views catered for, Muslims sent to Islamic school, protestants sent to protestant schools. And why stop there, blacks sent to black schools - well why not, if the tax paying black parents demand their offspring being sent there. Why restrict parents wishes only on ethos?


    Well if that's what you would like, I wouldn't be opposed to it. I would however, be opposed to any attempts to deny funding the education of children for any particular reason. If parents want a particular type of education for their children, well, as I suggested earlier - have at it! But try and deny me the type of education I would want for my child? Yeah, that's not going to happen.

    This 'going against your conscience' malarkey does not hold any more weight that someone simply having a point of view and I'm sick and tired hearing that expression. A cynical tactic to use emotive language in an attempt to have it all their own way.


    Might want to take that up with Atheist Ireland tbh.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,712 ✭✭✭AllForIt


    Actually, yes, I do. You're a citizen of the State aren't you? Of course you should have your say in the running of our education system and you should have a say in the way schools are organised

    Right so, since my opinion and tax contributions are equal to yours then I think that no school should have any kind of ethos and all subjects should be delivered to students based on verified facts only.

    In my opinion young children should be taught in lessons about the abstract idea of religion, the various flavors of religion, the particular ethos's of those religions and the fundamental differences between those religions beliefs and so forth.

    Would you have any objection to your offspring being exposed to an ethos that is counter to yours in the interest of education ? Or would you prefer that yours don't actually get an education at all and just hear a one sided view.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,978 ✭✭✭✭looksee


    Of course I can see why it's maddening if I were in your position HD, and of course I acknowledge that I don't have a problem with the patronage system as it is given that it happens to work not just in my favour, but in favour of 90% of the population.

    Now, can you acknowledge what I would see as madness in trying to argue that 10% of the population should control 90% of an education system that would be totally inadequate for 90% of the population?

    What is this 90% you keep talking about OEJ? The figures you provided yourself show only 60% of children identifying as RC. And even that figure includes children who have been baptised solely to get into schools (whether their parents are right or wrong in thinking this is necessary). https://www.education.ie/en/Publications/Statistics/Primary-Online-Database-POD-/

    You are conflating the 90% of schools run by the church with the 60(ish)% of children identifying as RC.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,968 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Of course I can see why it's maddening if I were in your position HD, and of course I acknowledge that I don't have a problem with the patronage system as it is given that it happens to work not just in my favour, but in favour of 90% of the population.

    Now, can you acknowledge what I would see as madness in trying to argue that 10% of the population should control 90% of an education system that would be totally inadequate for 90% of the population?

    What on earth makes you think 90% of the population are in favour of the existing education system? If you are suggesting that because someone self-identifies as Catholic that they wish the Catholic church to run our most important state funded institutions, you're obviously mistaken as illustrated by the recent NMH debacle. Similarly if you think all those self identifying as Catholic would like a Catholic ethos education you're also mistaken, given that the majority of those attending ET schools are Catholic where in all cases there is an alternative Catholic ethos school available.

    The bottom line, as I've repeated several times now, is that we don't really know what type of education Ireland's parents wants for their children as we haven't asked them, or taken time to properly understand all the options. I don't doubt that very many parents want a gender segregated religious ethos education for their kids, but similarly very many clearly do not. Breaking this down 90%/10% is an utter nonsense.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,871 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    AllForIt wrote: »
    Right so, since my opinion and tax contributions are equal to yours then I think that no school should have any kind of ethos and all subjects should be delivered to students based on verified facts only.

    In my opinion young children should be taught in lessons about the abstract idea of religion, the various flavors of religion, the particular ethos's of those religions and the fundamental differences between those religions beliefs and so forth.


    If that's what you want, then if you're not doing something about it already, I'd respectfully suggest you might want to get on that.

    Would you have any objection to your offspring being exposed to an ethos that is counter to yours in the interest of education ? Or would you prefer that yours don't actually get an education at all and just hear a one sided view.


    When you say counter, do you mean anti-religious? If so, then yes, I'd have an issue exposing him to that as I don't believe it would be any way educational for him (it's mostly stuff about sky fairies, pasta and 2edgy4u, angry bastard neckbeard type nonsense). If you mean atheism, I've actually encouraged him to explore the idea for himself, kinda ends very abruptly though when it's simply - there is no god. I've encouraged him to dig a bit deeper to understand the history and philosophy of atheism, as I believe it's good to actually educate himself on these topics. But for his formal education, I prefer that he receives an education in line with my religious beliefs. My wife wanted it for him as much as I did even though she couldn't be less interested in religion herself (she and her family are non-religious).

    As an aside, the NCCA tried to introduce something similar to what you're talking about in the form of an ERB curriculum... it didn't go down well, with any of the stakeholders in primary education.

    looksee wrote: »
    What is this 90% you keep talking about OEJ?

    ...

    You are conflating the 90% of schools run by the church with the 60(ish)% of children identifying as RC.

    smacl wrote: »
    What on earth makes you think 90% of the population are in favour of the existing education system?

    ...

    The bottom line, as I've repeated several times now, is that we don't really know what type of education Ireland's parents wants for their children as we haven't asked them, or taken time to properly understand all the options. I don't doubt that very many parents want a gender segregated religious ethos education for their kids, but similarly very many clearly do not. Breaking this down 90%/10% is an utter nonsense.


    The bottom line is that I'm solely using the figure that 90% of the schools in Ireland are under the patronage of religious orders, and I'm even being generous in surmising that 10% of the population have argued for an alternative. AllForIt seems to be suggesting that they'd be... all for it, but this is the thing - it's one thing to say you would want a different type of education, it's quite another when you actually have to do something to make that a reality.


  • Posts: 25,874 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    The bottom line is that I'm solely using the figure that 90% of the schools in Ireland are under the patronage of religious orders, and I'm even being generous in surmising that 10% of the population have argued for an alternative. AllForIt seems to be suggesting that they'd be... all for it, but this is the thing - it's one thing to say you would want a different type of education, it's quite another when you actually have to do something to make that a reality.
    Because 90% of schools are catholic, it therefore follows that 90% of parents are happy with that?

    That doesn't follow. Neither does your insistence that because few people are actively trying to set up these schools means that there is few people unhappy with the situation.
    In my case, my mother has explicitly told me that she didn't want to send me to a Catholic school when I was younger and had she had a choice I would have gone to an Educate Together school or similar. And that while my school had a school like that at the time it was too far from our house to be a viable option. Nor could she try to organise a movement to establish a new secular school because both of my parents worked and simply didn't have time.

    Your point seems to mean that my mother and people in similar situations are in favour of Catholic patronage, which is just funny.

    If 90% are so concerned with the Catholic ethos, how come 90% of Ireland's population aren't in mass every Sunday?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,871 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    King Mob wrote: »
    Because 90% of schools are catholic, it therefore follows that 90% of parents are happy with that?


    I'm not putting forward the argument that they're happy or unhappy with it. I'm putting forward the argument that they haven't acted to change it.

    That doesn't follow. Neither does your insistence that because few people are actively trying to set up these schools means that there is few people unhappy with the situation.
    In my case, my mother has explicitly told me that she didn't want to send me to a Catholic school when I was younger and had she had a choice I would have gone to an Educate Together school or similar. And that while my school had a school like that at the time it was too far from our house to be a viable option. Nor could she try to organise a movement to establish a new secular school because both of my parents worked and simply didn't have time.


    This year, because of the sibling rule in their admissions policies, my child didn't get into two Catholic schools I had applied for, I had considered private school as an alternative, and the other alternative was a school 25 miles away. He was more in favour of the school 25 miles away so we went with that option.

    If 90% are so concerned with the Catholic ethos, how come 90% of Ireland's population aren't in mass every Sunday?


    I'm not suggesting that 90% of Irelands population are concerned with the Catholic ethos (even given the evidence of parents I've met who say themselves they aren't religious, but they still want their children to make their Communion/Confirmation, and they cause war when they feel their children are unprepared and lay the blame on the school). I'm suggesting that they aren't interested in doing anything to suggest they are all that interested in alternatives. As for why they aren't in mass every Sunday, I would suggest they don't see the two different things as related.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,989 ✭✭✭✭recedite


    https://www.kildarestreet.com/debates/?id=2017-05-18a.157
    "Question declared lost" by 90 to 43 votes.
    I presume that is the end of the road for that particular bill, although the vote is described as a failed "motion".


  • Posts: 25,874 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I'm not putting forward the argument that they're happy or unhappy with it. I'm putting forward the argument that they haven't acted to change it.
    Which is nonsense, clearly because it's not true.
    There are tons of people out there actively trying to change it. From people trying to change in on the government level to people trying to help set up new secular schools.
    However not everyone has the time, money and resources to do this themselves.

    Similarly, the Catholic church has had a monopoly on education for the last few generations, and that takes time to change, so you pretending that it's something that is easy is more nonsense.

    So if you are not using this 90% figure to show that 90% of people are ok with the situation, what does it prove exactly?
    This year, because of the sibling rule in their admissions policies, my child didn't get into two Catholic schools I had applied for, I had considered private school as an alternative, and the other alternative was a school 25 miles away. He was more in favour of the school 25 miles away so we went with that option.
    Well bully for you that that's a viable option in your case.
    That doesn't hold up for everyone.
    Sometimes it comes down to a choice between ethos and practicality. A lot of the time is that practicality wins out.
    So we are arguing that this should not be a choice people have to make at all.
    I'm suggesting that they aren't interested in doing anything to suggest they are all that interested in alternatives.
    Which is again, nonsense of the highest order.
    Not everyone has the time and resources to campaign or set up new schools.
    Not everyone has the option of viable, affordable alternatives.
    The only reason Catholic school have such a huge share is because they are legacy schools that have been around for decades and the church, a rich powerful multinational organisation, has a vested interest in maintaining that share.

    People are interested in alternatives, we just don't know how many because the population has never been asked. Your method of determining it is flawed and biased and lazy.

    How exactly do you explain the huge over-subscribing Educate Together schools receive?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,871 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    King Mob wrote: »
    Which is nonsense, clearly because it's not true.
    There are tons of people out there actively trying to change it. From people trying to change in on the government level to people trying to help set up new secular schools.
    However not everyone has the time, money and resources to do this themselves.


    That's why I said I was being generous with the 10% that are actively doing something to change it.

    Similarly, the Catholic church has had a monopoly on education for the last few generations, and that takes time to change, so you pretending that it's something that is easy is more nonsense.


    I never pretended it was something easy, would you stop putting words in my mouth? You're also ignoring the fact that only a couple of generations ago, Catholics in this country were denied an education, until enough of them acted to change it. When enough people act to change the current status of our education system to an alternative model of education, then you'll have every reason to tell me my rationale is nonsense.

    Well bully for you that that's a viable option in your case.
    That doesn't hold up for everyone.
    Sometimes it comes down to a choice between ethos and practicality. A lot of the time is that practicality wins out.
    So we are arguing that this should not be a choice people have to make at all.


    What you're arguing, is that the choice shouldn't be available to them. You want to reverse the current situation to limit the majority to a model of education of your choosing. You're arguing about impracticalities while arguing from your minority position that the majority want what you want...

    That sounds reasonable to you?

    How exactly do you explain the huge over-subscribing Educate Together schools receive?


    Partly anti-religious brigade, partly people more interested in an informal, liberal education, partly Irish people wanting to avoid immigrants and lower class in the Catholic schools, partly because there's actually so few of them. They're an alternative, just not a very popular one.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,968 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    That's why I said I was being generous with the 10% that are actively doing something to change it.

    Unless you can provide some hard references, this appears to be an arbitrary number you've plucked out of the air with no basis in fact. The fact that 90% of our children attend Catholic ethos schools can't in anyway be construed as a matter of choice because, for the vast majority, they have no choice.
    Partly anti-religious brigade, partly people more interested in an informal, liberal education, partly Irish people wanting to avoid immigrants and lower class in the Catholic schools, partly because there's actually so few of them. They're an alternative, just not a very popular one.

    You left out those who simply don't want the Catholic church involved in running state funded institutions, those who had a very bad first hand experience of the Catholic school system under the brothers and nuns, and most importantly those who simply see ET as the best educational choice for their kids. While you may not be aware of it, there are very many Irish people who consider their own schooling to have been absolutely brutal and want better for their children. Ask a few people of my generation (early 50s) what they though of the brothers and nuns and I can promise you'll get some very colourful language in response.


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  • Posts: 25,874 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    That's why I said I was being generous with the 10% that are actively doing something to change it.
    Generous is one word. Disingenuous is a more accurate one.
    When enough people act to change the current status of our education system to an alternative model of education, then you'll have every reason to tell me my rationale is nonsense.
    It's nonsense because you are declaring that there's no interest (despite evidence to the contrary) because the status quo is the status quo...
    You're arguing about impracticalities while arguing from your minority position that the majority want what you want...

    That sounds reasonable to you?
    I've yet to see anything to suggest that the majority want catholic control of education.
    Right now the majority of people don't have a choice as it stands.

    Maybe the government should look into the actual desires of the people?
    . They're an alternative, just not a very popular one.
    Ignoring your rash generalisations, how can they be oversubscribed yet unpopular?


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