Snotty wrote: » I have no figures to back this up, but is it due to our larger amount of single sex schools compared to other countries?
Strumms wrote: » Sounds reasonable. So you are brought up in your formative years in this country segregated. Unless you attend an Educate Together type setup that is. Then you hit college and bang....sometimes quite literally 🔥
Teddy Daniels wrote: » Many schools in smaller towns are co Ed
Anteayer wrote: » The volume of single gender schools in Ireland is pretty weird though. It's reportedly about 1/3 of schools and it used to be a lot higher. It's something usually only seen in obscure private schools or that you'd only encounter in the developing world and middle East, where there are hang ups about women's education. It's not a Catholic Vs other religious backgrounds thing, but rather a hangover from a Victorian educational ideology that ended up in Irish public schools. Ireland's very much an outlier on that in the western world and certainly in the EU. Somehow we clung onto a system that was common elsewhere in the 1800s but died out entirely in the 20th Century. I know I've two friends from continental Europe who had been working in Dublin but moved back to Germany and France largely because they didn't like the structure of the school system and knew that it might be a struggle to find a less conservative model of school for their kids. It's genuinely a very strange setup. We just think it's normal because we grew up with it.
Strumms wrote: » Sounds reasonable. So you are brought up in your formative years in this country segregated. Unless you attend an Educate Together type setup that is. Then you hit college and bang....sometimes quite literally 🔥
Anteayer wrote: » The private schools don’t “know what they’re doing”. They’re usually just long established, very traditional and not much has changed since the 19th century in most of them. You’ve a selection bias at intake and parents who value education enough to pay big money.
johndaman66 wrote: » Whatever it is or is or isin't I'd suggest its not Catholicism anyway.
noubliezjamais wrote: » Something that I've noticed confirmed by two friend from France and Canada. They say that they find it peculiar that in general, Irish men and women in school/workplace tend to group themselves by their gender morseo than other western nations. I have to agree with them. Even though we are friendly, there's still can be a barrier between men and women who are friends that you don't see in other nations. Is it the Catholicism?
Dr Cliona Saidlear said that young girls need to be made aware that young boys who sit with them in the classroom can also be a danger. ... Dr Saidlear added: “They are doing a whole system review – they are not just looking at the curriculum content but they are also looking at what happens in the corridor. “It’s about how the whole school responds and creates a safe place. “Sex education around sexual violence is really about tools to help people around inappropriate behaviour and recognising behaviour in themselves. “It has shifted that focus from stranger danger and that dirty-old-man kind of image we have. “We really need to say that young boys can also be a danger to young girls, it isn’t all just fun. “The sexual violence that is being perpetrated mostly by young boys on young girls, was being named all the time in the public discourse as Romeo and Juliet, we were telling girls who were being raped that it was romance gone wrong, that it was disapproved of by adults.”
The parents of a seven-year-old boy against whom an unfounded allegation of sex abuse was made claim that the way the school principal over-reacted, and Tusla’s absolute refusal to delete the file, has ‘destroyed’ their lives, writes Michael Clifford. One day in 2017, two seven-year-old children had a typically innocent encounter in a school playground. The ultimate outcome of the incident, which lasted for about a second, has been trauma for one of the families, serious questions around training for school principals, and whether or not it is correct that a record be kept on a child wrongly accused of “sexual abuse”.