Flinty997 wrote: » I'm surprised because without trying all of the schools I've (and anyone I know) have experience of have very little religious influence. Religion as a subject never been taken seriously. Yet many in this thread, (who I have assume would tried it) seem to managed to find schools with a level of religious fanaticism that wouldn't be out of place 70 yrs ago. That's what's surprising.
Bannasidhe wrote: » .... in fact all the colouring in was religiously themed. ....
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » About 95% of Irish primary schools are "really, really religious"
Flinty997 wrote: » I just scanned through my own kids drawings out of about 30 I have to hand, one is religious (Xmas scene), the others are of space, nature, animals, family, events. I know these are Anecdotal examples. But its strange that I with zero effort found a school that doesn't do this. Yet someone opposed to religion ended in a school that does do that.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » By secondary most kids have seen through the big lie Primary school is the bone of contention. A shade under 90% of primary schools remain under RCC control, even if one accepts the census figure of 78% catholic that is way off (and of course many of that 78% are no longer parents of children of school-going age) The most relevant stat, according to me , is that fewer than half of marriages in Ireland now take place in any church at all (never mind an RCC one) and it's hard to imagine that couples who actively choose a non-catholic marriage would desire a catholic education for their kids.
Flinty997 wrote: » I agree state schools should be secular. Its still weird that someone without even trying can find schools, with minimal if any religious involvement, and do it repeatedly. While those, who want no involvement with religion, seem to get their kids into schools with the most extreme religious pressure.
Treppen wrote: » How do these schools with minimal religious involvement present themselves for you to find them?
Bannasidhe wrote: » Ah stop now. It's hardly a 1000 atheists in here saying our child was in a school run by the Spanish Inquisition. It's various people saying "my child(ren) encountered religious indoctrination to xxxx degree in their local taxpayer funded national school. We do not want our child(ren) to receive any religious indoctrination whatsoever as is our right under the Constitution but the State is giving us no choice". I would suggest you don't a) don't see it because b) you don't really 'get' why it's an issue. .....
Flinty997 wrote: » Pretty much are. So you need to look for evidence not based an anecdotal stories. Well if the curriculum and materials are saturated with religious indoctrination that would be easy to substantiate. You'd could look through a child schoolwork and school books. In some of the other threads people could point to a staff membership in religious groups or boards of management being dominated by members of such organisations. There you have clear links. We also have the issue around hospital ownership at the moment. Ultimately if religious indoctrination was as widespread as is claimed here. RC wouldn't be evaporating from society as it is. You wouldn't need nut analogies either.
Bannasidhe wrote: » Just over 90% of primary schools and 50% of secondary schools are under the patronage of the Roman Catholic Church - fact. These schools are bound to implement the ethos of the Roman Catholic Church - fact. How exactly do you think these schools fulfill this obligation?
Flinty997 wrote: » Whatever their obligations. The fact the vast majority leaving the school system have no involvement, engagement or association with religion. Implies they are either very bad at teaching it. Or just not doing it. That's not too say that patronage should be ignored. Religion should be detached from education. Definitely.
In 2016 the proportion of Roman Catholics increased steadily from 75.5 per cent for those aged less than one, to 83.5 per cent for 11 year olds. It then falls with increasing age to reach a low of 60.5 per cent for 27 year olds before steadily rising to reach a peak for 82 year olds at 91.9 per cent.
Bannasidhe wrote: » .... The census returns say you are incorrect - the majority still tick the RCC box. I would call that an 'involvement'....
Flinty997 wrote: » Last time the pope rocked up for mass 1.3 million turned up. This time 130k. Ticking boxes on a census isn't involvement.
Bannasidhe wrote: » Yes. It is. It is also what informs planning decisions. If people are not involved why tick the I am involved box when there is an I am not involved box available? Answer : Because they were 'raised Catholic' - and the majority of the instruction took place in school. You were looking for proof of other's statements and quibbled when you didn't get it. You then made an unsupported statement and when proof is supplied showing you are incorrect you are quibbling with the proof. You are coming across as not exactly consistent.
Communions and Confirmations are not a “one day ‘school event’ organised in a local church,” the leader of the Catholic Church in Dublin has warned parents and schools.
Flinty997 wrote: » Research and networking. I think a better question is how do others manage to find schools with such high religious involvement. Considering it's completely at odds with trends in society in general. Are there incentives for teachers and headmasters to promote religion.
Flinty997 wrote: » Thanks for that. Hardly hiding it under a bushel though are they. Even the crest is religious. But in researching this, I found this interesting case...https://atheist.ie/2017/09/tipperary-etb-christian-ethos/
Flinty997 wrote: » Well I found another job advert but it was an educate together : ) then I checked out our own school and there is almost zero mention of region on it. So I was thinking maybe it's ETBs but then came across that story which was interesting in a load of different ways.
6 wrote: » They are literally teaching something they think themselves think is make believe.
The horse has bolted with the baptism barrier gone. Its slow moving, but communion and conformations will be eventually moved to out of hours, and become an opt-in part of a child's upbringing. Then watch communions and confirmations fall off a cliff.
Geuze wrote: » They are not very religious at all, compared to this:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madrasa
Although the patron may be a church, the actual day-to-day activity is not very religious.
Treppen wrote: » Plus the whole charities network thing is a means to an end. You'll recall where enda got tough and closed the Irish embassy in the Vatican. Probably wasn't long before they realised the global network they were cutting off , but anyway, back open again.... https://www.dfa.ie/irish-embassy/holy-see/ambassador/ So big lie or not, you gotta know how your bread is buttered.
Flinty997 wrote: » Well you have to ask why are they demolishing large churches and selling them off for apartments if there is large regular involvement in religion.
The church has pretty admitted that attendance at communion and similar events are mostly treated as one day events, and religion takes a backseat even with these.
Realizing this, they've counted with the "Flourish" programme which is so out of touch with society its laughable.
Bannasidhe wrote: » The census returns say you are incorrect - the majority still tick the RCC box. I would call that an 'involvement'.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Try counting the number with enough involvement to show up for Mass on the average Sunday morning, and you won't be dealing with a majority.
Bannasidhe wrote: » Sadly infrastructure and funding is not decided by having someone stand outside churches on a Sunday morning - or even Saturday night which I have observed seems to be the big going to Mass day - with a clicky counter. It's decided by the compulsory questionnaire sent out to every household every 5 years. And on that questionnaire it asks what religion (if any) people are - I don't recall it asking how observant any one is. Personally I think if a system similar to Germany where those who profess to have a religion are obliged to pay a "support your religion tax" we'd soon see far less ticking of I'm a Roman Catholic box on the census. But for now we have people educated in Catholic ethos State funded schools (many of which required baptism until very recently), growing up to tick the I am a Catholic box even though they are not only non-observant, they continually break the tenets of their professed religion. And this means in the box ticking exercise the majority are 'Roman Catholic' and that is what the bean counters go on.
Peregrinus wrote: » Amazingly enough, school patronage decisions are much more influenced by consulting parents of school age children about what kind of school they want than by either census results or mass attendance surveys. That is, after all, the relevant data. As for the church tax, far, far more Germans tick the box and pay the church tax (61%) than actually go to church every Sunday (estimated 5-6%). And I think this is broadly true in most or all countries which have a similar church tax. People who choose church attendance as a proxy for genuine religious affiliation usually do so because church attendance is low and this give them the result they want. Having a second objective measure of affiliation might not yield the result they want. Which underlines the point already made - you can't project whether people will want to send their children to church schools based on whether they attend church or not, or what box they tick on the census form, or even whether they pay a church tax. You have to ask them what kind of schools they want to send their children to.