gawker wrote: » Congrats to AI and fair play to Hibernia College for swallowing their pride and making changes. It could be good for business for them, I'm sure being the only truly non-religious teachers ed providers in Ireland will bring them some students.
Michael Nugent wrote: » Hibernia College has explained to us the context in which the religious education element of its course has evolved. We are happy that Hibernia College did not intentionally include the sections that we found to be inaccurate about atheism and atheists.
expectationlost wrote: » so how did it happen? has anyone else got a proper explanation off them?
swampgas wrote: » I understand that a full explanation of what happened hasn't emerged. However, I don't think there is much to be gained by pursuing this line of questioning. The management are cooperating and seem genuinely interested in making things right. Demanding further explanations at this point would (IMHO) be counter-productive, as it's an attempt to force the college to "name and shame" those responsible, and that's something that any Irish institution is very slow to do.
This course aims to help its participants to gain an appreciation of, and respect for, religions other than their own without falling into relativism. It is hoped that, having studied this course, participants will appreciate how little they know of other religions and, as a result, be careful of making ill-informed comments and instead be capable of entering into respectful dialogue with people of different religions. This course on Religions of the World will lead to an understanding of the true Christian attitude to other religions, and it is hoped will provide participants with some understanding of the points of contact between these religions and Christianity.
number10a wrote: » The college made an absolutely massive mistake here, but they provide excellent training in all other areas of the teacher training process,
We do need to give them the benefit of the doubt when they say that the higher authorities in the college knew nothing about this. It seems perfectly plausible. I imagine it highly unlikely that the President of UCC and his closest colleagues would vet everything their lecturers are preaching, and likewise in any other institute of higher education in this country. But they would react if something objectionable was brought to their attention. Others on here have suggested that the college may not have been taking the religion module seriously and were just offering it so another box could be ticked for us student teachers, and this could well be true. The theory fits.
They even have an optional module for us relating to Educate Together (see attachement of the module summary). This module is unfortunately not examined, or really brought to our attention, but nonetheless, it is there.
expectationlost wrote: » i don't give them the benefit of the doubt, look http://cpd.hiberniacollege.net/CourseInformation/Spring2011Programme/ReligionsoftheWorld/tabid/69/Default.aspx they had 5 people supposedly writing this course and your suggesting they weren't talking it seriously?
expectationlost wrote: » thats supposed to impress?
expectationlost wrote: » I have my doubts. how good can an online course be? when you can't challenge your lecturers?
Michael Nugent wrote: » I will be discussing the Hibernia College course notes about atheism on http://newstalk.ie at about 12.30 lunchtime today with Fr Vincent Twomey, who wrote the notes, and Noel Ward, Deputy General Secretary of the INTO.
"It is a fact (his emphasis - P.) that atheism has produced the worst atrocities in history... Nazisim..." - "You're taking it out of context" "I would claim what we are producing is objective." "I stand over my course, I stand over what I said" "We respect the beliefs of the parents of the children we are teaching"
"We respect the beliefs of the parents of the children we are teaching"
number10a wrote: » It's not supposed to impress. It's not impressive. I think you'll note that I said it's unfortunate that it is not given a more prominent position. I'm just showing you that the college isn't set on indoctrinating us. Fr Twomey might well be, Hibernia College I think not.
Mark Hamill wrote: » Was Twomey really trying to claim that this* was taken out of context