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Thursday, April 4, 2019

State-funded faith schools

State-funded credit disciplinesThis paper will mind at the flair in which press place-funded assent schools came into being in the United Kingdom. It will argue that politics pedagogyal policy and its immigration and integration policies play a key role in find out the convey for the render of evoke faith schools.The state funding of faith schools has a long floor in the United Kingdom. The National Society of the Church of England founded 17,000 schools to offer commandment to the poor between 1811 and1860. (DfES, p.2) The state funding of these schools began in 1870 when Church and other voluntary institutions began to receive funds to supplement and assist them in their educational cookery. (Cush, p.435)As at January 2008, of the 20,587 kept up(p) primary quill and secondary schools in the UK, 6,827 have a ghostlike character and of these nine be Moslem. (Bolton, 2009,Table 1) There are three types of schools with religious character in the UK maintained, ac ademies and separate schools with the state providing funding for the first two. Maintained schools are all voluntary controlled which federal agency the Local breeding Authority suffers all the funding in return for control mostly everywhere religious education and governance (most Church of England schools are voluntary controlled) and voluntary aided where the state provides 90% of the funding for much(prenominal) control over religious education and governance (most other denominations fall into this category, especially Roman Catholic schools). (Cush p. 435-436). Christian and Jewish faith schools were the totally faith schools receiving state funding until 1998 when the Islamia Schools Trust, after a competitiveness of 12 years, was awarded voluntary aided status for its schools. Whilst there are only nine state funded Muslim schools, there are over 100 Muslim schools in Britain. These independent schools tend to co-ordinate their efforts by the Association of Mus lim Schools.On November 11th, 2007 during Prime Ministers Questions, the government stated that regarding education it is committed to a respective(a) system of schools dictated by parental ask and aspirations that the political sympathies does not have targets for faith schools scarce remains committed to supporting the establishment of new schools by a range of providers. (Bolton, 2009, p.14) Reaffirming the Governments position on faith schools, Ed Balls, the then Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families said on January 9th, 2008 It is not the policy of the Government or my Department to promote to a greater extent faith schools. We have no policy to expand their numbers. That should be a matter for local communities. (Bolton, 2009, p.16)The drive for some members of the Muslim residential area towards their receive faith schools needs to be understood in light of the backdrop of Muslim migration into the UK, their subsequent integration and recent dry land e vents. The first Muslims arriving from South Asia in the 1950s were semi-skilled or unskilled labourers. They had a tendency to stay insulated from the wider community this being as much a function of their own choice as a retort to the racial discrimination and social exclusion they were experiencing. (Hefner, p.227) Subsequent open immigration policies of the 1970s allowed their families to follow and now 75% of all Muslims in the UK are from South Asia. According to the 2001 census, the approximately 1.6 million British Muslims make up roughly 3% of the population. (Hefner, p. 227) In the UK, Muslim has become synonymous with Pakistani.Third generation British-born Muslim families no longer think of themselves as immigrants, although what it means to be a British Muslim is still a concept being negotiated. Our identities are go downd as much by our own understanding of our histories as by how we think others perceive us. In recent years, the identity of Muslims has been tied up with universe of discourse events and collision representations in the media. Since September 11th, 2001, Muslims have been bombarded by an overwhelmingly hostile media and a government apparently tone on impinging on the liberties and human rights of its Muslim citizens. Salma Hafejee described an event that evoked not fantastic feelings in her 21 year old son. Speaking on a film for Our Lives, a mold which explored the insights and experiences of Muslim women in Bradford, she told the story of a weekend visit her son took to Barcelona. Coincidently, on the weekend of his bring out there had been a series of arrests made in Barcelona in connection with what had been described as terrorist activities. On his return home, her son was met by police and questioned for several hours. She said he had always felt British and believed that his British passport would protect him, but for the first time he felt an alien in his own home. (Speak-it, 2009) One whoremonger well imagine that this experience and the constant barrage of negative images relating to his faith in the media must have been bewildering. Naturally surrounded by such hostility and otherised in this way, a community would have a tendency to close ranks and look inward for comfort, protection and security.This situation can be seen as some justification for why the Muslim community turned to Muslim schools to carry their communal identity and Muslim practices. The Education Reform Act 1988 states that schools should promote the spiritual, moral, cultural, mental and physical victimisation of pupils at the school and in orderliness Some Muslims were beginning to question whether a non-Muslim schooling surroundings would be able to adequately fulfil that need for their children. The Education Act of 1944 made religion the only subject it was compulsory to teach in school, but the teaching of religion is relatively superficial, meaning that from the sight of those for whom a religious ethos is important, mainstream schools are unable to provide the spiritual and religious dimension adequately.How governments deal with the provision of religion does seem to have some bearing on the educational choices of parents. An examination of Belgium and The Netherlands shows that when the government provision of religious education is high, the demand for religious schools is muted. In Belgium, 4% of the population is Muslim primarily of Turkish or Moroccan descent. Since 1975, it has been the law to provide Moslem instruction in state schools on the selfsame(prenominal) basis as other religions are taught. The first, and only, state funded Islamic primary school opened in 1989 and seems to be linked to the inability of two municipalities to appoint officially recognised teachers and thereby their refusal to provide Islamic instruction. In The Netherlands, 6% of the population is Muslim and also primarily of Turkish or Moroccan descent. The state does not have a policy for the specific provision of Islamic instruction and there are 45 Islamic schools in The Netherlands. (Merry, 2005)In the UK, the lack of adequate provision of religious education in mainstream state schools, the hostility of the media, the government and the public to their faith and community, and the recorded underachievement of Pakistanis in mainstream schools combine to form a powerful motivator for Muslim parents to take over control of the education of their child.Given the UK governments expansive grandiosity about promoting and supporting Britain to be a multi-cultural society, and its stated commitment to a diverse system of schools driven by parental needs and aspirations, the support of Muslim state funded schools is an easy stretch.But an agreed comment of a multicultural society seems woefully lacking. The government has a policy of promoting multiculturalism but if it is unable to define what a multicultural society could look like, how does it know that the policies it i s promoting are effective to meeting this end? Todays multicultural Britain has many faces dependent largely on ethnicity, geography and social class, which in turn is one of the determinants of educational achievement. Is multicultural simply the acknowledgment of diversity in our society or is it an engagement with that diversity to give rise a society that is pluralistic? Does it mean that we are all free to live in our own sub-worlds without interface with the wider community or does it mean that we are encouraged to engage with each other? Where is the roll that binds us as citizens if we live entirely culturally independent lives?This was a question that was raised by Ray Honeyford more than twenty years ago and it is still a question that warrants addressing thoughtfully today. In 1982 Bradford Council issued guidelines for its aim in education. These included preparing children for a life in a multicultural society countering racism and the inequalities of discrimination d eveloping the strengths of cultural and linguistic diversity and responding to the needs of nonage groups.Ray Honeyford was a headteacher in a Bradford middle school and he was concerned that the educational policies he was expected to implement were un flirtable. He argued that the 20% of Bradfords Islamic immigrant population had intentions to remain in Britain. For their sake and for the sake of others, they should participate fully in British life, and that in order to do so effectively their education needed to stress the primacy of the side of meat language, and British nicety, history and traditions. (Dalrymple, 2002) In 1984, Honeyford wrote an article that was rejected by The Times Educational Supplement in advance being published by the far right Salisbury Re meet. The fact that it was this publication that was the first manner of transmission connoted a lot to its readers and no doubt would have influenced the subsequent interpretation of the article itself. In Educat ion and Race an Alternative view Honeyford (2006) suggested that the perversion of language (he had a Masters in linguistics) or so race and cultural issues had made it impossible to speak honestly about the concerns and realities that our increasingly diverse society was throwing up. He highlighted that lumping together all non-whites into one category that was black created a dichotomy of anti-white solidarity. What we, today, call other-ing. His primary concern was the impact of an imposed multicultural mindset on the education of his students. British law obliges a parent to ensure that his or her child is registered and attends school regularly. He argued that the tendency for Asian families to take their children out of school and send them to the sub-continent for months at a time was not only illegal but had lucid negative educational effects. The Department of Education and Science turned a blind eye difference headteachers, like Honeyford, to comply with an attendance policy based on the parents country of origin. He found this undue and cast it as an officially sanctioned policy of racial discrimination. (Honeyford, 2006) Honeyford further highlighted that the absence of English as a primary language of instruction at the school left the ethnic white minority students in his schools educationally disadvantaged. His broader concern was how the functioning of inner cities with its production of ethnic ghettos, and multi-racial educational policies could produce an interconnected and harmonious society. He concluded I suspect that these elements, far from helping to produce harmony, are, in reality, operate to produce a sense of fragmentation and discord. And I am no longer convinced that the British genius for compromise, for muddling though, and for good natured tolerance will be sufficient to resolve the inevitable tensions. (Honeyford, 2006)Post-publication, Honeyford endured a protracted and bitter campaign against him leading to his event ual early retirement. The vitriolic response to his assertions for better and more compositional education did not raise the government action. Issues raised by the Honeyford Affair continue to be logical argumentd more than two decades later. Honeyfords tough and courageous questioning of issues that the government was too uncomfortable to raise and try and work finished have left a lasting vacuum on integration and the harmonious and multicultural world we reasonably aspire to.In light of these affairs, the debate on faith schools which predominantly relates to maintained schools leads us first to ask what the aim and purpose of education is. Is education intended to provide us with skills for employment, in which case it is driven by a practical measurable output? Or is in intended for, as Aristotle called it, human flourishing? And are these two necessarily mutually exclusive? If education is deemed a human right, then what role does the child play in determining the educat ion that he receives? These questions dont seem to have been directly touched upon by those debating the desirability of faith schools.Given the faith school debate touches on areas of education, politics and religion it is unlikely to be a dispassionate one. Most of the debate is opinion- rather than evidence-based (Cush p.440) and writers on the issue repeatedly bemoan the lack of empirical evidence to substantiate claims from either side. As Muslims are becoming acutely aware of their minority status, the drive towards Islamic schools is as much a response to the attack on their identity as it is about the ethos of education. According to Heffner and Zaman (2007, p. 228) In recent years, the issue of Islamic education has been a vital part of the debate about what it means to be a British Muslim today and an important terrain in the negotiation of identity, citizenship and co-existence.Mainstream education tends to view the world though an Anglo-Saxon lens and achievements are Eu ropeanised. The study of the contributions made by Muslim scholars over the centuries in many subject areas is a boost to self-esteem and those calling for Muslim schools are flavor for a change in the way the world is viewed. The mission statement of the Islamia Trust Schools states that it strives to provide the high hat education in a secure Islamic environment through the knowledge and application of the volume and Sunnah. (Islamia) What this requires is a reconception of the way in which any subject can be taught, negotiating as it must through the Quran and the Sunnah. The argument being made is that Muslim children are becoming de-Islamised (Khan-Cheema, p.83) and that mainstream schools are failing to provide an ethos in which all, not just secular, aspects of a childs life are catered for. Concern for the lack of single finish up provision in the mainstream for girls is also voiced as a concern and a reason for requiring the provision of Muslim schools. The academic un derachievement of Pakistanis in mainstream schools is well recognised, but their achievement in faith schools is well supra average (Bolton, 2009). The direct connection linking improved academic results and faith schools should be made cautiously as academic achievement is also liked to the economic and social class of the family.The case against Muslim faith schools is a compelling one. Those fighting this position say that these schools are a breeding ground for fundamentalist and intolerant religious views that are not inclusive of the majority. They propagate segregation and voluntary apartheid and create ghettos which forfend other races and faiths, thus creating social division. With Islam almost universally cast as a threat to world order this raises questions relating to citizenship and loyalty. Those in this camp may draw some of their inspiration from the position Honeyford took on the need to integrate rather than segregate more than 2 decades ago.Why would, and how cou ld, an immigrant who lands in the UK who is able to create for himself an environment that reflects culturally, socially, and educationally the one which he left, have any opportunity to build loyalty to his host country. understandably the governments position on what a multicultural Britain would look like needs to be debated much more openly if only so we can try and understand how we will get there. A laissez-faire(prenominal) each-to-his own policy cannot surely provide the way forward. The questions Honeyford asked more than 20 years ago, distasteful as they were, are questions we might need to ask again today.ReferencesBolton, Paul Gillie, Christine (2009). Faith schools admissions and performance. House of Commons subroutine library Standard Note SN/SG/4405Cush, Denise (2005). Review The Faith Schools Debate. British journal of Sociology and Education, Vol.26, No.3 (Jul.,2005), pp. 435-442Department for Children, Schools and Families (DfES). Faith in the System The rol e of schools with a religious character in English education and society.Hefner, Robert W. Zaman, Muhammad Q. (2007) Schooling Islam The culture and politics of Modern Muslim Education. Princeton University Press.Hewer, Chris (2001). Schools for Muslims. Oxford Review of Education, Vol. 27, No. 4, The State, Schools and Religion (Dec.,) 2001), pp.515-527Hewitt, Ibrahim (1996). The Case for Muslim Schools in Issues in Islamic Education. The Muslim Educational Trust, London.Hussain, Imitiaz, A. (2003), Migration and Settlement A Historical Perspective of Loyalty and Belonging in British Muslims Loyalty and Belonging, ed Mohammad Siddique Seddon, Dilwar Hussain, Nadeem Malik. The Islamic Foundation, Leicestershire.Khan-Cheema, Muhammad, A. (1996). British Muslims in State Schools a positive way forward in Issues in Islamic Education. The Muslim Educational Trust, London.Lawson, Ibrahim (2005). Leading Islamic Schools in the UK A challenge for us all. National College for School Leader ship.Merry, Michael S. Driessen, Geert (2005). Islamic Schooling in Three Western Countries constitution and Procedure. Comparative Education, Vol. 41, No. 4 (Nov., 2005), pp. 411-432Parker, Stephen (2005/2006). Review In Good Faith Schools, Religion and Public Funding. Journal of Law and Religion, Vol. 21, No. 1 (2005/2006), pp. 217-219Speak-it Productions (2009). Film Our Lives Project http//www.youtube.com/ourlivesprojectp/u/4/lFnuhPijzXM

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