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Education, Religious Commitment, and Religious Tolerance in Contemporary China

Xiuhua Wang, +1 more
- 27 Feb 2017 - 
- Vol. 59, Iss: 2, pp 157-182
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TLDR
This article examined the relationship between higher education and religion in a non-Western context, China, where children are typically raised in secular contexts and anti-religious ideology permeates the education system.
Abstract
Most existing research on education and religion has been situated in the United States, a context where it is normative for youth to receive religious socialization within families that is often thought to be challenged once they enter college. This study examines the relationship between higher education and religion in a non-Western context, China, where children are typically raised in secular contexts and anti-religious ideology permeates the education system. For Chinese youth, college is often individuals’ first significant exposure to religious perspectives. Using data from the 2007 Spiritual Life Study of Chinese Residents, we find that the influence of education on religion is not a secularizing one: Although the least educated are more likely to identify themselves as members of a religious group, this is true only of older adults. People with at least some college education report similar levels of religious salience and belief in their lives compared to both the least and moderately educated. In fact, younger adults who went to college are more likely to hold a religious belief than younger adults with only a primary school education, and more likely to report religion is important to them than those with a middle or high school education. Moreover, college-educated people are more likely to tolerate religious beliefs as alternatives to communism, and younger adults who went to college are more tolerant of religion vis-a-vis science than are younger adults with middle or high school education.

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Education and religion

Journal ArticleDOI

Epistemic justifications for belief in the unobservable: The impact of minority status.

TL;DR: The results show that under certain circumstances - notably when holding minority beliefs - tracking the source of beliefs serves as a central epistemic justification.
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Shaping the Religiosity of Chinese University Students: Science Education and Political Indoctrination

Miao Li, +2 more
- 11 Oct 2018 - 
TL;DR: This article examined the respective relationship between science education and political indoctrination and the religiosity of university students in mainland China, and found that students studying natural/applied sciences were less likely to perceive Protestantism, Catholicism, and Islam as plausible and less likely having supernatural belief, relative to students in humanities/social sciences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Attitudes Toward Religion and Believers in China: How Education Increases Tolerance of Individual Religious Differences and Intolerance of Religious Influence in Politics

Xiuhua Wang, +1 more
- 02 Jan 2020 - 
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors found that education is thought to increase empathy, producing a ''positive effect'' on Chinese public opinion about religious repression in China, yet there is little research into what the Chinese public think about religion.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The first year out : understanding American teens after high school

TL;DR: Clydesdale as mentioned in this paper tracked the daily lives of fifty young people making the transition to life after high school and found that teenagers settle into controlled patterns of substance use and sexual activity; how they meet the requirements of postsecondary education; and how they cope with new financial expectations.
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Science Teachers' Views of Science and Religion vs. the Islamic Perspective: Conflicting or Compatible?.

TL;DR: In this paper, a study that explores Egyptian science teachers' views on religion and science within the context of Islam was conducted, which revealed that participants' views of the relationship between science and a specific religion confirmed the centrality of teachers' personal religious beliefs to their own thoughts and views concerning issues of both science and Islam.
Posted Content

The Effect of Education on Religion: Evidence from Compulsory Schooling Laws. NBER Working Paper No. 16973.

TL;DR: The authors used Canadian compulsory schooling laws to identify the relationship between completed schooling and later religiosity, and found that higher levels of education lead to lower levels of religious affiliation later in life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acceptance of Evolution and Support for Teaching Creationism in Public Schools: The Conditional Impact of Educational Attainment

TL;DR: This paper found that higher education will only shift public attitudes toward evolution and away from support for teaching creationism in public schools for those who take non-literalist interpretive stances on the Bible, or to the extent that it leads to fewer people with literalist religious identities.