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Religious education

About: Religious education is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 9554 publications have been published within this topic receiving 65331 citations. The topic is also known as: faith-based education & RE.


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Journal ArticleDOI
15 Jul 2019-Religion
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that teachers of religious education in schools are neither following a common faith in teaching religious education nor are they in full agreement on providing equal rights to all students of different religious beliefs.

18 citations

01 Jan 2009
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the implications of religious and spiritual diversity in counseling education programs and their implications for Counselor Education Programs (CEPs) and recommend guidelines for CEPs.
Abstract: Spiritual and Religious Diversity: Implications for Counselor Education Programs

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the case of one particular values education program, "Living Values: an educational program" and its link with the Brahma Kumaris World Spiritual University (BKWSU) to show how the programme originated and developed, which individuals and institutions were involved in these processes, how such a programme finds application in British schools and what form such application takes.
Abstract: This article is concerned with the connection between religions and education. It explores the case of one particular values education programme, ‘Living Values: an educational program’, and its link with the Brahma Kumaris World Spiritual University (BKWSU) to show how the programme originated and developed, which individuals and institutions were involved in these processes, how such a programme finds application in British schools and what form such application takes. The article traces a ‘chain of transmission’ from inception to classroom and looks at the reception which a values-based programme finds among teachers, pupils and parents. The article is based on ethnographic and documentary data gathered in a one-year research project (September 2001 to October 2002) in the Warwick Religions and Education Research Unit (WRERU) at the University of Warwick.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article examined the role of teachers in a high school service-learning program at a predominately Black, urban Catholic high school in Washington, D.C. and found that novice teachers do not have sufficient pedagogical training and/or are not given ongoing guidance by administrators.
Abstract: The classroom teacher plays a pivotal role in any formal educational environment. More specifically, how this individual is involved and how s/he structures activities and discussions about a topic depends on the preferred learning style, personal demeanor, and educational philosophy of the teacher. For teachers that employ service-learning pedagogy in their courses, these expectations and factors do not vary. Teachers motivate students, help them to make meaning of experiences, and assist them in making connections for future action. These roles become complicated, however, when novice teachers do not have sufficient pedagogical training and/or are not given ongoing guidance by administrators. Using data from interviews with students and administrators at an urban Catholic high school, the qualifications and roles of the service-learning teachers, and their intended roles as described by administrators, are compared to the perceived roles as voiced by students. Implications and recommendations are discussed with specific attention to administrator communication, types and frequency of reflection activities, and, as a result, tensions of service-based models of experiential education in Catholic schools vis-a-vis the development of social justice. Introduction Catholic schools have been the focus of considerable interest and controversy among educational researchers and policy makers since Coleman and Hoffer's (1987) and Greeley's (1982) studies linking the academic success of inner-city Black students to their attendance at Catholic schools. More recently, Catholic schools have found themselves under the lens of public school reform, specifically in terms of their role in the voucher system debate (i.e., the use of public tax dollars for private school education). Coupled with these discussions, however, have been criticisms over some religious and private schools' hiring of uncertified/untrained individuals to teach. The latter issue garners much concern if non-public schools are to be charged with the education of the general public toward a common good. Catholic education deserves specific attention with regard to the civic good because Catholicism teaches that one's faith and love for God is demonstrated most clearly in active service to others. By aspiring to the examples set by the life and teachings of Jesus Christ, Catholics should understand that being agents of transformation and social justice is a duty of every Christian. In fact, according to Pope John Paul II (1995), the benefits of Catholic education's social justice component reach beyond the students who learn the required curriculum and those individuals oppressed by dominant groups: "Catholic education serves the future of all Americans by teaching and communicating the very virtues on which American democracy rests." In spite of this connection, the presence of a religious component in empirical studies of high school service-learning programs has been rare in recent literature, excluding Youniss and Yates' (1997) analysis of community service's beneficial effects when combined with a social justice class at a predominately Black, urban Catholic high school in Washington, D.C. This absence is even more bewildering given that community service-learning programs have been implemented at the secondary level for decades. With this in mind, studies that serve to extend the empirical foundations of both service-learning and Catholic education, especially the roles that teachers play in such programs and environments respectively, are creditable. This article examines the roles of teachers in a Catholic high school service-learning program, as compared through the intentions of program administrators and perceptions by students. Literature on civic engagement and religion, service-learning in Catholic schools, the role of teachers in service-learning, and reflection in experiential education frame a discussion of the findings and their implications. …

18 citations

BookDOI
01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: In this article, theoretical aspects of Catholic religious education in schools and examines them from multiple theoretical and contextual perspectives are discussed. And the authors explore and assert the proper identity of Catholic Religious Education in dialogue with Catechetics and with the wider discipline of religious education.
Abstract: This book covers theoretical aspects of Catholic Religious Education in schools and examines them from multiple theoretical and contextual perspectives. It captures the contemporary academic and educational developments in the field of Religious Education while discussing in detail the challenges that Religious Educators face in different European, Asian, African, Australian, American and Latin American countries. The edited collection investigates how to pass on a Catholic heritage as a "living tradition" in diversely populated schools and communities. In this way it explores and asserts the proper identity of Catholic Religious Education in dialogue with Catechetics and with the wider discipline of Religious Education. As the different articles of this publication demonstrate - through a series of interesting and critical points of view - Catholic Religious Education is confronted with many challenges from the risk of marginalization to the confusion produced by a religious indifferentism...

18 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023206
2022447
2021407
2020591
2019550
2018512