ABSTRACT

The Future of Publicly Funded Faith Schools addresses and critically examines the arguments both for and against the continued maintenance of faith-based schools within a publicly funded state system. Addressing the issue systemically, first grounding the discussion in the practical world of education before raising the central philosophical issues stemming from faith-based education, it provides a balanced synthesis of the different arguments surrounding faith schools.

The book expounds upon the different threats facing faith-based schools, including their perceived potential to undermine social cohesion within a multi-cultural society, and the questioning of their right to receive public funding, and examines what these mean for their future. Examining these threats, it questions:

  • What it means for a school to be ‘faith-based’.
  • The nature of religious education both within and without a faith-based school environment.
  • The ethical, epistemological, and political issues arising from faith-based education.
  • The concepts of the common good and social cohesion.
  • Whether there is possible reconciliation between opposing parties.

The Future of Publicly Funded Faith Schools makes a unique contribution to the literature in this area and is crucial reading for anyone interested in what the future holds for publicly funded faith schools including academics, researchers, and postgraduate students in the fields of education, religious studies, policy, and politics of education, sociology, and philosophy.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

part |55 pages

Context

chapter |10 pages

Making sense of facts and figures

chapter |12 pages

International perspective

part |49 pages

Religious education

chapter |18 pages

Three traditions

chapter |12 pages

Response to the secular age

chapter |9 pages

Religious education

An extended vision

chapter |8 pages

Service to society

part |49 pages

Key issues emerging

chapter |16 pages

Ethics

Education and its aims

chapter |15 pages

Epistemology

Knowledge, truth, and reason in religious education

chapter |16 pages

Civic society

Common good and social pluralism

part |16 pages

Drawing conclusions

chapter |14 pages

For or against Faith schools?

Finding an answer