ABSTRACT

Religious education in liberal pluralist societies such as the UK, the USA, and Australian underwent radical change in the 1980s and 1990s, with a major shift towards multi-faith, educationally oriented programmes. This has meant significant modifications to both the content and the methodology of religious-education courses and to the way they are conceived of and taught in schools and universities.
One important implication of this change for the teaching and study of religion today is the need for a philosophical dimension that deals with issues such as the truth status of religious statements and the moral acceptability of religious claims. This dimension is often insufficiently developed; this lack is made more critical by the multiple competing truth claims of various religions, giving rise to such contentious problems as the growth of fundamentalism, increasing religious intolerance and conflict, and differences of opinion on central moral problems such as birth control, abortion and euthanasia. This text attempts to provide the philosophical underpinning that the study and teaching of religion in modern societies requires.

chapter

Introduction

part I|43 pages

The Legitimacy and Place of Religious Education in Schools

chapter 2|18 pages

Challenges to Religious Education in the Curriculum:

Scepticism, Exclusivism, Relativism, and Reductionism

part II|38 pages

Responses to Pluralism in the Teaching of Religious Education

part III|45 pages

Ethical, Political, and Social Dimensions of Religious Education

part IV|44 pages

The Teaching of Religious Education: Case Studies and Recommendations