Crisis, Controversy and the Future of Religious Education

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Arts Education
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Barnes 2015b
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Compulsory Religious Education
Confessional Religious Education
Curriculum
curriculum policy critique
Democracy
Education Studies
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English Baccalaureate
English Religious Education
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Faith Schools
GCSE Religious Study
hermeneutics in teaching
human rights
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Inequality in Education
International Education
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Non-confessional Religious Education
non-religious secular worldviews
Non-religious Worldviews
Non-statutory National Framework
parental withdrawal rights
philosophy of education
Re Council
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Religious Education Co-ordinators
Religious Education Curriculum
Religious Education Work
religious freedom debates
Rob Freathy
secular worldviews analysis
Semantic Information
statutory curriculum inclusion controversy
Toledo Guiding Principles
Transforming Religious Education

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367373375
  • Weight: 503g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Crisis, Controversy and the Future of Religious Education sets out to provide a much-needed critical examination of recent writings that consider and respond to the crisis in religious education and more widely to a crisis in non-confessional forms of religious education, wherever practised.

The book is critical, wide-ranging and provocative, giving attention to a range of responses, some limited to the particular situation of religious education in England and some of wider application, for example, that of the role and significance of human rights and that of the relevance of religious studies and theology to religious education. It engages with a variety of positions and with recent influential reports that make recommendations on the future direction of religious education. Constructively, it defends both confessional and non-confessional religious education and endorses the existing right of parental withdrawal. Controversially, it concludes that the case for including non-religious worldviews in religious education, and for the introduction of a statutory, ‘objective’ national religious education curriculum for all schools, are both unconvincing on educational, philosophical and evidential grounds.

Timely and captivating, this book is a must-read for religious and theological educators, RE advisers, classroom teachers, student teachers and those interested in the field of religious education.

L. Philip Barnes is Emeritus Reader in Religious and Theological Education, King’s College London. He is the author of Education, Religion and Diversity: Developing a New Model of Religious Education (2014), also published by Routledge.