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What has morality to do with Religious Education?

The aim of this paper is to provide a positive case for increasing the role and importance of religious morality within the subject of religious education in British schools.


Event details

Abstract - The argument is structured in the following way. First, attention is given to the diminished role accorded to moral education within religious education that followed the transition from confessional to non-confessional, phenomenological religious education and the reasons for this. Secondly, a genealogical/historical account is constructed that identifies the different ways in which the contribution of religious education to moral education has been conceptualised and practised in post-confessional religious education. Thirdly, the notion that morality and religion are discrete domains of human experience, which has provided the intellectual framework for diminishing the moral content and ambitions of religious education, is criticised as controversial philosophically and as contrasting with the way many religious believers construe the relationship between morality and religion. Finally, there is short exploration of the ways in which the religious and moral content of the different religions can contribute to the personal and moral development of pupils and to the social development of communities and societies.

(Recording of seminar - University log on required)

Attachments
Dr_Philip_Barnes.docxBiography of Dr Philip Barnes (16K)
Dr_Philip_Barnes__Compatibility_Mode_.pdfPowerPoint Presentation from 25th October 2011 seminar (112K)

Location:

Baring Court 114