Description

Book Synopsis
Faith schools make visible a connection between religion and education, a much-contested aim. Principled arguments are frequently made for and against these schools, without evidence from empirical research. This book attempts to address the issues raised by religious education by offering a rich in-depth ethnographic case study of Catholic secondary schools, exploring pupils’ perceptions of life in the Catholic secondary school in twenty-first-century England. The findings suggest that although the crucifix is in all classrooms, the Catholicity within the school is changing. Catholic pupils are constructing fragmentary Catholic identities; they are asserting a ‘right to bricolage’.
This book considers questions pertinent to all faith schools, such as the extent to which they may contribute to or detract from social cohesion, and the extent to which a faith school is able to and/or ought to maintain and transmit the memory of faith tradition in a secular and plural society.

Table of Contents
Contents: Catholic schools in context – Changing signs of Catholicity – Fragmented Catholicity – Transmitting Catholicity – Religious Education – A Catholic community – Social cohesion and Catholicity – Implications for the Catholic future.

Fragmented Catholicity and Social Cohesion: Faith

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    A Paperback / softback by Leslie J. Francis, Rob Freathy, Stephen Parker

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      View other formats and editions of Fragmented Catholicity and Social Cohesion: Faith by Leslie J. Francis

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 11/12/2012
      ISBN13: 9783034308960, 978-3034308960
      ISBN10: 3034308965

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Faith schools make visible a connection between religion and education, a much-contested aim. Principled arguments are frequently made for and against these schools, without evidence from empirical research. This book attempts to address the issues raised by religious education by offering a rich in-depth ethnographic case study of Catholic secondary schools, exploring pupils’ perceptions of life in the Catholic secondary school in twenty-first-century England. The findings suggest that although the crucifix is in all classrooms, the Catholicity within the school is changing. Catholic pupils are constructing fragmentary Catholic identities; they are asserting a ‘right to bricolage’.
      This book considers questions pertinent to all faith schools, such as the extent to which they may contribute to or detract from social cohesion, and the extent to which a faith school is able to and/or ought to maintain and transmit the memory of faith tradition in a secular and plural society.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Catholic schools in context – Changing signs of Catholicity – Fragmented Catholicity – Transmitting Catholicity – Religious Education – A Catholic community – Social cohesion and Catholicity – Implications for the Catholic future.

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