Religious freedom or ...?
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View PostGoodness....are they up to it as well?....and all those top minds too....gor!
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View Postthey comprise about 20% of UK jewry and are the fastest growing section (50% or more kids/fam as compared with other Jews) - basically they rejected the 18th enlightenment and live within their own self constructed ghettos - interesting article on wikipedia which implies that their behaviour has grown more inward looking + 'ultra orthodox' over last century - similar groups in Israel exert influence way beyond their numbers
If they don't want to do, or learn science, I suppose that's OK - if they are exempted from national curricula, but they shouldn't be given special treatment regarding any examination administered by national, or even regional, examination boards.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostSo naturally they don't use cars or trains or planes,...
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View Postof course not - such ethics are essentially self serving - mechanisms can be found to allow modern conveniences - one jewish group in North London (possibly the same lot) sought planning permission to erect posts around their ghetto (of semis etc) from which multicoloured ribbons would be hung - apparently this made it ok to do some servile work (eg operate light switches) on the sabbath - there are true nuts everywhere Islam, Christianity + Jewry - catch is they are treated seriously instead of being derided (+ allowed to educate children to believe their form of stupidy).
I would like to see a state of affairs in which state education would be completely secular, with religion discussed only in an educational context as a part of the study of citizenship.If people of faith wish to bring up their children as believers, they should be free to do so with the equivalent of Sunday Schools within their communities,
but not in formal schooling.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View Post...I would like to see a state of affairs in which state education would be completely secular, with religion discussed only in an educational context as a part of the study of citizenship.If people of faith wish to bring up their children as believers, they should be free to do so with the equivalent of Sunday Schools within their communities,
but not in formal schooling.
Presumably if this (or another) sect believes literally in the biblical description of Earth - that is, supported on pillars and situated beneath a firmament that includes a floating sea - then they can 'redact' any mention in exams of Earth being an out-of-shape, tilted globe orbiting the Sun, which itself is orbiting the Milky Way.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostI agree 100%.
Presumably if this (or another) sect believes literally in the biblical description of Earth - that is, supported on pillars and situated beneath a firmament that includes a floating sea - then they can 'redact' any mention in exams of Earth being an out-of-shape, tilted globe orbiting the Sun, which itself is orbiting the Milky Way.
Besides the disregard for science, procedurally it must be wrong for teachers to have access to exam papers which are to be taken by students before the exam sittings, and any exam board which believes this to be acceptable can hardly deserve to be taken very seriously. The whole point of national and regional exam boards is that they can be used to compare performance of students against accepted standards, and it is not a normal procedure to allow teachers or schools to indulge in procedures which bias the results. If there are disagreements between individual schools and exam boards these should be dealt with long before any exam, and procedurally it is very suspect if schools are allowed to amend exams in the ways highlighted by the article.
Perhaps those involved should simply agree not to participate in exams, the contents of which they disagree with.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostI agree 100%.
Presumably if this (or another) sect believes literally in the biblical description of Earth - that is, supported on pillars and situated beneath a firmament that includes a floating sea - then they can 'redact' any mention in exams of Earth being an out-of-shape, tilted globe orbiting the Sun, which itself is orbiting the Milky Way.
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