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Old 05-04-2005, 02:27 PM
RACooper RACooper is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by valkyrie
I agree with what you're saying in theory, but I can't imagine how difficult it would be in practice. Maybe an elective class on religious/spiritual based theories would be a good idea, but I'd be concerned about it in a regular, required class. Which religions are included? Who is left out, or what parents are going to object to what is included? How many teachers can really be objective about it?
When I went to school (Catholic) it was a required class - World Religions... lets see we covered Protestantism, Islam, Judiasm, Hinduism, Zoroastrianism, Buddhism, Sikhism and a number of days on Cults and Sects - in each case someone (except for the Cults/Sects) was invited in to speak with us about their faith. Further if students asked about a particular faith, Father Ron was more than happy to deal with the subject - that's the reason we learned about Zoroastrianism. I guess I was lucky to come from a system where the Brothers and Priests believed that "knowledge was the best defense against the Devil".
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