A report published today
warns that Religious Education is already being marginalised as a consequence
of being left out of the 2010 English Baccalaureate and
is set to disappear altogether from the curriculum of many secondary
schools. Secretary of State for Education Michael Gove is expected to make an
announcement on RE's inclusion in the EBacc by July 19.
RE has been a core subject
for all pupils since 1870, but this could soon end. Michael Gove's rapidly implemented plans to
shake up the educational system are set to shake out RE. This may not be
deliberate but is the inevitable unintended consequence of government actions.
Being left out of the 2010
EBacc is already having devastating consequences in schools. A survey by the
National Association of Teachers of RE (NATRE) based on evidence from over half
of all state maintained secondary schools in England reports:
- A
quarter of all academies and community schools are not providing statutory RE
for 14 - 16 year olds. - This
non-compliance is predicted to increase during 2011 - 12. - GCSE
RE entries between 2010-11 and 2011-12 have dropped
by more than a third in academies and community schools - In
those schools where entry levels have dropped, over half attribute the drop to
the impact of RE being excluded from the EBacc.
Ed Pawson, Chair of NATRE,
said, "GCSE Religious Studies is a subject that
requires high standards of knowledge and evaluation of evidence. It explores
religious and cultural topics and engages in debates over issues of diversity
and conflict, ethics, philosophy and social change. It has grown massively in
popularity over recent years because students recognise it as a subject of
significant relevance to the world they encounter. By excluding RS from the
EBacc Michael Gove is effectively squeezing it out of the curriculum in many of
our schools across the country. This truly is a cruel blow."
In the light of new hard
evidence about the negative effects of RE having been excluded from the 2010
EBacc, The Religious Education Council of England and
Wales (REC) and NATRE, along with the Church of England and the Catholic Church,
calls for:
Religious
Education to be included in the English Baccalaureate
RE
in schools today
RE's exclusion from the
EBacc has already caused an avalanche of protest including:
- A steady stream of press articles and letters - An Early Day Motion in the
Commons signed by 111 MPs from all parties - Tabled questions and debates in
both the Commons and the Lords - Strong disquiet being expressed
by the Parliamentary Select Committee on Education - Bulging postbags of letters to ministers - A 130,000 signature petition to the Prime
Minister
Other evidence on the effects
of the EBacc excluding RE on schools, students and teachers:
- Two surveys reveal serious concern about the
level of compliance in many schools with their local authority's RE syllabus
regarding the following of GCSE courses. - Current application rates for secondary RE
teacher training are down 25% compared to geography down only 9% and history
actually up 3%. - Analysis of Government data reveals that 862
state secondary schools entered no candidates for GSCE Religious Studies in
2010, compared with 137 for Geography and 70 for History - A further analysis reveals that 25% of
academies without a religious character entered no pupils at all for an RE GCSE
compared with only 10% of other schools.
Given the academy expansion policy, unless remedial action is taken, the
future of RE in the school curriculum looks bleak.
- ends
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For further media
information:
Colin Hallmark /
Harriet Johnson, 3:nine Communications
Tel: 0207 736 1888;
07745 914170; email:
Notes to Editors
1. The NATRE research was carried out
over a 10 day period in May 2011. Responses from 1,918 schools were gathered.
Excluding the independent school responses, this represents over half (53%) of
all maintained secondary schools in England. The analysis focuses on the 1,157 sub-set
of academies, community schools and grammar schools.
2.
NATRE is the subject teacher
association for RE professionals in primary and secondary schools and higher
education, providing a focal point for their concerns, a representative voice
at national level and publications and courses to promote professional
development.
3. Established
in 1973, the Religious Education Council of England and Wales brings together
some fifty national organisations. These comprise academic and professional
associations specialising in religions and religious education, as well as the
individual religion and belief organisations inclusive of the range of faith
communities found nationally. The REC's shared priority is to strengthen the
quality of provision for the subject throughout the educational system. |