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Representing a Catholic school identity in primary school textbooks: a historical account of Hong Kong since 1973

AbstractReligious education is the bearer and mediator of the identity and values of Catholic schools and enables students to learn the faith and thus lay the foundations for evangelization. It has therefore been valued and upheld by the Catholic diocese for many years. This article examines this identity portrayed in three textbooks for Catholic elementary school in Hong Kong and discusses the sacred and social order portrayed therein. While maintaining the Catholic faith as the main axis, the textbooks took into account the fact that most students were non-believers and provided students with an appropriate outlook and attitude towards life based on the teachings of Jesus. The textbooks took the perspective of gratitude for blessings and instructed children to be good children of Heavenly Father, to trust in God wholeheartedly, and to love Jesus Christ and others. Prayers were capitalized in all three versions. The new textbooks introduced students to other religions in a respectful and inclusive way. With an emphasis on exploring issues that students encounter in life and development, topics not previously covered within the teachings of the Catholic Church were included. Efforts were made to incorporate Catholic knowledge and characters or thoughts from traditional Chinese culture to strengthen students’ Chinese identity and enhance the local characteristics of Catholicism. These findings can enrich our understanding of the ways in which the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong maintains a Catholic school identity with local adaptations amidst demographic, social and political changes.

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Making sense of big questions that require multiple subjects: preliminary theorisation of an integrative philosophy of knowledge and empirical indications of a lack of subject connection within school curricula

AbstractThis paper provides theorisation about a novel concept for education: an integrative philosophy of knowledge (IPK). This is proposed for school curricula to relate multiple subjects to big questions of personal and existential importance. Critical contemporary issues such as climate change education require multiple subject contributions but there is little clarity in the English education guidance on this drawing together, beyond the encouragement to do so in priority areas. Leading British thinkers have engaged the idea of the unity of knowledge, not without difficulty and criticism. The paper identifies reasons for a practical approach to consilience in school curricula. In addition to preliminary theorisation, in methodological ‘harmony’, this paper adds tentative empirical findings from a related research project that provides quantitative indications that such multi-subject connection is likely not happening. The findings are not definitive, but the perceptions of three groups of beginning and experienced teachers (secondary Religious Education (RE), secondary science and primary teachers) indicate that school curricula do not reflect an integrative approach to climate change education, and sex and relationships education, despite policy priority. A significant national survey could not detect many signs of connection. The paper speculates that RE could have a key epistemic role for the curriculum as a whole in this regard.

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