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Autonomy in Catholic Education
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 October 2024
Extract
During the latter half of the nineteenth century the Catholics of England entered upon their long struggle to maintain their schools in a condition of material and professional efficiency equal to that of the wholly state-supported schools in the national system. Both in primary and in secondary education the price of monetary aid from the Government has been increased control by the local or central education authority, and in consequence the chief pre-occupation of our struggle has been to safeguard the principle of Catholic teachers in Catholic schools, and to ensure the integrity of the teaching in doctrine and morals given during the hours devoted by law to religious instruction.
In the matter of the curriculum of secular teaching we have been content in past years to follow the lead set by the non-Catholic schools, and have adopted their general educational policy and conformed ourselves as best we could to its varying demands. Even those schools which have always been independent of government control have been forced, during the last forty years, by their acceptance of the external examination system to abandon their autonomy and the traditional system of education which they had inherited from the continental schools of pre-penal days, and to conform their syllabuses and teaching system to the dictates of the external examining boards. Thus it has come about gradually that the curriculum of secular teaching, with its attendant syllabus of books to be read and periods or matter to be studied, has ceased to be chosen by the authorities of the school and has been imposed by an impersonal external authority which has little or no understanding of the purpose and needs of Catholic education.
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- Copyright © 1943 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers
References
1 Two interesting articles by Dom J. B. Sandeman, O.S.B., have recently appeared in the Tablet, ‘The Divided Mind’ and ‘Literature and Life,’ dealing with the divorce of the secular curriculum in our schools from reality and religion. At the Conference of Catholic Colleges held at Ratcliffe, Easter, 1942, Fr. J. D. Boyle, S.J., read a remarkable paper in which he advocated that a syllabus of Christian education, a summary of the possible lines of which he sketched, should be drawn up and presented to the appropriate authorities as the material upon which in future the Catholic Secondary Schools in England desired that their pupils should be examined in the School and Higher Certificates. Fr. Boyle did not, however, deal with the inherent viciousness of the examination system and its effect upon the teaching of any syllabus. His paper was greeted with enthusiasm by the assembled Headmasters of the Catholic Secondary Schools of England, and the conference proceded to set up a committee, which is still at work, to deal with the whole question.
2 Curriculum and examinations in secondary schools–Report of the committee of the Secondary Schools Examination Council appointed by the President of the Bioard of Education in 1941. H.M. Stationery Office, 1/6 net.
3 The paragraph in the report giving the arguments against the School Certificate when read in conjunction with that giving those for it (pages 30–32) proves convincingly the soundness of this recommendation.