Launch of Taking the Next Step [educatetogether.ie]

Launch of Taking the Next Step - a Blueprint for Educate Together Second-level

This Friday, 19/06/09, Educate Together launched its Blueprint for Second-level schools, Taking the Next Step, as part of a continuing campaign for recognition from the Department of Education as a patron at second-level.

With over 10,000 pupils in 56 primary schools, Educate Together is now ready to take the next step. Like their primary counterparts, Educate Together second-level schools will incorporate a comprehensive Ethical Education curriculum. The Blueprint spells out how this will result in an inclusive, intercultural learning environment where second-level students will critically interact across viewpoints within a common language of respect.

Download Taking the Next Step here

For more information in relation to the Second-level Project, click here

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Information On Influenza A(H1N1) [into.ie]

Click below to read about Influenza A (H1N1)

influenza_information_for_educational_establishments.pdf

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Panel Notices 2009 [into.ie]

Please note the important changes to the way the Redeployment Panel is operating this year as previously advised to all schools. Also included below are the timetable of Key Actions for the Panels which is part of the Staffing Schedule (Circular 002/2009) available on the Department's website www.education.ie and you are urged you to familiarise yourself with the various responsibilities contained therein.

Key Actions and dates for the operation of the redeployment panels
The revised procedures set out agreed timeframes that will help improve the operation of the redeployment panels. The revised procedures are available on the Department's website.

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Education officials to meet prelate on control of schools [irishtimes.com]

SENIOR DEPARTMENT of Education officials will meet the Archbishop of Dublin shortly to examine his proposals to divest control of some Catholic schools.

Diarmuid Martin last week repeated his willingness to divest control of schools in areas where the Catholic Church was over-represented.

He described the virtual Catholic monopoly of primary school patronage as a historical hangover which did not reflect the reality of modern Ireland.

The department confirmed last night it would make contact with Dr Martin and other members of the Catholic hierarchy "to establish a more detailed assessment of areas in which schools could be identified where there is more school provision than needed by the demand for Catholic education and where existing schools could be used to provide for diversity of parental choice."

In late 2007, senior department officials met Dr Martin to discuss statements he had made at that stage in relation to the possible divesting of the patronage of primary schools in the archdiocese.

The department said that at that meeting, Dr Martin indicated that he had no specific locations in mind where one or more schools under his patronage might transfer to another patron, but that it might arise in the future.

"The meeting discussed the different issues that might arise, the need for such changes to be planned and managed and the desirability in individual school cases of consultation with all stakeholders ; parents, teachers and local communities," the department continued.

"It was agreed that Archbishop Martin would contact the Department at an early stage in any case where he was considering the feasibility of such a transfer, but no such cases have been referred to the Department."

On the wider issue of school patronage, the department said it was consulting directly with patrons about specific areas where the establishment of new schools would be required and how emerging demands in these areas would be addressed.

It will be seeking details of any schools where a change of patronage might potentially be relevant, as part of this process.

The Commission on School Accommodation is also undertaking a review of procedures for the establishment of new primary schools.

Among the range of issues being considered is patronage, including the criteria that must be met to become a patron and the circumstances where changes to patronage may be warranted.

Two new pilot community schools under VEC patronage are being rolled out in Dublin.

Fine Gael's education spokesman Brian Hayes last night called on the Minister to establish, without delay, a national forum on education to address issues concerning school governance, patronage and management.

"In light of Archbishop Martin's recent comments, an open invitation now exists and I believe that if the forum is not established, a great opportunity will be missed," Mr Hayes said in a statement.

"There are complex and difficult issues surrounding the future of education. We need to think carefully about these issues in an open, honest and non-confrontational way."

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Labour education policy ignores reality in schools [independent.ie]

It is very hard to know where exactly Labour's education spokesman Ruairi Quinn stands on the subject of denominational schools.

One minute he's doing his best impersonation of Senator Joe McCarthy who was famously paranoid about communist infiltration of the US State Department. Ruairi seems to think the Department of Education has been infiltrated by -- gasp! -- Opus Dei or the Knights of St Columbanus. I might as well say it's been infiltrated by the Freemasons.

But the next minute Mr Quinn seems willing to let the Churches have a continued role in our schools, and with public money to boot. He implied as much in a press release on Wednesday.

Then again, when debating me on 'The Last Word' the other day he seemed to think state funding of denominational schools is somehow illegitimate. So he is sending out very mixed signals on this subject.

However, whatever Mr Quinn may think, other leftists are crystal clear; they want state-funded schools to be nationalised and they are exploiting the Ryan report to this end.

Their initial target is the Catholic Church, but the other churches know that if Catholics lose this fight, so will they.

Last weekend, the Church of Ireland Bishop of Cork, Paul Colton, commented on the Ryan report. He said that in the debate about the report, only the victims should matter and that "all other agendas should be set aside".

He said that some people "have used the report as a springboard towards a secularising agenda", while "others have called unthinkingly for the withdrawal of all churches from their modern-day engagement with education in a country, which, according to the last census, is still manifestly religious in its affiliation".

Far better that a Church of Ireland bishop said this than a Catholic one, and how typical it was that Bishop Colton's remarks received so little coverage. It didn't suit the secularising agenda he spoke about, an agenda driven mostly by RTE, the 'Irish Times', and the Labour Party which together act as a sort of Secular Trinity.

When Ruairi Quinn warned that the Department of Education may be infiltrated by nefarious organisations, he was trying to explain the 'deferential' attitude of the department towards the Church. But there is no such attitude.

In the last 15 years, for example, not one new Catholic secondary school has been approved by the Department of Education. If the department was so deferential you'd imagine it might have approved just one or two such schools in areas that currently have none, and where there is genuine demand.

Noel Merrick, of the Catholic Secondary School Managers' Association, asked last year in light of the above whether the State had "closed its mind to the possibility of new Catholic schools?"

And if the department was deferential to religion in general, then why has state funding to Protestant schools been cut by €2m?

In reality, if the Department of Education is deferential to anyone, it is to the teachers' unions, but that is a story for another day.

In this debate we need to tackle two questions. The first is whether parents have a right to send their children to denominational schools, and the second is whether schools that are funded by the State should be run by the State.

In answer to question one, of course parents have a right to send their children to faith schools. They also have a right to state funding for those schools. They are taxpayers after all and generally our taxes should go where we, the taxpayers, want them to go.

Half of parents still favour sending their children to denominational schools. Obviously this implies that there should be fewer such schools than at present, something the likes of Bishop Leo O'Reilly, the hierarchy's education spokesman, has already acknowledged.

In answer to the second question, no, there is no necessary reason why the State should run the schools it funds. In ultra-secular Britain, a third of state-funded schools are run by the churches and they are extremely popular with parents because state-run schools are often run very badly.

But why should this be a surprise? The State generally runs things badly. Check out the state of our healthcare system for example.

In our present state of anger with the Church there is a remote danger that we might do as they did in Newfoundland in 1997, namely withdraw public funding from all denominational schools. But if we do this we will rue the day.

Even that left-wing utopia, Sweden, can see that a one-size-fits-all state-run schooling system is a bad idea, which is why it operates a system which allows parents send their children to their school of choice.

Fortunately, both Fianna Fail and Fine Gael accept the parental choice argument. Labour, on the other hand, is mired in confusion and sub-McCarthyite fantasies about Catholic infiltration of the civil service.

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