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Saada, Najwan; Magadlah, Haneen – British Journal of Religious Education, 2021
The teaching of Islam in Western and non-Western societies may be located along a continuum from critical to non-critical paradigms. Islamic religious education is dominated by the non-critical paradigm and a devotional discourse of religious education. This is true in both Islamic and non-Islamic countries and is relevant to the teaching of both…
Descriptors: Islam, Religious Education, Teaching Methods, Western Civilization
Ulfat, Fahimah – British Journal of Religious Education, 2020
The following article describes how empirical research can give new impulses to Islamic religious education. These impulses could lead to a reconciliation of the Islamic religious heritage with the fast-changing reality of Muslims in non-Muslim countries and societies. Due to the presence of Muslim children in public schools and the urgent…
Descriptors: Islam, Religious Education, Muslims, Teaching Methods
Elliott, Gregory; McCormick, John; Bhindi, Narottam – British Journal of Religious Education, 2019
Religious education in Australian Catholic High Schools is the raison d'etre for the Catholic education system and religious education teachers are critical to this mission. This paper offers a framework for investigating the self-efficacy of religious education teachers.We first describe the nature and context of religious education in Australian…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Catholic Schools, Self Efficacy, Foreign Countries
Radford, Mike – British Journal of Religious Education, 2011
A central task of religious education is to show how the puzzlements to human intelligence and the experiences that are associated with spirituality, are compelling in relation to our development as human beings. There are always more theories than objects or events to be explained, and while the spiritual "data" that gives rise to our puzzlements…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Religious Education, Educational Objectives, Spiritual Development
Shah, Saeeda – British Journal of Religious Education, 2012
Muslim schools are a growing phenomenon across the world. Muslim diaspora resulting from multiple factors including political, religious and economic enhanced the need among Muslims to maintain and develop their faith identity. Marginalisation of Muslims, in whatever forms and for whatever reasons, particularly in Muslim minority and/or secular…
Descriptors: Muslims, Persistence, Resistance (Psychology), Islam
Roebben, Bert – British Journal of Religious Education, 2009
Religious education at school should be more than just the acquisition of knowledge. It should not only provide cognitive facts on how religious people act according to their moral and religious convictions, but also on how learners can gain as much profit as possible from these facts in order to build their own identity as religious…
Descriptors: Religion, Foreign Countries, Religious Education, Spiritual Development
Dinter, Astrid – British Journal of Religious Education, 2006
Computers play an important role in adolescent youth culture. This adolescent use of computers has much deeper implications than simply developing specific technical skills. Focusing on the relation between adolescent subjects and computers reveals three issues of particular interest: individual identity formation, self-formation and…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Religious Education, Computers, Information Technology