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67% of people in Northern Ireland want integrated schools to be ‘main model’

2024-08-01

Publisher: In-Sight Publishing

Publisher Founding: September 1, 2014

Publisher Location: Fort Langley, Township of Langley, British Columbia, Canada

Publication: Freethought Newswire

Original Link: https://humanists.uk/2024/07/09/67-of-people-in-northern-ireland-want-integrated-schools-to-be-main-model/

Publication Date: July 9, 2024

Organization: Humanists UK

Organization Description: Humanists UK is the operating name of the British Humanist Association. We are a charitable company (no. 228781), formed in 1896 and incorporated in 1928, and registered in England and Wales. Our governing document is our Articles of Association, which can be viewed here.

new poll of people in Northern Ireland by LucidTalk has found that 67% of people want integrated education – a school system that brings pupils and staff together regardless of their religious background – to be ‘the main model’ for the  education system. Northern Ireland Humanists has welcomed the finding.

The survey, which was commissioned by the Integrated Education Fund (IEF). The results of this poll are consistent with a previous 2018 survey which found that two-thirds of parents supported their child’s school becoming integrated.

Further findings include:

  • 70% also said they want ‘all schools, regardless of type or aim to have a religious and cultural mix of pupils, teachers and governors’.
  • Only 34% of parents thought that it was important to them to have ‘a school which reflects a particular single faith or cultural background’, with 100% instead opting for ‘good educational standards’, 91% for distance, 94% for ‘good, well-maintained facilities’, and most pertinently, 72% opting for ‘a school which is openly welcoming of all sections of the community and to all faiths’. Just 10% disagreed with this last statement.
  • 63% of all adults also said they would support their child’s or their local school becoming integrated.
  • 62% want the Department of Education to ‘pro-actively support the amalgamation of schools from different sectors’. In 2022 the Integrated Education Act, which requires the Northern Ireland Executive to aim to meet demand for places in integrated schools, became law.
  • And 77% want to integrate the currently segregated initial teacher education system.

At present, most children from Catholic and Protestant backgrounds are educated separately. As a result, they miss out on the benefits of mixing with young people from other communities, of having a broader religious education curriculum, and building inter-community links. Northern Ireland Humanists has long advocated a single system of education, and campaigns for a fully inclusive education system free from religious discrimination.

Just 7% of schools in Northern Ireland are integrated. The poll also asked people why they think this is. 52% blamed the churches, and 47% the political parties.

Northern Ireland Humanists Coordinator Boyd Sleator commented:

‘Integrated education provides children and young people with the opportunity to mix and meet with young people from other communities, and this can break down existing community divisions.

‘There was a clear pledge “to facilitate and encourage integrated education” in the Good Friday Agreement. That was over 25 years ago, and yet we still see a tiny fraction of the schooling system as integrated. This poll shows again what we already know, parents want integration. The question is, when will they get it?’

Northern Ireland Humanists will be writing to the Education Minister about the poll, encouraging the Department of Education to take heed of its findings.

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