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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

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Wright, Andrew – Religious Education, 2008
Religious Education (RE) is an entitlement for all pupils in state-funded schools in England and Wales. The parental right of withdrawal is rarely invoked. Given the multi-faith nature of British society, inter-faith RE is normative in most (non-religious) Community Schools, and is a significant feature of many Faith Schools. Although RE is…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Community Schools, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy
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Wright, Andrew – Religious Education, 2006
This article discusses the complex relationship between philosophy and theology. It is important to recognize that the major world religions developed--initially at least--independently of Western philosophy. Although a close reciprocal relationship between classical philosophy and Western monotheism developed in the Middle Ages, the impact of…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Philosophy, Religion, Hermeneutics
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Hella, Elina; Wright, Andrew – British Journal of Religious Education, 2009
The paper addresses the relationship between the twin tasks of enabling pupils both to learn about and learn from religion in the state education systems of Finland and the UK. Recognising that the relationship between these two tasks is the subject of considerable confusion, it is argued that the most appropriate way to view the connection is…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Foreign Countries, Religious Education, Phenomenology
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Wright, Andrew – British Journal of Religious Education, 2008
Contextual religious educators tend to view discrete religious traditions as artificially constructed systems disconnected from the ordinary experiences of children. This article sets out the case for the continued representation of religions as substantial social facts in religious education classrooms. Accepting Robert Jackson's critique of…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Religious Education, Children, Realism
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Barnes, L. Philip; Wright, Andrew – British Journal of Religious Education, 2006
Geoff Teece has recently (in "BJRE", 27, 2005, pp. 29-40) come to the defence of modern religious education and contended that many of the criticisms brought against it are based on mistaken interpretations. More particularly, Teece accuses Andrew Wright of misinterpreting the position of Professor John Hick and of failing to appreciate the…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Romanticism, Role of Religion, Educational Philosophy
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Wright, Andrew – British Journal of Religious Education, 2005
In this article, the author comments on Professor White's response to his criticisms of White's attack on compulsory religious education (White, 2004). Religious education, the author contends, raises questions of fundamental importance and complexity that compulsion is necessary if people are to create anything resembling a religiously literate…
Descriptors: World Views, Religious Education, Reader Response, Rhetorical Criticism
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Wright, Andrew – British Journal of Religious Education, 2004
Though religion continues to enjoy a global significance for humankind, any justification of the compulsory status of religious education must be made on the basis of reason rather than public consensus. We live in a pluralistic world in which contrasting world views, grounded in radically conflicting ontological assumptions, vie for our…
Descriptors: World Views, Religious Education, Compulsory Education, Etiology