Ireland’s constitution protects the right to a religious education and for parents to ‘provide, according to their means, for the religious and moral, intellectual, physical and social education of their children’. A new proposal preventing Catholic schools from prioritising Catholic students is being called discriminatory, as it does not apply to schools of other faiths. The Church runs 90% of state schools. When a school is full, it prioritises Catholic students when deciding how high they are on the waiting list. The education minister wants to end giving preference to Catholic children who live some distance away over non-Catholic children living close to the school. The changes would not apply to non-Catholic faith schools. Faith in Our Schools is fighting the proposal, saying the policy ‘openly discriminates against the conscience and educational rights of Catholic parents and the autonomy, and associational rights of Catholic faith schools.’
Ireland: government calls Catholic schools discriminatory
Written by David Fletcher 06 Apr 2018Additional Info
- Pray: for this largely Catholic country to uphold the ethos of Catholic education in schools, regardless of government changes. (Deuteronomy 4:9)
- More: www.catholicherald.co.uk/news/2018/04/04/irish-government-policy-on-catholic-schools-branded-discriminatory/