This thesis, which moves through three stages, asks whether the compulsory
provision of a daily act of collective worship can be justified in the schools of a
liberal society. It begins with an analysis of the public debate which has surrounded
its presence since legislation in 1944 formalised existing practice, and notes that its
arguments are based on differing perceptions of the value of religious practice, the
needs of the child, the relationship between religion and morality, and the nature of
society.
Because this public debate is often distanced from actual practice, research
was undertaken in primary and secondary schools in England and Wales and is
described in the central section of the study. The methods used to gather data are first
discussed and are then followed by reports on the information acquired by means of a
national questionnaire, as well as observation and interviews which were carried out
with teachers and pupils in the south west of England and a city in the Midlands. The
findings show that the legal requirements are met in the majority of primary schools,
but that pupils' transfer to the secondary school frequently marks a point of transition
from daily worship to a weekly assembly, except in the voluntary sector. Adult
respondents discuss their attitudes to collective worship, the obstacles they encounter
in meeting the legal requirements and the approaches adopted in their schools. The
most important features of collective worship are perceived by teachers and pupils to
be the contribution it makes to the development of a sense of community, the
celebration of achievement and the ethos of the school. Conversations with pupils
reveal the changes in belief which occur as they mature, and shed further light on
provision in schools, reflecting young people's declining willingness to participate in
religious worship.
The evidence of the data reveals that opposition to collective worship is
expressed by young people and their teachers in the language of individualism and
choice. The philosophical analysis of the concluding section therefore examines the
question of the justifiability of collective worship from a liberal perspective, giving
particular attention to questions of autonomy, rights, indoctrination and the distinction
between the public and private domains. Recognising, howevcr, that
communitarianism provides a major challenge to liberalism, a study is also made of
relevant arguments from this perspective before concluding that collective worship
cannot be justified from either position. Nevertheless, schools claim that they intend
to maintain the provision of assembly in a maimer which meets their needs, and the
conclusion suggests that the way ahead may be to build on the current strengths of
provision and to replace the traditional elements of participatory worship with a
programme which develops a deeper emphasis on the spiritual and cultural
dimensions of experience.
Date of Award | 2000 |
---|
Original language | English |
---|
Awarding Institution | |
---|
Supervisor | Mark Haistead (Other Supervisor) |
---|
- Philosophy
- Education
- Religion
- Collective Worship
- Assemblies
- School
Nature and justifiability of the act of collective worship in schools
Gill, J. (Author). 2000
Student thesis: PhD