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Professor Peta Goldburg rsm Professor of Religious Education Associate Dean Catholic Identity and Partnerships Australian Catholic University
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Global village now a reality Diversity within and among religions not new Balance our teaching so that it does not restrict the tradition nor relativise the tradition
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Religion not a private matter Religion is matter for public square Religion is important cultural, social and political phenomenon Teaching about religions is central to inter- cultural education
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300,000 Aboriginal people, 600 language groups, many spiritualities First Fleet: 8 -14 Jews Convicts: Anglicans, Catholics, Presbyterians, Methodists, Congregationalists, Baptists 1850s Gold Rushes: Buddhists 1860s: Afghan Muslim camel drivers Post 1945: European immigrants Post 1960s: Asian, Middle Eastern immigrants
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Religious symbols Religious clothing Ritual requirements – praying Dietary requirements
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Stephen Prothero
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What, how, and why of religion Critical Religious Literacy Mary Boys - self-critical scholarship It does not refer “to one’s attitude toward the content, but to ways of thinking that enable us to recognise the assumptions and bias that we might impose” (Boys 2004, p. 150).
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Recognition literacy Reproduction literacy Reflection literacy
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Paulo Freire – evaluate and critique received ideas Ask: ◦ What view of knowledge am I presenting? ◦ What or whose knowledge is seen as valuable?
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1. Dialectical teacher-student relationship 2. Student agency 3. Student subject of learning rather than object of learning 4. Dialogic methodology
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Think about what you have heard ◦ One point of interest ◦ One question
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Religious Education in the Catholic Tradition Religious Education Beyond the Tradition Inter-religious Education & Engagement
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Sacred Texts ◦ (Old and New Testament; Christian Spiritual Writings & Wisdom) Beliefs ◦ (Trinity: God, Jesus the Christ, Spirit; Human Existence; World Religions) Church ◦ (Liturgy & Sacraments; People of God; Church History) Christian Life ◦ (Moral Formation; Mission & Justice; Prayer & Spirituality)
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characterised by a deep religious self- understanding and a desire to learn from differences without adopting or absorbing the other
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We need to know and be able to teach about the exterior diversity of religions and the interior complexity of religious traditions. In learning about the religious other we develop the ability to enter another’s religious tradition without losing our own boundaries.
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Sound knowledge of religion as a foundation for dialogue Does not compare religions
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How do we educate within our communities of faith so that people can engage with religious diversity and with the religious other?
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Religious literacy Firm foundation in Catholic Christianity Introduces students to major world religions Foundation for inter-religious relations in religiously diverse world
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