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Burns, Mildred – International Journal of Educational Reform, 2000
As for every aspect of Canadian life, duality of origins has defined and shaped education. French Catholic religious personnel created an elementary education system for fur traders, farmers, and native peoples; elites had a privately funded system. English Protestants oriented their systems toward extraction industries and trade. (Contains 41…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Catholics, Cultural Differences, Educational History
McNamee, Abigail Stahl – 1998
In Northern Ireland, groups of school children, parents, teachers, and principals are supporting religiously integrated schools. This paper gives an account of this movement and the history behind Catholic/Protestant tensions in Northern Ireland. The "Controlled" school system in the country is largely Protestant, whereas the…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
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Cohen, Marilyn – History of Education Quarterly, 2000
Offers an historical analysis of schooling patterns in the Tullylish (Ireland) parish between 1860-1900 to provide understanding of the social forces that promoted denominationalism. Concludes that terms of religious tolerance were constructed by Protestant elites perpetuating Protestant privilege and excluding Catholics from full participation in…
Descriptors: Attendance Patterns, Catholic Schools, Catholics, Educational History
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McNamee, Abigail S.; McNamee, Joseph E. – Childhood Education, 1985
Reviews research findings of the various effects of ongoing violence and social problems on Protestant and Catholic working class children in Belfast, Northern Ireland. A summer vacation program in which Northern Ireland children visit the U.S. is described. Current research to study this program and problems related to cross-cultural research is…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Catholics, Children, Cross Cultural Studies
Duffy, Terence – 1992
This paper explores the issue of peace education in Northern Ireland in its broadest sense. It looks not merely at peace education per se but also at the sectarian context of schooling and at a variety of anti-sectarian initiatives. In recent years there have been several peace education ventures in Northern Ireland reflecting the statutory…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Catholics, Educational History, Educational Policy
McGlynn, Claire – 2000
Since the early 1980s, efforts have increased to educate Catholic and Protestant students together in Northern Ireland. This case study examined the impact of mixed Protestant and Catholic education on former students' respect for diversity, friendship patterns, and their own religious, political, and cultural identity. A case study approach was…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Catholics, Cultural Pluralism, Diversity (Student)
Byrne, Sean – 1997
This book describes the results of a study of the political development of 35 Protestant and Catholic children between 11 and 16 years old, attending integrated and non-integrated secondary schools in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The research maps Belfast schoolchildren's images of political violence, political authority figures, and their views…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Catholics, Children, Culture Conflict
Darby, J.; And Others – CORE: Collected Original Resources in Education, 1978
A survey of the management, religious practices, teaching methods, and extracurricular activities in 250 Protestant and Catholic schools in Northern Ireland revealed more similarities than differences. (CP)
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Comparative Analysis, Differences, Elementary Secondary Education
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Cook, Lorainne A. – History of Education, 1997
Attempts a comprehensive investigation into the impact of nonconformity on the development of elementary education in Swansea, Wales, between 1851 and 1900. Nonconformity was a dissenting strand of English Protestant theology popular among the working class. Recounts the early efforts of the nonconformists in establishing Sunday schools. (MJP)
Descriptors: Educational History, Elementary Education, Ethnicity, Foreign Countries
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McClenahan, Carol; And Others – Journal of Social Psychology, 1996
Examines the friendship choices of Northern Ireland adolescents within a planned integrated school, a Protestant desegregated school, and a Catholic desegregated school. Reporting on over 300 middle- and high-school students revealed that in-group bias was the exception rather than the rule. All three schools exhibited similar characteristics.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Behavioral Science Research, Catholics, Cultural Interrelationships
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Valk, John – History of Education Quarterly, 1995
Maintains that issues of religion and the schools have surfaced again in the public forum. Discusses the controversy between public and private education in Utrecht, The Netherlands, in the 1800s. Concludes that public schools can never meet the needs of all and that the Utrecht compromise suggests that alternatives are possible. (CFR)
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Catholics, Church Role, Educational History