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Religious Education
The official journal of the Religious Education Association
Volume 110, 2015 - Issue 1
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Articles

Mismatches Between Legislative Policy and School Practice in Religious Education: The Scottish Case

Pages 70-94 | Published online: 17 Feb 2015
 

Abstract

Religious education (RE) is arguably one of the most legislated curriculum areas anywhere in the world, and yet in countries where legislation and educational policy exist to support its provision, how schools implement the subject in practice has not received much attention in the discourse. This article attempts to address this lacuna by analyzing the disjuncture between legislative policy and school practice in RE as it exists in Scottish non-denominational schools. The discussion offers possible explanations suggesting that this has to do more with the flexibility of the Scottish curriculum through the use of “open” national guidelines, and the relative autonomy schools have within the educational system. What is problematized in this article is that mismatches between policy and practice in Scottish RE are symptomatic of the complexity of interpreting and applying legislative policy in a contested school subject.

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Notes on contributors

Yonah H. Matemba

Yonah H. Matemba teaches in the School of Education in the Ayr campus of the University of the West of Scotland, UK. E-mail: [email protected]

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