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Biaggi, Cecilia – History of Education, 2020
After the partition of Ireland, the newly established parliament in Belfast was given control over education. The unionist government, mainly representing the majoritarian Protestant population, embarked on a reform of the pre-existing denominational education system and tried to persuade all the churches to transfer their schools to state control…
Descriptors: Churches, Catholics, Educational Change, Educational Administration
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Armstrong, David – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2017
In 1998, Byrne and McKeown examined the churches' roles in Northern Ireland's (NI) schooling system. NI was then governed by direct-rule from the UK's Westminster Parliament. The authors concluded that the desire of the Protestant churches to re-establish their influence in schools was "unlikely to succeed." This was contrasted with the…
Descriptors: Churches, Protestants, Church Role, Educational Legislation
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Denig, Stephen J.; Dosen, Anthony J. – Catholic Education: A Journal of Inquiry and Practice, 2009
The Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) was an ecumenical council of Catholic bishops from around the world. The bishops made changes both in the internal life of the Church (e.g., the sacraments and daily practices of Catholics) and in the approach that the Church took toward other religions and toward the secular world. These changes transformed…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Educational History, Institutional Mission, Governance