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van Dijk-Groeneboer, Monique – Journal of Religious Education, 2020
The formation of identity in a secularized world is different from formation in a religious oriented society. In this situation, educating young people and guiding their personhood formation is even more a task of connecting to the pupils from out of your own heart. A Catholic religious teacher can be a mirror for these young people when answering…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Moral Values, Self Concept, Catholic Educators
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Exalto, John; Bertram-Troost, Gerdien – Education Sciences, 2019
In the Netherlands, state and religious schools are equally financed by the government. Parents are free to choose a school that optimally fits their moral values as well as their idea of a good education. As a result, there is a huge variety of schools, which include those orthodox Reformed schools that form part of the so-called Bible Belt…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parochial Schools, Religion, Private Schools
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Ter Avest, K. H.; Rietveld-van Wingerden, M. – British Journal of Religious Education, 2017
During the second half of the twentieth century, faithful followers of non-Western religions immigrated into Western European countries. Their children were a challenge for the respective educational system in the host countries. In the Dutch context, the educational system consists of public and private schools in which religion is the most…
Descriptors: Islam, Religious Education, Immigrants, Foreign Countries
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Sturm, Johan C. – Religious Education, 1993
Describes the schools established and operated by the Dutch Reformed Church in the Netherlands from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries. Contends that the neo-Calvinists created a form of moral education consistent with their religious beliefs. Argues that ordinary citizens were still broadened intellectually and socially by these schools.…
Descriptors: Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethical Instruction, Foreign Countries