couple and their toddler at
Masjid al-Haram,
Makkah,
Saudi Arabia Religious education A
parochial school (US) or
faith school (UK), is a type of school which engages in
religious education in addition to conventional education. Parochial schools may be primary or secondary and may have state funding but varying amounts of control by a religious organization. In addition, there are
religious schools which only teach the religion and subsidiary subjects (such as the language of the holy books), typically run on a part-time basis separate from normal schooling. Examples are the Christian
Sunday schools and the Jewish
Hebrew schools. Islamic religious schools are known in English by the Arabic
loanword Madrasah.
Prayer in school Religion may have an influence on what goes on in state schools. For example, in the UK the
Education Act 1944 introduced the requirement for daily prayers in all state-funded schools, but later acts changed this requirement to a daily "collective act of worship", the
School Standards and Framework Act 1998 being the most recent. This also requires such acts of worship to be "wholly or mainly of a broadly Christian character". The term "mainly" means that acts related to other faiths can be carried out providing the majority are Christian.
Teaching evolution The
creation–evolution controversy, especially the status of
creation and evolution in public education, is a debate over teaching children the
origin and
evolution of life, mostly in conservative regions of the
United States. However,
evolution is accepted by the Catholic Church and is a part of the
Catholic Catechism.
Display of religious symbols In France, children are
forbidden from wearing conspicuous religious symbols in public schools. ==Religious indoctrination of children==