Teaching Religion in a Secular Swedish School System

Rationale, Challenges and Recommendations

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.59472/jodet.v1i2.22

Keywords:

Religious Education, Immigrophobia, Secular society, Multi-faith education

Abstract

Following my two-month research as an international Ugandan researcher in Sweden, I present an argument that the introduction of a non-confessional Religious Education in Sweden in 1919 and an objective and neutral education since 1962 had a key intention of de-linking teaching of religion from religious foundation bodies, in particular, the dominant Church of Sweden (Lutheran) and rendering it educational instead of confessional.

In this paper, I will argue that, despite the subsequent birth of a secular Swedish society and the onset of a multicultural society, there was - and there continues to be a justification for the teaching of religion in schools. In my interview with two experts on Religious Education from the National Agency of Education, two teachers of Religious Education and eight students, they all responded positively to the question of the continued teaching of religion in secular Swedish society.

However, in the paper, I will argue that there was or there is an inability of the curriculum and the teachers in some respects to do justice to the integrity of different religions. Based on earlier research and interviews, I’ll argue that despite the good intentions of having a neutral and objective multi-faith Religious Education (RE) curriculum in place, some textbooks and teachers’ approaches raise questions on fairness to all religions. In particular, the interviews indicate that there are signs of “Immigrophobia” among some students, teachers and sections of the community.

Notwithstanding, I will argue that since the findings reveal an overwhelming support for multi-faith RE by a secular population and being mindful of the increased multi-cultural society and signs of Immigrophobia6, it is imperative that a careful choice of text-books, especially on religions, other than Christianity, is done and special attention given to RE teachers to address the concept of fairness to all religions.

Author Biography

  • Fred Sheldon Mwesigwa, Bishop Stuart University

    Chancellor, Bishop Stuart University and Bishop of Ankole Diocese

References

Almen, E & Øster, H.C. (Eds.) (2000). Religious education in Great Britain, Sweden and Russia. Presentations, problem inventories and commentaries. Texts from the PETER project. Linköping: Linköping University.

Broadbent, L. (2002). A rationale for religious education. In L. Broadbent & A. Brown (Eds.), Issues in religious education (p. 176-191). London: Routledge Falmer.

Härenstam, K. (1993). Skolboks-islam. Analys av bilden av islam i läroböcker i religionskunskap. Göteborg: Acta universitatis gothoburgensis

Jackson, R. (1997). Religious Education: An interpretive approach. London: Hodder and Stoughton.

Jackson, R. (2004). Re-thinking religious education and plurality: Issues in diversity and pedagogy. London: Routledge.

Mannitz, S. (2004). The Place of Religion in Four Civil Cultures. In W. Schiffauer, G. Baumann, R. Kastoryano & S. Vertovec (Eds.), Civil Enculturation: Nation-State, School and Ethnic Difference in The Netherlands, Britain, Germany, and France (p. 87-117). Oxford & New York: Berghahn Books.

Morgan, D.L. (1997). Focus groups as qualitative research. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage.

Orlenius, K. (2004). Individuality and solidarity – the role and goals in religious education. I R. Larsson & C. Gustavsson (Red.), Towards a European perspective on religious education (s. 256-267). Skellefteå: Artos & Norma bokförlag.

Osbeck, C., & Cöster, H. (2005). Is “ground of values” a religion? About training world views in a non-confessional school. Paper presented at the 8th Nordic conference on religious education, Helsini, Finland.

Osbeck, C., & Pettersson, P. (2009). Non-confessional and confessional education. Religious education in public schools and in the Church of Sweden. I U. Riegel & H.-G. Ziebertz How Teachers in Europe Teach Religion. An International Empirical Study in 16 Countries (pp. 211-227). Münster: LIT-Verlag.

Thompson P, (2004). Whatever happened to religious Education? Cambridge: Lutter worth Press

Petterson, P. (2006). Sweden: Religious belonging and life rites without confession and regular practice. In H.G. Ziebertz & W.K. Kay (Eds.), Youth in Europe 2: An International empirical study about religiosity (pp. 139-158). Münster: LIT-Verlag.

Watson, B. (1993). The effective teaching of religious education. London: Longman.

Downloads

Published

2023-06-29

Issue

Section

Articles

Categories

How to Cite

Teaching Religion in a Secular Swedish School System: Rationale, Challenges and Recommendations. (2023). Bishop Stuart University Journal of Development, Education & Technology, 1(2), 63-82. https://doi.org/10.59472/jodet.v1i2.22

Similar Articles

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.