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Book Chapter: Curriculum, Leadership and Religion in Singapore Schools: How a Secular Government Engineers Social Harmony and the ‘State Interest’

TitleCurriculum, Leadership and Religion in Singapore Schools: How a Secular Government Engineers Social Harmony and the ‘State Interest’
Authors
KeywordsAcademic and islamic education
Background
Curriculum
Economic growth
Government
Islamic religious schools
Madrasahs
Multi-ethnic
National education
PSLE
Religion
Religious education
School leadership
Secular schools
Secularization of schools
Singapore
Social compact
Social harmony
State and school context to religion
State educational reforms and religion
State interest
Twenty-first century knowledge-based economy
Twenty-first century skills
Issue Date2014
PublisherSpringer
Citation
Curriculum, Leadership and Religion in Singapore Schools: How a Secular Government Engineers Social Harmony and the ‘State Interest’. In Chapman, JD ... (et al) (Eds.), International Handbook of Learning, Teaching and Leading in Faith-Based Schools, p. 533-551. Dordrecht: Springer, 2014 How to Cite?
AbstractThis chapter analyses the place of religion across the landscape of Singapore school curricula, leadership and policy making. In so doing, it first provides a social, political, economic and demographic context to Singapore as a small multi-ethnic, multi-faith island republic. Its strongly authoritarian and secular government prioritizes the twin goals of social harmony and a workforce equipped with the skills to be a leading global twenty-first century, knowledge-based economy. Education is seen instrumentally by the government as a crucial vehicle to meeting both goals. Thus, the central argument is that for a large majority of the 360 schools in the system, there is no place for religion in the curriculum, since it is regarded as potentially divisive to social harmony; rather, social, moral and citizenship (National) education are emphasized for their apparent greater congruence with the government’s twin goals. However, such government policy creates tensions for the Malay-Muslim minority, some of whom prefer their children to be educated in madrasahs, of which there are currently six. A dichotomy thus exists for such schools between the desire for an Islamic religious education and the government’s priority for a modern academic curriculum. The chapter identifies the various ways in which the government manages such tensions to engineer the ‘state interest’, and the premium placed on skilful leadership at all levels to navigate and finesse the sensitive boundaries between faith and state.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/198944
ISBN

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorDimmock, C-
dc.contributor.authorHairon, S-
dc.contributor.authorTan, CY-
dc.date.accessioned2014-07-21T09:07:18Z-
dc.date.available2014-07-21T09:07:18Z-
dc.date.issued2014-
dc.identifier.citationCurriculum, Leadership and Religion in Singapore Schools: How a Secular Government Engineers Social Harmony and the ‘State Interest’. In Chapman, JD ... (et al) (Eds.), International Handbook of Learning, Teaching and Leading in Faith-Based Schools, p. 533-551. Dordrecht: Springer, 2014-
dc.identifier.isbn9789401789714-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/198944-
dc.description.abstractThis chapter analyses the place of religion across the landscape of Singapore school curricula, leadership and policy making. In so doing, it first provides a social, political, economic and demographic context to Singapore as a small multi-ethnic, multi-faith island republic. Its strongly authoritarian and secular government prioritizes the twin goals of social harmony and a workforce equipped with the skills to be a leading global twenty-first century, knowledge-based economy. Education is seen instrumentally by the government as a crucial vehicle to meeting both goals. Thus, the central argument is that for a large majority of the 360 schools in the system, there is no place for religion in the curriculum, since it is regarded as potentially divisive to social harmony; rather, social, moral and citizenship (National) education are emphasized for their apparent greater congruence with the government’s twin goals. However, such government policy creates tensions for the Malay-Muslim minority, some of whom prefer their children to be educated in madrasahs, of which there are currently six. A dichotomy thus exists for such schools between the desire for an Islamic religious education and the government’s priority for a modern academic curriculum. The chapter identifies the various ways in which the government manages such tensions to engineer the ‘state interest’, and the premium placed on skilful leadership at all levels to navigate and finesse the sensitive boundaries between faith and state.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.publisherSpringer-
dc.relation.ispartofInternational Handbook of Learning, Teaching and Leading in Faith-Based Schools-
dc.subjectAcademic and islamic education-
dc.subjectBackground-
dc.subjectCurriculum-
dc.subjectEconomic growth-
dc.subjectGovernment-
dc.subjectIslamic religious schools-
dc.subjectMadrasahs-
dc.subjectMulti-ethnic-
dc.subjectNational education-
dc.subjectPSLE-
dc.subjectReligion-
dc.subjectReligious education-
dc.subjectSchool leadership-
dc.subjectSecular schools-
dc.subjectSecularization of schools-
dc.subjectSingapore-
dc.subjectSocial compact-
dc.subjectSocial harmony-
dc.subjectState and school context to religion-
dc.subjectState educational reforms and religion-
dc.subjectState interest-
dc.subjectTwenty-first century knowledge-based economy-
dc.subjectTwenty-first century skills-
dc.titleCurriculum, Leadership and Religion in Singapore Schools: How a Secular Government Engineers Social Harmony and the ‘State Interest’en_US
dc.typeBook_Chapteren_US
dc.identifier.emailTan, CY: tancy@hku.hk-
dc.identifier.doi10.1007/978-94-017-8972-1_31-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-85031426912-
dc.identifier.hkuros230364-
dc.identifier.spage533-
dc.identifier.epage551-
dc.publisher.placeDordrecht-

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