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Community Cohesion

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Title: Community Cohesion


1
Community Cohesion
2
Education and Inspections Act 2006
  • E I Act Section 33 (6)
  • Schools have a duty to promote community
    cohesion
  • Section 154
  • The Chief Inspector of Schools should report on
    the contribution made by the school to
    community cohesion
  • Department of Education and Formation of Bishops
    Conference
  • Commitment to inspect community cohesion in
    s48 inspections from September 2007

3
Definition DfES draft guidance for schools
  • By community cohesion, we mean working towards a
    society in which there is a common vision and
    sense of belonging by all communities a society
    in which the diversity of peoples backgrounds
    and circumstances is appreciated and valued a
    society in which similar life opportunities are
    available to all and a society in which strong
    and positive relationships exist and continue to
    be developed in the workplace, in schools and in
    the wider community

4
Community from a schools perspective dimensions
(DfES draft guidance)
  • the school community the pupils it serves,
    their families and the schools staff
  • the community within which the school is located
    the school in its geographical community and
    the people who live or work in that area
  • the community of Britain - all schools are by
    definition part of this community
  • the global community formed by EU and
    international links.
  • In addition, communities of schools for
    example, the networks formed by schools of the
    same or different faiths, or by schools that are
    part of the specialist schools network.

5
Integration (DfES draft guidance)
  • All schools will find it useful to consider how
    different aspects of their work already support
    integration and community harmony to take stock
    of what has worked so far, for them and for other
    schools and consider where there may be scope to
    improve their existing work through a more
    explicit focus on the impact of their activities
    on community cohesion.

6
Integration or diversity? (DfES draft guidance)
  • Through their ethos and curriculum schools can
    promote a common sense of identity and support
    diversity, showing pupils how different
    communities can be united by common experiences
    and values.
  • Schools are to promote a common vision and sense
    of belonging (Integration)
  • Schools should support and value diversity
    (Multiculturalism)

7
Three areas (DfES draft guidance)
  • Teaching, learning and curriculum
  • teach pupils to understand others, to promote
    common values and to value diversity, to promote
    awareness of human rights and of the
    responsibility to uphold and defend them, and to
    develop the skills of participation and
    responsible action.
  • Equity and excellence
  • equal opportunities for all to succeed at the
    highest level possible, removing barriers to
    access and participation in learning and wider
    activities and eliminating variations in outcomes
    for different groups

8
Third area (DfES draft guidance)
  • Engagement and ethos
  • provide a means for children, young people and
    their families to interact with people from
    different backgrounds and build positive
    relations, including links with different schools
    and communities locally, across the country and
    internationally

9
Elements of community cohesion
  • Race
  • Culture
  • Faith
  • Socio-economic background
  • Gender
  • Age
  • Ability
  • Disability
  • Upbringing

10
Groups of children
  • Girls and boys
  • Minority ethnic and faith groups, travellers,
    asylum seekers
  • Pupils who need support to learn English as an
    additional language
  • Pupils with special educational needs
  • Gifted and talented pupils
  • Children looked after by the local authority
  • Other children, such as sick children young
    carers those stress pregnant school girls and
    teenage mothers
  • Any pupils who are at risk of disaffection and
    exclusion

11
Some features in schools
  • Cohesion through knowledge of the way of life of
    other pupils in the school and the community
  • Cohesion through a recognition of our common
    humanity
  • Cohesion through concern for the well-being of
    others in the school community of different race,
    culture, faith, age, upbringing, gender, ability
  • Cohesion through common service to help the weak
    and vulnerable in the school, local community and
    the world at large
  • Cohesion through a readiness to stand up and be
    counted for adherence to these values
  • From Report on 2002 National Meeting of the
    Inter-Faith Network for the UK (Indarjit Singh)

12
What does our Faith bring to cohesion?
  • Gives a glimpse of the commonality of human
    origins and destiny
  • Offers understanding of the truth of the human
    person who we are and how we are to live
  • Personhood rests in relationships, in community,
    not in mere individualism
  • Clarifies the sources of the virtues that society
    values and teaches respect for others
  • (Archbishop Vincent)

13
Four arenas for schools
  • What we do to integrate those who are from a
    different culture or faith
  • What we are doing about religious literacy
    equipping pupils to understand other religions
  • Moments in school life where the virtues are
    tested
  • The schools moral framework clarity about what
    the school stands for
  • (Archbishop Vincent)

14
Catholic approach to community cohesion
  • Significance of Catholic principle of the dignity
    of all human beings equality of all how, and
    the extent to which, this is made real in the
    school.
  • Integration of pupils from different ethnic,
    religious or cultural groups into the community
  • Extent to which the spiritual and faith
    dimensions of a community or cultural group are
    investigated and understood
  • Provision of patterns of moral reasoning to
    inform pupils choices
  • Focus on the idea of a community of which pupils
    are members rather than on tolerance and
    individualism

15
Catholic approach to community cohesion (2)
  • Parents coming together to promote cross-cultural
    contact and community cohesion within the school
  • Development of a religious literacy which
    embraces other faiths
  • Understanding of the Church, both local and
    universal, as a community and its relationship
    with the world
  • Church and inter-faith dialogue as experienced in
    the school

16
Other Religions
  • Primary schools
  • DRE position is that other religions should be
    taught as an aspect of culture what it means to
    live as a Sikh, Hindu, Muslim
  • Secondary schools
  • Religions taught as culture and faith what
    others believe, how they celebrate and the
    implications for their way of life.

17
Inspection
  • Framework for Inspection 2007
  • Community Cohesion
  • 3. How effectively does the school/college
    promote community cohesion?
  • Inspectors should evaluate
  • how effectively leadership at all levels in the
    school/college promotes community cohesion
  • the inclusive nature of the provision for prayer,
    collective worship and liturgical life of the
    school
  • how far the Religious Education curriculum
    promotes community cohesion.
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