More action needed to improve school integration
Currently, around 7% of school aged children in Northern Ireland are educated in schools which are officially integrated.
The National Secular Society has reiterated its call for action to integrate schooling in Northern Ireland after a poll revealed the extent of religious polarisation there.The poll also found that 69% of people in Northern Ireland support integrated education.
Of the 827 primary schools in Northern Ireland in 2016, more than a third had fewer than 105 pupils.
Meanwhile 93 out of 197 post-primary schools had fewer than 500 pupils - the minimum number recommended by the Department of Education.
The Department of Education has sent out its new “Options for Sharing and Integrating” booklet to NI schools.
The leaflet has been designed to provide Principals and Boards of Governors with information on developments which school communities might want to consider within the context of the Sustainable Schools Policy and the Area Planning Process.
Schools invited to consider integration and sharing as options for the futureThe booklet tells schools: “Children and young people are preparing to live and work in a global, multicultural and pluralistic society. Therefore, the benefits of educating children and young people from different community backgrounds together through Shared Education or integrated education are increasingly recognised.”
The publication outlines options such as transformation to integrated education, establishing Shared Education campuses, and jointly managed schools, and provides links to further information on the DE website.
The six-page booklet has been emailed to all schools except Special schools and hospital schools, and hard copies will be distributed to all schools within the next two weeks. The DE suggests that these are made available to senior management teams and members of the Board of Governors, for their information
Sinn FĂ©in MLA Caoimhe Archibald said integrated education plays a valuable role in our society and commended the work of the Integrated Education Fund (IEF) and Council for Integrated Education.
Speaking at the launch of IEF's Alternative Manifesto in Stormont the East Derry MLA said:
“Sinn Fein recognise the valuable role that integrated education plays in our society and I would like to commend IEF and Council for Integrated Education on their sterling work.
“The duty to encourage and facilitate integrated education was part of the Good Friday Agreement and successive Sinn Féin Ministers have sought to build on that as a crucial element of moving to a genuinely reconciled society.
“Education is key to achieving that and this Alternative Manifesto is an important contribution to the debate on how we shape our school system and develop our educational policy together for the benefit of children and wider society.
“We agree with the IEF that fundamental structural change is needed in our education system and in fact our Ministers fought and worked very hard to bring that about.
“Part of that change is ending selection and levelling the playing field for all our children. The late Martin McGuinness as Education Minister showed great leadership in abolishing the 11 plus to establish a transfer system based upon parental choice.
"Despite this, many schools continued to select and reject children based on an unregulated test system. That needs to end because the evidence is overwhelming that academic selection and rejection is damaging for children and for the education system.
“Sinn Féin has met with the Permanent Secretary of the Department of Education and Chief Executive of the Education Authority in recent months to discuss transformation of the EA and present to them our thoughts on how it should be taken forward.
“It is important that we all, the Department of Education, the Education Authority, all sectoral bodies and all political parties, work together to overcome the many challenges facing education to provide the best educational outcomes for all our children.”