Meadmaker
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- Apr 27, 2004
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meadmaker, I'd be interested in your argument. I certainly think that there is a role for religious schools insofar as they can be regulated by the state and provide a place where children of religious parents can at least receive some regulated imput distinct from their parents' dogma.
The question is whether religious education, and by that I mean the indoctrinating sort that goes on in religious schools, can enhance critical thinking ability.
To answer that, first let us pose a thought experiment. Suppose I, as a teacher, stand in front of a classroom and, with all sincerity, say, "The Earth is flat." Being a trusted authority figure, the students all believe me.
A different teacher says, also in all sincerity, "The Earth is round." Again, all students believer the other teacher. Now we have two classrooms of students. One set of students believes "round", and the other believes "flat".
Can we conclude anything about the critical thinking skills of either set of students? I'll answer that for you. Of course not. In other words, critical thinking doesn't have anything to do with the content of what is being taught.
Let's go back to the OP for a moment. There are lots more atheists today than there were a decade ago in the United States. Can we conclude that the critical thinking skills in our country have suddenly improved dramatically? Sadly, no. What has happened is that a movement has emerged, complete with leaders, and those leaders have attracted followers. While some people have analyzed and continue to analyze evidence, and ponder philosophical questions critically, and have reached the conclusion that there is no God, others have heard people say, "I don't believe in God," and they have used all their critical thinking skills to say, "Me neither."
Again, the fact that they happen to be saying something we agree with is not evidence of critical thinking skills.
To develop critical thinking skills, the most important part of any exercise is not the content of the lesson, but the process. A student must be taught to look at a text, any text, examine what it really means, and question it, digest it, place it in context of when it was written. He must get behind a superficial gloss of the text and really understand what it says at a deeper level.
Religious education, at its best, encourages exactly that. No particular religion or denomination has a monopoly on this, but some are better at it than others. In particular, I like what goes on at my son's school. They read the Torah in depth. They learn the language, and then compare the English translation to the Hebrew original. (Should I have put "original" in quotes? Oldest surviving copy.) They are not taught to question the Torah, but they are taught how to question, and they are taught that the answers matter. As it turns out, being bright kids, they end up questioning Torah anyway. Once you teach someone how to think, it's hard to limit what they think about. I think religious education can teach someone how to think, and teach them that thinking matters. After that, the student's own mind is completely free to turn a critical eye on whatever claims he chooses.
Contrast that to the American public school system. Being totally afraid of controversy, on any subject where there isn't a clear cut yes or no answer, a typical public school student is told, "That's a matter of opinion. You should decide what you think for yourself." This somehow passes for critical thinking. They are told they should decide, but they aren't given the tools to decide. Doing so would open up the school to controversy. The result is that an awful lot of people have grown up believing that they should base their beliefs on whatever feels right to them. They are skeptical, but they are not critical thinkers.
In order to develop critical thinking, there has to be something to think about. Also, that thing has to matter, because otherwise there is no reason to think about something critically. Religious education can force someone to think about a topic that matters. I know, for example, that my son will spend a significant amount of time thinking about ethics during the eight years he attends this school. (There's no High School there.) Of course, it will all be from a Jewish perspective, but as it turns out, that's really close to all the other religious perspectives in the world, and he'll know that. A public school student might not get that sort of training, because the teachers would be afraid of the controversy.