Learning and Teaching

Fostering a faith that grows with our children
Faith lies at the very heart of Catholic education, yet fostering faith in the face of a culture
obsessed with superficial materialism, the cult of ‘me’, and the here and now – not the
values that enrich our world and bring true happiness – is an ever increasing challenge.
Paul Sharkey, Director of Catholic Identity at
Catholic Education Melbourne, talks about the
challenge of what he calls ‘somethingism’;
the ‘I know there’s something out there but I’m not
sure what it is’ view of religion so many Australians
now hold.
How can parents and teachers strengthen belief and
enable children to develop a mature faith as they
become young adults in a society where the word of
the gospels is just one of a myriad of messages our
children are bombarded by each day?
That’s where the Enhancing Catholic School Identity
project – ECSI – comes in.
For over a decade Catholic Education Melbourne
has been working with academics at the Catholic
University of Leuven in Belgium and the Australian
Catholic University to develop religious education
programs that truly speak to young people and place
their values in a specifically Catholic context.
‘Our Catholic education system seeks to serve and
reach out to an increasingly diverse community here
in Victoria,’ Dr Sharkey says. ‘Young people today
are immersed in a globalising world and exposed
to a multiplicity of cultures, world views and beliefs
through the media, pop culture and their own
personal experiences. Our schools need to work
with parents and parishes to respond to this in
what they teach.’
Enhancing Catholic identity is about more than
teaching and theology. The ECSI project has
developed tools to allow Catholic Education
Melbourne and individual schools gather information
about how Catholic identity is perceived in their own
communities. This creates the starting point for a
process that allows schools to shape and deepen
the faith of students.
‘One of the most important lessons the enhancing
Catholic identity process has taught us is that
students will reject religion if they feel their real
questions or viewpoints are disrespected or not
addressed authentically in the religious education
process. We need to take students seriously, and
we also need to place what they have to say into a
Catholic context.’
In the first years of education, most Catholic
school students have a strong, simple, literal faith.
But as they grow and begin to wrestle with the
big questions of life themselves, many simply find it
easier to disengage with their religion and succumb
to ‘somethingism’. They choose the comfortable
cop-out, instead of Christ’s challenge. ECSI seeks
to keep these students engaged.
Excerpt Taken from Catholic Education Today
Paul Sharkey
‘One of the things we value with our students at St John Vianneys is to have
a go, to ask questions in every curriculum area, so it should be with Religious Education as well.
We use our ESCI data annually to analyse and evaluate our teaching and learning/RE program so that we provide optimum processes for our students to consider the 'big ideas' and moral questions of their world seeking to make their faith relevant.
Julie Cooke
Teaching and Learning Leader