Ethics Education in the Context of an Interreligious Encounter Day (IED): Empirical Research Results from Austria
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- First, it will make the point that the IED in Vienna opened up a space to explicitly make religion a subject of discussion at school.
- Second, the article will argue that—within the context of the IED—religion is constructed in a very specific way that can be described as ‘school religion’.
- Third, it will propose that the observed IED format has the tendency to prioritize specific individual constructions of religion—especially those prompted by theology.
2. On the State of the Art
2.1. Religious Studies on Religious Plurality
“It [religious pluralism] is neither only a question of a (co-)existence of several religious traditions in a certain place under the conditions of plurality and legal secularity, nor only a question of the processes of polarization and division within religions along the lines of a tradition- or time-appropriate handling of religious truths of the respective religious community. Within one and the same religious tradition, parallel developments have recently been observed that go beyond the classic conservative/progressive pattern. The individual himself has become the new carrier and multiplier of ‘not belonging’.”(Baumann and Behloul 2005, p. 8—translation by the author with the help of https://www.deepl.com/translator (accessed on 16 December 2023))
2.2. Religious Pedagogy on Interreligious Learning
- Phase of Preparation: the students work on a defined topic in their respective classes. They each prepare a presentation for the IED.
- Phase of Presentation: the presentations are presented to the students from the other classes (mixed groups) as part of a project day.
- Phase of Discussion: based on the presentations, the students (mixed groups) engage in an exchange that uses discussion groups.
- Phase of Reflection: the pupils return to their respective classes and further reflection takes place. (Boehme 2023, pp. 378–86; Boehme 2021)
3. On the Vienna Project
3.1. Participant Observation in Vienna
- First, the group of researchers decided—in contrast to the other studies on IEDs—to consider all four phases of the IED (in religious and ethics education classes and mixed groups) as well as one lesson that was attended by the pupils in their respective school classes.
- In all phases, the observations of the research team—in consultation with the respective teachers—focused on selected pupils from the respective teaching groups. These were referred to as ‘focus pupils’ (FP).
- One particularly momentous decision was to follow Katja Boehme’s didactical model and to include Ethics Education in the IED. This integrated a school subject into the analysis that is fundamentally different from denominational religious education.
- As far as the actual data collection is concerned, the researchers’ observations were documented using an open protocol procedure (as far as possible including also speech into the analyses). From the outset ad hoc interpretations were integrated into the protocols.
- Due to formal restrictions, there was—unfortunately—no way to use tape or video recordings for data collection. This would have provided much more dense material. The researchers have tried to compensate for this by dense note-taking and an immediate transformation of the notes into the actual protocol.
- A two-stage coding process (based on Grounded Theory) was used to analyze the data. At first, a comparatively simple and formal coding system was applied to identify text sequences. In a second analytic step, these sequences were then condensed into theoretical statements.
3.2. The Interreligious Encounter Day
- Alevi Religious Education: 8 (including students from other classes and schools)
- Ethics Education: 16
- Protestant Religious Education: 6 (including students from 10th grade)
- Islamic Religious Education: 12
- Orthodox Religious Education: 10
- Roman Catholic Religious Education: 13
- Alevi Religious Education: Hıdırellez festival
- Ethics Education: Halloween and Valentine’s Day
- Protestant Religious Education: Good Friday and Reformation Day
- Islamic Religious Education: Ramadan and Eid al-Fitr
- Orthodox Religious Education: Easter
- Roman Catholic Religious Education: Advent, St. Nicholas and Christmas
3.3. Ethics Education within the Context of the IED
“Ethics lessons are committed to fundamental human rights and freedoms. They are aimed at reasoned argumentation and reflection with regard to questions of ethics and morality.Ethics lessons should enable pupils to reflect independently on how to shape their lives successfully, provide them with guidance and lead them to a well-founded discussion of fundamental questions about their own existence and coexistence.By engaging with different philosophical, ideological, cultural and religious traditions and concepts of humanity, ethics lessons contribute to personal development. The aim is to strengthen the pupils’ ability and willingness to respect human dignity, to take responsibility for their own lives and actions as well as for peaceful coexistence and to practice an attitude of tolerance and openness.”(Republic of Austria 2021, p. 2—translation by the author with the help of https://www.deepl.com/translator (accessed on 16 December 2023))
4. Ethics Education and Interreligious Encounter Learning at a School in Vienna
4.1. Typical Interactions in the Context of the IED
“Eth_FPf describes her Halloween practice as a sequence of points that she seems to practice “over and over again”. The following is mainly a list, which I reproduce in fragments made up of several quotations:“First thing we do after we get up is make pumpkin faces.” “Then I dress up.” “Every year we always watch the same movie ‘Nightmare before Christmas.” “I’m going to pick up my cousin.” “Then we knock on doors for trick-or-treats.” “In the evening we watch horror movies.” “I’ll wake up my mother at midnight.”These are the cornerstones of a dense description of Eth_FPf’s Halloween practice. She seems to actually celebrate Halloween as a ritualized holiday. In her own narrative, she is initially concerned with the ritual aspect. I (or we—her cousin and her mother) do it that way.This practice is presented unproblematically. It does not seem to require any further legitimization. It is not fundamentally questioned neither by the EE teacher nor by other pupils.”(Ethics Class_1, p. 8—translation by the author with the help of https://www.deepl.com/translator (accessed on 16 December 2023))
“The pupil Eth_9m comments: “You celebrate Halloween by dressing up.” In addition, he comments that one might also celebrate Halloween Parties. He himself would do neither of both.As far as our research project is concerned, it is interesting to see that Eth_9m generalizes Eth_FPf’s statement. This documents the perception that Halloween has fundamental characteristics that can be generalized.In response to this interaction, the EE teacher asks Eth_9m: “Would you please share with us why you don’t do it like Eth_FPf?” Eth_9m responds: “I don’t believe in this.“ Three other pupils support this opinion.”(Ethics Class_1, p. 10—translation by the author with the help of https://www.deepl.com/translator (accessed on 16 December 2023))
4.2. Specific Role of Ethics Education
““Now we are starting to prepare for the Encounter Day.” The Ethics Education teacher emphasizes that preparation is important. The teachers have already chosen two holidays: Valentine’s Day and Halloween. These should be presented properly at the IED.The selection of these two holidays seems to me to be highly significant in terms of our research question. International Workers’ Day was not chosen as a holiday that would have a decidedly ideological connotation. Valentine’s Day and Halloween are festivals that are only weakly ideologically framed.It is also interesting that the EE teacher establishes a connection between the two holidays and the identity of the class as an Ethics Education class. This implies that these holidays are important for the EE class.—It is, however, very likely that Christmas would have been a festival that is far more significant for the majority of pupils.”(Ethics Class_1, p. 5—translation by the author with the help of https://www.deepl.com/translator (accessed on 16 December 2023))
“The teacher then continues: “The first task is to write down how you celebrate Valentine’s Day and Halloween.” Some pupils immediately start writing. […]After the task has been formulated, the teacher walks around the class. Some pupils address questions directly to him. The EE teacher answers the questions in such a way that I can also hear his answers: “What should I do if I don’t celebrate the festivals?” The EE teacher answers that the pupils should then describe how the holidays are celebrated in Austria or how they are celebrated in their respective country of origin.After further questions, the EE teacher says that one could also describe what can be observed at those holidays in shopping centers. A pupil asks whether she could also describe how she celebrated Halloween at elementary school. The EE teacher answers: “Yes, very well.” He adds that it is also possible to write down why these holidays are not celebrated or how they are celebrated.”(Ethics Class_1, p. 6f—translation by the author with the help of https://www.deepl.com/translator (accessed on 16 December 2023))
- Eth_FPf acts well within the boundaries of the IED. She presents her own Halloween activities in a way that is parallel to most of the other activities presented at the IED.
- Eth_FPf follows a particular rationale different from the rationale of the Religious Education classes. There are sequences within the protocol that document how Eth_FPf’s actions challenge the boundaries of the IED.
“Then Eth_FPf gets up and starts talking about Halloween. [...] Like Eth_3f, she had made markings [in the EE teacher’s background paper that serves as a point of reference for the presentations]. Eth_FPf presents that Halloween is initially something like All Saints’ Day or the ‘Dias de los Muertos’. People often dress up on Halloween. She points to herself and says: “I’m supposed to be a Werecat, for example. These are the modern witches of the 21st century.”This formulation is significant with regard to the construction of authenticity. Eth_FPf inserts herself into the context of Halloween. At the same time, however, the previous sequence emphasizes the aspect of disguise. Eth_FPf ‘is’ not a Werecat, but ‘she is supposed to be’ a Werecat. At the same time, she emphasizes the current deviant meaning of her disguise (‘witch of the 21st century’).“In the US, up to 100 million Dollars are spent to decorate houses on Halloween,” Eth_FPf continues. She says that it is basically about protecting the houses from evil spirits and scaring the ghosts away.”(Ethics_IED, p. 14f—translation by the author with the help of https://www.deepl.com/translator (accessed on 16 December 2023))
“Before they start the Kahoot! one of the Muslim pupils comes forward and says that she has one more question: “What’s the deal with ‘trick or treat’. Isn’t that what they say on Halloween? What does it mean?” Eth_FPf replies that it has to do with the early followers of Christ. They went from door to door with soul cakes. This tradition was then lost over time and only re-emerged later in America. Sour means that you don’t get such a soul cake and sweet means that you have received one.”.(Ethics_IED, p. 16—translation by the author with the help of https://www.deepl.com/translator (accessed on 16 December 2023))
“Then the OR teacher takes a piece of paper with a question for Islam. He reads out: “How can you believe in God even though you don’t know if he exists?” Islam_9f answers: In her opinion, there must be something that created everything. Eth_FPf then asks what she thinks about what is taught in biology lessons, such as the Big Bang. Islam_9f says that she does learn such things, but that she doesn’t believe in them.Here, the Muslim pupil clearly positions herself in contrast to content that she construes as scientifically secular.Eth_FPf replies that she is fascinated by how people can believe in something despite scientific evidence to the contrary. At this point, the OR teacher interjects that science cannot explain anything. Rather, it is about a specific logic of looking at the world. Islam_9w says: “Yes.””(Ethics_IED, p. 33—translation by the author with the help of https://www.deepl.com/translator (accessed on 16 December 2023))
5. Concluding Remarks
- First, the Interreligous Encounter Day that was observed in the summer semester of 2019 at this particular secondary school in Vienna, opened up a space to make religion a subject of discussion at school. The protocols document quite dense sequences of interaction that were explicitly framed in a religious manner. This corresponds to the intentions of those scholar–practitioners that have so far developed and refined the IED format (Boehme 2021; Garcia Sobreira-Majer et al. 2014; Schambeck 2013). The Interreligious Encounter Day can successfully trigger interaction with regards to religion in a setting prone to exchange. In this respect it creates a particular form of religious setting in the school context.
- Second, religion is—within the context of the IED—constructed in a very specific way that can be described as ‘school religion’. The notion of ‘school religion’ is controversially debated among religious educators (see: Liljestrand 2018). The data from the Vienna Project illustrate that most constructions of religion documented within the context of the project followed the rationale of presentation and assessment. The IED format has only rarely produced interactions that were so personalized and dense that it makes sense to describe them as “authentic”. And this is not surprising as long as pupils tend to perform what Breidenstein calls the “job of a pupil” (Breidenstein 2006). In this respect the Vienna Project rather supports those strands of research that propose that interreligious formats tend to produce their own types of religion (Klinkhammer et al. 2011). This is particularly true within densely regulated contexts such as schools. That is the reason why it seems appropriate to apply the notion of ‘school religion’ to what happens within the context of the IED.
- Third, the observed IED-format has the tendency to prioritize specific constructions of religion—especially those embedded into theology. The data presented in this article have focused on ethical education and the respective focus pupil. They are, however, not restricted to EE, because they have always analyzed interactions within the wider context of the IED format. These data have shown that Ethics Education follows its own dynamics with regards to the overall IED. On the one hand, the interactions of the focus pupil were based upon general pedagogical orientations. On the other hand, they were influenced by the practices of the concrete EE teacher (Alberts et al. 2023; Bleisch and Bietenhard 2018). In this respect, the data have shown overlaps between EE and RE. These were at least partly generated by the fact that EE was part of the IED. These overlaps also existed independently—for example, in relation to religious plurality in the EE class, or to the personalities of the pupils (and teachers).
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Lehmann, K. Ethics Education in the Context of an Interreligious Encounter Day (IED): Empirical Research Results from Austria. Religions 2024, 15, 389. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040389
Lehmann K. Ethics Education in the Context of an Interreligious Encounter Day (IED): Empirical Research Results from Austria. Religions. 2024; 15(4):389. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040389
Chicago/Turabian StyleLehmann, Karsten. 2024. "Ethics Education in the Context of an Interreligious Encounter Day (IED): Empirical Research Results from Austria" Religions 15, no. 4: 389. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040389
APA StyleLehmann, K. (2024). Ethics Education in the Context of an Interreligious Encounter Day (IED): Empirical Research Results from Austria. Religions, 15(4), 389. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15040389