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Integrated “Brand” Goes Global

Nadia is principal of a school in Israel where Jewish and Arab children play and learn side by side. When it opened there were demonstrations outside, and staff are used address the conflict in the region as it is reflected in the classroom.

Marinko teaches English and German to children aged 11-14 in Vukovar: his school enrolment is around 99% Croat.  He says teaching tolerance in a school without diversity is an uphill task.  For the past eight years he has been working with an NGO to establish a mixed, integrated school.

 Ljuljjetta works for the campaign organisation Nansen Dialogue in Sarajevo, which was set up to promote reconciliation after the wars in the Balkans.  Schools in this region are segregated three ways and divisions are so deep that though there are shared schools, pupils attend in shifts according to their ethnic background and their paths don’t cross. She wants to see a truly integrated integrated school in Srebrenica.

These three, and others from Eastern Europe, Cyprus and the Middle East, gathered in Belfast recently, joined by principals, teachers and founding parents from integrated schools in Northern Ireland.  The conference on integrated peace education provided a platform for sharing experiences and discussing challenges and best practice; but it also shone an international spotlight on integrated education in Northern Ireland.

Mary Roulston (Millennium IPS); Nadia Marinko; Peter Mccreadie (Formerly Priory IC)

 

Thirty years after the establishment of Lagan College the founders and principals could empathise and advise over the processes and pitfalls in setting up a new type of education in a context of conflict, but the situation in Northern Ireland also showed that after three decades of successful schools, integration is not yet the norm and has been allowed to flourish thanks to the efforts of campaigning parents and the financial support of philanthropists.

 

That said, the conference was a source of encouragement for the delegates I met.  As Luljjeta says,

 “I welcome the opportunity to gain insight from other delegates.  You can feel very isolated when you are trying to motivate parents and the government has no interest in changing things.”

“I try to have projects with other schools of other backgrounds,” says Marinko.   “There are a lot of people in Croatia willing to live together but  they’re not allowed to because of the segregated system.   You have high points and low points; I feel very much re-energised after this.”

Maria teaches at the independent English School in Nicosia – the only school in Cyprus with anything like an integrated approach. Around 15% of the pupils are Turkish Cypriots.   Maria has been striving to offer pupils “more than just a parallel existence” and has introduced new anti-bullying and equality policies as well as a more globally-aware curriculum.

 “It has been inspiring to meet truly wonderful people here who’ve dedicated their lives to bringing forward change. I feel that we need to spread the message that if we want peace we all of us have to work hard and play our own small part”

But the founders of integrated schools in Northern Ireland all stressed that the end was worth the journey.   The conference ended with a pledge to continue supporting and sharing – and a declaration that, from 2013, the first week in March would be designated International Integrated Education Week.

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Shared education or shared out education?

By Karin Eyben, Integrated Education fund

Shared education or shared out education? Which will best serve the needs of our children’s future?

That was a question raised at Sustaining Schools, Sustaining Communities, an event organised by Rural Community Network and the IEF in Ballyronan, on the banks of Lough Neagh. (more…)

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Why 9 out of 10 = 7%

By Tony Macauley

 

The latest MORI poll into attitudes to integrated education, once again finds that the vast majority, around 9 out of 10 people, are in favour of integrated education in Northern Ireland. It’s no big surprise. Similar polls have shown the same result, consistently for many years now. (more…)

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Listen Up! by Malachi O’Doherty

By Malachi O’Doherty

The findings of the Mori poll into attitudes to Integrated Education are astonishing.The easy assumption about how Northern Ireland works is that most people prefer things as they are. Parents choose the schools to send their children to, and if their choice is sectarian, then the presumption must be that they are sectarian, that a priority in education is that children should be raised uncontaminated by the influence of the Other. (more…)

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The New Government

By Paul Rowe, Educate Together

Paul Rowe, the Chief Executive Officer of the Educate Together charity in the Republic of Ireland, reflects on the way to move the shared education agenda forward with the new government installed in the Dail. (more…)

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Integrated Education Debate at Stormont

by Susan Whitla

“This House would only fund integrated education.”

This was the rather controversial motion debated on Friday 4th March by a mixture of MLA’s, students from both The Historical Society (Trinity College Dublin) and Debating Society (Queen’s University Belfast). (more…)

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