State-school chaplains push
This suggestion will be rejected out of hand come Tuesday afternoon (or so I bloody well hope).State-school chaplains push
Jason Koutsoukis, Political Correspondent, Canberra
June 11, 2006
FULL-TIME chaplains would be installed in government schools to lift religious standards and provide mentoring for students under a plan backed by the federal Education Minister.
Four prominent Liberal MPs are behind the proposal, seen by the Prime Minister and to be discussed in a meeting of Coalition MPs on Tuesday.
Education Minister Julie Bishop strongly supports the idea, but the Victorian Education Union has described it as "sickening".
Ms Bishop said parents were "looking for choice in the education and values taught to their children".
"This proposal is consistent with the national framework for values education in the Australian schools program currently being implemented across the country and while some states do have chaplaincy programs in place, it is definitely worth considering a national approach," Ms Bishop said.
But Australian Education Union Victorian president Mary Bluett said values were not the sole province of religions.
"This goes to the very heart of our secular education system," Ms Bluett said. "It's also another backhanded swipe at the teaching profession in government schools as if we somehow don't have values."
Others supporters are Victorian Greg Hunt, the parliamentary secretary for environment and heritage, Queenslander Andrew Laming, South Australia's David Fawcett and NSW's Louise Markus.
Mr Hunt slammed state school systems for being "anti-religious" and said it was time the Commonwealth intervened to give government-educated children a chance.
Under the plan, the Commonwealth would match funds raised by any government school that voluntarily raised money for a chaplaincy program.
Mr Hunt said the issue of the separation of church and state would be avoided because it would apply only to those schools that applied for the funding and would be voluntary for those students who wanted to consult a chaplain.
Mr Hunt said a full-time chaplain would cost schools about $70,000 a year to provide.
"So if a school could raise $35,000 then the Commonwealth would match that with another $35,000," he said.
Mr Hunt said there was a gaping hole in the religious education needs of government school students that parents wanted the government to fill. "There is a clear need in our schools for the mentoring and personal development, counselling and crisis management, the opportunity for values-based guidance and religious education that a chaplain could provide."
The four Liberal MPs are proposing a pilot chaplaincy program in their electorates before taking the program national.
Federal Independent Education Union of Australia president Lynne Rolley said she was "sick of hearing this Government imply that government schools are some kind of wasteland without values. It's nonsense."
The Federal Opposition's education spokeswoman, Jenny Macklin, was unavailable for comment