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Flags are symbols of some person or group of people. They can represent schools, clubs, political entities, religious organizations, or almost any group of people with a common interest.
mass media, religious, heritage, schools, family
Maurice Hill has written: 'R.I. and surveys: opinion polls on religious education in state schools' -- subject(s): Public opinion, Religious education 'Results of BLM-funded baseline studies'
Many schools, especially private and parochial schools, offer religion classes as part of their curriculum. Some public schools may also offer elective courses in religious studies or comparative religion. It is best to check with individual schools to see if they offer such classes.
Religious schools are all biased and have all views fixed on one religion. Whereas public non religious schools have religious freedom allowing your child to believe in what he wants to.
Because Mexicans are a deeply religious people, and as such, there is a large amount of religious -- mostly Catholic -- schools in Mexico.
Israel has 3 main types of schools: 1. State Schools 2. Religious State Schools 3. Religious Only Schools If I lived in Israel, I would choose the Religious State Schools, because they teach BOTH religion and regular school subjects.
At education-portal.com/religion_degrees.html there are lists of all religious schools and degrees for careers in religious leadership, teaching and counseling.
There are both Jewish Religious Day Schools and Jewish Sunday Religious Schools. These are not very different from their Christian or Islamic equivalents.
Like Western countries, Lebanon has secular state-funded schools and it also has private religious schools funded by local religious institutions.
Not all boarding schools are religious.
Schools in the United States are not allowed to require prayer or promote any specific religion due to the separation of church and state. However, they may offer religious studies as an elective course for academic purposes. It is important for schools to maintain a neutral stance on religion to respect the diverse beliefs of all students and families.