This paper shows that a lack of explicit and clearly stated intentions regarding the development of Catholic students’ ecclesial agency through their schooling leads to potential problems as they experience and imagine themselves as lay persons in the Church. While the question of “ecclesial agency” applies throughout all Catholic schooling and the whole Church, in practice the usual flashpoint upon which its relevance emerges is in the discussion of issues that are controversial within Catholicism. This paper, therefore, examines the question of ecclesial agency through an analysis of the pedagogical treatment of three controversial intra-Church topics and documents on the Church’s understanding of the laity. Its conclusion reveals several...
Responding to challenges questioning the possibility of distinctively Catholic higher education, thi...
The second in a two-part series, this article reviews the recent struggle of the Christian Brothers ...
This paper argues that the progressive, revisionist reaction within Catholic education and schooling...
This paper shows that a lack of explicit and clearly stated intentions regarding the development of ...
In many Australian Catholic schools, students who are not Catholics are increasingly seeking enrolme...
This paper observes that an ironic tension occurs in the discussion of controversial issues in some ...
The decline in religious in Australia in the 35 years since the end of the Second Vatican Council ha...
This is the third in a series of four papers which seeks to articulate theologically and practically...
Through a secondary analysis of a case study on successful school leadership, this study inquired in...
Contemporary Catholic education faces a double challenge to be robust in terms of academic achieveme...
This paper conceptualizes Catholic education as a societal institution interdependent with other maj...
The Catholic school sector is under significant stress with declining enrollments and schools closin...
This article is a qualitative study of the practice of leadership in Catholic schools in Australia. ...
The discussion about the meaning and intended results of education is a conversation that must be un...
Critical reflection on the curriculum offered in the Catholic school is a valuable addition to wider...
Responding to challenges questioning the possibility of distinctively Catholic higher education, thi...
The second in a two-part series, this article reviews the recent struggle of the Christian Brothers ...
This paper argues that the progressive, revisionist reaction within Catholic education and schooling...
This paper shows that a lack of explicit and clearly stated intentions regarding the development of ...
In many Australian Catholic schools, students who are not Catholics are increasingly seeking enrolme...
This paper observes that an ironic tension occurs in the discussion of controversial issues in some ...
The decline in religious in Australia in the 35 years since the end of the Second Vatican Council ha...
This is the third in a series of four papers which seeks to articulate theologically and practically...
Through a secondary analysis of a case study on successful school leadership, this study inquired in...
Contemporary Catholic education faces a double challenge to be robust in terms of academic achieveme...
This paper conceptualizes Catholic education as a societal institution interdependent with other maj...
The Catholic school sector is under significant stress with declining enrollments and schools closin...
This article is a qualitative study of the practice of leadership in Catholic schools in Australia. ...
The discussion about the meaning and intended results of education is a conversation that must be un...
Critical reflection on the curriculum offered in the Catholic school is a valuable addition to wider...
Responding to challenges questioning the possibility of distinctively Catholic higher education, thi...
The second in a two-part series, this article reviews the recent struggle of the Christian Brothers ...
This paper argues that the progressive, revisionist reaction within Catholic education and schooling...