This study ous identity dat Dutch schools for secondary education (mean age 16.4). With the help of a theoretical conceptualization of "religious identity development" empirical research is carried out. Main question is whether differences in terms of religious commitment and exploration between pupils of the four participating schools can be explained by religious denominations of pupils and the importance the pupils' parents attach to worldview. It is concluded that school in general has no significant main effect on religious commitments and explorations of pupils. Religious backgrounds of pupils should be taken into account. Because pupils themselves do indicate that school has influence on the way they look at life, further research is...
According to its nature and intent, religious identity is almost the most important part of human id...
The aim of this study has been to investigate ten secondary school students´ view on religion and be...
Strictly religious adolescents grow up in highly religious contexts with orthodox beliefs and practi...
The question how (denominational) schools for secondary education influence the religious identity d...
Religiously affiliated schools in the Netherlands, as well as in other parts of Europe, continue to ...
More and more, Dutch adolescents are no longer affiliated with or involved in institutionalised reli...
In the 1980s and 1990s in the Netherlands, as a reaction to the growing number of non-Christian pupi...
The increasing diversity of societies is one of the most important educational issues of the globali...
The purpose of this article is to examine the role religious secondary schools play in the religious...
The main purpose of this study was to discover the influence of parents, peers, and schools on the r...
The ways schools shape their (religious) identity may change over time. Because of developments in s...
Despite the claim that plurality - be it religious, cultural, moral, or other - is important to the ...
The ways schools shape their (religious) identity may change over time. Due to developments in socie...
This study examines how secondary school students perceive different (non-) religious groups. Very f...
Religious diversity within Dutch schools has greatly increased. We carried out an empirical study to...
According to its nature and intent, religious identity is almost the most important part of human id...
The aim of this study has been to investigate ten secondary school students´ view on religion and be...
Strictly religious adolescents grow up in highly religious contexts with orthodox beliefs and practi...
The question how (denominational) schools for secondary education influence the religious identity d...
Religiously affiliated schools in the Netherlands, as well as in other parts of Europe, continue to ...
More and more, Dutch adolescents are no longer affiliated with or involved in institutionalised reli...
In the 1980s and 1990s in the Netherlands, as a reaction to the growing number of non-Christian pupi...
The increasing diversity of societies is one of the most important educational issues of the globali...
The purpose of this article is to examine the role religious secondary schools play in the religious...
The main purpose of this study was to discover the influence of parents, peers, and schools on the r...
The ways schools shape their (religious) identity may change over time. Because of developments in s...
Despite the claim that plurality - be it religious, cultural, moral, or other - is important to the ...
The ways schools shape their (religious) identity may change over time. Due to developments in socie...
This study examines how secondary school students perceive different (non-) religious groups. Very f...
Religious diversity within Dutch schools has greatly increased. We carried out an empirical study to...
According to its nature and intent, religious identity is almost the most important part of human id...
The aim of this study has been to investigate ten secondary school students´ view on religion and be...
Strictly religious adolescents grow up in highly religious contexts with orthodox beliefs and practi...