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09th Dec 2015

85% agree that the school system in Ireland should be reformed

HerFamily

Choosing which school to send your children to is one of the biggest decisions you’ll make.

According to RTÉ News a survey has revealed that, given the choice, 40 per cent of people would opt to send their kids to a non-Christian school.

The study, conducted for organisation Equate which is campaigning for change in the Irish school system, involved one thousand adults who were presented with a list of statements.

Almost 85 per cent agreed that the system ought to be reformed so that no child is excluded on the basis of their religion or non-religion.

Large group of children having a class in the classroom.

Over three quarters of those asked said that they believed that schools should not have the right to refuse admission to a child belonging to a different religion than that of the school’s patron.

Twenty per cent said they knew someone who had baptised their child in a bid to guarantee access to a local school.

At the moment, the majority of primary schools in Ireland are run according to religion, mainly by the Catholic Church.