Galway Educate Together National School (GETNS) operates under the umbrella of Educate Together, the representative organisation of the Educate Together schools and associations throughout the Republic of Ireland. Educate Together owes its origins in the movement to establish new multi-denominational primary schools which emerged in the late 1970s and early 1980s. By 1984, when Educate Together was established, there were three schools and the organisation acted as their co-ordinating body. Galway Educate Together National School (GETNS) was set up in 1994, as Galway School Project, by a small group of parents who wished to establish a school run on the core principles of the Educate Together movement. The Educate Together movement has grown considerably, and to date there are 28 schools throughout the country. The organisation became a company limited by guarantee in 1998 and has charitable status. It has a small national office staffed on a part-time basis. All directors and committee members work in a voluntary capacity.
Educate Together, and by extension GETNS, aims to meet a growing need in Irish society for schools that recognise the developing diversity of Irish life and the modern need for democratic management structures. In particular, Educate Together guarantees children and parents of all faiths and none equal respect in the operation and governing of education.
GETNS and all the schools operated by the member associations of Educate Together are fully recognised by the Irish Department of Education and Science and work under the same regulations and funding structures as other national schools. However, they have a distinct ethos or governing spirit. This has been defined in the following terms:
- Multi-denominational i.e. all children having equal
rights of access to the school, and children of all social,
cultural and religious backgrounds being equally respected,
- Co-educational and committed to encouraging all
children to explore their full range of abilities and opportunities,
- Child centred in their approach to education
- Democratically run with active participation by
parents in the daily life of the school, whilst positively
affirming the professional role of the teachers.
(Source: Educate Together Charter)
Whilst the concepts of child-centredness and co-educationalism are now widely accepted in Irish primary education, what distinguishes GETNS and all Educate Together schools is their work in developing a culturally inclusive and democratic ethos. This has pioneered unique approaches to inclusion of minority opinions and faiths in the Irish context. All the schools have developed education programmes which open the eyes of children to the naturally positive contribution that social diversity and difference of viewpoint and opinion make to society. In GETNS this is part of what is referred to as the REEP (Religious and Ethical Education Programme). The REEP is unique to GETNS, but has at its core Educate Together's guiding principles.
The other characteristic feature of Educate Together schools is that they are democratically organised and governed. This maximises the potential for building a genuine partnership between the professional, objective role of the teacher and the necessarily personal involvement of the parent in contributing to their children's education. The management of GETNS is the responsibility of its members who through a democratic process establish two committees - the Executive Committee and the Board of Management. Parents, teachers and members of the community who are actively committed to the ethos of the school play a part in these committees. There is also a Parents' Committee that is directly elected from the parent body annually.
Educate Together is facing unprecedented demand for places in its schools, for increased services to schools and is under pressure to open new schools in new areas. It is also being urged to promote its philosophy in the wider context of secondary education and pre-school provision. This growing demand can be attributed to objective factors in modern Irish life, namely the rapid diversification of society, economic growth, increasing population, globalisation of the economy and improved communications. It is also attributed to the increasing demand of Irish parents to participate as partners in the educational process and a wish that their children should grow up at ease with social, religious and cultural difference. At a local level, GETNS aims to play its part in meeting this demand.
R.E.E.P - Religious and Ethical Education Programme
The Religious and Ethical Education Programme (REEP) is unique to Galway Educate Together National School but has as its core principles those of Educate Together, the co-ordinating body for all Educate Together schools in Ireland.
Facts, Figures & History
Educate Together started as an organisation
in 1984, when the first three schools decided
to set up a co-ordinating committee that
would disseminate information among the
existing schools and assist in the growth
and development of new schools. The three
schools were located in Dalkey, Bray and
Glasnevin, all in the greater Dublin area
Educate Together Charter
Recalling Article
26.3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
"Parents have a prior right
to choose the kind of education that shall be given
to their children"
and Article 42.4 of the Constitution of
Ireland:
"The state shall provide for
free primary education and shall endeavour to supplement
and give reasonable aid to private and corporate educational
initiative, and, when the public good requires it,
provide other educational facilities or institutions
with due regard, however, for the rights of parents,
especially in the matter of religious and moral formation",
and recognising:
1.1 That many parents have a valid
preference for schools in which boys and girls of
all social, cultural and religious backgrounds can
be educated together in an atmosphere of mutual understanding
and respect,
1.2 That the multi denominational
schools established under the banner of Educate Together
are a distinctive response to the growing demand for
such an option within the Irish educational system,
Educate Together affirms that:
2.1 Children of all social, cultural
and religious backgrounds have a right to an education
that respects their individual identity whilst exploring
the different values and traditions of the world in
which they live,
2.2 Parents are entitled to participate
actively in decisions that affect the education of
their children. In particular, they have the right
to decide what kind of school reflects their conscience
and lawful preference,
2.3 Multi denominational schools
have the right to be treated no less favourably than
other schools within the Irish educational system,
in accordance with their needs and their identity,
2.4 The state has a duty to take
the identity of the multi denominational sector fully
into account when deciding on policy that affects
the establishment and development of schools,
and Commits itself to:
3.1 Support the establishment of
schools which are,
Multi-denominational i.e.
all children having equal rights of access to the
school, and children of all social, cultural and
religious backgrounds being equally respected,
Co-educationaland committed to encouraging
all children to explore their full range of abilities
and opportunities,
Child centred in their approach to education,
Democratically run with active participation
by parents in the daily life of the school, whilst
positively affirming professional role of the teachers,
in any area where the demand for such a school exists,
3.2 Promote
fuller awareness and recognition of the identity of
the multi denominational sector at all levels in Irish
society and abroad,
3.3 Participate
in appropriate structures and activities concerned
with the future development of education in Ireland
and abroad,
3.4 Promote
a future where multi denominational education will
be as freely available to parents as any other educational
option they may choose.
Formally launched on 12th May 1990
at the Aula Maxima, University College Galway, Ireland.
Amended on April 17th 1999 at the first Annual General
Meeting of Educate Together, Bray Co. Wicklow.
© Educate Together, 2000
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