Club Soda and Salt asks Trinidad and Tobago's Minister of Education for some data to support her assertion that “with the establishment of the religious schools over 75 per cent in the primary sector, we have been able to see in the school system emphasis on morals and values and when the morals and values are not there, there are problems in the school system.” While he agrees that denominational schools do perform better than secular schools, he wonders whether this might not be due to “the schools being independently run, relatively speaking?. . . . This has nothing, NOTHING, to do with religion, and everything to do with having less meddling from the MoE in the school’s affairs.”
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If this report is true, I have to say that Trinidad-Tobago is setting itself up for a lot of troubles in the future.
The state is allowed to teach ethics and civics in its curriculum, and should. It should not depend on the moral teachings of different groups to establish ethical conduct in its people.
There is a difference between morals and ethics.