Quietly Contesting the Hegemony of the Catholic Clergy in Secondary Schooling in Ireland: The Case of the Catholic Lay Secondary Schools from Independence in 1922 to the early 1970s

From the time of Irish independence in 1922 until the mid-1960s, a cohort of small, lay-run Catholic secondary schools operated in Ireland. They functioned to fill a gap that had existed in the network of Catholic clergy- and religious order-run secondary schools and catered for the minority of the...

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Main Authors: Tom O'Donoghue, Teresa O'Doherty
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: FahrenHouse 2021-06-01
Series:Espacio, Tiempo y Educación
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.espaciotiempoyeducacion.com/ojs/index.php/ete/article/view/336
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author Tom O'Donoghue
Teresa O'Doherty
author_facet Tom O'Donoghue
Teresa O'Doherty
author_sort Tom O'Donoghue
collection DOAJ
description From the time of Irish independence in 1922 until the mid-1960s, a cohort of small, lay-run Catholic secondary schools operated in Ireland. They functioned to fill a gap that had existed in the network of Catholic clergy- and religious order-run secondary schools and catered for the minority of the population attending the majority of the secondary schools in the country. The (Catholic) Church authorities, who monopolised secondary school education and resented the intrusion of other parties into what they considered to be their sacred domain in this regard, only tolerated the establishment of lay-run schools in districts where it was not anxious to provide schools itself. This indicated the preference of the Church for educating the better-off in Irish society as the districts in question were mostly very deprived economically. The paper details the origins, growth and development of the lay-owned Catholic secondary schools. The attitude of the Church to their existence is then considered. The third part of the paper focuses on a particular set of lay schools established amongst what had been, for a long time, one of the most neglected areas in Ireland in terms of secondary school provision by the Catholic Church, namely, the Irish-speaking districts in the remote and impoverished areas in the north-west, west, south-west and south of the country, which were officially called the Gaeltacht districts.
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spelling doaj.art-c2171c27909b473bb792edaedda1bc142022-12-21T19:20:53ZengFahrenHouseEspacio, Tiempo y Educación2340-72632021-06-018129730810.14516/ete.336206Quietly Contesting the Hegemony of the Catholic Clergy in Secondary Schooling in Ireland: The Case of the Catholic Lay Secondary Schools from Independence in 1922 to the early 1970sTom O'Donoghue0Teresa O'Doherty1University of Western AustraliaMarino Institute of Education DublinFrom the time of Irish independence in 1922 until the mid-1960s, a cohort of small, lay-run Catholic secondary schools operated in Ireland. They functioned to fill a gap that had existed in the network of Catholic clergy- and religious order-run secondary schools and catered for the minority of the population attending the majority of the secondary schools in the country. The (Catholic) Church authorities, who monopolised secondary school education and resented the intrusion of other parties into what they considered to be their sacred domain in this regard, only tolerated the establishment of lay-run schools in districts where it was not anxious to provide schools itself. This indicated the preference of the Church for educating the better-off in Irish society as the districts in question were mostly very deprived economically. The paper details the origins, growth and development of the lay-owned Catholic secondary schools. The attitude of the Church to their existence is then considered. The third part of the paper focuses on a particular set of lay schools established amongst what had been, for a long time, one of the most neglected areas in Ireland in terms of secondary school provision by the Catholic Church, namely, the Irish-speaking districts in the remote and impoverished areas in the north-west, west, south-west and south of the country, which were officially called the Gaeltacht districts.https://www.espaciotiempoyeducacion.com/ojs/index.php/ete/article/view/336secondary schoolingirelandcatholic churchlay people
spellingShingle Tom O'Donoghue
Teresa O'Doherty
Quietly Contesting the Hegemony of the Catholic Clergy in Secondary Schooling in Ireland: The Case of the Catholic Lay Secondary Schools from Independence in 1922 to the early 1970s
Espacio, Tiempo y Educación
secondary schooling
ireland
catholic church
lay people
title Quietly Contesting the Hegemony of the Catholic Clergy in Secondary Schooling in Ireland: The Case of the Catholic Lay Secondary Schools from Independence in 1922 to the early 1970s
title_full Quietly Contesting the Hegemony of the Catholic Clergy in Secondary Schooling in Ireland: The Case of the Catholic Lay Secondary Schools from Independence in 1922 to the early 1970s
title_fullStr Quietly Contesting the Hegemony of the Catholic Clergy in Secondary Schooling in Ireland: The Case of the Catholic Lay Secondary Schools from Independence in 1922 to the early 1970s
title_full_unstemmed Quietly Contesting the Hegemony of the Catholic Clergy in Secondary Schooling in Ireland: The Case of the Catholic Lay Secondary Schools from Independence in 1922 to the early 1970s
title_short Quietly Contesting the Hegemony of the Catholic Clergy in Secondary Schooling in Ireland: The Case of the Catholic Lay Secondary Schools from Independence in 1922 to the early 1970s
title_sort quietly contesting the hegemony of the catholic clergy in secondary schooling in ireland the case of the catholic lay secondary schools from independence in 1922 to the early 1970s
topic secondary schooling
ireland
catholic church
lay people
url https://www.espaciotiempoyeducacion.com/ojs/index.php/ete/article/view/336
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AT teresaodoherty quietlycontestingthehegemonyofthecatholicclergyinsecondaryschoolinginirelandthecaseofthecatholiclaysecondaryschoolsfromindependencein1922totheearly1970s