This month’s introduction of an opt-in clause for religious instruction in state schools is a significant step forward,
and will accelerate the decline of church-led evangelism in schools, says the Secular Education Network (SEN).
Spokesperson Mark Honeychurch says that SEN is relieved the government has finally ensured that parents and caregivers
should be made aware of any church-led religious instruction their child is receiving – although whether this happens in
practice is up to individual schools.
“The August 2020 update to the Education and Training Act requires schools to enforce an ‘opt-in’ process for religious
instruction. For this reason, SEN member Tanya Jacob will not be proceeding with her planned High Court case against the
Attorney General in October,” he says.
“The case was to argue that the Education Act be updated to be appropriate for today’s less religious, more diverse and
multicultural New Zealand. The opt-in clause means that a significant amount of this change has now happened, although
substantial religious influence remains. SEN will continue to lobby for religious instruction to be fully removed from
state schools,” he says.
This court case, along with persistent media attention and Human Rights complaints, motivated a change to religious
instruction in the August 2020 Education and Training Bill, and the new opt-in clause for religious instruction is now
law.
Nearly 10,000 people have already signed the Secular Education Network’s petition calling on Education Minister Chris Hipkins to entirely remove religious instruction in State primary and intermediate
schools.
“School time should be reserved for professionally taught education. We encourage the teaching of facts about all major
religions, rather than the teaching of one religion as though it is fact. Our petition represents the views of New
Zealanders advocating for this important change.”
“The content of the church-led religious instruction ‘classes’ is not curriculum based, but young children are incapable
of recognising the difference. To children, what is taught at school is fact. It is up to us responsible adults in their
lives to ensure that evangelism doesn’t take place in class time.”
Nearly 25% of New Zealand secular, state primary schools - schools that have no religious affiliation - still close for
up to an hour a week, or 20 hours a year, so that church volunteers can preach non-syllabus, non-Ministry of Education
approved Christianity classes to young children.