--

"Representing our individual organizations but joined in common cause, we have formed a council of peers to share information and raise awareness of ethical humanist responses to UN-related initiatives".


C E B O . org



Council of Ethics-Based Organizations Associated with The Department of Public Information of the United Nations
ACTIONS, EVENTS
WORLD FOCUS
UN NEWS
MDGS
Press releases, resolutions, campaigns, letters, statements, newsletters from CEBO members and Humanist organizations.

COUNCIL OF ETHICS ORGANIZATIONS

American Ethical Union

American Humanist Association

Humanist Society

International Humanist and Ethical Union

National Service Conference, American Ethical Union

REGIONAL AFFILIATES

Humanist Society of Metropolitan New York (AHA)

New York Society for Ethical Culture (NYSEC)

UNITED NATIONS NGO COMMITTEES WITH CEBO MEMBERS

AMICC American NGO Coalition for the International Criminal Court

Subcommittee for the Elimination of Racism of the NGO Committee on Human Rights

NGO Committee on Freedom of Religion or Belief

Working Group on the Rights of the Child of the NGO Committee on Unicef

CONGO committee on spirituality, values and global concerns

UNITED NATIONS ETHICS GROUPS WITH CEBO MEMBERS

Values Caucus

U.N.-RELATED ETHICS SITES

Humanvalues.net

IHEU: Appignani Center for Bioethics

WFM: Responsibility to Protect ____________

Cebo.org is hosted by Humanists.net
a project of the Institute for Humanist Studies

|ARCHIVES|


Saturday, April 19, 2008

Independent.co.uk
Humanism to be added to GCSE religious studies
By Richard Garner, Education Editor
Friday, 18 April 2008

The study of humanism is to form part of the syllabus for a GCSE in religious studies for the first time, one of the biggest exam boards will announce today.

The subject has been added to reflect the rising number of people sharing humanist beliefs in the UK, the Oxford & Cambridge and Royal Society of Art exam board (OCR) said.

The move is part of a reform of religious studies as a result of which pupils can study six major religions (Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism and Sikhism) as well as humanism. In a separate philosophy and ethics paper, youngsters will also be encouraged to tackle modern moral issues and examine the perspectives that different beliefs have towards topics such as abortion.

Andrew Copson, head of education at the British Humanist Association, said: "Since the 1960s, the proportions of those whose beliefs are humanist has steadily increased. A Mori poll in 2006 showed that 36 per cent of the UK population shared humanist views on morality and knowledge."

The Government and the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, the exams watchdog, have backed the inclusion of humanism.

OCR is also offering a faith-based approach in an alternative world-religions paper. That would allow pupils to focus entirely on Christianity, Islam or Judaism if they wished to.

Some representatives of the Catholic Church have opposed the teaching of abortion from different perspectives. However, concerned pupils can take the 100 per cent Christianity teaching option in the world religions GCSE paper if they wish.

Labels: , ,



"Representing our individual organizations but joined in common cause, we have formed a council of peers to share information and raise awareness of ethical humanist responses to UN-related initiatives in the fields of human rights, intellectual and religious freedom, peace and conflict, corporate ethics, and sustainable development."

"War does not determine who is right--only who is left." - Bertrand Russell