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This study provides a critical ethnographic examination of 4 full-time Islamic schools in order to examine the social, pedagogical and ideological functions of these alternative, religiously-based educational institutions in Canada. This research is based on the following three objectives: (1) identifying the role and function of Islamic schooling in a diasporic context, (2) understanding the role of Islamic education in the development of Islamic identity, (3) examining the Islamization of knowledge and pedagogy in Islamic schools.The discursive socialization and educational practices of Islamic schools also serve to structure gender roles in the Muslim community. The socialization of Muslim girls in particular is implicated by the contested notion of gender identity in Islam. Muslim girls must negotiate various orientations and articulations of identity that both challenge and affirm traditional notions about Islamic womanhood, as well as facing situations of "gendered Islamophobia" outside of schools.For religiously oriented families, Islamic schools provide a more seamless transition between the values, beliefs and practices of the home and school environment. They also provide a space free from racism and religious discrimination that many students encounter within public schools.This study also examines the epistemological foundations for Islamically-centred education and the pedagogical strategies, including methods of discipline and socialization. These aspects of knowledge, pedagogy and practice are examined in order to better understand how they are informed by the religious and spiritual traditions of Islam.Operating as a spiritually-based alternative to the public education system, independent Islamic schools take on multiple sociological roles. For example, these schools attempt to create a "safe" environment that protects students from the "de-Islamizing" forces in public schools and society at large. Some parents choose Islamic schools for children who have become engaged in un-Islamic behaviours such as alcohol or drug use, gang activities or sexual promiscuity. In these circumstances the schools function as spaces for the re-socialization and rehabilitation of wayward youth. Islamic schools therefore also operate as sites for the social reproduction of Islamic identity.
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Subjects
Education, Muslim girls, Islamic educationPlaces
OntarioEdition | Availability |
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Staying on the 'straight path': a critical ethnography of Islamic schooling in Ontario.
2004
in English
0612918394 9780612918399
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Adviser: George Dei.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Toronto, 2004.
Electronic version licensed for access by U. of T. users.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 65-05, Section: A, page: 1720.
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- Created October 26, 2008
- 2 revisions
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