Dalkey School Project
The Dalkey School Project is a school in Glenageary, County Dublin in Ireland. It was set up on September 18, 1978[1] by parents in Dublin who wanted their children to attend a Multidenominational school.[2]
At the time the vast majority of primary schools were National schools, which had religious patrons. (This is also true today, though to a lesser degree.)
Support for such a school came from Jack Lynch, then head of Fianna Fáil, the Labour Party and some members of Fine Gael.[2] However the then-minister for education, Richard Burke was not sympathetic.[2]
During the years 1975-78, the project members were involved in extensive correspondence with the Department of Education and other bodies in order to prove the need for the school.[2]
The school opened in 1978 with 90 pupils, largely due to the support of the then newly elected Fianna Fáil government.[2] Opposition came from a group calling itself Council for Social Concern and some but some also came from obstructing of planning permission according to Michael Johnston, who was chairman of the project.[3] The school operated from various temporary premises until a dedicated school building was opened in 1983.[2]
In 1984, Educate Together was founded, a coordinating committee to coordinate efforts of groups trying to organize multi-denominational schools in the Republic of Ireland.
See also
References
- The Dalkey School Project, Articles of Association, Certificate of Incorporation No. 67032
- Multi-Denominational Schools in the Republic of Ireland 1975-1995 Archived 2009-01-06 at the Wayback Machine, paper delivered by Professor Áine Hyland, Professor of Education, University College, Cork, Ireland, at a Conference Education and Religion organised by C.R.E.L.A. at the University of Nice. 21–22 June 1996.
- Educate Together now country's fastest growing educational movement, Irish Independent, 17 September 2008, retrieved 9 February 2009