Islamic Primary Schools in The Netherlands: The Founding, The Debate, and The Outcomes

At present around 865.000 Muslims live in the Netherlands. In 1988 the first Islamic primary school was founded; now there are 61 with 15,000 students. Islamic education always has been a highly controversial topic in the Netherlands. The debate centers around the question whether the schools contr...

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Main Author: Geert Driessen
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: Program Studi Pendidikan Islam 2021-02-01
Series:Nazhruna
Subjects:
Online Access:https://e-journal.ikhac.ac.id/index.php/NAZHRUNA/article/view/1076
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spelling doaj-e916f2e374da4589b451faab828db9882021-08-03T23:21:39ZaraProgram Studi Pendidikan Islam Nazhruna2614-80132021-02-014110.31538/nzh.v4i1.10761076Islamic Primary Schools in The Netherlands: The Founding, The Debate, and The OutcomesGeert Driessen0Driessen Research, The Netherlands At present around 865.000 Muslims live in the Netherlands. In 1988 the first Islamic primary school was founded; now there are 61 with 15,000 students. Islamic education always has been a highly controversial topic in the Netherlands. The debate centers around the question whether the schools contribute to the integration of Muslim youth into Dutch society, or leads to isolation and segregation. This article’s goal is to entangle why and how the schools were established, the obstacles met in this process and the resulting heated societal debate, and the schools’ attainments in terms of cognitive and noncognitive student achievement. To arrive at these insights a review and analysis of the literature was conducted. The results show that Islamic schools academically achieve relatively well, that is, taking into account their largely socioeconomically disadvantaged student population. Also, they perform best on a pen-and-paper integration test. This does not mean, however, that especially populist and right-wing politicians are convinced now that all Muslim youngsters will accept the Dutch norms and values and will integrate into Dutch society. https://e-journal.ikhac.ac.id/index.php/NAZHRUNA/article/view/1076Islamic EducationThe NetherlandsAchievementIntegrationSegregation
collection DOAJ
language Arabic
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Geert Driessen
spellingShingle Geert Driessen
Islamic Primary Schools in The Netherlands: The Founding, The Debate, and The Outcomes
Nazhruna
Islamic Education
The Netherlands
Achievement
Integration
Segregation
author_facet Geert Driessen
author_sort Geert Driessen
title Islamic Primary Schools in The Netherlands: The Founding, The Debate, and The Outcomes
title_short Islamic Primary Schools in The Netherlands: The Founding, The Debate, and The Outcomes
title_full Islamic Primary Schools in The Netherlands: The Founding, The Debate, and The Outcomes
title_fullStr Islamic Primary Schools in The Netherlands: The Founding, The Debate, and The Outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Islamic Primary Schools in The Netherlands: The Founding, The Debate, and The Outcomes
title_sort islamic primary schools in the netherlands: the founding, the debate, and the outcomes
publisher Program Studi Pendidikan Islam
series Nazhruna
issn 2614-8013
publishDate 2021-02-01
description At present around 865.000 Muslims live in the Netherlands. In 1988 the first Islamic primary school was founded; now there are 61 with 15,000 students. Islamic education always has been a highly controversial topic in the Netherlands. The debate centers around the question whether the schools contribute to the integration of Muslim youth into Dutch society, or leads to isolation and segregation. This article’s goal is to entangle why and how the schools were established, the obstacles met in this process and the resulting heated societal debate, and the schools’ attainments in terms of cognitive and noncognitive student achievement. To arrive at these insights a review and analysis of the literature was conducted. The results show that Islamic schools academically achieve relatively well, that is, taking into account their largely socioeconomically disadvantaged student population. Also, they perform best on a pen-and-paper integration test. This does not mean, however, that especially populist and right-wing politicians are convinced now that all Muslim youngsters will accept the Dutch norms and values and will integrate into Dutch society.
topic Islamic Education
The Netherlands
Achievement
Integration
Segregation
url https://e-journal.ikhac.ac.id/index.php/NAZHRUNA/article/view/1076
work_keys_str_mv AT geertdriessen islamicprimaryschoolsinthenetherlandsthefoundingthedebateandtheoutcomes
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