Research Article

The Impact of Sunday School and Madrasah to Religious and Moral Education in Igalaland

Authors

  • Joseph Esther Ojone Department of Religious Studies, Kogi State University Anyigba, Nigeria

    ojesther15@gmail.com

Abstract

This study examines the impact of Sunday school and Madrasah to religious and moral education in Igalaland. In the study of religious and moral education, the focus has been on Christian and Islamic religious education obtained from the formal school as it is embedded in the Nigerian educational curriculum, much attention has not been given to religious and moral education outside the formal school context hence, the aim of this study is to provide the relevance of Sunday school and Madrasah to religious and moral education in Igalaland. The methodologies applied in this study are multi-dimensional: socio religious and descriptive approaches. This is achieved through structured interview, focus group discussion, and participant’s observation and existing literatures. Findings from this research show that people learn about the communal, social, intellectual, ecclesial and moral dimensions of their faith in their various places of worship. This study recommends efficient methods through which Sunday schools and Madaris can be effectively utilised to bring about moral reforms in Igalaland. The study concludes that since education can be described as a system of imparting ideals and cultural practices of the society to the next generation in an unending process, the young need to be initiated into their faith according to the various stages in Sunday school and Madrasah.

Keywords:

Sunday School Madrasah Religious Education Moral Education Igalaland

Article information

Journal

Journal of Arts, Humanities and Social Science

Volume (Issue)

1(1), (2024)

Pages

8-14

Published

06-01-2024

How to Cite

Joseph, E. O. (2024). The Impact of Sunday School and Madrasah to Religious and Moral Education in Igalaland. Journal of Arts, Humanities and Social Science, 1(1), 8-14. https://doi.org/10.69739/jahss.v1i1.4

References

Ajijola, A. D. (1999). Restructure of Islamic Education. Adam Publishers & Distributors.

Amareswaran, N. (2018). Practice of Moral Education in Real Life. International Journal of Creative Research Thoughts (IJCRT), 6(1), 1446-1452.

Anyebe, A. (2018). Contribution of Christian Religious Education to National Unity in Nigeria. EPRA International Journal of Economic and Business Review, 6(6), 26-28.

Aruwa, S. A. (2016). Crime and Insecurity in Igala Nation: Implications for Socio-Economic Development. A paper presentation at the 2016 Igala Education Summit, Kogi State University, Anyigba.

Ilori, J. A. (2002). Philosophy of Christian Education: An African Perspective. Plateau: Honey City Press.

Irika, O. O. (2014). Religion and National Development. Okpanam: Emma International Printers.

Mordi, J. F. (2015). The Social Dimension of Religion. Agbor: Progress Publishers.

Myriam, C., & Laura, B. (2011). Inside madrassas: Understanding and engaging with British-Muslim faith supplementary schools. Institute for Public Policy and Research (IPPR).

Usman, D. B. (2002). The Importance and Challenges of Teaching Christian Religion in the Teacher Education Programmes in the Twenty-first Century. Teacher Education Journal, 2(3), 2002.

Downloads

Views

221

Downloads

31