Gabriella,
I think you have, but ippy can confirm or deny as he wishes.
I'm not sure there's much to disagree about when the words are plainly written, but in any case the issue isn't about just RC faith schools. The question you were asked and ignored though was a more general one of principle ("Would you for example think it acceptable for a Muslim faith school to teach its pupils that there actually was a religious figure who could prophesise things – thereby breaking the rules that physics describes?"). If you don't want to answer that's up to you, but you must I think concede that your "kiddies making up their own minds" idea is a different proposition when the facts about religion (ie, RE) are taught rather than the "facts" of religion are taught (ie faith schools).
BHS
I figured rather than take your approach on many occasions of promising to get back to me with a response and then spectacularly failing to do so, which seems to have become something of a habit with you when you are unable to produce any evidence for some of your opinions, I would just respond when I had the time without making empty promises.
Per our earlier discussion on another thread
http://www.religionethics.co.uk/index.php?topic=15349.75, reply #97, the plainly written words on Page 7 of the RC schools curriculum doc show that RC schools are teaching beliefs. I even quoted them to you - you may remember the very first point under the heading "The aims of Religious Education:
1. To present engagingly a comprehensive content which is the basis of knowledge and understanding
of the Catholic faith"
"Faith" being the crucial word in that sentence, and in many other sentences in the document. So that's my evidence for my opinion that the plainly written words in the document show beliefs are being taught as beliefs.
While it may be your opinion or interpretation that the RC schools curriculum doc states that they are teaching these beliefs as facts, the RC doc does not read that way to me. To teach something as a fact, it needs to be more than a statement - it needs to be proved using evidence. If they don't present the evidence then they are teaching something as if it is an opinion, not a fact.
For example, you often present your statements of opinion as though you sincerely believe them to be true or factual. We are, however, all aware that they are just your opinions, though some - I suppose you would call them "gullible" - people might actually think your statements are true, despite your lack of evidence. Not surprising that people tend to agree with people if they perceive them to hold similar views to their own, even where there is a lack of evidence presented.
Based on my position on RC schools I thought it would be fairly obvious that I think it is acceptable for a Muslim faith school to teach children
their belief that there "actually was a religious figure who could prophesise things – thereby breaking the rules that physics describes". For it to be taught as a fact, they would have to present testable evidence - and the fact could still be revised if new testable evidence became available.
I think it would be kind of pointless to teach beliefs about a supernatural concept that didn't sometimes break the rules of physics. Where's the fun in that? Also some of it probably ties in with beliefs the pupils' parents have taught them and it was probably kind of the point of sending them to a Muslim faith school - to teach them these shared traditions and beliefs.
Hopefully you're not going to ask me if Jewish faith school should be allowed to teach children their belief that there actually was a ......[insert supernatural story of your choice relating to Jewish faith]?