Let us remind ourselves of your comment that started this line of discussion:
'Religionists didn't get their claws into education, they started it'
So we aren't talking about schools, but education. So to answer your question, vocational training and education are distinct things. The romans established educational establishments (call them schools) in Britain in the period when they were in occupation in Britain. St Augustine did not establish educational establishments in Britain - he established narrow vocational training establishments, similar to those for training people for other trades and professions. Educational establishment didn't really reappear in Britain until the 11th and 12thC - some of which were linked to religious establishments some not.
Indeed there are examples of battles where narrow training schools were removed from monastic control and secularised in order to provide education rather than mere clergy training, which were resisted by the incumbent monastic orders.
It's that quote out of context again the same one: 'Religionists didn't get their claws into education, they started it'.
I was referring to the way the various religions grab the very young, pre seven year old, children the ones they know full well are the most likely to succumb to their influence.
The reference was then about how the various religions couldn't wait to get their claws into these pre seven year old vulnerable children as the're the most likely source for blindly following new recruits, it was not about the various religions getting their claws into education in general.
Vlad is often dishonest in this way, mind the false Hungarian/English, English/Hungarian dictionary he uses doesn't help, I'm sure English isn't Vlad's first language?
(False Hungarian dictionary or phrase book? from those wonderful, old now, Python days)
Found another link on the subject of this thread as follows:
https://www.tes.com/news/faith-schools-discriminate-against-non-religious-pupilsRegards Prof D, ippy