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What debate over modern education tells us about a divided Turkey

The internal dispute over Turkey鈥檚 national identity explains the broad criticism of a new wave of educational reforms.

By Scott Peterson, Staff writer
ISTANBUL

At one of the most expensive and renowned private high schools in Turkey, on the eastern outskirts of Istanbul, the impressive results of the graduating seniors of the Ko莽 School are celebrated.

This fall several of them will begin attending top universities around the world, including at least three at Harvard and two at Yale, among many others. All their names and destinations are posted on a wall in the entrance hall, the pride of students and teachers alike.

But controversial new educational reforms are underway in Turkey, designed by the ruling Islam-leaning Justice and Development Party (AKP), with the stated aim of training 鈥渟cience-loving, skilled and ethical individuals鈥 who draw on their own culture and civilization to aid 鈥渢he well-being of humanity.鈥

The reforms have been criticized on both sides of Turkey鈥檚 secular-religious divide, and are open to wide interpretation. But the fact that courses in religion are among the few to remain mandatory 颅鈥撀爀ven as history and geography become electives 鈥撀爃ave some questioning whether the new raft of reforms is an example of anti-secular, pro-religious social engineering by the AKP that reflects a broader, decadeslong transformation of Turkish society.

Previous reforms have expanded religious study at the expense of other areas of the curriculum, while the latest reforms have curtailed some religious subjects and been criticized for valuing skills over morals. The across-the-board criticism closely follows the key social fault line in Turkey, such that Turks wedded to the republic鈥檚 founding secular traditions charge that there is too much religion, while conservative Turks who often support the AKP argue the exact opposite, that the new reforms offer too little religion.

President Recep Tayyip Erdo臒an has in the past called for the creation of a 鈥減ious generation,鈥 and presented a strong education system as a 鈥渕ust have鈥 for a secure national future.

And educators praise some aspects of the reforms, which are meant to transition Turkey from an agrarian to urban society, boost problem-solving and technical prowess, and sharpen critical thinking.

But for the Ko莽 School, the retooling of Turkey鈥檚 education system may determine how prepared its students will be in the future for the best higher education in the world 鈥撀燼nd therefore how many of its students鈥 names will hang with pride on the admissions wall.

鈥淓very ideology is trying to form their own citizens, that鈥檚 normal,鈥 says Ay艧e Alan, a history teacher and dean of the Ko莽 School, speaking in a personal capacity. 鈥淣ow they are playing with history courses, which is an old story. They always do that. Every government changes something.

鈥淏ut the religion course, I think it is the most important course, at least for the government, because they want to keep it. They are very serious about that,鈥 says Ms. Alan, a well-known educator in Turkey who has written against the new religious 鈥渕ilitarism鈥 in schools, just as she once wrote against the secular 鈥渕ilitarism鈥 that long dominated Turkish classrooms.

The modern Turkish state was founded in 1923 by the secular Mustafa Kemal Atat眉rk from the ashes of the Ottoman Empire, defeated during World War I. For decades afterward, the Turkish military saw its role as protecting that secular tradition and conducted several coups to do so.

Axing Darwin, adding religious classes

Still, the changes have been profound since the AKP was first elected in 2002. The military鈥檚 role in politics has been neutered, while Islam鈥檚 increased political stature has driven deep changes in society.

AKP changes to the national curriculum in 2017 doubled religious teaching in high schools to two hours each week and cut Charles Darwin鈥檚 theory of evolution from science classes.

鈥淵ou can in Turkey now easily send your child to a religious kindergarten school [where] they teach Quran and pupils are just 5 years old,鈥 says Ms. Alan. 鈥淭hey teach students to be soldiers of the new system.

鈥淭hey don鈥檛 say 鈥榮ystem,鈥 but militarism is something important for us, because if you check the history of Turkey, militarism is part of our history,鈥 continues Ms. Alan. 鈥淣ow the danger is we have both: We have militarism, and a religious system at the same time. This really scares me.鈥

The first batch of education reforms were rolled out last October, in an 鈥淓ducation Vision 2023鈥 document. Then in May, a separate set of reforms specific to high schools was published. Though short on details, it appears modeled on the International Baccalaureate program.

Educators agree that there are many positive aspects. But it comes as Turkey鈥檚 education system is still reeling from purges of tens of thousands of teachers following a failed coup attempt in July 2016.

Turkey has also seen a surge in religious schools, known as Imam Hatip schools, that once were designed to produce clerics and today have a curriculum dominated by religious studies. By one count, the number of students at Imam Hatip middle schools jumped from just under 100,000 in 2012-2013 to nearly 750,000 today.

And yet even though Turkey spends a sizable portion of its budget on education 鈥撀11.9% last year, nearly double the percentage when the AKP first came to power 鈥 nationwide test results published in July were low.

The local equivalent of the global Program for International Student Assessment test found that in math, 86% of eighth graders scored at intermediate or lower levels on a five-level grading scale, with 53%聽scoring in the lowest two categories. For the Turkish language, some 66% of eighth graders were聽at intermediate or聽lower levels,聽which meant they struggled to understand idioms and satire.

Emphasis on a 鈥榩ious generation鈥 or marketable careers?

In the midst of this maelstrom, it is not just secular educators who have complained about the new reforms.

鈥淚f anything, it looks like this new program has abandoned the project of raising a 鈥榩ious generation,鈥欌 says Talat Yavuz, director for the Istanbul 4th District of E臒itim-Bir-Sen, a conservative pro-government teachers union.

鈥淭he AKP has really invested a lot in the education system, building schools,鈥 says Mr. Yavuz. 鈥淏ut still there is this widespread view that we have not been able to achieve the kind of success we want in education.鈥

鈥淭he new program puts the onus not on issues like ethics, values, and morality, but it seems career-driven, which doesn鈥檛 encourage students to ask who we are, why we are here, but focuses instead on marketable skills,鈥 he says.

Among a host of complaints, E臒itim-Bir-Sen鈥檚 official response said the new proposal 鈥渞isks wiping out the social satisfaction achieved on the matter of religious education,鈥 which it said was a 鈥減opular demand,鈥 by sidelining classes on the Quran, the life of the prophet Muhammad, and basic religious knowledge.

In an outright denunciation of the reform program, Zekeriya Erdim, a longtime adviser to senior AKP officials in Istanbul and Ankara, said it 鈥渟ets aside ... our religion, state, homeland, nation, culture and civilization [in favor of] the 鈥榳orld citizenship鈥 of a dominant culture and civilization [i.e., the West] that makes a hell out of everything it touches.鈥

Mr. Yavuz nevertheless says the surge in the number of religious schools is a 鈥渞ebalancing鈥 of Turkey鈥檚 education system, after decades of enforced secularism.

鈥淭his is a normalization process,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e鈥檝e made a lot of progress, but 10 years later is there going to be another coup that will pull us in another direction?鈥

While the details of the reforms have yet to be published, 脰zg眉r Bozdo臒an, head of the large teachers union E臒itim-Sen, which, unlike its similarly named counterpart, is pro-opposition, condemned them. The lack of mandatory classes in technology, environment, human rights, and democracy means 鈥渋t will not be possible to meet today鈥檚 needs, let alone those of 2040,鈥 he was quoted as saying.

Indeed, educators have seen how some programs, once encouraged by the AKP and lasting for years, have been canceled in recent months. They include student councils 鈥撀爓hich provided hands-on, local exercises in democracy 鈥撀燼nd an in-depth gender awareness program.

These steps are 鈥渁nother example of their [AKP] vision, of their ideology,鈥 says Ms. Alan, the educator. A year remains before the new reforms kick in for Turkey鈥檚 high schools, to work out the issues and ease the raft of fears.

鈥淭he interesting thing is the AKP started these different democratic projects,鈥 says Ms. Alan, referring to the student councils and gender program. 鈥淏ut the AKP knows the culture of Turkey very well. In Turkey, you can change your mind four times a day and it doesn鈥檛 matter. You just declare that you change your mind, and [people] accept it.鈥