Business Week
 
 
Does More Education Lead to Less  Religion?
By _Charles Kenny_ (http://www.businessweek.com/authors/2762-charles-kenny) 
 October 27, 2014 

 
 
Earlier this month, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria introduced new  
curriculum guidelines for schools under its control. History, literature, and  
music were all out. The theory of evolution was specifically banned, the 
latest  manifestation of the long and complicated relationship between religion 
and  education. Religious schools are still a major source of learning 
worldwide,  even while learning is often considered a threat to belief.
 
 
A recent National Bureau of Economic Research _paper_ 
(http://www.nber.org/)  by Naci Mocan and Luiza Pogorelova gives  ammunition to 
anti-education 
zealots. In a study of the impact of compulsory  schooling reforms in the 
1960s and ’70s in Europe, they find an associated  decline in the number of 
people who claimed to be very religious and the number  who went to religious 
services. Specifically, they suggest that one additional  year of schooling in 
Europe was associated with a 10 percent reduction in the  propensity to 
attend religious services once a week or more.
 
 
The choice between schooling and faith may not be so stark, though. 
Globally,  we’ve seen a massive rise in education, without a uniform change in 
religious  beliefs. In 1970, only about 40 percent of children worldwide 
enrolled in  secondary education; four decades later, the rate had climbed to 
73 
percent. In  developing nations, the increases have been substantial: In 
sub-Saharan Africa,  enrollment rates have grown from 13 percent to 41 percent. 
In Pakistan, the  average adult has had five years of schooling, up from _a 
little over one year_ (http://www.barrolee.com/)  in 1960, and in  Nigeria 
the same numbers are 7.5 years, up from 2.4. (The average American adult  has 
13 years.) If Mocan and Pogorelova’s results held worldwide, this massive  
rise in education would suggest a cratering in global religious  practice.
 
 
The available evidence tells a different story. According to the latest 
wave  of _World Values Surveys_ (http://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/) , 24 out  
of 42 countries have seen an increasing proportion of people who say religion 
is  important in life. Four have seen the percentage unchanged, and 14 
countries  have seen it decline. In the countries where it’s declining, the 
starting points  are radically different. The U.S. dropped from 56 percent in 
the 1990s to 40  percent now, whereas in Iraq, the proportion has dropped to 
85 percent, down  from 94 percent in the late ’90s. Overall, though, the 
world is becoming more  godly, at least according to this measure of religious 
adherence. 
People also report they’re going to church, mosque, or synagogue more 
often.  Of the 42 countries that took part in the latest World Values Survey 
round and  at least one previous round, the proportion of people who claim to 
attend  religious services once a week or more has climbed in 22, stayed the 
same in 2,  and declined in 18.
 
Of course, there are considerable sensitivities to reporting about your  
religious attitudes and behaviors in many parts of the world. Where it is the  
norm to say you go to church every week, you are likely to say you go to 
church  every week, even if you haven’t been in a month of Sundays. So survey 
results  are fallible. But they do suggest there remains a huge variation 
across  countries regarding both religious attitudes and practice, one that is 
not  systematically closing even as education rates climb dramatically and 
schooling  levels converge across countries
 
Why does Europe look different from the developing world when it comes to 
the  link between education and belief? It might be that education only 
matters after  a certain point—maybe you need to go all the way through 
secondary 
school to  come out a skeptic, and most emerging markets haven’t reached 
that point yet. A  simpler explanation might be that most children in Africa 
and Asia aren’t  learning potentially threatening theories like evolution at 
school. In fact,  many kids _aren’t  learning anything much at all_ 
(http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-09-02/why-johnnies-around-the-world-can-t-
read)  in school—including basic literacy. It’s hard  to fully understand 
the effect of education on faith if schools aren’t providing  much of an 
education to begin with.

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