Case
Religion

In 2011, government schools in New South Wales, Australia began offering philosophy based ethics courses as an alternative to courses in religious education. This case probes the ensuing debate and surveys the diversity of ethical claims made by supporters and detractors of both religious classes and philsophy based ethics classes.

Solution #1
I am unsure what the question is here. I do feel that there should be other options for students that do not have a deep rooting in religious beliefs. Honestly, people will debate anything on the internet including debating the color of a shoes/dress on the internet.
Solution #2
To each their own. Students come from a variety of family backgrounds. Some believe in god, some do not. I think philosophy based courses should be offered as well as religious courses. It is one of the biggest questions in life that transcends education: Where did we come from? Students should be free to choose how they explore this question, if they choose to at all.
Solution #3
For what grade was this? Were these classes mandatory?
Solution #4
This is a statement, not a question. How are we to help with a solution?