THE number of Manchester children studying religious education has soared by half in three years.
Some 1,460 pupils took full GCSEs in the subject in 2004 compared with 984 in 2001 - despite the city being branded the most godless in Britain over Christmas.
The number of children taking a short-course GCSE in RE has risen from 1,360 to 1,701 over the same three-year period.
A-level candidates in the subject have tripled from 12 to 38, with 92.1 per cent getting A-C grades.
Manchester has a standing advisory council on religious education (SACRE) which receives '5,000 a year from the city council to promote and monitor RE in schools.
Ofsted inspections showed every primary school in Manchester met the requirement for a daily act of collective worship. Two unnamed secondary schools and a special school did not.
Candidates
The figures show not just a three-year rise, but a gradual year-on-year increase in RE uptake.
Full GCSE entries rose from 984 in both 2001 and 2002 to 1,139 in 2003 before hitting 1,460 last year. The number of short-course GCSE candidates increased from 1,360 to 1,631 in 2002, 1,686 in 2003 and finally 1,701 in 2004.
SACRE chairman Tommy Judge said: "We are delighted by the figures.
"I think it has a lot to do with how the subject is taught. When I was at school you found out very little about other religions. Now, in Manchester schools, it seems there is a whole new opening up of all the religions. It has become a vibrant, exciting thing for people who want to take it up."
Jan Ainsworth, head of education for the Manchester Diocese, said: "The figures reflect how interested a new generation has become in matters of spirituality.
"This was recently borne out by our attendance figures which showed that the number of young people going to church is on the rise."
Tweet

Showing comments 1 to 2 and replies | View All
Bill Heathfield, Manchester (18/01/2005 at 07:13)
The idea that children are suddenly rushing back to religion is ridiculous - they see an opportunity to up the number of GCSE passes with very little additional effort and they take it.
The religious propagandists who are pushing this idea that there is a sudden resurgence of interest in religion among young people need to be challenged. It simply isn't true.
And why does the city council give B#5,000 to the local SACRE to "promote" religion - as your story reported? Didn't we have a law against "promoting" homosexuality in schools? Why not a law forbidding the promotion of dangerous superstition, particularly when using public money to do it.
Bill Heathfield
Annie, Chorlton (29/01/2005 at 12:58)
This is 2005, and a move towards a secular UK should be pressed with even greater vigour.
Religion is currently killing thousands every day, as it has since time immemorial.
Secular RE would educate the rights and wrongs of religion, and hopefully allow people to make up their own minds.
As for compulsory worship?
Disgusting and authoritarian.