The DUP wants to create a vision of schoolchildren who are all Northern Irish, Sinn Fein MLA John O'Dowd added.
DUP
leader Peter Robinson has hinted that, while church schools are welcome
to exist, the state may not be obliged to fund them.
He compared the
Northern Ireland education system to South Africa during apartheid when
black and white children were taught separately.
But Mr O'Dowd
argued: "They see the Catholic education system as a threat to their
vision of society, not even in terms of Catholic religious teaching or
theology but in terms of how the nationalist community is educated.
"The
DUP wants to break that down and turn society into a schooling system
where at the end of it we produce a ceramic vision of each other where
we are all little Northern Ireland, and I think that is a mistake in
itself."
He told the Assembly nobody could argue against
integrated education but added parents had a right to choose where to
send children and in most cases they went to their local school.
"We
live in a divided society, so naturally many people in the Catholic
community send their children to Catholic primary schools or Catholic
secondary schools, and within the unionist community they are sent to
controlled schools," he said.
"That is as a result of our society - it is not education's fault that we have a divided society."
He said co-education was part of the solution but was not the only answer.
SIC: BT/UK