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Religious Education
Socrates once said ‘Education is the kindling of a flame, not the filling of a vessel.’ Our research-based approach to pedagogy, emphasises exploration of varying perspectives on religious, philosophical, and ethical topics, teaching students what the different perspectives are and how to think intelligently about them. This approach is built on the dictum of John Stuart Mill, “He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that.”
Our KS3 curriculum is broad and balanced, paying equal attention to all six major world religions (Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam). We teach the Eastern Religions first, followed by the Western religions, and do so chronologically within each category to allow interleaving and critical perspectives and comparisons to be developed. Studying the major world religions to such depth and detail, allows students to develop confidence in their knowledge before advancing to philosophical enquiry. Subsequently, we build on this foundation by exploring both Philosophy and Ethics to further develop both analytical skills, extended writing and capacity for philosophical argumentation. This unit is ambitious and allows students to engage with challenging philosophical material, including epistemology.
In KS4 students are challenged to complete a full GCSE as an option subject, fulfilling our statutory requirements to teach Christianity and augmenting this study by contrasting this Western religion with the Eastern religion of Buddhism. Studying the GCSE course, students gain independence through the cultivation of essential study skills, including effective evaluation.
In KS5 we offer an academically rigorous A-Level which gives equal weight to the disciplines of Philosophy, Ethics and Christian Theology. The course further develops students’ extended writing and evaluation skills and engagement with advanced academic literature.
We are also committed to contributing to the Langton Extended Curriculum, through our delivery of the Philosophy IVE at KS4 and the Philosophy Project and PPE Pathway at KS5. Students undertake independent research into challenging philosophical and ethical topics and develop essential academic skills. Students are encouraged to be creative in their independent project development. This extended curriculum, plus other school events and trips, are part of our statutory obligation to deliver a minimum of 40 hours of RS per year group for students up to the age of 18.
KS3
Year Group |
Areas of Study |
7 |
An exploration of Eastern Faiths: Hinduism, Buddhism and Sikhism. This includes origins and development, key beliefs, holy texts, places of worship and how the religion is practiced today. |
8 |
An exploration of the Abrahamic Faiths: Judaism, Christianity and Islam. This includes origins and development, key beliefs, holy texts, places of worship and how the religion is practiced today. |
9 |
Epistemology: Understanding Knowledge, Plato’s Cave, Descartes’ three waves of doubt Philosophy of Religion: Cosmological and Teleological arguments for the existence of God, Science vs Faith?, The Big Bang and Evolution and Miracles Life After Death: Religious views of life after death, near death experiences, science and the afterlife, humanism, life after death and morality Holocaust: study of antisemitism, events of the Holocaust, spiritual resistance, the problem of evil and suffering |
GCSE
Board
AQA
Outline of the Course
- Component 1: Study of two religions (Buddhism and Christianity) – beliefs, teachings and practices
- Component 2: Thematic Studies (Themes A, B, D and E) – Different religious perspectives on the issues within our society
- Theme A: Relationships and Families – Religious teachings about sexuality, divorce and marriage, contraception and gender equality
- Theme B: Religion and life – The origins and value of the universe and of human life – abortion, euthanasia and animal experimentation
- Theme D: Religion, peace and conflict – Just War Theory vs Pacifism, the Ethics of Nuclear War, Holy War
- Theme E: Religion, crime and punishment – corporal punishment; the death penalty and forgiveness
Assessment
Type of Assessment |
Duration |
Weighting |
|
1 |
Christianity and Buddhism: short and long answer questions |
1 hour 45 minutes |
50% |
2 |
A mixture of short and long answer questions on each theme |
1 hour 45 minutes |
50% |
A Level
Minimum Entry Criteria
Desired: 7 in Religious Studies or 7 in English Language
Essential: 6 in Religious Studies or 6 in English Language
Board
Eduqas
Outline of the Course
Component One – Study of Religion (Christianity)
- Religious beliefs, values and teachings and how they vary historically and in the contemporary world; key moral principles, beliefs about the self, death and the afterlife; sources of wisdom and authority; significant social and historical developments; practices which shape religious identity; religion and society
Component Two – Religion and Ethics
- Ethical language and thought; three normative ethical theories; the application of ethical theory to two personal, societal or global issues; how ethical language in the modern era has changed over time
Component Three – Philosophy of Religion
- Philosophical arguments for the existence of God; The nature of religious experience; Problem of evil and suffering; Philosophical language; critiques of religious belief
Assessment
Type of Assessment |
Duration |
Weighting |
|
1-3 |
Students will sit three 2 hour papers, one on each of the topics (Philosophy, Ethics and Christianity). Within each exam there will be Section A and Section B, students will choose one out of two questions set in section A and one out of three questions set in Section B. Each question set comprises of Part A (20 marks) and Part B (30 marks). |
2 hours (per paper) |
33.3% of the qualification (per paper) |