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RE

Religious Education

Religious Education (RE) creates opportunities for personal reflection as well as deepening knowledge and understanding of the world around us and, ultimately, developing the key skill of empathy. Religious Education contributes to students’ education by provoking challenging questions about meaning and purpose in life, beliefs about God, ultimate reality, issues of right and wrong and what it means to be human. In RE students learn about religious and non-religious world views to discover, explore, and consider different answers to these questions. RE offers opportunities for personal reflection and pupils’ spiritual, moral, social, and cultural development as it encourages them to examine the significance of their learning in relation to themselves and others.

Students learn to interpret, analyse, evaluate, and critically respond to the claims that religious and non-religious world views make, as well as express their insights and agree or disagree respectfully. Teaching, therefore, equips learners with knowledge and understanding of what is meant by the terms 'religion' and 'world view', as well as knowledge and understanding of a range of religious and non-religious world views.

RE offers opportunities for personal reflection and pupils’ spiritual, moral, social, and cultural development as it encourages them to examine the significance of their learning in relation to themselves and others. It enables students to explore their own beliefs - religious or not, ideas, feelings, experiences, and values in the light of what they learn. RE encourages empathy and respect and enables learners to develop their own sense of identity and belonging, all whilst promoting respect and tolerance of different beliefs, values, and ideas.

Ultimately, RE enables positive participation in our society due to its diverse religious and non-religious world views. The course gives pupils an informed understanding of political, social, and moral issues that they will need to face as they grow up in an increasingly globalised world. Pupils learn to positively deal with controversial issues, to manage strongly held differences of belief and to challenge stereotypes and prejudice.

Curriculum Information

Year 

Autumn 

Spring 

Summer

7

Why are some people religious? Where did the universe come from? Arguments for the existence of God. 

Christian beliefs  

What do Sikhs believe about the nature of God? 

What do Muslims believe? 

 

Why do people suffer? Including the Problem of Evil and Suffering. 

Is there life after death? 

 

8

Prejudice and Discrimination What does it mean to live as a Muslim in Britain today? 

 

Do religions bring conflict or harmony? 

What does it mean to live as a Sikh in Britain today? 

 

What does justice mean? 

How do believers follow their religion? 

9

How do you make moral decisions? What are the origins of the universe and human responsibility? 

 

Why is Social Justice important? 

What are the rights and wrongs of medical ethics? 

 

What do theists believe about abortion and euthanasia?

 

What is genetic engineering and why/how is it used?

10

CORE RE

What makes us human?

Harm no living thing?

How does the media portray religion? 

10 

GCSE

AQA

RE

Buddhist beliefs

 

Relationships and families

Relationships and families continued

 

Buddhist practices

 

 Religion and life

 

Christian beliefs

 

 

11 

GCSE 

AQA 

RE

Crime and Punishment

Christian practices

Human Rights and social justice

Revision and examination support

Revision and examination support

 

11 GCSE

Edexcel

RE

(2024 cohort only)

Christian practices

 

Matters of Life and Death

Marriage and the family

 

Revision and examination support

Revision and examination support

RE is fun, you can explore different beliefs and learn more about life around you.
Year 10 student
RE enables you to learn more about different cultures in the world.
Year 10 student

Biddick Academy

Biddick LaneWashingtonNE38 8AL

0191 511 1600

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