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I really love video games –  I will pick up a controller to immerse myself in a whole range of activities, from rolling up worlds in Beautiful Katamari to acting out vigilante justice in Batman: Arkham City, and maybe dabbling in a little demon slaying in Dante’s Inferno. Because of this, and the fact that I work in a boys’ school where Call of Duty is the conversation topic of choice, I have been looking for ways to incorporate video game culture into my RS lessons. It’s not just my school – 82% of the UK’s 8 – 65 year-old population play games (IAB, 2011), and it’s high time we embraced this form of pop culture. Now, we obviously can’t really involve actual playable games into classes the way that we can watch film clips, but we can use elements of them to inform and influence the tasks we set in class. Here’s how:

 

RPG Character Creation

 

In most role-playing games the player is given an opportunity to design their character, assigning various personality types and abilities. These are limited by a given number of points that can be ‘spent’ in order to prevent players maxing out every ability straight away. I have had success using this approach when asking a GCSE class to design a perfect soldier – they were given templates with a range of character attributes (independence, intelligence etc) and a limited number of points that they had to apply in order to demonstrate how important they thought each attribute was to the perfect soldier. They could then choose their personal arsenal from a selection of real-world weapons (including those banned from modern warfare) and explain their choices. This task engaged the students, while forcing them to consider the real nature of war and the nature of people fighting it.

 

Critical Thinking

 

Part of the magic of a well-written video game is the need to solve problems and tackle obstacles. For those playing multi-player titles, there is also the added challenge of working in a team. By putting these together, we can use a core gaming concept to enrich RS task (particularly in schools where RS and citizenship are lumped together). I have had a lot of success using a ‘survival plan’ group task, where students are given an outline of a survival situation, a range of characters, items and tactics to choose from. Elements of RS can be brought in by designing scenarios and characters carefully to bring out themes of why religion is important to people – does it provide moral support? Can elements be of practical use? Does it provide a sense of stability? The video game methods in a classroom setting worked really well, and had a great reception from the students.

 

Back to Reality

 

Chances are, if you are discussing war with teenage students, most will consider that they know what it’s like simply because they’ve played a bit of Battlefield with their friends. They will assume that the peer pressure they feel to improve their kill-to-death ratio gives them some insight into the stress of warfare. We can draw on the ‘knowledge’ they find from these games to collect what their views of war currently are, perhaps at the beginning of a unit on conflict. It can be hugely fulfilling to challenge these assumptions by showing them what real war can be like – army speakers, news articles, pictures of wounded soldiers and footage of battles can all help to draw the distinction between the play world and the real one, and bring the impact of war into sharp focus. This approach can be used with a range of subjects, including ethical choices, revenge and competition.

 

‘Gamifying’ the Classroom

 

Finally we have a more generic idea for using game concepts in any classroom. Sarah Smith-Robbins has written a great article on using elements of game design in classroom management (Smith-Robbins, 2011). In short, she points to the ideas that make games so immersive and engaging, such as clear goals with achievable milestones and equally transparent progress sequences. More interestingly, she also encourages the idea that games require us to reflect on our performance. Just as a player who fails to complete a section of the game must consider what they must do to improve, so too must a student consider how they will overcome an academic hurdle. Given the huge number of UK gamers, the majority of our students will be used to these concepts and we could definitely benefit from using them.

 

I know that a lot of people bemoan the audio-visual industries (and games in particular) for taking kids away from exercise and the outdoors, so I’m not advocating that we march into classrooms and tell the children to play CoD for 6 hours straight – I actually think that exposure to games should be carefully controlled and limited by parents. However, I also believe that games can be a force for good in children’s lives, and that we should embrace all of their experiences so that they can learn to think critically about them for themselves. Who knows, the next time they solve a puzzle to save the princess they might start using those skills in the real world.

 

IAB Games Steering Group (2011), 10 UK Video Game Audience Stats http://www.iabuk.net/blog/10-uk-video-game-audience-stats (Accessed 5/7/2012)

Smith-Robbins, S. (2011), ‘”This Game Sucks”: How to improve the gammification of education’ Educause Review 46:1 http://www.educause.edu/ero/article/%E2%80%9C-game-sucks%E2%80%9D-how-improve-gamification-education

 

Celia Warrick

Summer 2012

After 2003, when life in Iraq became an intolerable round of kidnappings and torture, there were voices from the USA proclaiming that this state of affairs was not an American oversight, but had in fact been deliberate political strategy – to encourage chaos so that free development of market forces could take place.

 

Maybe there is a similar strategy taking place in education at the moment. The leaked ideas associated with Michael Gove may well not come to fruition, but taken with other recent initiatives, the intent looks very much like a ‘scorched earth’ attack on the pillars of modern Religious Education. Let’s imagine for a while what the RE world would look like if this destabilisation was a total reality. RE outside a newly-reinforced EBacc qualification; most schools transformed into academies/free schools with no link to SACRE’s; no National Curriculum and Ofsted newly mandated to root out weak teaching, but no need to mention RE by name.  Where would this take us ? I think it would evaporate the whole concept of what RE has come to mean. QCA’s Non-Statutory Guidance on RE stated : ‘RE does not seek to urge religious beliefs on pupils nor compromise the integrity of their own beliefs by promoting one religion over another’.  This advice has never been heeded in some faith schools, and I fear that it could be heeded less and less in the future.

 

Local syllabuses have provided the backbone of improvements at KS3. SACREs work very much within the embrace of the Local authority and would struggle to survive meaningfully on their own. Without funding and training, SACRE members would be overwhelmed by schools doing their own thing in the local area. LA’s have been privatising their services for some time and this would feed into syllabus design.  Perhaps schools would have to buy into syllabuses designed by private companies only answerable to their shareholders.

 

And with fewer RE Advisors (a decline that has been going on for years) other bodies would line up to fill the gap of providing INSET and support. Clearly those with most experience are the Church of England and the Roman Catholic church, but there are other faith-based groups that are wising up to opportunities (have a look at the long list of members of the RE Council). Resources, lesson planning, schemes of work and of course eventually textbook publishing – all of these would move closer to the beat of faith communities, meaning a Religious Education that is less objective about ‘Jesus, whom Christians call the Saviour’ and more celebratory about ‘Jesus, our Saviour’.

 

Let’s face it, RE is a hard subject to teach anyway in a society that has been fed on greed and amorality, and in a school where management is not supportive and where there has been a history of simply adequate teaching in RE, the Headteacher would be very tempted to pull the subject to avoid bad experiences with Ofsted.  We see this process happening already, especially in schools where there is great competition at KS4 for options and time. If you compare types of school, this process is most likely to happen in secular, LA schools, leaving RE represented by a higher proportion of faith schools.

 

And secular, LA schools would be a rare thing anyway.  Who are the big guns when it comes to funding and supporting academies ?  The faith communities of course.  The Church of England is rivalling the Victorians in its positively industrial approach : http://www.churchofengland.org/education/national-society/academies-%281%29.aspx

 

When Ofsted comes to these faith academies (let alone free schools), which of the inspectors is going to put their neck above the parapet and object to evangelising going on in the KS3 classroom ?  Or point out that the time given over to other faiths is only 5 or 10% ? What is there to stop this new vanguard of faith school academies from rewriting the rules ? Everyone has known for years that the Catholic school down the road has its own sacramental brand of RE, and everyone went along with it because of the small numbers and because it seemed tolerant to do so, but what if more and more children of agnostics and atheists have no choice but to go to faith academies and find that Johnny is coming home and talking about his sins ?

 

There is no one organisation within the RE world to steady this potential storm.  NATRE, AREIAC, AULRE and others are simply professional advisory bodies. The government has shown scant concern for advice over the EBacc. The RE Council is an umbrella organisation with a list of members longer than my arm, and most of them are faith communities who could not sign up to radical action or serious protection of interest. At best it would reflect change rather than initiate it. It is to be commended that Nick Gibb has asked the RE Council to draw up a quasi-National Curriculum, but then if there is to be no National Curriculum anyway, what is the benefit ?

 

The only measure of control would come from examinations. No doubt Gove would only offer EBacc subjects in his fast-track ‘O’ Levels. A reduction of exam boards down to one would create pressure on syllabuses. The Faith schools cannot ignore the rise and popularity of philosophy and ethics, but a rejuvenated evangelical KS3 would inevitably lead to more dogmatic religion-based GCSE syllabuses a few years down the road.  Also, if universities are to be involved in A Level syllabus design, how long before the downplaying of Humanities subjects in higher education has an effect on available subjects? Debt-laden students may opt for a marketable course. I heard the other day that AQA Philosophy A Level runs at a substantial financial loss. Who would have the power within the reformulated examination board? If present trends are anything to go by, Gove would look to the independent sector for a lead, and RE in the Independent sector is still thirty years behind, stuck with the chaplain doubling as Religious Instruction leader.  The rich may not be religious but they damn well know their King James Bible and how to get their darlings confirmed. Knowing how to conduct yourself during christenings and weddings is an essential part of ‘getting on’ after all.

 

The loosening of bonds has started already and it seems Gove is intent on accelerating this descent into chaos.  In the coming months there will no doubt be ‘beacons of excellence’ on display to show how we could all do it; just as in Iraq before the US Forces left, we were told how big an impact the operation had had. It is true, Iraq will emerge from its hell, but the new Iraq will not be the country of America’s making, nor one that America would necessarily wish for.  A power struggle in the world of RE will weaken progressive forces of a secular and free-standing RE unafraid to investigate truth, and strengthen the hand of faith communities, sending it back into the fold of the evangelist and proselytiser.  That would not be an RE I would wish for.

 

Andrew Strachan

Summer 2012

The following paper by Dr Mark Chater, Director of Culham St Gabriel’s (www.cstg.org.uk) was originally presented at the AULRE 2012 Conference.

 

Introduction

 

Thank you for your warm welcome, and my thanks to AULRE for this opportunity to share some thoughts on knowledge. It is very good to be here.

 

It is said of Gandhi that, on his return to India in 1915, he took to criss-crossing the country by train, because of his need to know India from the inside. In this country, and in this city, it is often to taxi drivers that we turn if we want a certain kind of knowledge. This has happened twice to me recently: once in Redbridge with a driver who told me that RE was a waste of time, and who raged against the liberal elite for our soft attitude to intolerant minorities; and then in south London, with a Nigerian driver who educated me on the religious politics of Boko Haram, the group terrorising northern Nigeria. I learnt that the name Boko Haram means ‘western education is sinful’, that they have no real religious agenda, but are the product of extremes of wealth and poverty, with no substantial middle class. The wealthy class in the north is exerting influence and using religion to manipulate the poor. ‘Instead of employing them to work, they employ them to die’, he said.

 

Knowledge – class – religion; all interwoven. What are we to make of this in the current context of the knowledge-based curriculum review and the REC’s decision to attempt a review reflecting it? I offer my thoughts on doing the knowledge.

 

The problem I wish to address with you is this: in the face of the Govean model of the curriculum, how should we position initial teacher education for RE? This question is created in the full knowledge that whatever happens to the curriculum in schools has a strong backwash effect on ITE and the content of initial programmes, and that university-based ITE in all subjects is under threat. How can we respond without simply reverting to sectional interest? How can we deal with the obvious overcrowding of PGCE programmes(1), and what sort of knowledge is needed in the beginning teacher of RE? How can we shape the RE teacher’s knowledge, skills and task anew, so that it survives this period?

 

My questions will be:

–       What is the Govean model of curriculum knowledge?

–       How is the relationship between knowledge and pedagogy shifting?

–       Is there an RE-led, values-led critique of knowledge curriculums?

–        Can RE shape a better knowledge?

 

All this needs to be explored in the context of the curriculum review, and the RE Council’s intention to conduct an independent RE review, which may involve creating a national RE document to sit alongside the new national curriculum, in the way that the 2004 Framework did, and its successors. Such a document, and its use, will have a profound influence on your work as trainers.

 

What is the Govean model of the curriculum knowledge?

 

Let us begin with a premise that the curriculum is always political, and also that curriculum design is a political issue, because it influences pedagogy and, therefore, the progress of pupils, in invisible ways. Public pressure groups often exert influence to have their cause included in the content of the curriculum, be it an aspect of child safety, an approach to language teaching, an outdoor experience or a particular skill or value, or in our case, a particular religion or belief. Curriculum writers can only agree at the cost of having very lengthy documents, considered too prescriptive. This is sometimes called the ‘Christmas tree effect’. On the other hand, reducing content to a bare minimum incurs the disappointment of many pressure groups and may lead to their cause disappearing from some or most schools.

 

The proposed programmes of study for the primary curriculum (DfE 2012) are indicators of the direction of travel, and they fall foul of both traps. They are based firmly on the known views of Messrs Gove and Gibb, with their knowledge-based approach to the curriculum. Michael Gove has endorsed the idea of a curriculum based on facts. (BBC, 2011). Justified as a desire to be less prescriptive, his apparent preference is for a curriculum that simply lists the knowledge to be taught: ‘I just think there should be facts’. (BBC, op cit) In the interview, Gove used the word ‘facts’ four times, and the words ‘understanding’ and ‘skills’ not at all. In the USA, the Hirsch-inspired core knowledge programme constructs a curriculum from the same basic building blocks (Hirsch 2012). The definition of learning as knowledge, and furthermore knowledge of the past, is reinforced by Nick Gibb: ‘I believe very strongly that education is about the transfer of knowledge from one generation to the next. Knowledge is the basic building block for a successful life.’ (Gibb, 2010).

 

Later in the speech, he does grudgingly use words such as concepts and understanding, and even skills, but they come a long way down.

 

The implication of this for training teachers is clear. All we need is teachers who know; the rest is craft, and can be picked up through observation and imitation.

 

The proposed primary programmes of study (DfE op cit) are by year for years 1 and 2, and by 2-year band for years 3-4 and 5-6 (formerly key stage 2). English: It is 24 pages long, with a further 25 pages of spelling lists. Let’s take a look at a random couple of expectations – in year 1 pupils should be taught to:

–       Respond speedily with the correct sound to graphemes for all 40 + phonemes, including, where applicable, alternative sounds for graphemes. (ibid)

(In passing, we note that this is synthetic or, as it is now called, systematic phonics: barking at print. It is a demand that phonics should be used, because it works in all cases.)

–       Add prefixes and suffixes, using the spelling rule for adding ‘s’ and ‘es’ as the plural marker for nouns and the third person singular for verbs. (ibid)

There is progression in years 2, 3-4 and 5-6:

–       Year 2: add suffixes to spell longer words, eg -ment, -ness, -ful and -less.

–       Year 3-4: Use further prefixes and suffixes and understand how to add them.

–       Use further prefixes and suffixes and understand the guidelines for adding them; spell some words with ‘silent’ letters, eg knight, psalm, solemn. (ibid)

 

The trouble with examples is that they become the norm. The trouble with prescriptive lists is that they inevitably leave something out.

 

The 25 page list of spelling and grammar points takes prescription to new lengths. At some points, it rhymes rather beautifully: now, how, cow, down, town; at other points it seems to have hidden wisdom: toy, boy, annoy, enjoy. Examples of prefixes include disappear, disappoint, disobey. And at some points the expectations seem unrealistic: eg for year 3-4, spelling immature, immortal, impossible, impatient, imperfect, irregular, irrelevant, and irresponsible – nearly some apophatic theology in there.

 

There is a lot of it, it’s not all facts, but it is all knowledge of a very particular and contestable kind, and it is based on a doctrine of sequentialism – the logical order in which facts occur, as Mr Gove calls it. It falls foul of the Christmas tree effect because it is overloaded. It is bound to have left something out, and very soon a language specialist will discover what has been omitted. It also lays bare the other subjects, where prescription will be minimal or non-existent, and effectively leaves them out in the cold. Returning to our taxi theme, we can say that this curriculum is a satnav curriculum: it tells you exactly what to do, but it can still get you lost.

 

Finally, the PoS’ definition of progress: ‘By the end of the key stage, pupils are expected to have the knowledge, skills and understanding of the matters taught in the programme of study.’ (ibid)

 

Mary Bousted, writing in the TES, commented that ‘the weight of subject content and its sequencing can only lead to teachers … transmitting information’ (Bousted 2012, p44). So teachers’ professional choices about teaching and learning strategies will be severely reduced. Bousted also predicts that a broad and balanced curriculum is endangered, and will become a ‘forlorn memory’ for all primary teachers (op cit p45).

 

How is the relationship between knowledge and pedagogy shifting?

 

Now if Mr Gove were here, he would strenuously claim that he wishes to leave methodology to teachers, and he wants government to get out of the way – a trope that plays very well, I might add, with some teachers and most parents.  His political programme applies an absolute distinction between curriculum and pedagogy:

 

‘[The country requires] a national curriculum that sets out broad goals to be reached by the age of 16. The curriculum would set out a framework of the core subjects and would include no further instruction as to what aspects of those subjects should be taught or how subjects should be taught…’ (Gove 2009).

 

How strange, then, to read that Year 1 English teachers ‘must ensure that pupils practice their reading with books that are consistent with their developing phonic knowledge and that do not require them to use other strategies to work out words.’ (DfE 2012). So teachers cannot let pupils read a book containing the word ‘said’, even if they come to school already able to read and to recognise that word.

 

It should be acknowledged that all curriculums are forms of selection, elevating certain kinds of knowledge and repressing others (Alexander 2010: p248), and that all forms of officially approved speech or literature are ideological (Post 1998: p6). In this sense, some form of organised control of educational processes is inescapable.

 

The trouble is, of course, that between curriculum and pedagogy there is an invisible, but strong connection, one utterly denied (in public) by current ministers. I wish to propose this educational doctrine: every curriculum design casts a pedagogical shadow. Designing a curriculum around pupil outcomes – as in 2008 and 2010 – encourages pedagogy and planning that thinks about ECM, coherence and meaning in learning. Many people are worried that designing a curriculum around knowledge alone will tend to produce ‘delivery’ teachers whose pedagogical default style is invariant content coverage. It takes a rare teacher to transform such a curriculum – which is really a syllabus – into learning experiences that absorb the learner and vivify the subject. This is as difficult as turning flat cola into sparkling champagne. It will be even harder if/when most teachers are trained into a ‘craft’ in one school.

 

There is also a class factor. Content-led teaching favours teachers and learners in privileged environments, where less skill and effort are required to interest and motivate learners. Correspondingly, in more challenging schools a flat, content-led design will either create more planning challenges for teachers, or become a deficit that is passed on to the learners, whose progress suffers as a result. In RE, it has long been known that a content-led approach simply induces boredom, apathy or hostility; distressingly however, many local RE syllabuses, and therefore many lessons and units repeat this pattern (Ofsted 2010: p29). And we have to acknowledge that we in RE have a knowledge problem, and a vulnerability in standards, that is becoming evident in inspection results (Ofsted, 2010) and in emerging perceptions about GCSE short course. Somehow, we need to address the knowledge challenge without falling into the factual trap.

 

Alternative designs have offered aims-led, concept-led, competence-led or experience-led models of curriculum planning, which leave decisions on detailed content, beyond what is illustrated, to schools operating in their local communities. Key concepts can be understood as major, archetypal ideas that exist in each subject and can be linked to several different forms of content.

 

Is there an RE-led, values-led critique of knowledge curriculums? The monkey in the museum: the tyranny of facts and opinions

 

By Mr Gove’s way of thinking, learning is reduced to knowledge, and knowledge to facts. There are no forms of knowledge that are not facts: anything that cannot be a fact must be a ‘mere’ opinion, relegated to a less important field. As an assumption, this creates epistemological conditions inimical to critical learning. In Pierre Bourdieu’s phrase, ‘the very structure of the field in which the discourse is produced and circulates’ (Bourdieu, 1991: p137) makes some discourses possible and others illegitimate, and this is a form of censorship.

 

Jerome Bruner, reflecting on this problem in the context of his doctrine of learning as a personal act of meaning, argues that reflection leads individuals to new concepts of the self, and that this is the most prized knowledge: personhood authored by the learner (Bruner, 1990: pp99-140). Bruner warns against the failure to make the attempt at this self-authoring. To fail to invest in the conceptual self is to reduce teaching to mere information-giving, which ‘cannot deal with anything beyond the well-defined and arbitrary’ (Bruner, op cit p5) and – by implication, in RE terms – is highly unfitted for dealing with ambiguity, layered meanings, metaphors and complexity. A pedagogy that restricts itself to information-giving is ‘a monkey in the British Museum, beating out the problem by a bone-crushing algorithm or taking a flyer on a risky heuristic.’ (Ibid). This brilliantly Simian image is a nice statement of the problem. Here we can imagine ministers as monkeys let loose in the museum of the curriculum, alternately thumping themselves and others with a fact, then leaping into the air on a wild opinion. That behaviour, the reduction of all questions of human existence to matters of measurement alternating with ill-informed, undisciplined personal interpretation, characterises the lives of those individuals who have not dared to go beyond knowledge.

 

Can we imagine what a curriculum for RE would look like if it were composed of facts? Can we construct a pedagogy based on the communication of religious facts, and would such a pedagogy have integrity? Statements of ‘fact’, iterations and reiterations of ‘knowledge’ can become timelessly self-evident, self-replicating and unquestionable, turning them into truths (Derrida, 1974). If we were to apply this to teaching, for example, about the resurrection as a ‘fact’ for Christians, or nirvana as a ‘fact’ for Buddhists, we could see the problem developing. The problem is further compounded by Mr Gove’s sequentialist assumption that a curriculum should arrange facts in order – ‘a logical sequence by which facts accumulate’ (BBC, ibid). Would the sequence in RE be shaped by a young learner’s growing ability to hold and wield ideas, or – more likely – by the supposed internal order of the discipline? For example, would RE first cover the Old Testament, then the New? Would it take the Gospels before Acts, Hinduism before Buddhism? In doing so, it would already have set the epistemological locks on learners’ minds, pre-determining the way the subject is gradually constructed in their understanding.

 

Any religion or ideology that divides the world of ideas starkly into truth and falsehood – as, for example, most fundamentalisms do – has set an epistemological lock on information about itself, and has thereby controlled discourses about itself and its opponents, in ways which are anti-educational. Discourses proposing that either Jesus was the son of God or he was a fraud, that either Muhammad is the seal of the prophets or there is nothing but relativism and polytheism, are all too prevalent in religious communities, and they create dispositions towards particular kinds of teaching. The discourses are designed to drive hearers ineluctably to set conclusions, and even if treated by a teacher who takes care to attempt objectivity, these discourses skew the discussion and exploration. They create, in the minds of some learners, a binary distinction between knowability and unknowability, between fact and opinion – a distinction which need not exist, and which subverts a critical education. In using two attainment targets and two outcomes at GCSE, RE is already distressingly close to this binary distinction; we certainly cannot tread any further on that road.

 

The teaching of this kind of ‘knowledge’ in RE would be particularly baneful because it would create advantages for those who want their own religious truths to be taught as facts, for those who want a continuation of the flawed phenomenological project of claimed objectivity and for those who wish to minimise young people’s experience of debate and critical thought for political reasons.

 

The teaching of RE as facts necessarily precludes the possibility of debate. As a result it also, necessarily, curtails the possibility of learners’ participation and autonomy within their own learning. This would be an impoverishment of educational possibility, offering no place to articulacy and empowerment. Whilst posing as a form of academic rigour, facts are a denial of the capacities upon which academic rigour is founded, and therefore a denial of the idea of rigour itself – as well as being a denial of democratic education.

 

As in any totalitarian system, the learner confronted with ‘facts’ is permitted only two possible responses: quiescence or revolt. Quiescence leads to success in school and career terms: it creates rewarding relationships with authority figures, nurtures a strong sense of institutional belonging. Quiescence also embeds, reinforces and rewards habits of valuing security above truth, duty above integrity, suppression of any disposition towards curiosity and enquiry, criticality, debate or controversy – or at least, it places unspoken but clearly sensed limits on such habits. Quiescent states of mind are ideal for preserving both religious authority structures and the liberal project to avoid difficult questions about diversity and truth.

 

Facts are a way of embedding certainty. They are a pedagogical fundamentalism, paralleling religious or ideological fundamentalisms in the sense that they create a closed system that cannot be questioned and create reaction. Within the closed system are facts that are truths: outside are opinions that are relative. Both facts and opinions would escape critical scrutiny, the first because they are privileged and treated as uncontestable, and the second because they are considered unimportant. This would lead to a form of RE potentially far worse for learners than at present, though easier to teach, but very clearly lacking in integrity in academic terms, and impoverishing learning.

 

Can RE shape a better knowledge?

 

Is there a way out of this for our subject, that doesn’t involve simply turning our backs on this curriculum review and saying that we won’t play? Pondering this, I turned to Paulo Freire, because of his interest in freedom and literacy. Freire knew full well the oppressive capitalist nature of pre-defined knowledge – banking education; he knew that ‘knowing is not eating facts’ (Shor and Freire 1987: 48); he staked out a definition of literacy both more rigorous and more far-reaching than Mr Gove’s: ‘I say that reading is not just to walk on the words, and it is not flying over the words either. Reading is re-writing what we are reading. Reading it to discover the connection between the text and the context of the text, and also how to connect the text/context with my context, the context of the reader.‘ (Op Cit, pp10-11). He contrasted this liberative, rigorous reading with the reading of texts 100 years ago in ways that give us no knowledge of our own time. And his liberating alternative was a rigour based on depth. He proposed ‘… a radical reduction in the transfer-of-information … in favour of a prolonged scrutiny of materials drawn as problematic texts on social life.’ (Op cit, p88). Is there, in his proposal, the germ of an idea for a better knowledge-based curriculum design, that could actually work for RE? Taking his idea of prolonged scrutiny of problematic texts, is it possible to say that the Bhagavad Gita is a problematic text on the question of destiny, and that it constitutes knowledge in that sense? Or the Psalms, a problematic text on anguish, tenderness and fragile joy? Or – because this is Freire – for ‘text’ read ‘context’, that St Paul’s at the time of the Occupy encampment, and the narrative of its reaction to the moral crisis presented to it, is a problematic text going to the heart of Christianity?

 

So can we say that in RE, knowledge is …

–       Profound, prolonged scrutiny of texts in context, and of our context?

–       Disciplined exploration of questions, and the ways in which they exercise influence?

 

So encounters of depth, with texts or questions, can be styled as knowledge in RE; those huge wells of insight that lie below simple phrases – such as the Talmud’s ‘who saves a single life, saves the world entire’.

 

Conclusion

 

Politically, it is vital that RE stays together, and that we find a path through the mess of this curriculum review, shaping the way knowledge happens, and the way trainee teachers gain it. The path is thin, and the dangers are on either side: to one side, the risk of business as usual, leading to increased isolation and irrelevance – not paying attention to the perception that we have a knowledge and standards problem. To the other, the risk of complete capitulation to Mr Gove’s philistine and reductive model of knowledge. We have to find the transcending, third position between those two, and I believe that we will: we can draw on ancient and new resources to find out how our own discipline defines knowledge, and truth, in a unique way. Here, Howard Gardner’s recent work on Truth, Beauty and Goodness in a postmodern context is going to be useful and encouraging (Gardner 2011: 35). All I can do now is to offer a few tentative conclusions:

–       The Govean claim to knowledge and rigour is flimsy, reductive and easily challenged.

–       We in RE need to pay attention to knowledge, and the relationship between knowledge and pedagogy. In candidates for training, perhaps we need to worry less about the theology they know, and more about the theology they can do.

–       We need to recognise that doing so is a political and ideological project.

–       And so we should commit ourselves to shaping knowledge, defining it, and charting progress, in ways that are politically liberating – an epistemology of and for the poor. To paraphrase the Talmud, ‘Who saves a single insight, saves the curriculum entire.’

 

I also want to add that Culham St Gabriel’s, as a newly formed trust, will put its shoulder to the wheel of this effort. We are willing to think and work with others in the RE community. We intend to continue our work in CPD, focusing on M level access and supporting primary TAs. Our redevelopment of REonline will support teacher knowledge as well as learning. We also recognise the need to address primary ITE needs in RE. We do this as partners, in the context of this difficult time for RE, and in the hope that this makes some contribution.

 

 

 


 

Notes

This point was made in the AULRE/Culham summit for ITE providers in RE, in King’s College London, in March 2012.

 

References

 

Alexander, R. ed., Primary Children, Their World, Their Education: Final report and recommendations of the Cambridge Primary Review, Abingdon: Routledge, 2010, p248.

BBC (2011), Interview with Michael Gove, Radio 4 Today Programme, London: BBC, 20 January 2011.

Bourdieu, P. (1991) Censorship and the Imposition of Form, in John B. Thompson (ed.) Language and Symbolic Power, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard Press, 1991:137.

Bousted, M. (2012) ‘Teachers, prepare to be straitjacketed’, in Times Educational Supplement, 6 July 2012, pp44-45.

Bruner, J. (1990) Acts of Meaning: The Jerusalem-Harvard Lectures. Cambridge, Ma: Harvard University Press, 1990, pp99-140.

Derrida, J. Of Grammatology, Baltimore, MD: John Hopkins University Press, 1974.

Gardner, H. (2011) Truth, Beauty and Goodness Reframed: Education for Virtues in the 21st Century. New York: Basic Books.

Gibb, N, Speech to Reform, 2010.

Gove, M. (2009) Speech in House of Commons Education Debate. London: Parliament.

Hirsch, E.D. (2012), Core Knowledge, www.coreknowledge.org

Ofsted, Transforming Religious Education, London: Ofsted, 2010.

Post, R. (1998) ‘Censorship and Silencing’ in Robert C. Prost (ed.) Censorship and Silencing: practices of cultural regulation, Los Angeles: The Getty Research Institute for the History of Art and the Humanities,1998: 6.

Shor, I. And Freire, P. (1987) A Pedagogy for Liberation. Westport, Cn.: Bergin and Garvey.

 

Dr Mark Chater

Summer 2012

I think I’m changing my mind about changing the name of RE. Nietzsche said that changing your mind was a healthy thing to do and I like Nietzsche, so I’ll say that I’m happy with this shift. Although that wouldn’t be quite true.

 

When I wrote in the autumn, I said that the subject would eventually be called something else.  My feeling was based on several things. Mainly to do with twenty years of seeing young people struggle with the superficial sense of the word ‘religion’.  The way people use language is always shifting and ‘religion’ has accumulated connotations of dippiness and weakness (let’s blame Freud) that young people find hard to shake off. So the argument goes that ‘religion’ is just packaging; call it something more contemporary and cool and you’ll be away. And of course many schools have.  Keep an eye on the jobs in the TES and you will see a whole selection. I’ve changed the name myself in more than one school, although only once did I actually get rid of the word ‘religious’.

 

Additionally, as we all know, philosophy and ethics have been the great growth areas, and arguably the areas that have ‘saved’ the subject.  Let me direct this to those of you who were teaching in the 1990s; be honest – you know that you all changed your GCSE short courses to Philosophy and Ethics and you know that the kids loved it.  It’s a seller and that cannot be denied.  Much of what underscores the subject focus of Philosophy and Ethics is an engagement with secular ideas. The great thing about Hume and Kant is that theist and atheist alike are comfortable discussing their theories. It’s a common ground.  It’s not pure atheism that people want (or the dry logic of British 20th century philosophy) but an inclusive interaction, where students can feel free to wander in and out of concepts.  It is in this context that ‘spirituality’ resonates so much better. I hear people talk in a discriminating manner. They try to distinguish ‘real religion’ from ‘institutional religion’ but it’s a hard thing to do.  Christianity has been institutionalised for so long that taking the political power out of the word ‘religion’ is ultimately just not possible.  The past disdain for RE has not been about the substance of the subject, but about fear of indoctrination and the teenage suspicion of authority. Mark Chater, in his spell-binding article says : ‘Does the name of our subject help ordinary parents to understand …? I suspect not, and I think the time will soon come when we need a debate about the brand name.’

 

Religions are made up of lots of individuals, all of whom have a variety of perspectives.  The boundaries of religions are not clear but osmose with the times. Young people have a hunger for that unclear boundary which is spirituality, where there is a big open space for lots of mixing. As Lat Blaylock said in his video ‘Who owns RE ?’ ( http://re-handbook.org.uk/section/intro  21:30 in) we cannot ignore the students whose preference is for spirituality over religion. If Mitt Romney gains the American Presidency, it will be a small seismic tremor for the Western world. To have as its leader a member of a group that claims Christian heritage, that most would say is not Christian and some would say (and 20 years ago everyone would have said) is a cult, brings society face to face with the fragility of the concept ‘religion’. So the argument for ditching ‘RE’ is that we should embrace this social change we see about us, put on the postmodern t-shirt and change the name. At least that’s what I thought until I did some reflecting.

 

It seems the big guns in RE all like ‘Religious Education’. I read something to that effect by Ian Jamison a while back and I’m sure I was at an INSET where Lat  expressed the same views too. You might argue that ‘they would say that, because they are the RE establishment and have to uphold the status quo’, but there is more. I read Terence Cooley’s RE Online article from 2007 and listened to Durgamata reflect on the same issue on the TES Forum recently (http://community.tes.co.uk/forums/t/454418.aspx?PageIndex=11#6746045 ). They make some good points.

 

It’s not that I’m convinced by the argument that by ditching the word ‘religious’, the subject suddenly becomes social studies. It is not a black and white choice. However, here is something precious about the word and once you get rid of it, you’re very unlikely to get it back.  Religion is our bread and butter, at least at Key Stage 3, and I’m sure it will stay that way.

 

I’m ready for a change of name, but I don’t think the country is quite ready, I don’t think the government is (Cameron’s recent speech on the importance of religious values seemed to be sympathetic to RE but I think he wants a quite old-fashioned version – ‘Divinity’ perhaps – see http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/religion/8962894/David-Cameron-the-Church-must-shape-our-values.html ) and I also expect there are sympathetic voices out there saying that RE needs to concentrate on survival, dealing with the EBacc, Academies, allocation of PGCE places etc. and not be distracted by faffing about with public relations and how it is perceived. If there is a national fight, then a consistent recognisable name will give us focus.

 

Nevertheless, many schools have already changed the name and this process will continue. When I was young I was impatient for change and when change did not come, I despaired. But as I get older I see that things did actually change in the way I had hoped, only it took a lot longer than I thought. Some changes need time to ferment and clarify.  Some social currents are slow but deep-running.  One day RE should change its name, but… as Juba uttered to the spirit of Maximus ‘but not yet,… not yet’ (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCKJmJNNrbM&feature=related 8:40 in).

 

Andrew Strachan (Head of RE at Torquay Girls’ Grammar School)

Spring 2012

There’s a pop culture motif that has been running strong for decades, and has enjoyed a certain amount of modern resurgence in the field of video games and schlock horror movies – the zombie. From the classic, slow moving, Romero zombies to the terrifying ‘rage’ victims of infection films like 28 Days Later, there is a huge range of beings clustered under the single title of ‘zombie’. While the real-life instances of voodoo zombies may be worth exploring, what I am really interested in here is our culture’s adaptation of this myth in the form of a flesh eating, mindless predator. For me, the zombie is an excellent source of questions about humanity, making it a fantastic way to approach these questions in the RE classroom. There is a wealth of film and literature on the zombie, so I have included a list of my favourites at the end of the article. A word of warning, however – the majority of zombie films are rated 15/18 due the gore native to the genre, so these resources are best used with older classes and only in small, carefully chosen clips. Once you have engaged with them, how do you use zombies to teach RE? Here are three questions sparked by the zombie myth, but they are not exhaustive – a little creativity and critical thinking on one or two of the media sources will provide many more.

 

What is it to be human?

 

I think this is the most pertinent question for RE, as it can be narrowed down to encompass ideas of the soul, senses, experience and dualism. It arises when one begins to consider the fundamental differences between zombies and humans  – the change in appetite, the loss of real conscious behaviour, the lack of reason or cognition – and at which point we draw the dividing line. This is ideal for class discussion, with possible starting questions including:

 

●      Which change causes a human to become a zombie?

●      Is a zombie a kind of animal?

●      Does one single change cause a zombie, or must it be a whole range?

●      Is there a spectrum from human to zombie?

●      What do we have that makes us human?

 

Obviously, these can be adapted to suit varying abilities and ages, as well as the different topics that these questions originate from.

 

Euthanasia Dilemmas

 

A very common trope in zombie fiction is a dilemma faced by characters – if a loved one is bitten, should they be killed immediately to prevent them turning into a zombie? A twist on this is seeing someone after they have been turned – is it right to kill them? A lot of fun could be had in the classroom using role plays to demonstrate the dilemma and its resolution, with hot-seating of the characters so that they can explain their decisions. The reactions can then be compared with a more prosaic situation, perhaps that of turning off a life support machine, and a discussion had about active and passive euthanasia.

 

Teamwork

 

This may sound like a particularly flippant idea to consider in zombie media, but it is actually a rather important one. It is almost always the belligerent characters going off alone that get mauled, and there is usually a cheesy ‘teamwork’ project that helps to save the group of survivors (a wonderful example is in the comedy Shaun of the Dead when the survivors have to cross town). The surviving group is also frequently made up of a wide range of characters, most of whom are complete strangers to one another. Students could be asked to draw up a list of people who they would want with them during a zombie attack, with explanations of inclusions, or they could be given a list of famous people and choose who they would sacrifice for the survival of the rest. Not only does this help to highlight the qualities required for good teamwork, but it also serves as a platform for discussing other ethical dilemmas and reasoned morality.

 

Initially, using the pop culture zombie may seem like a silly way to approach some very serious questions, but I think that the legend has existed for such a long time precisely because it makes us ask them. It has a wonderful combination of history, philosophy and gore-appeal that makes it a magnet for some very mature queries indeed, even if they may appear wrapped in the ridiculous “But Miss, what if…” questions so beloved of teenagers. Embrace this, have a little fun with the myth, and it may produce some surprisingly grown-up results.

 

Below-18-rated zombie sources (to be used selectively in order to avoid inappropriate gore!)

 

Films

Shaun of the Dead [15] (some suitably gore-free scenes for younger years)

The Crazies [15]

Resident Evil [15]

 

TV

The Walking Dead

Supernatural (S02E04 “Children Shouldn’t Play With Dead Things”)

 

Books

World War Z (for older readers)

Xtreme Monsters: Zombies

Goosebumps: Zombie School

 

Games

Atom Zombie Smasher (PC/Linux/Mac – free demo)

Kids vs Zombies (iPhone)

Plants vs Zombies (everything)

 

Celia Warrick

Spring 2012

Tackling full or short course GCSE in one lesson per week, whilst also doing justice to the themes and skills afforded by thought-provoking RS, can be a real challenge for RS teachers.  The tendency towards rote learning and teaching simply for the exam can sometimes seem unavoidable. However, the use of ‘risky’ strategies can improve results through active engagement with the material. The following strategies can help to improve the skills and techniques needed for GCSE RS:

 

Learning key words

 

Active engagement with key words can be gained through creating ‘top trumps’ cards for key words (the categories on them could include potential themes and questions to which the word could be used or linked). Laminated key word cards can provide a basis for revision or learning games including snap (requiring students to justify the link between words) or Pictionary/ Charades which would allow students to test each other’s knowledge through group work. Guessing a key word through role-play, acting or mime can also be a useful and engaging means of revision.

 

Philosophy for Children can also be used for creating a ‘philosophical enquiry’ from a particular picture, poem or piece of music, allowing students to link the source to key words or themes and explore these through interactive debate.

 

Developing empathy and considering impact

 

Within many exam boards, students must examine the effects of a particular feature of religion on believers of a particular faith. This could be demonstrated in the form of a diary (perhaps of the experience at a place or worship or pilgrimage) or radio interview where students can elucidate a point of view from another’s perspective (perhaps regarding religious dress or a relevant issue in the news which may prompt debate). Interrogation of newspapers for issues in which key themes or teachings are borne out make for an interesting elaboration of those themes, recent examples of which could include the anti-capitalist demonstrations at St. Paul’s or any Human Rights topics from Amnesty. Reuters has its own ‘Faith World’ section (http://blogs.reuters.com/faithworld/), which provides the most up-to-date news stories, most of which would be relevant to key examination topics.

 

Students can also approach a certain ethical scenario, for example, an unwanted pregnancy, person on life-support machine or couple considering IVF, from different characters .e.g. an Imam, friend, parent or priest. As a class, students could then consider potential advice and guidance from different points of view.  This will help to illuminate teachings and bring them to life. Similarly, placing teachings in simple speech bubbles on the board without prompts or categories would encourage students to think freely about the ways in which believers might follow or interpret a teaching or concept differently.

 

Evaluating both sides of the argument

 

Instead of spoon-feeding students with reasons they can place into the discussion questions, students can draw around their two hands and physically write the reasons ‘on one hand’ and ‘on the other hand’ to evaluate a statement. Alternatively, creating class ‘hands’ where the entire group can generate reasons ‘for’ and ‘against’ can be an equally engaging strategy to use in evaluation questions. Creating an ‘opinion line’ in the classroom where students must justify their opinion can also help to give reasons for points of view. This may be enhanced by presenting students with various sources e.g. pictures or videos which might stimulate alternative viewpoints and by asking students to re-examine their points of view in the light of new information.

 

Perceiving diversity within and between religions

 

Students achieving an A* will need to know that not all members of a religious faith believe or act in the same way. Diversity can be demonstrated through the use of a table, pie chart or diagram, the most interesting of which has been a family tree or species diagram (used in science for showing different characteristics of animals). The branches in the diagram can represent different branches of religion and breaks or separations in the diagram show differences whereas links show similarities. Lastly, you might also set up a question-and-answer session between two religious believers or indeed ask the religious believers in the class how they differ to beliefs shown in a textbook/video.  If a visitor or conference call can be set up, this can be another useful way of discussing diversity within and between traditions.

 

Frances Lane

Spring 2012

Whenever I have been berated by a student for failing to teach “English religion” I’ve responded by asking just what is an English religion? The response has always been “Christianity”, allowing me to point out smugly that Christianity is no more English than Islam or Buddhism. That a Middle Eastern religion has become so well established in an alien land that natives truly believe it is indigenous should be no surprise. The Christianisation of the British Isles was a long and complex process through which native deities and Christian saints became fused, holy places merged and a synthesis of beliefs developed, doubtless some of the strongest threads in this seamless weaving together of traditions were acceptance of new ideas at the level of popular belief.

 

The Anglicisation of Christianity involved the creation of an English Christian identity based on an array of myths and legends about such diverse subjects as Glastonbury, Joseph of Arimathea and Saint George, who looked and acted curiously like the British god Llugh. These were accepted and endured because they filled a need in society.  The idea that Jesus accompanied his Joseph (possibly his great uncle) to England needed neither Biblical authority nor historical evidence.  Cornish miners sang “Jesus was a Tinner” not because it was the doctrine of the Church but because the idea that Jesus had shared their miserable, dangerous job was a way to make it bearable.

 

A more recent example of this process is the emergence of Nation of Islam in the USA. It is unlikely that, armed with the data from focus groups indicating that Americans of African heritage were the most likely converts, some ulama somewhere in the Middle East decided to launch a missionary campaign based on bow ties and the idea that God was Black. Rather, the Black Muslim ideology appealed to the spiritual needs of African Americans because it chimed with the political and social upheaval in 1960s USA.  That it wasn’t Islam as it was practiced elsewhere didn’t matter.

 

The point which I wish to underline is that historically religions have spread often mainly because some aspect of them has appealed to a societal or communal need.  It does not have to be an orthodox aspect, indeed, it would seem that half understood or vague notions of the new tradition are most easily ingested and may form a bridgehead for a second wave of more orthodox understanding, as the Pagan influenced Celtic Church discovered at the Synod of Whitby. However, this process leads to the gradual development of distinct versions of a tradition rooted in local culture and addressing local needs.  The Internet, along with other media, undermine this process; had Malcolm Little had access to the Internet he might have been spared his epiphany at Mekkah or he might never have embraced Islam at all.

 

The Internet presents an almost limitless source of information about religion and a spiritual seeker can avail themselves of a plethora of religious views, beliefs and arguments at the click of a mouse. The accuracy of some of this information is perhaps debatable and, arguably, the most attractive web sites will be the most popular, but response to both content and presentation will be dependent upon individual subjectivity. Whilst evidence suggests that personal contacts and networks are still the most common ways for individuals to change their religious allegiances, the Internet allows the creation of virtual religious communities or allows the migrant to retain links with a community they have physically left behind. No longer is the seeker bound by communal and geographical restrictions but they are freed to reshape their individual consciousness. At a time of religious pluralism, mass migration and globalisation, the Internet runs counter to the slow process of the welding together of culture and religion based on incomplete understanding of dogma and the pragmatic needs of the community. Religious individualisation has made belief a personal choice, an option which can be accepted, rejected or remodelled with disregard to communal values.

 

It seems possible that the Internet’s impact on the spread of religions will increase the individualisation of religousity at the expense of communal and cultural cohesion.  What is certain is that religious education and informed religious literacy will be more important than ever before in the age of the World Wide Web.

 

Lil Osborne

Spring 2012

The use of visualisations in RE is not a new concept and was brought to the fore in the 1990s by Mary Stone’s Don’t Just Do Something, Sit There and Hammond et al’s New Methods in RE Teaching. Although the techniques continue to be used in some primary schools, there is far more potential for their use than is currently employed. Visualisations can be used as a form of relaxation, spiritual development and story-telling within RE. The latter is used for developing understanding about religious stories and engaging with the AT2 aspect of ‘learning from religion and beliefs.’ This can be taken a step further when examining visualisations in the context of neuro-linguistic programming (NLP).

 

“As part of its approach to learning, Neuro-linguistic Programming relates words, thoughts and behaviours to purposes and goals. It is rooted in the practices of everyday life, on a number of levels, including the spiritual.” (Craft,2001:126)

 

It can be difficult to understand the physical and emotional aspects of belonging to any group that you have not had personal experience of. In terms of Religious Education, we are constantly asking children to reflect on feelings, experiences and concepts, for example: worship, commitment and religious truth. Using visualisations in partnership with chosen NLP techniques highlights these physical and emotional aspects to enable children to have an ‘imagined’ personal experience which enhances their learning and understanding.

 

The key to an effective visualisation is the ability to guide the children in using their imagination to place themselves in the story. They need to use their senses to explore their surroundings and interact with any characters they may meet. The visualisation should be written in the present tense and should allow children to express their reactions and experiences as a follow up. Preparation for a visualisation is just as important as the follow up work. You may choose to have children on chairs in a circle or on a carpet area but try to create a special space so that children associate this space with this type of activity. Make sure you have time to do a ‘stilling’ activity where children learn to be still and relax their body and mind with breathing exercises for example. Ensure the atmosphere is quiet and respectful and you won’t be disturbed, you could even put a note on your classroom door.

 

Some ideas for visualisation topics

Key events in a religion’s history:

Hinduism – The colourful stories of Gods and Goddesses

Christianity – The birth of Jesus

 

Observing worship:

Judaism – Shabbat in a synagogue

Islam – Prayers in a mosque

Sikhism – Observing the reading of the Guru Granth Sahib

 

Being part of a celebration or festival:

Hinduism – Holi

Christianity – Good Friday and Easter Sunday

 

Visiting a place of worship:

Islam – Exploring a mosque

Buddhism – Exploring a Buddhist temple

 

Spending time with a family:

Judaism – Pesach

Buddhism – Worship at a family shrine

 

Following the visualisation, don’t move straight into an activity, give the children time and space and allow them a short period of quiet time to reflect on their experience before asking them to share one thought with someone next to them. Depending on the topic, you might ask them to think about the most exciting part, how they felt or what they saw at a particular point in the visualisation. Make sure that you have these questions prepared beforehand and that there is no pressure for children to share with the whole class. At this point, children can then return to their tables for the main follow up activity. This can be anything you feel is suitable that will allow them to explore their experience and respond to it. Give the activity a focus through a question, e.g

– Role play the conversation that Joseph had with the innkeeper

– Write a poem about what you saw at the Holi celebrations

– Paint or draw the Pesach meal that you shared with the Jewish family

– Small group discussion about what you saw and how it felt at the mosque.

The RE community feels itself to be hanging on a cliff-edge.  Will we fall into oblivion as the new educational changes sweep us aside, or will our voice be heard and sense prevail so that the subject can continue to promote the Good Society?  I wonder whether, either way, this is the wrong model to be imagining.  Lurking behind this way of thinking is the fear that things could get along fine without us.

Perhaps we should think in a more positive and assured way. For all our letters to MPs (and yes, I spoke to mine at the weekend), supporting the REC’s review of RE, lobbying Headteachers and trying hard to be at the forefront of exciting teaching and learning, maybe we should be acting out of a certain spirit of detachment, sure that the right principles will prevail. If out of desperation to avoid extinction, we manage some successes in the short term (say, becoming part of the EBacc), and yet at bottom we have a subject that is of little value, the triumph will not last. On the other hand, if we are swimming in the middle of the current of the times, a bright future will be inevitable.

I attended a workshop at the Culham St. Gabriel’s National RE Conference in September by Lat Blaylock on ‘Learning from Religion’ and it occurs to me that it would do RE teachers no harm if we did some of this ourselves. Instead of giving sociological and political reasons why RE is worth valuing (and so ending up with that kind of solution), what treasures from the world faiths can help us to adopt a helpful approach in these difficult times? What can RE teachers learn from religion?

All major religious traditions share the notion that happiness comes when we caste aside our aims and intentions for the greater good of the integrated whole. If we act out of selfish desires, no lasting good will come of it, but if we seek to do the will of the Almighty, then there can be no thought of failure.

In the Bhagavad-Gita, Arjuna is anxious at the start of battle and Krishna gives him support: ‘One who performs his duty without attachment, surrendering the results unto the Supreme Lord, is unaffected by sinful action, as the lotus is untouched by water’. Whether he wins or loses, he should remain unaffected by the outcome and by doing his duty to the best of his ability he will in any event be part of the right outcome.

This teaching of non-attachment is present in all the major faiths. Obviously in Buddhism it is a core discipline and other eastern traditions value the same perspective. Lao Tzu said : ‘The return to the Root is called Quietness; Quietness is called submission to Fate; What has submitted to Fate becomes part of the always-so’.

Western wisdom tells the same story. Seneca, the Stoic philosopher, wrote: ‘One can do nothing better than endure what cannot be cured and attend uncomplainingly the God at whose instance all things come about’. All three monotheistic faiths have the same tone. The great Muslim phrase “in sha’Allah” motivates the whole person to put the call and act of the Compassionate One before self. Job’s great moment at the end of his trials is to recognise that all is written in the Plan: ‘You have told me about great works that I cannot understand, about marvels which are beyond me, of which I know nothing’. And what of the Christian tradition, what gem could we use to give us strength? We are spoilt for choice, but how about St. Francis de Sales, who said : ‘We should ask nothing and refuse nothing, but leave ourselves in the arms of divine Providence without wasting time in any desire, except to will what God wills of us’.

So, whether we are theists or not, what we can learn from religion in the present trials for RE is that we should leave the outcome of our actions to the future, Fate or God’s hands. The government after all has taken no positive, active steps to get rid of RE and we float in this uncertainty, waiting to see where we will end up.  We need to focus on the floating and not the ending up. A positive attitude come what may. How lucky are we, that we are all day in a space where we can freely share the great spiritual and ethical traditions of the world? Each religion, in its own arena, is committed to its own language of truth. Even the Interfaith movement, admirable as it is, has an agenda which is to promote interfaith relations.  In the RE classroom, we have no agenda beyond honesty and truth and so can create that liberating balance of openness to ideas and attention to the wisdom of these great traditions, a process that is practised in so few places in our society.  Maybe only in the RE classroom. For some of the students who go through our rooms it will be the only time in their lives that they have space to consider the great questions.

We should not act as if we are resentful younger brothers, desperate for the attention that our older siblings get (History and Geography), since there is a danger that if we gain the attention for the wrong reasons, we could misuse the time and opportunity. Rather, we should act out of delight and privilege that we can do this RE thing. We should feel conviction that our destiny is in good hands, whatever facts and statistics are splashed in the media.  The principle of non-attachment found in all the major religions teaches us that everything will come out in the wash in the end and that nothing we do is a waste, however grim it may seem to us at the time.

Autumn 2012

What does philosophy for children aim to do, and how can this be used with theology to enrich RE learning?

The area of philosophy and theology for children has fascinated me since early in my PGCE. I have always felt that the role of the RE teacher is to encourage deeper thinking and discussion, necessarily involving concepts that reach beyond the scope of some other subjects. How far this could be possible was, however, a complete mystery to me – I had no way of knowing how much I could expect from my own peers who had never studied theology, much less a room full of eleven year olds who had probably never even heard the word before – so upon hearing about ‘P4C’ and other proponents of the area, I was immediately interested. What I was keen to find out through the course of the investigation for this paper is threefold – What do P4C and other scholars say about the movement’s aims? Are there any limitations and how do they affect application? And, most importantly, how can it enrich RE learning? Using the sources discussed throughout, as well as my own observations, I hope to answer these questions and, in the process, gain something that can help to further my teaching and provide a better learning experience for our pupils.

Two key terms common throughout this study will be ‘P4C’ and ‘CoPI’. These, though related, are distinct and separate terms often used when discussing the formal teaching of philosophy to pupils. P4C is the name commonly used for the Philosophy For Children movement founded by Matthew Lipman in the 1960’s which developed the CoPI ideal.  A CoPI is a ‘community of philosophical inquiry’ – another name for the group of students and the situation in which philosophical ideas are being discussed. It is not just about the group, but about the environment of the session and the content of it.

What is philosophy for young people?

There are two main contributors to the philosophy in classrooms movement – Matthew Lipman and Catherine McCall. Both approach the idea in similar ways through use of a CoPI, but where Lipman is considered to be a founder of the theoretical system, McCall provides thoroughly comprehensive material and evidence for its practical implementation in schools.

When Matthew Lipman first founded the ‘P4C’ way of thinking, he did it because at the time (1960s) he felt that young people “lacked the necessary skills to construct sound arguments to fight for what they thought was right” (Hannam & Echeverria, 2009: 5). This is the primary aim of the children’s philosophy movement – to equip children and young adults with the skills and experience that will help them to put forward a sound argument. Lipman’s idea to combat this was to develop a CoPI which is basically a space for a group of young people to share ideas which aids in practicing and developing critical thinking by exploring a question at a very deep level (Hannam & Echeverria, 2009: 6,7). The idea of CoPI is very similar to my own experiences of philosophy as an undergraduate – most students’ formative ideas about the nature of philosophy and theology are created and espoused within a seminar-type structure, where they have almost free reign to develop ideas throughout an extended conversation guided by a lecturer or seminar leader.

Catherine McCall’s use of CoPI develops these rather mature concepts to lead a similar kind of discussion with children as young as five. Given a topic and some leading questions, the children are invited to share their growing ideas, and these discussions are given shape (and a semblance of order) by the teacher who ‘chairs’ the meeting. While one aim is to equip children with these skills, McCall also writes that “to be proficient in any activity or skill, one needs to be exposed to the activity and to practise it”(McCall, 2009: 1-2). Philosophy does not stop after the first lesson, but extends itself and continues to provide students with not just the bare skills, but with proficiency in them. This is the difference between teaching a child to ride a bike so they can wobble a few metres, and teaching them continuously until they can go unaided for miles. This is such a profound part of the P4C idea that it acts almost as a separate aim in itself. The eventual end-point of this continued teaching of philosophy is, for McCall at least, to ‘transform’ the participants and to go beyond just teaching skills into the realm where the children themselves are changed (McCall, 2009: 175). This is not just for the good of the students themselves, but can produce individuals who directly benefit society as “to be an active and effective citizen requires both the disposition to reason and the skills required for effective reasoning” (McCall, 2009: 177) – a goal shared by Hannam and Echeverria who write that CoPI can help students to “understand better who they are in the world in relation to others and can begin to handle the stresses of living in a globalized world [by]… taking responsibility for its well-being” (Hannam & Echeverria, 2009). These are goals for CoPI that are logical but lofty.

Resources for Philosophy – how can it be implemented?

When considering the area of children’s philosophy, the first book to discuss here is Catherine McCall’s 2009 book, Transforming Thinking, especially useful in this instance because of its focus on practice as well as theory. From the very beginning, McCall sets out to show the reader that philosophical thinking and problem-solving is something that even a child of five can do, sometimes even better than a university student. Starting to explain this, McCall first explores the Piagetian theories of the development of children’s cognitive capabilities – mainly, that children are not capable of logical, abstract thought until the age of 11 – and soon comes to the conclusion that these are not necessarily correct, and that while there may be empirical evidence to support Piaget, McCall contests that this is not down to the limited capabilities of children, but the fact that they have never been taught to work this way. This concept will be explored in much more detail in the main body of this investigation, but it will do for now to mention that McCall’s work with children and philosophy has found that they can transcend the set stages of Piaget’s theories. By accusing Piaget of under-estimating the abilities of young children to think logically, McCall can then move on from these pre-existing constraints to put forward her theories and examples of child-friendly philosophy.

As mentioned before, McCall does not only deal with theory, but also guides the reader as to how one should put into practice the method of CoPI with children. In Chapter 7 she includes lists of topics that the teacher ‘chairing’ the discussion should know, as well as guidelines in Chapter 8 for how to direct the conversation to illuminate and expand upon basic points raised by the pupils. Alongside this, there are transcripts of real conversations in these CoPI sessions that McCall herself has carried out – a valuable resource for teachers starting to use these techniques and evidence of her assertions that children can be taught to think logically and abstractly from a very young age. These are real lessons, with real students, and even detail times when behaviour management was required, demonstrating to the novice CoPI chair that it’s nothing to be concerned about if the pupils don’t listen and conform straight away.

The theories that McCall champions are, however, not entirely new. As mentioned, the Philosophy for Children movement (or P4C) was first conceptualised in the sixties, and has now expanded to be fairly common in both secondary and primary schools. As a result of a P4C workshop in the early eighties, the International Council for Philosophical Inquiry was formed, an organisation for which McCall is on the advisory committee (P4C 2008-10; McCall, 2009). This relatively long-standing history behind McCall’s work locates it within a comprehensive and well-researched school of education methodology that has proven itself to be effective and worth pursuing. P4C claim three certain effects from their methods, and while increased cognitive ability is certainly a reason to use it, the other two are rather more directly pertinent to RE: “Developments in critical reasoning skills and dialogue in the classroom” and “Emotional and social developments” (P4C 2008-10). The latter developmental claim would, in the best case, enable students to connect with more mature levels of discussion about sensitive issues, whether it be ethical tangles or simply respecting and encouraging the sharing of others’ beliefs. The other claim would, one hopes, increase a student’s ability to grapple with complex ideas such as arguments for and against the existence of God, and being more able to articulate these ideas in the classroom and on paper. These are vastly important skills for deeper learning and understanding in RE, and one would hope that the application of P4C would help to develop them.

McCall isn’t the only P4C devotee writing practical and theoretical guides to classroom philosophy – Hannam and Echeverria’s Philosophy With Teenagers, published last year, is another book that aims to show how easy and fulfilling it is to incorporate CoPI into the classroom. While Transforming Thinking outlines scenarios and gives examples to aid the teacher in implementing CoPI, Philosophy With Teenagers is far more theory driven, concentrating on the aims and concepts with only a few pages on the structure of a session. The same ideas are present here – the goals of Hannam and Echeverria’s CoPI are to develop teenagers, including various ideas of identity (ideological, interpersonal and others) and higher order thinking. This is very similar to McCall, but what really sets Hannam and Echeverria apart is their focus on curriculum reform, set apart from dedicated CoPI sessions. Five chapters include ideas on how the curriculum needs CoPI ideals, how these can be implemented in various subjects and how this will lead to a generation of more well-rounded young people who can “develop hypothetical reasoning and envisage consequences of their actions without the need to engage in practical experimentation” (Hannam & Echeverria, 2009: 72). Philosophy With Teenagers finds opportunities for CoPI everywhere in the curriculum, even in unlikely subjects like D&T, trying to demonstrate the flexibility of philosophical enquiry. However, I feel that this seems to be stretching P4C rather too thinly, and by lauding it so copiously may even serve to damage it in a ‘too good to be true’ type of scenario.

While Hannam and Echeverria are writing on a well-established educational method, their book does not go uncriticised, and the criticisms levelled by Richard Davies in his 2009 paper for the British Educational Research Association annual conference may just as well apply to parts of McCall’s work, and maybe even the roots of the P4C movement itself. One problem (another will be discussed later) that Davies has is that, as he sees it, Hannam and Echeverria’s long-term ideals for CoPI require there to be a large number of students educated in this way. He feels that students leaving a school which advocated CoPI would quickly disperse throughout society, meaning that a “population of young people skilled in critical thinking in this way would find it difficult to meet up with like-minded individual in the course of their day-to-day living. This is one requirement for an educated public” (Davies, 2009: 3). This is one of a small number of legitimate arguments, although I would just add that Hannam and Echeverria’s ideals are just that – ideals. The generalised goals for their CoPI implementation work on the assumption of wide adoption precisely because, in their ideal educational world, that is exactly what would happen.

Nevertheless, Davies does touch on a concern – is there a point to CoPI and its aims if there are never enough people educated in this way?

Theology for Children – Further Resources

While it’s all very well examining the field of children’s philosophy in general, what is really important for us as RE practitioners is how it can be applied to our subject, and that means looking at the linked discipline of theology. The concepts are largely similar as far as implementation goes, although theology with children obviously requires careful selection of topics and questions. The following is a selection of the resources available to us, along with an explanation of how they approach theology and some critical analysis of the content that compares it with previously mentioned literature.

There are a number of resources available for this, and the ones I am specifically looking at here are from RE Today – a well-known and widely-used source for RE teachers. While RE Today is published by Christian Education Publications, their conception of RE is pluralistic, there is no hint of evangelising or proselytising within the resources, and there is a good amount of material on other faiths. One resource book, Philosophical RE (Blaylock, 2008), openly uses the principles of P4C in an RE context. This is mainly through the use of prompts for discussion, whether for groups or for individual students to think out for themselves. Blaylock draws links between P4C and RE by focussing on the presence of ‘big questions’ as part of religion, and of the need to equip students with the ability to keep asking ‘why’, and to explain deeper meanings in religion.

Following this, Questions: Beliefs and Teachings (Blaylock & Pett, 2009) also deals with the questions that religion throws up, but these differ from the ones in the previous book. Here, the questions are less centred around the meaning of life and the nature of goodness and instead focus on the individual, asking things like “what are my beliefs?” and “what impact do they have?”. While not named as an explicitly philosophical approach, this takes the nature of philosophical questioning and turns it back on the students, making them “responsible for the beliefs they hold” (Blaylock & Pett 2009: 23). It is this level of enquiry that philosophy aims to encourage throughout every aspect of education, and these resources certainly do that. As well as an interview included in the Questions resource books, Trevor Cooling has also written a great deal on the Stapleford Project and ‘concept cracking’. While these are not labelled as philosophy either, I believe that a definite case for inclusion can be made.

Cooling’s ‘concept cracking’ is the essence of CoPI distilled for RE. Breaking down complicated theological themes into topics that are open for discussion and connected to the students’ current experiences brings the discursive nature of philosophical theology into the RE classroom, using it to assist students in the exploration of religion at a potentially high level. In Questions: Beliefs and Teachings an interview with Cooling quotes him as saying “Students need to be responsible for the beliefs they hold, because they are so important in shaping their attitude and behaviour” (Blaylock & Pett, 2009: 23). While the previous assertion of perhaps too-structured an approach may be partially true – flexibility can be essential in the classroom – it still holds that concept cracking is a key element of encouraging responsibility. It allows students access to, and discussion of, more complicated ideas that in turn allow them to take more responsibility for their own convictions. If McCall wants to achieve a ‘transformation’ in students, she could do worse than implementing CoPI-based concept cracking in an RE setting.

Cooling notes that the Stapleford Project’s aim is to devote more attention to “exploring the theological concepts” that are the source of meaning and the absolute certainty that children are able to “handle abstract religious ideas,” (Cooling, 2000:153) both of which fit neatly within the overall aims for a philosophical approach. More than this, Cooling helps us to begin to link philosophy for students with theology for students, giving ideas on how to ‘crack’ the more complicated religious concepts to enable pupils to get to grips with areas of theology that aid overall understanding of a religion. His article in Pedagogies of Religious Education is more than the handbooks from McCall, Hannam and Echeverria – it advocates using and breaking down these concepts as an educational approach and pedagogy in itself. This goes far further than the others’ suggestions that philosophy is merely ‘useful’, and instead argues that it is an absolutely valid (and almost essential) method for engaging students with theological concepts and the deeper meanings of religion.

In this regard, Cooling is not the only advocate of a philosophically-linked theological approach – Gerhard Büttner’s article for the BJRE (2007), “How Theologizing With Children Can Work” also deals with the ‘big questions’ of philosophy, but seeks to locate them within a religious context, thereby dealing with complex theological issues outside of prescriptive dogma. Here, it is his turn to chronicle anecdotes from himself and his acquaintances that document the ability of small children to extend their thinking beyond the here-and-now, to deal with more fundamental questions of how things originate and where this might be located within religious narrative. Sharing some similarities with McCall’s text, conversations with children as young as 4 years old are presented to demonstrate the range of logic and reason that even this age-range is capable of. The difference here is that, whether directly or in-directly, these enquiries are all connected to ideas of God and religion, with examples such as a little girl wondering why Jesus is still on the church crucifix on Easter Sunday and a philosopher’s daughter pondering the nature of causality and infinity.

By extending the ideals of philosophical thinking into religious enquiry, Büttner provides a similar, but alternative, method of ‘doing theology’ to Cooling – both rely on relating the experiences and enquiries of children to the religious concept at hand, but the latter requires a structured, analytical approach, whereas Büttner is more concerned about opening up a child’s natural enquiry and then finding within it a theological approach. For me, both are equally valid and both may prove to be useful in different settings. In criticisms of the concept cracking method, Cooling mentions that the step-by-step nature of the approach may indeed be too rigid, and that perhaps it would be more useful to see it as an inspiration for teaching (Cooling, 2000:165). The reverse of this may also prove to be a criticism of Büttner – it may well be that there is not enough ‘method’ in his theories of children as natural theologians to provide a good result often enough. If a child needs prompting, it would probably be more suitable to use Cooling’s formulaic approach.

Theory in General Practice

There is a wealth of material that covers, advocates and begins to criticise philosophy in the classroom – this is just a snapshot, but it is a relevant one. From the history of P4C we can understand the roots of the methods that are espoused by the authors of the practical guides, and Cooling’s pedagogy enables us to apply these rigorously within our subject. The more openly philosophical approaches of Büttner and the RE Today materials also demonstrate the range of possibilities we have to tackle the implementation of questioning and discussion within RE whilst still keeping on track and providing a comprehensive and effective education. What is still up for discussion is how these work outside the edited and necessarily exaggerated realm of practice books, in the real classroom with children who may never have encountered this approach before.

While on my PGCE I had the opportunity to observe some year 7 ‘Thinking Skills’ lessons (the particular interpretation of P4C/CoPI used by my training school). During these sessions I was able to observe these aims in practice and see how they affect the youngest students in the secondary system. While there is no set programme of study, every lesson is designed to get the students thinking for themselves, getting to the root of our reasons for thoughts and actions. One striking lesson had the students engaged in a competition to build the highest tower from plastic cups, but with the actual winners being those who showed the greatest teamwork skills. This was thought-provoking for the students, some of whom came face-to-face with the nature of how they really behave in a group situation. Other lessons have included the nature of words and how we can understand the nature of words and their origins. While these are not strictly the things that a CoPI is necessarily designed for, the skills that the students are learning are the same – each lesson has an objective that requires the students to engage with concepts on a deeper level than just surface meaning or intention. These are the building blocks for philosophy, easily applicable to any subject or situation, and correlate well with Lipman’s ideals. More importantly, it has helped me to see that these really are reasonable aims – both the introduction and continued practice of skills are present and achievable. Use of these skills throughout various subjects would not only help to address the implementation of continued practice, but would also aid pupils in seeing the wide range of applications for deeper thinking. However, within this school only year 7 had any timetabled space for the sessions and I have yet to work at another school that includes it officially on any programme of study.

What limitations are there on philosophy with children?

Davies, in particular relation to Philosophy With Teenagers, is concerned that there is a lack of a clear and instructive linking between the mind-based ideals and the actions of teenagers who have been instructed in critical thinking (Davies, 2009). His issue is that the idea of theoretical knowledge informing practical wisdom is “simply not realistic” (Davies, 2009: 3).  However, I do not believe that this is an entirely valid limitation on CoPI, if it is valid at all. The way CoPI is used, at least in terms of the thinking skills I have observed, is not a case of teaching theoretical skills for practical application, but is a way of engaging students to think more deeply about abstract ideas to lead to better understanding of the world. This may be a more applied form of knowledge, but it is still lodged firmly in the theoretical and Davies point can no longer stand if there is no theory/practice gap to traverse.

There are other limitations that are of much more concern. McCall’s handbook for CoPI implementation starts with a transcribed conversation of what seems to be a deep and mature philosophical discussion amongst a group of people. It is then revealed that these are actually 5 year olds. This is all very much in line with the aims of P4C. However, McCall mentions in the notes appendix that the particular class of 5 year olds she was working with had needed CoPI sessions every day for a month before they could begin to follow the reasoning structure required for discussion. This is one of the main limitations of CoPI ideals – as mentioned briefly in the previous section, there are often time restrictions that prevent the inclusion of a dedicated CoPI lesson past the first one or two years of secondary school. There may be many good things to come out of continued CoPI applications, but lesson time is in short supply at most schools and it may be the case that there isn’t even spare time in any subject to include philosophical style thinking. In a lot of schools many lessons are missed due to the structure of the timetable and calendar, so in a lot of cases there is no time to do anything but teach concepts and exam technique even for those members of staff who hold thinking skills activities in high regard.

This problem highlights how even the noblest aims to include CoPI ideals can fall at the feet of logistics and day-to-day life. Because of this time issue, the limitations placed on McCall’s aims and achievements are rather large and, therefore, rather damaging to the practicality of CoPI inclusion in schools. The idea that philosophising with children can have such dramatically good effects upon them as members of society cannot be upheld because the likelihood is that most pupils who have the opportunity to even sample CoPI will not experience it often enough for these sociological benefits to come to fruition. While I am by no means suggesting that there is no civil benefit to CoPI, P4C or other philosophy movements, it strikes me that it is very improbable that the extent of McCall’s claims can ever be reached, purely because of time restrictions. However, it also strikes me that even if full potential is not reached (or perhaps not even approached), these lessons can still have some merit – it is not a skill set that is only valuable when completed.

Specialising in RE

RE is, by its very nature, the kind of subject that tackles the ‘deep’ questions that are perfect for a philosophical approach, whether by class discussion or exercises for the individual. More than this, philosophy itself is perfect for RE, as the subject lends itself to a questioning and philosophical approach. In a world where many international conflicts have a religious dimension we would not be serving our teenagers well if they did not leave school well informed about religious matters (Hannam & Echeverria, 2009: 110). This idea correlates perfectly with Lipman’s original desires – by providing young people with access to certain skills and the opportunity to practice them in a safe environment, we help them to argue for their beliefs and to stick up for themselves. In terms of RE specifically, religion is a trigger for debate almost everywhere. We can inform students of facts and details concerning major belief systems, and also give them the skills to discuss these respectfully, deeply and with genuine engagement. This leads not only to self-assurance and the ability to cohesively stick to their beliefs, but also helps them to understand the nature of someone else’s. What we must consider, however, is how possible this is and whether it adds a great deal to the learning of RE. After reading the sources cited in the literature review, I would say that the answer to these considerations is an unequivocal “absolutely,” for the following reasons: 

‘Theologizing’ with children

While resources and pedagogies go a long way to cementing the role of CoPI in RE, Büttner’s article demonstrates a critical piece of evidence. The ability of young children to grapple successfully with questions of God documented by Büttner is striking; it presents us with evidence that even pupils half a decade younger than secondary students have the ability to understand the enormity and physical impossibilities of religious concepts. While, as mentioned previously, he may not be methodical enough to be used as a teaching tool, Büttner demonstrates that there is almost an innate ability to deal with these ideals, and that we must just tease them out of students and get to the underlying core of what a seemingly non-theological conversation might actual hold. This cannot be done without discussion or without contemplation of conversation, making the need for application of CoPI in the area undeniable.

Applications in RE Practice

I have been heavily influenced by the whole idea of philosophy and theology in the RE classroom, and as such I have used it extensively in my first year as a ‘proper’ teacher. I would consider the role of discursive inquiry to be of the utmost importance when teaching a subject so socially-orientated, yet deeply personal, as RE. While there may not always be time and the topic may not always be appropriate, I include these principles in the majority of lessons, to aid my students to develop as critical thinkers who can engage deeply enough with concepts of religion to truly understand it and make confident decisions about their own spirituality. I have integrated some elements into our departmental schemes of work, by discussing the reality of miracles, the humanity of zombies and the links between religions. The response was brilliant – I was genuinely surprised by how thoughtful the students’ answers and, more importantly, the reasons behind their answers were. The experiences I have had with this approach have done much to persuade me of the validity of the CoPI, and have demonstrated to me that young secondary students are very much capable of high level thinking.

Specialist RE Resources

Simply put, CoPI themes are abundant in RE resources, to the point where there is even a resource book named Philosophical RE that is filled with questions, discussion points and methods to shape and connect lessons using personal experience. Unsurprisingly, Questions: Beliefs and Teachings is similarly packed with ideas for getting to the core of religious belief. These resources not only firmly establish the place of philosophical and theological discussion in the RE classroom, but also serve as a conviction that our students are more than capable of grappling with these methods and concepts in a mature and progressive way

Conclusion

For me, the final word on application and on the inclusion and effectiveness of philosophy and theology in RE lies with Davies. For him, theology “holds on to the power of ideals, of the need for action, of the canonical texts and opportunities to meet together, and yet in combination with philosophy recognises the need for corporate action beyond one’s comprehensive doctrine and action permissible within public space” (Davies, 2009: 5). If we acknowledge, as I believe we must, that the goals of RE teaching are at least generally concordant with the ideals of Lipman and other CoPI advocats, then Davies’ vision of theology is one we must aspire to include. I have heard students less than half my age giving theologically-based answers that I would have been pleased to put forward myself. By giving young people a chance to think deeply about questions of spirituality and faith, and including philosophical discussion, then we give them the opportunity to take responsibility for their faith, their identity and their ideas, and of their place in the world that they can have a part in influencing as confident and critically-minded individuals.

 

Reference list

Blaylock, L. (ed) (2008) Philosophical RE, Birmingham: Christian Education Publications

Blaylock, L. & Pett, S. (eds) (2009) Questions: Beliefs and Teachings, Birmingham: Christian Educations Publications

Büttner, G. (2007) ‘How Theologizing With Children Can Work’, British Journal of Religious Education, 29 (2), 127-139

Cooling, T. (2000) ‘The Stapleford Project: Theology as the Basis For Religious Education’ in M Grimmitt (ed) Pedagogies of Religious Education,  UK: McCrimmons

Davies, R. (2009) ‘What’s in a word: philosophy, theology and thinking? A critical review of Hannam and Echeverria (2009)’ presented to the British Educational Research Association annual conference, Manchester, 2nd-5th September

Hannam, P. & Echeverria, E. (2009), Philosophy with Teenagers: Nurturing a Moral Imagination for the 21st Century, London: Continuum

McCall, C. C. (2009) Transforming Thinking: Philosophical Inquiry in the Primary and Secondary Classroom, London: Routledge

P4C 2008-10, History of P4C, P4C, viewed November 4th 2010