Religious Education
Shining Together, We Reach for the Stars.
Our Christian Values: Respect, Motivation, Cooperation, Kindness, Pride, Perseverance
These Values are seen as curriculum drivers and learning behaviours to succeed and 'Shine Together, whilst we 'Reach for the Stars'. They were chosen by our church school community, with our church school community and their needs in mind. Our values are rooted in the teachings of Jesus Christ and we use our learning from the Biblical texts to inspire us in our learning, providing us with Hope (with a mind to Jesus as the light of the world) and aspiration.
The importance of RE in Primary Education
The DfE, 2010 (Religious Education in English Schools) clearly establishes that religion and beliefs inform our values and are reflected in what we say and how we behave, explaining that:
RE is an important subject in itself, developing an individual’s knowledge and understanding of the religions and beliefs which form part of contemporary society. Religious education provokes challenging questions about the ultimate meaning and purpose of life, beliefs about God, the self and the nature of reality, issues of right and wrong, and what it means to be human. It can develop pupils’ knowledge and understanding of Christianity, of other principal religions, other religious traditions and worldviews that offer answers to questions such as these. RE also contributes to pupils’ personal development and well-being and to community cohesion by promoting mutual respect and tolerance in a diverse society. RE can also make important contributions to other parts of the school curriculum such as citizenship, personal, social, health and economic education (PSHE education), the humanities, education for sustainable development and others. It offers opportunities for personal reflection and spiritual development, deepening the understanding of the significance of religion in the lives of others – individually, communally and cross-culturally.
As a Church of England school we endorse and reflect this in our practice on a daily basis, through Collective Worship, RE lessons and as a thread across the curriculum, e.g. you will often see RE content being linked to English comprehension or extended writing.
We plan and teach using the Gloucestershire Agreed Syllabus for RE, available at: https://www.gloucester.anglican.org/education/primary-religious-education/. They set out that the principal aim of religious education is to explore what people believe and what difference this makes to how they live, so that pupils can gain the knowledge, understanding and skills needed to handle questions raised by religion and belief, reflecting on their own ideas and ways of living.
This is captured well in this representation, which shows the connections Gloucestershire Schools forge to create the links between self, others and world.
Alongside this, we have been trained to use the Understanding Christianity Resources, to celebrate and support our identity as a Church of England school. The Understanding Christianity Project (available at: http://www.understandingchristianity.org.uk/) offers a comprehensive approach to teaching and learning, including:
- a theological and conceptual basis, taking seriously Christian accounts of the ‘big story’ of salvation and the relationship of the reader/pupil to these texts
- a clear outline of core knowledge ‘building blocks’ in relation to Christianity, to enable teachers to see what pupils should know, understand and be able to do
- support for teachers who have little or no theological training, through straightforward essential background information for the teacher about Christian concepts, theology and practice;
- a teaching and learning approach to enable pupils to move from an understanding of the biblical text and how to handle it, to an understanding of what this means for Christians within the Church and in Christian living, including opportunities for pupils to examine and evaluate connections between these ideas and the wider world
- flexible opportunities for assessment: these use both knowledge building blocks (suitable for ‘mastery’ models of assessment) and end of phase/key stage outcomes (which incorporate knowledge and the skills with which to handle, integrate and apply this knowledge). These allow pupils to make progress from surface learning to deeper learning at all ages.
As a part of our whole school cohesion in the curriculum we adopt an enquiry focus each term, e.g. being theologians, historians, geographers, artists, musicians, linguists... We believe that this creates better connectivity between the subjects, making learning more relevant to the children, so that they are inspired to 'reach for the stars' as a school team and personally.
To support children to know more and remember more, we have 'build as you learn' Knowledge Organisers. The children complete these as they complete learning and acquire knowledge. These can then be used as a tool to reactivate knowledge, as well as providing a simplified 'one page' spread to support memory and retention (keeping the emphasis on the most important knowledge to retain).
Our RE Policy explains further our approach to the teaching of RE across the school.