The Faith & Belief forum works towards a connected and supportive society where people of different faiths, beliefs and cultures have strong, productive and lasting relations. We are delighted to provide a suite of lesson plans with accompanying films, presentations and worksheets for KS3. Distilling 20 years of The Faith & Belief Forum's knowledge of equipping learners with tools for safe and meaningful dialogue.
The Faith & Belief forum works towards a connected and supportive society where people of different faiths, beliefs and cultures have strong, productive and lasting relations. We are delighted to provide a suite of lesson plans with accompanying films, presentations and worksheets for KS3. Distilling 20 years of The Faith & Belief Forum's knowledge of equipping learners with tools for safe and meaningful dialogue.
This lesson explores a key tool to use when having difficult conversations,
or when something has been said that has caused upset or offence.
The ‘Oops & Ouch’ tool comes in use during difficult moments, making
space for learning opportunities.
This lesson helps your students practice more key skills involved in
strengthening the level of respect in a dialogue.
‘Oops’ teaches empathy, sensitivity, responsibility and self-reflection,
while ‘Ouch’ requires honesty and calls for an awareness of an
imbalance of respect
In the last few lessons, we have looked at different aspects of our identities
and explored differences and similarities among each other.
In this lesson the students will use their writing skills to celebrate the many
aspects of their identity. We will focus on our name and other aspects of
our identity as a basis to write stories or poems.
The writing aspect of this lesson lesson is best suited to KS2 classes.
In the last lesson students explored the concept of identity and explored
what the word itself means. They learnt about where people might get
their identities from and how they are formed. This lesson will begin to explore the idea that identity has more layers to it. Students will learn that there are parts of our identity that are visible to others and parts that are invisible, either because we don’t choose to share them or as simple as they can’t be seen by others. This is where assumptions are often made of people, often based on what we can see by looking at others. It is only by getting to know ourselves well that we can also begin to understand and want to learn more about others.
Through the metaphor of a backpack, which the film highlights, this lesson
will explore visible and invisible identity.
This lesson is about introducing the concept of identity
and exploring what makes up our identity.
To explore and understand the concept of identity
To learn and understand the different things that make up other peoples identities
To reflect on the different things that make up their own identity
In this lesson, students will learn that having discussions are tools for
preventing and resolving conflict. They will identify similarities and differences
between each other, recognising themselves in others to help build empathy
This lesson builds on the previous key principle of Safe Space;
‘active listening’, with the students. This time we explore how
body language is an important way to show that we are listening
and understanding someone else.
In this lesson will introduce the concept of ‘generalisations’ with your
students, and encourage more helpful ways in which we can express
our opinions and describe aspects of our identify using I statements.
This lesson aims to explore one of the key principles of Safe Space, that to
truly understand someone else we need to ‘actively’ listen to them. Active
listening refers to making an effort to fully understand what someone else is
saying and reflect before saying a response. There are lots of ways students
can learn to show they are doing this and to recognise how we listen is
important in having a meaningful conversation with others
The aim of this lesson is to introduce and explore the concept of ‘respectful
relationships’. We show that respect means being considerate of the wishes,
feelings and needs of another person and that mutual respect is fundamental
to building healthy friendships and relationships.
We ask the class to think about, discuss and model positive interactions
on how respect can be given in relationships including:
• Friendship and family relationships, enjoying time together / trust
• Respect for others in need
• Self-respect
• Respecting those in authority
We aim to help you explain to pupils that in school and in wider society
it is important to show respect and feel respected by others. We believe
that the best way to develop mutual respect, is to help students explore the
similarities between us, even with people who we believe are very different
from us.
This lesson is about introducing the students to creating a ‘Safe Space’
where they will explore the importance of creating shared group principles
so that everyone feels comfortable to share their thoughts, beliefs and feelings .
We are delighted to announce we have secured funding to provide two free programmes in the London and Birmingham regions!
SCHOOL LINKING
Our School Linking Programme helps students improve their communication and interfaith skills (critical thinking, empathy, dialogue).
It supports schools RE, SMSC and British Values provision by fostering an understanding and respect for difference amongst students.
We offer teachers 2 FREE CPD days, training them to run 3 link days across the academic year with a school from another area/faith/belief/culture.
REGISTER NOW
WORKSHOPS: Encountering Faiths & Beliefs
Our Encountering Faiths & Beliefs workshops bring real-life experiences of faith, belief and identity into the classroom via a panel of trained speakers that students can engage with in an interfaith Q&A.
REGISTER NOW
Diversity exists within and across groups – both individuals and groups are complex, therefore issues are too. This lesson looks at what happens when we oversimplify issues and our responses to them.
All the factors we have explored so far (issues evoke strong emotions, are often surrounded by misinformation, can expose fundamental differences, etc.) can make it challenging to approach controversial issues with an open mind and with a sense that we are free to change our minds. This can polarize us into ‘camps’ which are hard to deviate from if they are tied up in our identity / notion of loyalty. This means that our own arguments can have weak spots, while we blindly overlook anything of use in a seemingly opposing perspective.
Skill: Flexibility – how can we resist the idea of ‘camps’ surrounding a certain issue and open up space for fluidity and complexity?
This fifth lesson in the Controversial Issues package, sees students exploring the scenario of discussing an issue with someone from a completely different background.
Our own identities, beliefs and backgrounds shape our views and
outlooks; these can be vastly different, and this can make reaching
common ground feel impossible.
Skill: Acceptance, including difference. The aim here is to truly internalise the
mantra ‘It’s ok to disagree’ and move towards being open to learning
something from people we can’t necessarily agree with.
This lesson will be looking at the strong emotions that controversial issues can evoke in us and other people, and all the ways in which these can serve to shut conversation down or make it difficult to engage. Through the topic of being called out for racism, we’ll be looking at developing emotional literacy to help us acknowledge and address what we and others are feeling and ensure that we don’t lose an opportunity to share ideas and learn.
Having thought about how hard it can be to approach controversial issues, this lesson looks at the challenge of navigating the differing narratives around a certain issue. It explores how critical thinking can be employed to spot biases and harmful agendas in the sources of information we expose ourselves to, as well as to be mindful of our own agendas / influences when seeking out and consuming information.
Skill: Critical thinking
Spotting our own biases and thinking critically about the media
or information we consume; holding assumptions lightly and
emphasising nuance.
This Lesson 2 uses an LGBT+ topic of your choice (either trans women
being excluded from women-only spaces, OR being both an LGBT+
person and a person of faith) to explore the following aspect of
controversial issue engagement:
To begin with, some issues we shy away from entirely because they
are difficult for a number of reasons. We can be unsure of our place
to comment, feel like we don’t know enough OR that an issue is
too personal, and be unsure how to participate and afraid of the
consequences of engagement. This can mean that less meaningful
research or discussion around a topic takes place or that conversations
get shut down entirely, further clouding it in controversy.
Skill: Having the confidence in oneself and one’s position to engage in
discussion around a particular controversial issue; knowing what steps
one can take to bring about this feeling of confidence.
This introductory lesson uses discussion to explore what some of the factors are which make issues controversial. This lesson serves as a launching pad for exploration of the skills that prove useful when faced with some of these characteristics of controversial issues.
In the last few lessons we have looked at different aspects of our identities and explored differences and similarities among each other. We have also looked at what happens when we meet new people and we reflected on the challenges that might emerge when bringing diverse groups of people together. In this lesson you’ll use your writing skills as a vehicle to celebrate the many aspects of your identity. We will focus on our name and other aspects of our identity as a basis to write poems/prose about our identity,
We are a charity and this nominal fee for this resource is a donation and will help support our education work. However we want as many teachers to use our resources and are aware schools are under financial pressure so please contact us info@faithbeliefforum.org.
This lesson we’ll be looking at difficulties when different people come together. We’ll also be looking at spaces. Are there conversations or places in which certain aspects of our identities aren’t welcome? Are we responsible for any spaces which dictate which aspects of other people’s identity are welcome and which aren’t? How can we move towards inclusivity – what does it look like and how can we use all the skills learnt so far to ensure it’s being achieved as much as possible, on a continual basis?
In the last lesson we explored Similarities and Difference, examining our own identity and the aspects associated with our identity that are most important to us. We began to challenge stereotypes by listening to other’s stories in the class and finding similarities and differences with each other.
What happens then, when we meet new people? How can we bear all of this in mind and make sure we make full use of the opportunity to learn from them? How can we avoid being hindered by our preconceptions and assumptions? Moreover, how can we articulate who we are to them? How can we encapsulate this complexity and offer an impression of ourselves without relying on, or reducing, our various identities to, stereotypes? How can we sensibly
and sensitively navigate the differences we find? And how can we seek out and manage to celebrate commonalities? How can we learn from one another?