All 6 Meds summarised in a flow chart for revision purposes. Colour coded - red pen sections are analysis of Descartes’ ideas. Blue and green pen sections are summaries of Descartes’ ideas.
Designed for the IB Philosophy Diploma but would also help A Level teachers of the OCR Religious Studies spec and the AQA Philosophy course.
A lesson to introduce Christianity at KS3. Especially useful if you have already taught Judaism. The lesson looks at Jewish prophecies regarding the Messiah and explores whether the details of Jesus’ life in the Gospels matches those prophecies.
Detective style task - put information sheets around the room, give students a handout to fill in and they can mingle around the classroom gathering evidence.
End the class with a discussion/debate regarding the findings. Next lesson can include a write-up of their overall opinion on whether Jesus really is the Messiah the Jews have been waiting for.
A KS3 lesson exploring the account of the Exodus story and the evidence both for and against accepting it as a historical record or not.
PPT included with ideas for how to make this into a Group Assessment Project. Worksheet included too for a classroom activity.
Complete scheme of work for the Knowledge of God topic on the OCR A Level spec for Religious Studies. Covers arguments for Natural Theology vs. Revealed Theology.
Comes with PPts and worksheets for classroom activities and discussion. The page references correlate to the two official textbook brands for the course.
Designed for KS3 students, to explore basic versions of the Arguments for God’s Existence, such as the Cosmological Arg, Design Arg, Fine-tuning Arg and the Hard Problem of Consciousness.
Youtube links included as hyperlinks. Fill in the gaps activities to help them with their book creator project on each question.
You will need clay, spaghetti and marshmallows as additional resources!
For KS3, two lessons worth of material to get students to consider how religions have benefitted the world and also caused some negative consequences. This leads on to discussing whether the world would be better with or without religion, why we study religions at all, and whether religions are beneficial only because of the what they do for us, rather than if they contain any Truth, etc.
Fill in the gaps activities, Learning Enhancement Sheet with sentence openers to help weaker students access the written task at the end. Also includes clips, debates, diamond 9 activity, round the room information gathering exercise leading up to an overall opinion piece at the end.
Stretch and Challenge Philosophy for KS3 with some differentiated tasks.
Introduction to Philosophy, pondering whether something can come from nothing. Also includes the counter argument from science looking at multiverse theory.
Lesson One of Four.
Worksheets, handouts and PPT all included to tackle Cosmological Argument.