I work as a Head of Philosophy, Religion and Ethics in one of the country's highest achieving state schools.
I am passionate about ensuring that my subject is engaging, relevant and academically rigorous.
I devote time imagining, creating, differentiating and tailoring my resources so that the students benefit from quality teaching materials and I hope that they are of real benefit to your own practice.
I work as a Head of Philosophy, Religion and Ethics in one of the country's highest achieving state schools.
I am passionate about ensuring that my subject is engaging, relevant and academically rigorous.
I devote time imagining, creating, differentiating and tailoring my resources so that the students benefit from quality teaching materials and I hope that they are of real benefit to your own practice.
Firstly, I’d like to say a HUGE thank you to the more than 1000 of you who have downloaded this display pack! I hope your classrooms look gorgeous!
This is a complete 200+ page pack of a number of classroom displays that I have developed over the last couple of years to invigorate my department. Two updated booster packs have already been added.
Original Display Pack:
- Philosophers and Religious Figures Timeline (Over 40 thinkers with pictures, dates and outlines of their thinking).
- Famous quote callouts to add along the timeline (one for almost every philosopher). Get students talking!
- Custom-made colourful lettering for timeline eras.
- Over 20 ethical and philosophical questions in colourful speech bubbles to inspire thinkers in your classroom (A great one for open-evenings or tutor time discussions!)
- Steps/Levels display with optional number arrows. Department levels policy documents included.
- ‘How to’ guides for all displays.
Booster Pack 1:
- Philosophical Language Literacy Display with sentence starters for knowledge/explanation and assessment/evaluation.
- Agree --> Disagree continuum signposts to make human bar charts in your classroom!
- Blooms thinking guidance for teachers with question prompts. Great for shrinking and sticking on desks or displaying at the back of the room.
Booster Pack 2:
- A raft of additional thinkers to give greater flexibility to the Philosopher Timeline across exam boards.
- Quotes for every new thinker of course!
I’ve also added another high-quality display pack covering Logical Fallacies and Cognitive Biases. Find it here: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/logical-fallacies-and-cognitive-biases-display-pack-philosophy-psychology-11925635
The Sala Dei Nove is a series of Frescos in the Council Chambers of Sienna. They are entitled 'Allegory of Good Government', 'Allegory of Bad Government', 'The effect of Good Government' and 'The effect of Bad Government'.
The example appears in the AQA RS textbook and this task is designed to help students identity key features of the frescos.
This resource includes three high resolution images of the frescos and a number of small cards to place onto the pictures as annotation.
I include an annotated version as an answer sheet or hand-out.
Print the frescos onto A3 and provide these to each group. Give a set of the cards (printed A4) and ask the students to place the cards onto the pictures. In doing so, students should come to an understanding of the utility of the frescos to the Council of Nine and the people of Sienna.
All images shared freely by Wikipedia as faithful reproductions of images in the public domain.
This is a game I created and use with Y9 as part of a SOW that addresses the question of 'What is real?'
This game features in a lesson on the Matrix and we explore whether or not students think it's always best to know the truth. The link to the film is made through the choice of the red and blue pill.
I devised the game in order to help students find reasons and give justifications for deciding to either stay in the Matrix, or leave and discover the truth.
It's necessary to print the game board as A3 and the cards as A4.
A tailored reading for information sheet with an accompanying analysis triad.
Students are tasked with creating their own religious festival subsequently.
The empathy person task is a way of showing understanding of concepts/ideas or events by forcing students to categorise their thinking.
I've used this task to accompany video material often. Such as the key events like Passover ('Prince of Egypt' works well for this) or ritual events like weddings/funerals. I've used it when teaching prejudice and discrimination, wealth and charity, the list goes on.
KS3 RE Assessment.
Three or four lesson assessment task. I use this as the culmination of a Year 8 SOW on the holocaust entitled 'Faith and Suffering'.
The lesson could be adapted for use in History SOWs.
Lesson one:
You require the PPT slideshow, the memorial stations (preferably printed onto A3 and laminated) and the ideas board.
I encourage students to write on the stations sheets using board pens so they can be rubbed off and re-used.
The ideas board can be set as a homework.
Lesson Two (possibly with an additional lesson):
Students working in pairs to complete the A3 proposal blueprint for their own memorial design.
Lesson Three:
Students to write a letter to the local council to ask permission to erect their memorial. This is individual work to be levelled alongside the pair work.
Lesson intended for use with AQA Religion, War and Peace unit.
It details different types of pacifism and scriptural sources from the Gospel narratives. A card-sort encourages students to analyse the scriptural sources.
Students will learn key scripture in support of pacifism.
Furthermore, students are asked to compare contrasting accounts in the Bible and evaluate whether or not Jesus was a absolute pacifist and if not, what he really thought about violence.