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RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving teachers confidence in subject knowledge Examining RE’s work in SMSCD and

Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

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Page 1: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Better REThe Manchester Hub

2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative

ways to set high standards in pupils’ learningGiving teachers confidence in subject knowledge

Examining RE’s work in SMSCD and values education, including ‘British Values’

Page 2: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Danny: 6“My open mind picture has a road going in to take every new idea. He has shut his eyes to think harder.”Teachers of RE need to be able to: Understand the contributions RE

can make to actively promoting British values and to SMSCD.

Be able to use numerous high quality learning approaches with pupils, promoting spiritual and moral development.

This can help you think through: Your practice in relation to

handling questions about racism, prejudice and extremism.

Issues to do with RE leadership and management in relation to SMSCD and Values education.

Page 3: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Tolerance

Mutual respect

The rule of law

Individual liberty

Democracy

Good RE has always explored these values –

without coercion, enabling pupils to develop

their own ideas with integrity

Page 4: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 5: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Can you create a Union Flag for all your pupils?Get every pupil to contribute both a blue and a red to the mosaic. On the blue, they write something unique to themselves: what makes me a special human being? On the red card they write something that makes them proud of Britain, or which links us all together in Britain. Avoiding repetition is good, but doesn’t matter too much. They should each contribute two thoughts. The cards are folded, so that they can be opened and read when arranged onto the flag and stuck down. A good team work activity might be for a small group of senior students to put the image together. How should it be publicised beyond the school? What happens next matters: pick up on Lauren’s ideas about P4C, further discussion, links with Citizenship and more. Make it RE with the next slide.

Page 6: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

i) A man once asked the Prophet Muhammad what was the best thing is Islam, and he replied, “It is to feed the

hungry and to give the greeting of peace both to those you know and to those you do

not know.” Islam: Hadith of Bukhari

ii) Love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul and all your strength. Love your neighbour as you love yourself.

Judaism and Christianity: Deuteronomy 6:5 and Leviticus 19:18

iii) Whenever you see someone else hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in

prison and you look after them, you look after me, said Jesus.

Christianity: Matthew 25:31-46

iv) Let your aims be commonand your hearts united,

and all of you be of one mind,so you may live well together.

Hinduism: Rig Veda 10.191.4

v) The only possible basis for a sound morality is mutual tolerance and respect: tolerance of one another’s customs and

opinions; respect for one another’s rights and feelings; awareness of one another’s

needs.Non-religious: A J Ayer, The Humanist Outlook

vi) There is no greater penance than patience, no greater happiness than

contentment, no greater evil than greed, no greater virtue than mercy, and no more

potent weapon than forgiveness.Sikhism: Guru Amardas

Page 7: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Extend the learning into an older age group. Thomas Paine, the great philosopher of the French and American revolutions, says ‘My country is the world and my religion is to do good.’ Can students make a 360 piece collage of global values and their own contributions? Does the world need a universal religion? Can our contemporary religions offer the world more peace?

Page 8: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 9: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Team churchTeam A: Here’s the church... Build a cardboard box church. Provide the children with a huge

box, and tell them it is going to be turned into a church. Talk a lot before this starts!

Team B: Here’s the steeple... A Tower and a bell This team are also going to do some big scale box modelling. Get them to

look at some pictures of a church tower or spire, and tell them their challenge is to make

one

Team C: Lego furnitureTalk to this team about the things they find

inside church. There might need to be an altar for the sacrament, and a font to welcome new babies, some images and statues of saints or of

the Blessed Virgin Mary

Team D: Making Windows from stories of Jesus Give the team members an outline on paper of a blank church window, and tell them that we are making some windows for our class’s team

built church. Ask what pictures

Team E: Open the door and here’s all the people Tell this team that their challenge is to

create the congregation for the church.

Team F: All around the churchAsk this team to decide how the whole model

church can be put into a churchyard or garden.

Page 10: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Here you can see an acetate stained glass window, a stickle brick crucifix, two candles, an altar, font and organ. What will it look like if you move the camera up a bit?

Page 11: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

The stained glass window was done with sharpie pens. It works better to do the windows on plain paper, then photocopy them onto acetate. Imagine what you see when you turn around and look down the church.

Page 12: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

“Open the doors and here’s all the people”

What will it look like if you move the camera back to see the whole church?

Page 13: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

The tower building team did a fine job. Can children write about their work, using, for example, labels, lists and captions?

Page 14: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Julie got her pupils to make a plan of the church and draw some of the things they had learned about in their plan. Some pupils wrote about the drawings as well.

Page 15: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

I put a candle because Jesus is the light of the

world

I put the cross because I saw

Jesus or God on the cross

It’s good thinking and creative energy that makes this team task into good RE

Page 16: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Get each team to share its work with the others. • Tell children that the Bible compares the church to a body,

where the hands do one thing and the feet another, the tummy matters and so does the tongue.

• Tell the children that their teamwork is like the church itself, in one way. Christians believe God is pleased when we all co-operate, when we all do our bit.

• Ask the children to make up some prayers or meditations, and to practice a song for the ‘opening’ of the church, and have a little ceremony.

• Can some of your writers make a poster inviting people to come?

• Ask children to take and use photos of the teams working to show how the church is built. Link community and activity together as a way to learn what it means to belong to the church.

Page 17: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Hallsville School in Newham used similar ideas with the Reception class, creating a church in their classroom for children to play inside.

What do you think the inside looks like?

Page 18: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Lots of work for the TA here, but lots of experiential and fun learning for the 4-5 year olds.

What if you adapted the ideas for older pupils?

Page 19: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Team Church for 7-11s

Older pupils might try…• Designing and making two faith community

buildings, from different religions, and considering similarities and differences. They could invite the 4-6 year olds to come and see their work

• Developing ideas for a ‘shared sacred space – e.g. a chapel for an airport, hospital or shopping centre: how could this be made to wrok for Christians, Jews, Muslims and Hindus? What about non-religious people?

Page 20: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 21: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 22: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Al Fatihah – the first surah of the Qur’an“In the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most

Merciful. Praise be to Allah, the Cherisher and Sustainer of

the worlds; Most Gracious, Most Merciful; Ruler of the Day of Judgment. You we worship, and Your aid we seek, Show us the straight way, The way of those to whom You have given Your

grace, those whose portion is not wrath, and who go not astray.”

Page 23: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Muslims believe Allah – God – has 99 names. Ahmed Moustapha, a Muslim artist, painted the names like this. It’s called “The Attributes of Divine Perfection’. It is made up of 99 geometric shapes, each written with one of the ‘beautiful names of Allah’So without drawing God – which Muslims never do – it is a painting of what Muslims believe about God: That Allah / God is merciful, lord of the world, ruler of the day of judgement, sustainer, and 95 other things.

Page 24: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 25: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

The Kaaba at Makkah: empty of any image or statue since the time of the Prophet Muhammad [PBUH] But still full of the invisible presence of Allah.The centre of Islamic faith on earth: a billion face the Kaaba in prayer daily.

Page 26: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

www.natre.org.uk Check out Spirited Arts Copyright

Page 27: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 28: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 29: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 30: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

www.natre.org.uk Check out Spirited Arts Copyright

Page 31: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

www.natre.org.uk Check out Spirited Arts Copyright

Lord of the

world

Ruler of Judgement

day

Healer Merciful

Evolver

Page 32: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

www.natre.org.uk Check out Spirited Arts Copyright

Page 33: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

“I have worked with the concept that “we are created in the Image of God” and that the 99 names or attributes of God are reflected within us. So when the viewer looks at the “99 names” s/he sees the Self reflected in the mirror, and is reminded of the 99 attributes within one’s own self.”

Yasmin Kathrada:

Page 34: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

www.natre.org.uk Check out Spirited Arts Copyright

Page 35: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 36: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Muslim artist Ahmed Mater uses iron filings and a magnet block to create the swirling effect of this work of art.

Page 37: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 38: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

If the Kaaba in Makkah is a symbol for the presence of Allah on earth, it is good that it is empty. No image or statue is

allowed. But in the emptyness, Allah is there. Allah is everywhere. ‘If you walk towards Allah, then Allah runs

towards you.” (Hadith of the Prophet Muhammad, PBUH)

Page 39: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 40: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 41: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 42: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving
Page 43: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Take the A3 sheet...• With a partner, discuss the

similarities and differences between the works of art

• Write into the bubbles on your page things that are similar about each pair.

• What is unique about each one?• What do all three have in common?• Think. Give reasons. Discuss.

Page 44: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Is it Ahmed Moustapha, or Yasmin

Kathrada, or Ahmed Mater, who taught you best about the Muslim understanding of God /

Allah?www.natre.org.uk Check out Spirited Arts

Copyright

Page 45: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Islamic art and the understanding of Allah

• RE teachers know that the Islamic rules for representing Allah are to be taken seriously.

• No image of Allah could ever capture the reality of God ~ so make no images.

• This activity and work enables the use of some brilliant Islamic art in exploring the concept of God in Islam

• It’s ideal and adaptable for thoughtful work for 9-11s

www.natre.org.uk Check out Spirited Arts Copyright

Page 46: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Al Fatihah – the first surah of the Qur’an

“In the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful. Praise be to Allah, the Cherisher and Sustainer of the

worlds; Most Gracious, Most Merciful; Master of the Day of Judgment. You do we worship, and Your aid we seek, Show us the straight way, The way of those on whom You have bestowed Your

Grace, those whose (portion) is not wrath, and who go not astray.”

www.natre.org.uk Check out Spirited Arts Copyright

Page 47: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Boy, aged 12, answering a question on belief about God.

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Page 48: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

NATRE

www.natre.org.uk

NATREfor all RE teachers

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Page 49: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

“I believe in one God, ALLAH. I don't know what my God looks like because in the

Muslim religion we are not allowed to see any pictures of 'him'. As a Muslim I think Allah is the most powerful 'thing' as I don't know what 'he' is like. I respect my God very much.”

Girl, 14

“I think God is... well... God, I guess. God is God, our creator, and He is very powerful. That all I can

say. He is not something you can measure.”

Girl, 15

“I am a Muslim so my beliefs about God are fairly orthodox. I believe God is an entity which is beyond the scope of human perception

(which is pretty limited to say the least...), God is within all of us, He

is the voice which guides us down the path of goodness, The Hand of God is on all of us - it's our choice whether to take it or

not.” Boy, 15

“I feel that Allah (God) is with me and looking at me wherever I am. I

think Allah is the real God. No one can see him but he can see us. He is one, he has no partner and he wasn’t born. When you pray you

feel closer to God You are thanking him for what you have got. I think religion completes

your life. Without it you can get lost and confused.”

Boy, 11www.natre.org.uk Check out Spirited Arts Copyright

Page 50: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

• “He in his essence is one, without any partner. • Single without any similar• Eternal without any opposite. • Separate without any like• He is one, prior with nothing before him• From eternity without any beginning• Abiding in existence without any after him• To eternity without an end• Subsisting without ending• Abiding without termination• Measure does not bind him• Boundaries do not contain him.”

Allah: by the medieval Muslim theologian Al-Ghazali

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Page 51: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

The Holy Name of AllahJade, 8 Jade was inspired to make this by using a repeater pattern from the ICT equipment. Muslims are inspired by the holy name of Allah, Lord of the World. The painting uses Islamic rules, and doesn’t picture the divine.

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Page 52: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

Box of the RevelationChidi worked on his own, creating a box of scrunched paper that shows the presence of the holy as little shards. These came about by drawing light around a human figure and then cutting out the beams of light and rearranging them, his own idea. He said he was thinking about God when he did it.Chidi, boy, age 14, SEN SchoolThis piece comes from a selection of work achieved by children with a range of difficulties including autism, speech and communication difficulties, behavioural difficulties, dyslexia, cerebral paly and Downs' syndrome. Some are among the least able children in their school.

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Page 53: Better RE The Manchester Hub 2015 RE conference Enabling RE to offer lots of thoughtful and creative ways to set high standards in pupils’ learning Giving

God is Everywhere in the WorldShadan, 12

“My painting is called God is everywhere in the world! I chose to do a world and a book on top and that book represents the Quran (or Bible). The bottom of the world represents dirt: the thoughts of people that don’t have any religion, the thoughts of people that don’t believe in God. At the top of the world there is a light (coming from the holy writings) and that light is growing to show that God is growing.”

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