Archive for the ‘Lesson’ Category

Poverty Assessment

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

Today we started an assessment on poverty (booklet that was handed out is here.

This is due for Thursday 4th June (1st lesson back after half term). Next week we will be in K11 to give you a chance to start writing some things up.

If you want some more information to help you try some of these:

Martin Luther King Project: Due 19th March

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

Today (5th March) we started on a Martin Luther King project in the Resource Centre. The project handout is here.

Make sure you read the second page for tips on how to do well. Having lots of facts is no good to me without explanation, analysis and evaluation!

I’ll put some of the best ones up here when they are finished. Remember: This is due on the 19th March, so that’s the homework for two weeks. Make it good!

Here are those tips on how to do well:

This is your opportunity to show me how much you know and how well you have understood it. Note that in RE understanding is often more important than the facts that you have found. Depending on the level you are aiming for you’ll need to:

Level 5: Explain. You’ll have found out lots of facts about MLK, but you need to explain why they are relevant to your project. For example, you may highlight the different water fountains for coloured people as evidence of what life was like for coloured people. What you need to do is explain why these water fountains affected coloured people. How did it make them feel? What did it say about the way white people saw them?

Level 6: Analyse. There are five questions to be thought about in your project. To do good analysis you need to highlight themes that occur throughout. Examples of themes might be:

  • Justice/injustice
  • Freedom/slavery
  • Love/hatred
  • Violence/non-violence

For example, the theme of injustice appears in all five questions. There was injustice in the way black people were treated, MLK had a strong sense of this injustice (perhaps from his father), Christianity teaches that God love justice and hates injustice, Martin may have picked up on the Christian idea about battling injustice, and one might admire his sense of battling injustice. This is only very brief, to do it properly you need to explain what you are saying (as in Level 5). For good analysis pick two or three themes and try to talk about them when thinking about each question.

Level 7: Evaluation. The main question in the project is about how MLK’s religious belief influenced him. To evaluate this you need to explain why you think his religious belief did or did not influence him. Some people say that his religious belief wasn’t that important, and his battle was more about making life better for himself, his family and his friends than a battle over religious ideas. Do you agree? If so, why? If not, why not? Using your level 6 analysis you can make an argument. For example, using the theme of freedom, you might find that while MLK thinks it very important, Christianity does not agree. If so, this might suggest that the religious side of the story is not so important for MLK.

Lesson on 26th February: Martin Luther King

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

We started on a project about Martin Luther King (MLK) and the Civil Rights movement in America today.

Each of you had a sheet and you used some books to find out information about MLK, what he believed, what he said and what he did. These will be really useful when we come to starting our project properly next week. Finish for homework if you did not do so in lesson.

Homework:

A reminder that if you haven’t yet handed in your homework on Apartheid then I need it by next lesson. If I don’t get it by then you’ll be expected to come back at lunchtime to do it.

In addition to finishing the sheet about MLK, today’s homework was to find out more about his interest in civil rights. What motivated him to do what he did?

  • Was it his religious beliefs?
  • Was it his social conscience?
  • Was it his sense of justice?

Whatever you can find out will be very helpful for the project. For information try:

Lesson on 12th February: Rosa Parks

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

Today we watched some of a film about Rosa Parks and thought about what life was like for black people in 50s and 60s America. We looked at things like:

  • Black people finding it hard to register for voting
  • Police discrimination and victimisation of black people
  • The assumption of guilt for black people over white people
  • Having separate drinking fountains
  • Black people being forced to sit at the back of buses

I wonder what struck you most about the way coloured people were treated.

After half term we’ll look at Martin Luther King and what he did to help get rights for coloured people.

Lesson on Apartheid: 29th January

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

Today we had a balloon debate looking at 3 anti-apartheid heroes. Nelson Mandela, Desmond Tutu and Trevor Huddleston.

In the end, after considering all three and looking at their contributions to the abolition of apartheid, we decided that Trevor Huddleston would make the ultimate sacrifice….

The homework set can be found here and has more information on the people involved.

Lesson on racism: 22nd January

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

Today we looked at where racism came from, particularly looking at slavery and the Windrush. We considered the kinds of pictures racist people might have in their heads when thinking about people of a different race and how we might change that.

Where does racism come from?

Play the racism quiz

For the homework look here

Lesson: 15th January 2009

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

Lesson on racism from Thursday 15th Jan. The idea was to get you thinking about what might make people racist.

Key question: What might cause people to be racist?

Things to think about: Do people just wake up one day and decide to be racist? No probably not. People become racist over many years of being around the idea that people with a different colour skin are inferior or are in some way fundamentally different.

Can you make someone not a racist by just telling them they are wrong? Probably not. Imagine the time when people believed the sun rotated around the earth. It was really hard to change the mind of people who had that idea stuck in their heads for so long, even though the evidence was right there. It’s really hard to change somebody’s mind on something! With that in mind, how might you change somebody’s mind about racism?

Powerpoint: Meaning makers

Prince Harry video: Prince Harry

News articles: Muslim victim of ‘racist attack’, CCTV captures racist attack gang, John Lydon denies ‘racist’ attack.