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Science and RE teachers' perspectives on the purpose of RE on the secondary school curriculum in England

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    Abstract

    Renewed interest in curriculum in English schooling over the past decade has emanated from a particular focus on the place and role of knowledge in the classroom. Significant changes in policy and examination specifications have led to changes in religious education (RE). However, little is known about teachers' perspectives on the purpose of RE. We asked teachers of science and RE what they understood as the purpose of RE on the school curriculum. Data from 10 focus groups and a survey with 276 secondary teachers demonstrated that many secondary teachers of science have a different understanding to RE teachers of the purpose of RE on the school curriculum. Findings also show a lack of consensus from RE teachers on the purpose of RE, suggesting the impact of the knowledge turn in RE is not as strong as the Ofsted Research Review implies. Findings are significant as little is known about how knowledge works across disciplinary boundaries in schools. If students are to come to a full understanding of how knowledge works, teachers need to have some understanding of how knowledge is being constructed and utilised in other curriculum subjects. Knowledge of the intended purpose of RE is important for respectful co-existence of subjects on the curriculum and essential when RE is declining as a subject in secondary schools.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)487-504
    JournalThe Curriculum Journal
    Volume34
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 14 Nov 2022

    Keywords

    • Inter-disciplinary learning (IDL)
    • Knowledge of curriculum
    • Ofsted research review
    • Purpose of religious education
    • Religious education

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