Religious Education

Religious Education
'Teaching RE is not just about religion. It provokes challenging questions about purposes and morals. It opens our eyes to the world around us and allows us to see and feel things in different ways.'
Intent
 
At Bramingham, we follow “Identities, meanings, values: The RE Agreed Syllabus 2018-2023 (Bedford Borough, Central Bedfordshire and Luton).  The principal aim of our RE curriculum is to provide opportunities for children to develop their knowledge and understanding of what people believe and what difference this makes to how they live. Throughout their time at Bramingham, children develop the vocabulary, confidence and skills needed to ask the challenging questions raised by religion and belief, reflecting on their own ideas and ways of living.  RE enables our pupils to develop respect for others and their beliefs and helps to challenge prejudice. It provides opportunities for them to consider their responsibilities to themselves and to others, and to explore how they might contribute to their communities and to wider society encouraging empathy, generosity and compassion.  

At Bramingham we follow the RE Agreed Syllabus for Bedford Borough, Central Bedfordshire and Luton.  Through it, children explore questions of identity: who am I? Where do I fit in? What influences shape me? They discover a range of accounts of the meanings humans find in life, developing their own sense of meaning, and they consider how human values are often common and humane, but also often distinctive in the ways they are expressed and practised.

 

The principal aim of RE at Bramingham is to explore what people believe and what difference this makes to how they live, so that pupils can gain the knowledge, understanding and skills needed to handle questions raised by religion and belief, reflecting on their own ideas and ways of living.

 

RE lessons enable children to make sense of a range of religious and non-religious beliefs, understand the impact and significance of religious and non-religious beliefs; and make connections between religious and non-religious beliefs, concepts, practices and ideas.

 

In RE lessons children have the opportunity to explore their own, and others' faiths through drama, looking at religious artefacts, listening to faith stories, interviewing members of faith communities and visiting places of worship.  As a school we have close links with Bramingham Church, the Guru Nanak Gurdwara and Stopsley Baptist Church and are this year hoping to partner with Luton Synagogue and the Luton Mandir to enhance our children's experiences further.