Course Description
The course offers an academic approach to the study of religion and is accessible to candidates of any religious persuasion or none.
This A Level Religious Studies course encourages students to develop their interest in, and enthusiasm for, a rigorous study of religion and its relation to the wider world. Treat the subject as an academic discipline by developing knowledge, understanding and skills appropriate to a specialist study of religion. Adopt an enquiring, critical and reflective approach to the study of religion and Reflect on and develop their own values, opinions and attitudes in the light of their learning.
Read on to find out more about our A Level Religious Studies distance learning course and how you can learn with our amazing materials and online support.
An outline of what is offered in our A Level Religious Studies course:
AS LevelUnit G: New Testament (RSS07)
How the synoptic gospels came into being
Oral Tradition
Reasons for the synoptic gospels being committed to writing
The relationship between the three synoptic gospels; the priority of Mark
Reasons for writers editing material as they wrote the synoptic gospels
Reasons for translating the original Greek synoptic texts
Aspects of Jesus’ teaching and action, parables and healings
The role and the purpose of parables and healings as recorded in the synoptic gospels
Scholars’ views of the theology and the teaching found in parables and healings
The arrest, trial and death of Jesus
Scholars’ views of the theological message and the teaching about the person of Jesus provided by the writers in these accounts
The main similarities and differences between the three accounts:
The resurrection of Jesus
Scholars’ views of the theological message and the teaching about the person of Jesus provided by the writers in these accounts
The main similarities and differences between the three accounts:
Unit J World Religions 1: Buddhism or Hinduism or Sikhism (RSS09)
Buddhism
Samsara and the three marks of existence
The concept of samsara – the cycle of death and rebirth
The concepts of dukkha, anatta and anicca
The implications of these ideas for the Buddhist way of life and attitude to life
The Four Noble Truths
The framework of the Four Noble Truths – the illness, the cause of the illness, the truth that there is an end to the illness, and the prescription
Tanha – the different types of craving and how they lead to suffering: craving for sense pleasures, craving to be rid of something and craving for re-becoming; the root of tanha in ignorance and the pointlessness of trying to fulfil tanha in samsara
Nibbana – the truth of the end of craving and the end of dukkha arising from it; contrasts between samsara and nibbana; the experience of the arahant in this world and beyond death
The implications of these ideas for the Buddhist way of life and attitude to life
The Four Noble Truths
The framework of the Four Noble Truths – the illness, the cause of the illness, the truth that there is an end to the illness, and the prescription
Tanha – the different types of craving and how they lead to suffering: craving for sense pleasures, craving to be rid of something and craving for re-becoming; the root of tanha in ignorance and the pointlessness of trying to fulfil tanha in samsara
Nibbana – the truth of the end of craving and the end of dukkha arising from it; contrasts between samsara and nibbana; the experience of the arahant in this world and beyond death
The implications of these ideas for the Buddhist way of life and attitude to life
The Eightfold Path
The nature and purpose of the Eightfold Path
In the context of the Eightfold Path:
The nature of wisdom and its importance – right understanding and right thought
The nature of morality and its importance – right speech, right action and right livelihood
The nature of meditation and its importance – right effort, right mindfulness and right concentration
The relationship between wisdom, morality and meditation, and the ways in which they contribute to the path to enlightenment
The Sangha
The Sangha as refuge
The monastic community – its nature and discipline
The lay community – its life and discipline
The relationship between the monastic and lay community, and the relative importance of each as a path to enlightenment
A2 LEVEL
Unit 3E: New Testament (RST3E)
The context of John’s Gospel
The nature, role and purpose of the discourses in John’s Gospel
The nature, role and purpose of signs in John’s Gospel
The nature, role and purpose of the passion and resurrection narratives
Unit 3E: New Testament (RST4C) TOPIC II – Ways of Moral Decision-Making
Medical research and medical developments
Business practice and economics
Previous Knowledge Required
Basic English reading and writing skills are required.
Support
You will have access to a tutor via email who will mark your work and guide you through the course to ensure you are ready for your examinations.
Assessment
Unit 1 and Unit 2 – Introduction to Religious StudiesEach unit:
Students study any two units from a choice of eleven available. In each unit, students answer two essay questions from a choice of four.
Unit 3: Studies in Religion
Unit 4: Religion and Human Experience
We will provide you with a list of examination centres but it is entirely your responsibility to find a centre which will accept you as an external candidate.
In some cases you should be prepared to travel to another town or city to take your exams.
The contract for sitting exams is between you and the centre and we will provide you with comprehensive instructions on when and how to deal with the examination centre.
Modules
Awarding Body
AQA (The Assessment and Qualifications Alliance) has a leading reputation for promoting education for the public benefit and draws on long experience of setting and marking public exams such as GCSEs, A-levels and other qualifications. AQA is the largest of the three English exam boards, awarding 49% of full course GCSEs and 42% of A-levels nationally. In total, students take over 3.5 million exams with them each year.