Othering in Religion, Values and Ethics: How Using Psychological Studies Can Help Further Understanding

Abstract

The othering of groups in society is a significant topic that is covered in Religion, Values and Ethics (RVE) in my school. One Programme of Learning (POL) that tackles this as a whole is that of Martin Luther King Jr that year 8 (12- to 13-year-olds) study, which uses the Baptist preacher as the spine of the work but uses various examples from the #BLM movement, and psychological studies from Stanley Milgram (The Study on Obedience) and Philip Zimbardo (The Stanford Prison Experiment). This builds upon a year 7 POL (11- to 12-year-olds) which is based on The Island by Sue Phillips, where they begin to build a community and decide how a community works. In this they encounter several obstacles to their community, and they work out a way to stay a community without arguments or schisms. This, as well as the above POL, has been influenced by the works of Johnathan Sacks and his book Not in God’s Name. This POL was a study conducted for my MA thesis which looked at a multi-disciplinary, cross-curricular approach to RVE which incorporated various historical and geographical skills as well as improving literacy using a short story to frame the topic, as well as other articles and sources.

Presenters

Jasmine Jacques Butterworth
PhD Student, Education, Aberystwyth University, United Kingdom

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Religious Community and Socialization

KEYWORDS

Othering, Stereotyping, Prejudice, Discrimination, Martin Luther King Jnr, Milgram, Zimbardo