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Oatlands College CBS

Religious Education/Pastoral Programme

INTRODUCTION
Religious instruction and Pastoral
Care within Oatlands, although the responsibility of all members of
staff, is the particular responsibility of the Religion Department,
which consists of four teachers: Noel Collins (Head of Dept), Leigh
Phelan, Linda Beirne and Sinead Mulvally under the auspices of the
Principal Keith Ryan.
| The aim of the Religion Dept. is to provide students
with amble opportunity to develop spiritually and
personally; to be individuals who can think for themselves
and apply the Christians values to their own lives. We
endeavor to achieve this by encouraging students to
participate in social justice activities such as the Indian
Immersion Project organized in conjunction with the
Christian brothers. Recently, Staff members Jack Mc Glade,
Stevie Tobin and Brian Kehoe, along with Oatlands T.Y.
students Conor Caulfield, Michael Corr, Robert Corr, David
Doyle, Sam Dunne, Daniel Fox, Evan Heritage, Shane Lauritsch,
Peter Mc Carthy and Finnian O Neill travelled to India
visiting schools, hospitals, leper colonies and slums. This
visit impressed upon the students so much that on returning
home they organized a large-scale fundraising campaign
throughout the school in order to pay for the cost of
treatment for a number of terminally ill cancer patients
living in India. |
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At Oatlands College we shrive to maintain a
pro-active approach to Christianity. For example, an annual event
amongst students and staff is the Christmas Shoe box appeal or
Operation Christmas Child. Each student is invited to fill a shoebox
with Christmas gifts, which in turn will be sent worldwide, bringing
hope to children in desperate situations.
The College annually fundraises for the St.
Vincent de Paul Christmas appeal by Carol Singing in the local
shopping centre with first year choir students.
The Religion Dept., in addition to
encouraging charitable activities, also seeks to develop the
spirituality and moral formation of all students through
participating in frequent liturgies, mediations and charity-drives.
RELIGIOUS EDUCATION
Religious Education holds a central place in
the life of Oatlands College. The recent addition of our new prayer
room designed by Fergus Costello alongside students and parents is a
testament of the centrality of Religious Education.
In 2006, over eighty students were among the
first to successfully complete the Junior Certificate Religious
Education Exam in the history of Oatlands. The success of the
Religious Education programme is due to the resources made available
by the college. The school’s ongoing commitment of employing fully
trained catechists has greatly raised the status of Religious
Education as a subject that implements the school’s mission
statement fully.
JUNIOR CYCLE RELIGIOUS EDUCATION
| From first to third year, students are assigned a R.E.
teacher for three classes per week. In addition to being
assigned a class teacher, students are also assigned a class
tutor whose responsibility is primarily pastoral. All
students experience meditation and personal reflection and
over time develop a more mature faith and understanding of
Christianity. The structure of the Junior Certificate R.E.
course follows plan B of the course which reflects the
liturgical year. Prayer services are integral to college
life in the sense that the liturgical year is reflected in
college life. Moreover, marking the liturgical year in a
visual sense is important to the community of Oatlands. |
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Junior Certificate Religious Education may be studied at Ordinary or
Higher level. The course consists of two parts:
Part 1
Students take any two of the following:
Section A - Communities of Faith
Section B - Foundations of Religion - Christianity
Section C - Foundations of Religion - Major World Religions
Part 2
Students take all of the following:
Section D - The Question of Faith
Section E - The Celebration of Faith
Section F - The Moral Challenge
Junior Certificate Religious Education students are also assessed on
a project called the Religious Education Journal worth 20% of the
entire marks. The Journal consists on the students’ personal
reflection on one aspect of the Junior Certificate R.E. syllabus.
TRANSITION
YEAR
Transition Year students annually take part
in the ‘Schools Across Borders Programme’. As part of this
initiative 12 Israeli and 12 Palestinian students visited Ireland in
December and January 2006. Some of these students stayed in the
homes of Transition Year students.
This project aims to show teenagers from
areas involved in conflict that people of their own age on the
‘opposite side’ are not so different and could even share similar
views on the conflict. Also as part of the scheme some Oatlands T.Y
students visited schools in Belfast whom they co-operated with
during the programme. The main
aims of this project was not to force the views of others upon
students but rather to improve relations, break down negative
stereotypes and better educate the masses.
FIFTH YEAR
Students begin fifth year with a module on
science and religion. This module complements the Junior Certificate
Religious Education syllabus. In addition to this module, students
follow the Religious Education framework. The framework is presented
in eight sections and it is recommended that students study at least
two sections each year. The selection and sequencing of the sections
can be varied to suit teacher and student interests. However it
might be useful to use Section A as an introduction to the whole
programme of work.
Section A: The search for meaning
Section B: Christianity
Section C: Religious faiths in Ireland today
Section D: Morality in action
Section E: God-talk
Section F: A living faith - doing justice
Section G: Celebrating faith
Section H: Story
SIXTH YEAR
In Sixth Year students cover four of any six
main topics.
(i)
Issues in Justice and Peace (Section F)
(ii)
The Search for meaning (Section A)
(iii)
Eschatology –heaven, hell, death and the Last Judgment.
(iv)
Cults and New Religious Movements
(v)
World Religions
(vi)
Crime and Punishment
| In addition to covering the above topics,
sixth year students are frequently amalgamated for a
presentation by a guest speaker. For example, recently
students met an ex-prisoner from the pathways project who
shared his story about his life choices. Students also
received a detailed presentation from Harpreet Singh, a
member of the Sikh Council of Ireland, on the main tenets of
Sikhism. |

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STUDENTS OF OTHER FAITHS/RELIGIOUS
DENOMINATION
All students are required to study religion
at all levels in Oatlands College as outlined in the school’s
Religious Education Policy (see policy for more details). Although
Oatlands College is a Catholic College, students belonging to other
major world religions are welcomed in Oatlands. It is important to
note that students are not tested on their faith, but rather, their
knowledge of religion. The school’s prayer room is available to all
students for communal worship, in that class groups are frequently
brought to the prayer room. All students are encouraged to attend
the prayer room for personal reflection and prayer in between and
outside class time.
ATHEISTS
AND STUDENTS OF NO AFFILIATION TO A RELIGION/FAITH COMMUNITY
While a belief in God is beneficial in the
study of Religion at Oatlands, it is not essential. A student does
not need to believe in God in order to study Religion. Students will
not, under any circumstances, be tested on their religious belief or
lack of. More specifically, students are examined on their
knowledge, understanding, skills and attitudes of the subject
content. Each student will bring their own unique questions and
contribution to the study of Religious Education at Oatlands
College.
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