Take action on RE say leading politicians as more students take the subject at GCSE
Five year funding gap is letting down a ‘record number of students’ as new data suggests many disadvantaged GCSE students go on to take it at A level.
The number of students in England and Wales taking a GCSE course in Religious Studies GCSE has risen to 253,225, an increase of 0.6% from last year.
The increase was largely driven by a surprise rise in the short course in England, up 16.5% from 15,672 to 18,257.
In Wales, amid an overall 5% drop in pupils taking GCSEs, the number of entries to RS courses fell by 11%.
The strong entry results in England saw the Religious Education Council of England and Wales (REC) and the National Association of Teachers of RE (NATRE) reiterate their call for a National Plan for the subject. They warn that an ongoing funding crisis and lack of a specialist teacher recruitment strategy now seriously threatens the provision of high-quality learning for the quarter of a million students who take the subject annually.
Joining the call for a National Plan was Lord Karan Bilimoria, CBE, DL, Vice President of the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) and Chancellor of the University of Birmingham who pointed to the number of disadvantaged students going on to take the subject at A level. A study in April found they were twice as likely to take the subject than their peers, favouring it over history and geography:
"When it comes to levelling up education, the latest data shows that giving more support to religious education students at GCSE is an easy win. If RS is the humanity that disadvantaged young people are most likely to take, then backing this up with a properly funded National Plan is a must. The subject will provide those young people with the crucial skills of analysis, curiosity and intellectual confidence as part of a broad, balanced education and give them a headstart in the global workplace."
Father of the House Sir Peter Bottomley MP, who first called for a National Plan for the subject after chairing a parliamentary roundtable on its future in March, also responded to the results:
“These numbers show that RE is widely popular at GCSE. We must not let down young people by continuing to starve the subject of funding and leadership. Schools and colleges need a National Plan that sets out a modern and relevant curriculum for education in religion and in the world’s faiths and cultures. Generations of students should understand spiritual development and interfaith understanding that is necessary to contribute fully within modern British society.”
Sarah Lane Cawte, Chair of the Religious Education Council of England and Wales (REC), said:
“I’m delighted to see an overall rise in students taking GCSE RS. At its best, RS is one of the most personally enriching and academic subjects on the curriculum. Yet sadly, I cannot think of another subject that has ever attracted such a large cohort of students yet received such little corresponding government support.
“In neglecting RE, the Government risks letting down a record number of students. There is now an average of around a quarter of a million students taking the subject at GCSE each year who receive £0 of additional government money to help with their study of RE. In comparison, in the last five years a GCSE music student has received up to £10,000 a head after a National Plan for music. We want an even distribution of funding across the curriculum to ensure it is broad and balanced.”
Katie Freeman, Chair of the National Association of Teachers of RE, said:
“These results are testament to the hardworking and passionate community of RE teachers we have across the country. We would now like to see the Government back up their hard work with a properly funded National Plan. This will ensure that every young person has access to an excellent RE teacher, armed with the best evidenced-based curriculum that will allow them to take their place in modern society.”
Earlier this year in March, students spoke at the parliamentary roundtable on why they enjoy the subject. Shreya, a Year 10 student offered her view:
“RE is fundamental to life. It’s all about people and people will never be out of date. RE is the one time in school where you can talk, listen and try to make sense of people, events and beliefs in the world.”
Last summer, research carried out by the charity Culham St Gabriel’s Trust found that nearly two-thirds (64%) of adults in Britain believe RE is an important part of the school curriculum. Seven out of ten (73%) also agreed that the subject should provide students with the opportunity to learn about other people, beliefs, worldviews and cultures.
The full entry results were:
Wales
- Wales RS overall, down 11%, by 1,598 from 14,853 to 12,985
- Wales RS full course, down 4.3%, by 445, from 10,358 to 9,913
- Wales RS short course, down 27.3%, from 4,225 to 3,072
England
- England RS overall, up 1.3%, by 3,149, from 237,091 to 240,240
- England RS full course up 0.3%, by 564, from 221,419 to 221,983
- England RS short course, up 16.5%, by 2,585, from 15,672 to 18,257
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For media enquiries and RE teaching images please contact:
Colin Hallmark / Fred Sculthorp
3:nine Communications:
re@3nine.co.uk
Tel: 0207 736 1888
Mubina Khan-Daniels
National Association of Teachers of RE:
Mubina@retoday.org.uk
Tel: 0121 415 3970 / 0121 4583313
Notes for editors:
Religious Education Council of England and Wales
Established in 1973, the Religious Education Council of England and Wales (REC) brings together over 60 national organisations. These comprise academic and professional associations specialising inreligious education, as well as individual religion and belief organisations representative of the range of communities found nationally.
The Religious Education Council of England and Wales
National Association of Teachers of RE
NATRE is the subject teacher association for RE professionals in primary and secondary schools and higher education, providing a representative voice at national level and publications and courses to promote professional development. NATRE’s Executive consists of a majority of serving teachers from primary and secondary schools who are elected for a three-year term of service.