Teaching: The Religious Eeducation Site
The RE site has been designed as the starting point for using the Internet in RE teaching and learning. Its main feature is a searchable index of regularly checked RE resources on the Internet. Other useful sections include links to relevant material on government agency sites and reviews of ICT resources for RE.
[http://www.theresite.org.uk/]
Teaching: Religious Education Ideas
Contains links to (and descriptions of) all of the Religious Education ideas.
[http://www.teachingideas.co.uk/]
Teaching: Christian Education
Teaching: Providing support and resources for RE practitioners through Religious Education Services; Providing resources for Christian education in the churches through Christian Education Publishing.
[http://www.christianeducation.org.uk/]
Teaching: Department of Religion and Ethics
The Department of Religion and Ethics at St Martin's College has many distinctive features. RE-XS is an initiative of the ELMAR Project (Electronic Media and Religion), one of the projects run by the department. ELMAR was established in 1995 to investigate and improve the use which religious groups make of information technology.
[http://re-xs.ucsm.ac.uk/]
Teaching: GCSE Religious Studies
Learn topics in GCSE religious studies from two chief examiners who have set exams for many years and who have written informatively about christianity in a book that has over a hundred concise chapters, some of which teach you to answer questions such as does God exist? and can we describe him? while others teach you what christians —catholic, orthodox and protestant— believe about God, Jesus and creation, how they worship, and why they say some actions are right and others are wrong in areas ranging from sex, marriage and abortion to wealth, poverty and liberation.
[http://www.gcsereligiousstudies.co.uk/]
Teaching: Religious Education & Information Technology
REfIT is a working group looking at the future of Religious Education and Information Technology. The group has received a three year grant from the Dulverton Trust to look at how Information and communication technology will affect the teaching of Religious Education.
[http://refit.ucsm.ac.uk/]