TRS4522 - World Religions: Texts & Traditions

Objectives:

On successful completion of the module, students will be able to:
demonstrate knowledge and understanding of essential features of major 'World Religions' (e.g. Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, Sikhism) as living traditions, with reference to texts and historical developments;
demonstrate an understanding of the history, nature, development and content of these religions from a reflective, informed position, including their variation and plurality;
demonstrate an understanding of the key religious and philosophical concepts of these traditions and their interpretations from primary and secondary sources;
demonstrate a critical understanding of the academic study of these traditions and their categorisations.

Content:

This module explores major world religions through primarily textual and historical analysis, examining the principal texts of the various traditions, and identifying how these texts have informed the historical development and spread of these religious traditions. Specific attention is paid to the variations within traditions and the differing manners in which key texts and tenets have come to be interpreted differently by various groups. The module will also include an examination of the categorisation of 'world religions'.

Learning and Teaching Information:

The course will be taught in plenary sessions which will make use of a blend of teaching and learning methods. These will normally include: lecture-style presentations by the tutor; seminar-style discussion of a particular topic; informal prepared presentations by students, followed by discussion; other exercises as appropriate to material and group. Guidance on reading in preparation for each session and activity will be given; and learning will be supported where appropriate by VLE and other electronic resources. Guidance on research and essay-writing will be embedded in the learning and teaching process throughout the module; and may also be supported by tutorial guidance on essay plans and drafts if required.

Lecture
Contact hours: 20

Seminar, group work, tutorial, etc
Contact hours: 20

Guided independent study
Hours: 160

Further details relating to assessment
Assessment 1 - Directed activities: these consist of weekly tasks that must be completed and submitted for inspection at timetabled sessions each week. The assessment will be assessed on a pass/fail basis with a pass requiring at least 75% of all weekly tasks to be completed successfully. A pass will lead to the full award of 10% towards the final module mark. A fail in directed activities will contribute 0% to the final mark.

Assessment:

001 Directed Activites 10%
002 Essay 1 2000 words mid semester 45%
003 Essay 2 2000 words end semester 45%

Fact File

Module Coordinator - Nathan Uglow
Level - 4
Credit Value - 20
Pre-Requisites - NONE
Semester(s) Offered - 4S2