This resource contains a complete lesson on ‘Philosophical scepticism’ as part of the Epistemology unit for AQA’s A-Level Philosophy course. The lesson focuses on theory and skills on debate/oracy as well as higher-order thinking. For further activities and guidance, please use the official AQA A-Level Philosophy textbook.
A fully resourced lesson focused on philosophical responses to the problem of evil. The lesson looks at Other Christian response ( John Hick) and Non-religious response (Epicurus, David Hume and John Mackie). The lesson follow Eduqas, Route B spec.
This resource is aimed at AQA A Level Philosophy. It can also be used with IB, Scottish Highers and international KS5. It includes Philosophical Zombies (particularly through David Chalmers’ version), property dualism and its appeal to qualia and phenomenal properties of experience. The slides should deliver a lesson of approx 60 minutes but could also suit 75-90 minutes with questioning and student activities, which are alluded to in slides.
A Level Philosophy, Epistemology, the unreliability of the senses, optical illusions, Hume and the problem of induction, Hume on causation vs constant conjunction.
This bundle of lessons look at Philosophical Thought Experiments. They have been used with Sixth Form students as part of an elective program to broaden their understanding of Philosophy (especially if they are not studying Philosophy for A Level). They aim to get students thinking in a philosophical way, asking and answering questions during class discussion. There are links to videos found on YouTube to support the learning and these can be found within the presentation. Some fascinating discussion and deep thinking should result!
Ancient Philosophical Influences for OCR A Level Religious Studies Philosophy of Religion.
This is the full unit broken down into detailed individual lessons within two PowerPoint presentations, one being 3 lessons on Plato within 35 slides and one 4-5 lessons on Aristotle within 47 slides. Included are information worksheets on both philosophers and a series of tasks covering key themes including the Allegory of the Cave, Theory of the Forms, the Four Causes of Aristotle. Included is also an assessment essay guidance sheet used for a formal assessment of this unit’s learning. These resources cover the full unit in a circa 8 lesson scheme and include class, homework and assessment opportunities within.
This is a complete unit of work, covering around 14 hours of teaching time. This resource includes a range of activities, lesson powerpoints, a student booklet which follows the powerpoints and assessments. It encourages philosophical discussion about evil, explores theodicies and a case study of the Holocaust to question whether God can exist even though there is evil in the world.
This is a complete unit, ready to teach!
It covers:
The problem of evil and the inconsistent triad
Natural and moral evil
Augustine’s theodicy
Soul-making theodicies
The rise of anti-semitism and Auschwitz
Holocaust denial
Jewish responses to the Holocaust and problem of evil
Psychological explanations for evil, from Milgram and Zimbardo
Assessments, including extended writing responses and multiple choice tests
I personally find this unit most appropriate to teach in Year 9 as a good step to prepare for the GCSE, though it may also work well with Year 8.
Please leave a review, and happy teaching!
A Philosophy Mini-Curriculum for Primary
PDF - scripted lessons for Primary School Educators.
EYFS Lessons - Optional use of Socrates Doll
Socratic Method: Plan, script - question sorting and introducing ‘Big Questions’
What is ‘real’? Plan - thinking about where knowledge comes from and whether we can tell if something is real or not. Discusses personhood.
Years 1 and 2 Lessons
What’s the Big Idea? Plan - an introduction to philosophy and some of the big ideas it delves into.
How Did the Universe Come to Be? A discussion-based unit about creation and the idea of God.
Year 3 Lesson
What is the Difference Between Knowing and Believing? Plan - a look at observation, faith and miracles.
Year 4 Lesson
Morality: How do People Make Moral Decisions? Plan - a look at how people justify moral decisions with logical arguments.
Year 5 Lessons
Utilitarianism Parts I & II - Plans, Presentation, Scenario Cards - a look at Bentham and Mill’s system for moral decision making.
Ontology: Plan, Presentation - A look at the Ontological arguments for the existence of God and its problems.
Year 6 Lesson
Plato’s Cave: Plan - A look at the role of the philosopher in society and the idea of knowledge through revelation.
Primary Range Home/School
Lesson 1
The Purpose of Things: Plan - A discussion-based enquiry into the purpose of everyday things. It examines the ‘why’ of objects, both made and naturally occurring. An introduction to teleology.
Lesson 2
Of Superheroes and Miracles: Plan and Presentation - A discussion-based enquiry into the origins of the idea of the ‘superhero’. Encompassing believability, scepticism, Hume and his views on miracles.
Lesson 3
Morality with a Buddhist Focus: Plan - A discussion-based enquiry looking at morality and the externalised, spiritual drives behind it. Encompassing non-spiritual reasons of morality, inviting discussion about internal morality as well as a starting point to study belief in karma.
Lesson 4
Knowing VS Believing Part 1: Plan - A discussion-based enquiry looking at the difference between ‘Knowing’ and ‘believing’. Part 1 covers magic tricks and the senses as a source of ‘fact’. It asks whether scientists need a little belief in their line of work too. Introduces concepts such as dark matter.
Lesson 5
Knowing VS. Believing Part 2: Plan - A discussion using Flew’s The Invisible Gardener Parable. How do we know things? Is there a battle going on between science and belief? Do scientists believe? An introduction to the Falsification Principle.
For more and the accompanying Free presentations can be found on my website by googling philosophy in ks2. These are made using ‘creative commons’ pictures and so are not subject to copyright.
The problem of Other Minds (Solipism)
Typed notes about:
Mills argument from analogy
Wittgenstein Private Language
Satre and Heidegger's criticisms
Student tasks are upon the worksheet along with example exam questions
The essential Philosophy for Children (P4C ) tool!
Professionally designed with amazing animations to capture your students’ attention.
This download includes an editable PowerPoint (and a PowerPoint show, for your convenience) featuring over 101 philosophical questions to stimulate discussions in your class tutor-group.
It also has a ‘randomiser’ so that you can randomly select a question each time!
Perfect for form-time, end of lessons, great for any subject! Suitable for KS2-5!
Please leave a rating or review if you liked this product :)
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This download is a demo version so that you can try the method and see how effective it is with your classes.
The full version can be found here: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/-p4c-the-philosophical-debate-generator-200-slide-ppt-with-randomiser-philosophy-for-kids-11382893
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About the full version:
This is a 200 slide PPT, containing 198 philosophical debates, discussions, and dilemmas.
It also contains a ‘randomiser’ slide: when clicked a random moral problem is presented to the group.
Uses:
-P4C (Philosophy for kids)
-Form time activities
-R.S./Philosophy/Citizenship cover lessons
-Debating societies
-Making best use of spare time at the end of lessons
Discussions follow one of four formats, each asking students to move from one side of the room or the other to make their position clear: teachers should then use questioning to foster a debate between students, encouraging them to present reasons for their choice and defend their position.
The formats are:
-Is the statement TRUE of FALSE?
-Whose side do you take?
-Agree or Disagree?
-Which statement is more true?
This resource is great value at £4.99 and cannot be found elsewhere:
-It clearly contributes to your school’s SMSC provision
-Furthers students’ critical thinking skills
-It allows for countless hours of discussion and debate to be structured in a focussed and engaging manner.
-It would take days to reproduce yourself.
-It can save vast amounts of staff time in preparing cover lessons
-It is the perfect way to make the most of any time a teacher might have left at the end of a lesson.
-It deals with cross curricular issues
Please note: this resource deals with controversial issues, debates and questions that may be deemed unsuitable for younger children. It is designed for secondary school students, but can be easily adapted to younger years with appropriate amendments by their teacher.
BHA’s educational resources are for teachers who want to make RE, Citizenship and PSHE properly inclusive, and for students researching assignments. They are all PDF resources and you will need Adobe Reader to view and print them. Most of these resources for students of all ages outline how humanists approach a range of issues. They contain discussion questions, further reading suggestions and web links, as well as a humanist perspective. (Please note that they are not intended to be definitive or prescriptive statements about what all humanists think or BHA policy.)
Here is a table with all the philosophers on the OCR A2 Philosophy And Ethics Course from the philosophy side. Within the table are all of the philosophers opinions and arguments for the course topics along with criticisms from other philosophers. I will add one for all of the philosophers in the Ethics part of the course soon. A great resource to cement the knowledge into your head as it is written in understandable and relevant language.
This resource contains a complete lesson on the theories of ‘Property Dualism - The Philosophical Zombie argument’, including criticisms and any relevant defences, as part of the ‘Metaphysics of the Mind’ unit of AQA’s A-Level Philosophy course. Please note that, whilst this contains all relevant learning materials, this should be used in conjunction with the official textbook.
Here is a table with all the philosophers on the OCR A2 Philosophy And Ethics Course from the ethics side. Within the table are all of the philosophers opinions and arguments for the course topics such as conscience, and sexual ethics. I have also made one for all of the philosophers in the Philosophy part of the course. A great resource to cement the knowledge into your head as it is written in understandable and relevant language.
Eduqas Specification on the Problem of Evil. All resources, lessons and handouts for Eduqas component 2, Theme 2 ABC. Includes:
the logical and evidential PofE
Augustinian theodicy
Irenaen theodicy
The lesson is part of a series of lessons looking at Philosophical Thought Experiments. It has been used with Sixth Form students as part of an elective program to broaden their understanding of Philosophy (especially if they are not studying Philosophy for A Level). The aim to get students thinking in a philosophical way, asking and answering questions during class discussion. There are links to videos found on YouTube to support the learning and these can be found within the presentation. Some fascinating discussion and deep thinking should result!
This particular lesson focuses on The Trolley Problem and considers how we make moral decisions; is utilitarianism enough? Are there certain actions that are inherently wrong?
Wanting to have a discussion based lesson with your class to help build your evaluation skills?
This lesson introduces students to two ethical problems- Phillipa Foot’s Trolley Problem and Bernard William’s Organ Transplant analogy!
This lesson can be great to use in a form time to hear the contrasting views of your students or you could spend the full hour on this lesson.
Optional struture-
One half of the room focus on one analogy, discuss it with peers, and then vote. Afterwards, they could teach the other half of the classroom the analogy and the others can then discuss what would be the right thing to do.
From there, you could have a whole class discussion on the most ethical thing to do!
Please leave a review if you find this resource useful.
Best wishes,
Liz
These first year undergraduate lectures by Dr Peter Millican aim to provide a thorough yet accessible introduction to many philosophical topics and to get students interested in thinking about key areas of philosophy. Taking a chronological view of the history of philosophy, each lecture is split into 3 or 4 sections which outline a particular philosophical problem and how different philosophers have attempted to address these. This content is placed under a Creative Commons licence and is free for reuse, remixing and redistribution in education worldwide (BY-NC-SA).