
Religious Education • 60 • 30 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England
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This is lesson 9 of 10 in the unit "Rights, Needs, and Justice". Lesson Title: Advocacy and Activism Lesson Description: Students will learn about advocacy and activism related to human rights. They will explore how individuals and groups can make a difference in their communities.
Key Stage: 2
Year Group: 6 (ages 10–11)
Curriculum Area: Religious Education (RE)
Unit Title: Rights, Needs, and Justice
Lesson Number: 9 of 10
Lesson Title: Advocacy and Activism
Instruction Time: 60 minutes
Class Size: 30 pupils
UK Curriculum Links:
This lesson helps meet the aims of the Locally Agreed Syllabus for Religious Education by:
By the end of this lesson, pupils will be able to:
Purpose: To stimulate moral thinking and gauge pupils' values
Teacher note: This physical engagement helps warm up thinking about justice and advocacy, and builds confidence in expressing personal opinions — key RE skills.
Purpose: Define key concepts and give real-life applications
Define advocacy and activism with pupil-friendly examples.
Use map to locate where actions for justice have happened — tie in with UK examples. Mention relevant religious or spiritual influences:
Show 3-minute video/audio clip featuring a young activist (UK-based if possible) + short class discussion:
Purpose: Explore real-world examples of advocacy and link with beliefs
Teacher-led Group Tasks (pupils split into 6 groups):
Each group receives a case study card of a faith/ethical advocate (e.g., Marcus Rashford, the Salvation Army, Islamic Relief UK, Greta Thunberg with climate justice, Martin Luther King Jr., or Quakers in anti-war movements).
Task:
Identify:
Groups will then create a mini advocacy campaign poster using their learning. It must:
—
Gallery Walk: Pupils walk around viewing posters from each group. Use sticky notes to write one thing they “liked” and one “action idea” they’d consider for their own lives.
Class Discussion Prompt:
Share a quote from Desmond Tutu:
“If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.”
Ask: What does it mean for us today?
Formative Assessment Through:
Pupils working at expected level will:
Pupils working above expected level may:
Challenge: Write a short letter to a member of your local council or MP about an issue you care about, explaining why it matters and suggesting changes. Link back to beliefs and values where possible.
Let’s empower our pupils not just to learn about justice — but to become agents of it.
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