Theology students at Oxford will no longer have to study Christianity
after their first year of university, after pupils challenged the lack
of diversity in the current course structure.
A "major driver" for implementing changes, which will allow students
after the first year to abandon study of Christianty entirely, is "the
dramatic change in the way religion is seen and practised in the UK,"
according to Professor Johannes Zachhuber, the theology faculty's board
chairman.
"The dominance of the Church of England has been receding but at the
same time religion hasn't disappeared. We want to offer to potential
students what is interesting for them and that has changed a lot in the
last 30 years," he told the Times Higher Education magazine.
Christianity will remain compulsory in the first year of the course,
with two papers to be sat on the religion, however students will have
free reign to choose a wide range of papers in the second and third
years.
The changes to the theology degree at the world's oldest university
will more accurately reflect both the expertise of the lecturers and the
interest and experience of the students.
"We recognise that the people who come to study at Oxford come from a
variety of different backgrounds and have legitimately different
interests. They come from the respected communities of Britain," said
Zachhuber.
"If you have a very rigid curriculum, there will be an increasing
mismatch between what lecturers are doing in their research time and
what they're having to teach," he added.
The reduction in compulsory modules for second and third year
students will enable other papers to be taken, including "feminist
approaches to religion and theology" and "Buddhism in space and time".
"These changes are what students want, because a bigger world is
affecting them," according to Benjamin Thompson, associate professor of
medieval history at Oxford, who said that there have been similar moves
in history.
"The most obvious example is the rise of militant Islam, or how well the Chinese economy is doing.
"With the Cecil Rhodes statue debate, this 'decolonisation' of the
curriculum is now quite interesting." As an example, he said that to
study a medieval knight students "might look at his uniform and trace
its origins to the silk roads in the Far East" rather than just looking
at history from an English perspective."
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