Question Author
@pixie
Not an option for me, either, back in O-level days. If it had been, I suspect I'd not have attempted it, just from lack of interest.
(Lack of interest, at that age, being the result of lack of research into what it entailed. These days, we have Wikipedia to muck around with and it's only a matter of time before I encounter some jargon that I simply must know more about and end up in the philosophy section...)
;-)
As you rightly point out, religion needs to be understood if one is to end up in a job dealing with people day-to-day, so, equally, I think it wouldn't be right to chop it out of the course entirely.
I also notice there that a sociology teacher is drafted in to teach the course. Not enough teachers, suitably qualified for the subject, to go around. :-/
@canary42
//the old Tory mantra, we mustn't teach the lower classes to think or they will spot how we mercilessly exploit them for our own enrichment). //
Or, as I prefer to phrase it "we musn't teach people to think - it makes them too left-wing". (No Tory worth their salt would say "makes them too fair-minded", as that would be conceding way too much!)
@Buenchico
Thanks for the link,
Starts promisingly but try not to scroll all the way down to the last paragraph (with the employment stats charts) as it would knock the wind out of the sails of even optimistic types.
(I did cross-check by calling up a page for another subject and the charts were equally demoralising).
Thanks for replying.