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Religious Studies: Student Employability Profiles: Employability Skills

Students of Religious Studies are drawn to the subject not least because it is both dynamic and diverse. Many changes and new developments have taken place in this field over the last century, with a strong focus on ethics, spirituality, power and diversity influencing individuals and institutions alike on a global basis.

Religious Studies students develop strong skills in engaging with the issues raised by clashing belief systems and understand how the conflicts that arise out of this may aide the interests of those engaged in power struggles. They are able to critically analyse and evaluate the solutions put forward for resolving these conflicts.

The main employability skills and aptitudes a graduate develops through the study of Religion are set out below.

These quite special skills and attributes make the Religious Studies student a very desirable employee in an organisation that is confronted on a daily basis with global demands and local issues.

Add to this the generic skills of time management, planning and organising, information gathering skills, intellectual curiosity and the ability to set personal and work goals, well developed written and oral communication skills and the belief in life long learning.

Religious Studies students are well equipped to enter into many different and diverse occupations. These include careers in:

Some of the above will need either further academic or professional study and those deciding to go on to do a masters degree will find their highly developed research skills are well sought after in the employment field.

Whatever career a Religious Studies student chooses they are well equipped to cope with the challenges the ever evolving employment market may put there way and with individual determination and drive, they will make a success of their chosen path.

The specific employability skills that can be gained by studying Religious Studies, as identified by the Quality Assurance Agency (QAA) Subject Benchmark Statements, are:

  1. The ability to understand how people have thought and acted in contexts other than the student's own, how beliefs, doctrines and practices have developed within particular social and cultural contexts and how religious traditions have changed over time. ( A degree of 'cultural shock' may be involved in study of the past, as well as in the encounter with the beliefs, doctrines and practices of contemporary others.)
  2. The ability to read and use texts both critically and empathetically, while addressing such questions as genre, content, context, perspective, purpose, original and potential meaning, and the effect of translation if the text is not read in the original language.
  3. The appreciation of the complexity of different mentalities, social behaviors and aesthetic responses, and of the ways they have been shaped by beliefs and values, and conversely how beliefs, sacred texts and art forms have been shaped by society and politics.
  4. Sensitivity to the problems of religious language and experience, and to the issues of multiple and conflicting interpretations of language and symbols, texts and traditions. Simplistic, literalising or doctrinaire explanations are less likely to be advanced by a student of TRS.
  5. Appreciation of both the interconnectedness of and internal tensions within a system of beliefs and practices.
  6. Basic critical and analytical skills: a recognition that statements should be tested, that evidence and arguments are subject to assessment, that the interpreter's role demands critical evaluation.
  7. The ability to employ a variety of methods of study in analysing material, to think independently, set tasks and solve problems.
  8. The capacity to give a clear and accurate account of a subject, marshal arguments in a mature way and engage in debate and dialogue with respect for the opposite case or different viewpoint.
  9. Empathy and imaginative insight.
  10. Self-discipline and self-direction.
  11. Independence of mind and initiative.
  12. Ability to attend to others and have respect for others' views.
  13. Ability to gather, evaluate and synthesise different types of information.
  14. Analytical ability and the capacity to formulate questions and solve problems.
  15. Presentation skills, both oral and written.
  16. IT skills, including word-processing, communicating by email and using the web, accessing information from electronic as well as non-electronic sources.
  17. Teamwork skills.
  18. Writing skills, including accurate referencing and clarity of expression.
  19. Ability to attend closely to the meaning of written documents.
  20. Ability to read texts in a different language.
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This page was originally on the website of The Subject Centre for Philosophical and Religious Studies. It was transfered here following the closure of the Subject Centre at the end of 2011.

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The British Association for the Study of Religions
The Religious Studies Project