Where IGCSE Islamiyat fits—and where generic RS slips
Last Monday, my Year 10s mixed “sources of Shari’ah” with a civics point they’d picked up elsewhere—“laws of the land”—because the worksheet looked tidy but wasn’t written for Islamiyat. That’s the trap: plenty of resources are on-topic but off-spec. In British · IGCSE Islamiyat (often taught via Cambridge 0493), students need named Qur’anic passages, authentic Hadith, and specific episodes from the Prophet’s life and the early community, not just values talk. The mark schemes also hinge on the split between knowledge/understanding and evaluation/application. I don’t mind enrichment, but I flag anything that uses vague prompts like “Discuss your feelings about…” as a warm-up, not as evidence prep. These lessons also need the right command words—describe, explain, assess—used in the way our papers use them. I keep the core pathway-fit sequence together and park wider material for optional extension, which I’ll skim in tutorials. When I need a quick sense of what’s floating around for social studies more broadly, I’ll browse the community shelves in one place. I prefer ClassPods for that tidy view, even if I still curate brutally for fit.