What Islamic Studies looks like inside ICSE timetables
On Monday of Week 4, my Class 8 group were fired up about Zakat after a food-drive assembly, but our discussion wandered. That’s the challenge inside an ICSE timetable: Islamic Studies sits beside board subjects with clear command terms and marking, yet many resources for faith studies don’t use that language. In our school, I mirror ICSE Social Studies habits—define, explain, give reasons, evaluate—so my students practise the same moves they need in History/Civics.
Here’s the fit issue I see most. On-topic videos or PDFs tell the story well but skip structure: no numbered parts, no 2/3/5/8-mark cues, and little India-specific context (like zakat committees working with local NGOs). I rewrite questions into ICSE-style stems and add a short source—an excerpt from a hadith collection or a relief report—so we can do source reasoning, not just recall.
I keep a shortlist of Social Studies-aligned pieces in ClassPods, and if you want to see how others tag similar material, you can skim the community shelves here.