Conferences Vardy served as chair of the governors of
Shebbear College, a
Methodist school in Devon. He has also worked as a member of the Methodist Schools Committee, and has been a keynote speaker at conferences in the field of education, including for
UNESCO and
UNHRC. While at Heythrop, Vardy served as an editorial adviser for
Dialogue, a journal of religion and philosophy aimed at sixth-form students, and made a series of teaching videos through Dialogue Education. He began running day conferences for sixth-form students in the mid-1990s and set up Wombat Education Ltd in 1998. In 2002 he and Julie Arliss of
Richard Huish College, Taunton, organized a conference there and several others around the UK. In 2009 Vardy and his second wife, Charlotte Vardy, set up Candle Conferences Ltd, and in 2012 Candle Education Ltd, through which they run day conferences for schools. Since 2010 Vardy has campaigned against the introduction of the
English Baccalaureate, which he argues has led to a decline in numbers taking religious studies. He views philosophy of religion as an exercise in exploring the terms left undefined by theology (such as "God" and "soul") and encouraging humility. Education is a way to help young people become fully human, in his view, or good in the
Aristotelian sense. He described the approach in his books "What is Truth?" (2001) and "Being Human" (2003), and in a paper, "Becoming Fully Human", for
Dialogue Australasia in 2007. Vardy was awarded an Honorary Doctorate in Theology by the University of Chichester in October 2021, in recognition of his work in promoting the study of Religious Studies, Philosophy and Ethics and Values Education.
Dialogue Australasia Network In 1999 Vardy worked as a consultant for an Australian school,
Geelong Grammar School, in
Geelong, Victoria. promoting the "five strands" approach to religious studies in schools that he proposed at the inaugural conference of Dialogue Australasia Network in 1997. This was implemented in a number of Australasian Independent Schools. He also served as an editor and occasional author for the journal
Dialogue Australasia. ==Media==