Hey
Both i guess.. I am just struggling to grasp what I actual need to discuss besides issues such as abortion and euthanasia
No worries! So with ethics you need to read the question carefully to understand specifically what it wants from you. It's a common mistake (it was definitely the mistake I made in my trials) where students address the APPLICATION of ethics (abortion, euthanasia), when actually just asked what the ethical teachings are.
So if you're given a short answer to identify the ethical teachings - you identify the ethical teachings. That's it. Nothing about modern issues, just, what are the teachings. You might also be asked to describe the sources of ethics, so dig back to sacred texts and writings, and other authorities within the religion. Then, more likely in an essay situation, if you're asked about the way an adherent can apply the ethical teachings to their daily life, or the way adherents look to religion for ethical guidance...then you can bring in those issues you brought in.
So the way I see it is really like there's three tiers of questions: ethical teachings, sources, application. And it's important not to jump between them and take it too far when really you've just got a 3 marker question on the teachings - you'd be wasting your time going any further into it.
Does this make sense?

I organised my study notes accordingly to help get my head around this
