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Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results
Jordon, Sherry – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2014
This article describes the use of "Writing to Learn" assignments in a course on the Theology of the Protestant and Catholic Reformations. These short, informal assignments promote active learning by focusing on writing as a process for critical thinking and as a way to learn the content of the course. They help students creatively engage…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Protestants, Catholics, Philosophy
DeRogatis, Amy; Honerkamp, Kenneth; McDaniel, Justin; Medine, Carolyn; Nyitray, Vivian-Lee; Pearson, Thomas – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2014
The editor of "Teaching Theology and Religion" facilitated this reflective conversation with five teachers who have extensive experience and success teaching extremely large classes (150 students or more). In the course of the conversation these professors exchange and analyze the effectiveness of several active learning strategies they…
Descriptors: Large Group Instruction, Religious Education, Theological Education, Teacher Attitudes
Clingerman, Forrest – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2014
Reflecting on the complementary pedagogical models on teaching courses related to religion and the environment presented in this issue of the journal by Kevin O'Brien ("Balancing Critique and Commitment") and Jennifer Ayres ("Learning on the Ground"), I suggest ways in which these essays form a conversation about teaching.…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Religious Education, Theological Education, Reflection
O'Brien, Kevin J. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2014
Courses about religion and the environment should work toward a synthesis of critical thinking--teaching students to examine and question the interplay of environmental degradation, religious traditions, and new religious movements--and advocacy--helping students to embrace, articulate, and refine their own environmentalist commitments, in…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Critical Thinking, Advocacy, Religious Factors
Neal, Lynn S. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2013
What happens when a class assignment becomes a source of controversy? How do we respond? What do we learn? By describing the controversy surrounding an assignment on religion and representation, this article examines conflict's productive role in teaching about New Religious Movements (NRMs) and religion. It suggests that we consider how our…
Descriptors: Conflict, Religion, Religious Education, Teaching Methods
Deffenbaugh, Daniel G. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2011
Recent research by Barbara Walvoord suggests a perceived disparity between faculty learning objectives and students' desire to engage "big questions" in the introductory religion classroom. Faculty opinions of such questions are varied, ranging from a refusal to employ any approach that diverts attention away from critical thinking, to a…
Descriptors: Religion, Introductory Courses, College Students, College Faculty
Jacobson, Rolf A. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2011
This essay explores a midrange teaching and learning issue regarding the teaching of biblical languages and one strategy for addressing the issue. Seminary students do not yield a great enough return in exchange for the investment they are required to make in learning biblical languages. Students invest great time and money, but they do not learn…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Writing (Composition), Second Language Learning, English
Walvoord, Barbara E. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2008
A study of sixty-six highly effective teachers of introductory theology and religion courses in various types of institutions reveals very complex challenges for instructors. The majority of students have as a goal their own religious and spiritual development. Faculty members' most frequent goal is critical thinking. Students much less frequently…
Descriptors: Counseling Services, Teacher Effectiveness, Religion, Guidance Centers
Kim, Bokin – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2006
An historically familiar tension in East Asian Buddhism between meditation and cultivation in broad learning has appeared in discussions and planning for preparing ministerial students in Won Buddhism. This paper reviews the history of preparation in this order, which was founded in 1916. While the alternatives of training based on practice and…
Descriptors: Graduate Study, Buddhism, Foreign Countries, Intellectual Experience
Baldwin, Gayle R. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2006
Is it effective or even possible to teach an introductory course in religious studies that not only provides first-year university students with the fundamental vocabulary, concepts, and critical tools of religious inquiry but also invites and stimulates the transformation of the religious imagination? In what kind of teaching and learning method…
Descriptors: Religion Studies, Introductory Courses, Religion, Personal Narratives
Ramey, Steven W. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2006
In a postcolonial environment, our students will encounter multiple representations and diverse followers of various religions outside the classroom. Students need to think critically about the representations of all religions and recognize the humanity of all people. Too often, students leave courses discussing one or more world religions with an…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Critical Theory, Religion, Criticism
Solberg, Mary M. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2005
Teaching bioethics might be likened to a rollercoaster ride of twists, turns, and dips that invite teachers and students to experience something of their own edges of fear and comfort. Here the author provides readers with a glimpse into her distinctive approach to teaching bioethics that encourages students to move beyond boundaries of personal…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Student Reaction, Ethics, Teaching Methods
Lynch, Gordon; Pattison, Stephen – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2005
This article presents findings from an empirical study exploring student and teacher perspectives on positive learning experiences in practical theological education. Forty-five students and twenty teachers were interviewed in focus groups in four educational institutions delivering programs in practical theology. The findings indicated that…
Descriptors: Theological Education, Teacher Attitudes, Student Attitudes, College Faculty
Samman, Khaldoun – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2005
Traversing a rock-strewn terrain of essentialist methodologies historically employed for teaching Islam, the author espouses a non-Essentialist pedagogy that combines critical reflection, analysis of historical methods, and development of an appreciation for alternative notions about Islam and global interdependence. In this essay the author…
Descriptors: Islam, Religion Studies, Instruction, Teaching Methods
Foster, Charles R.; Dahill, Lisa E.; Golemon, Lawrence A.; Tolentino, Barbara Wang – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2005
In this essay the authors describe how four seminary educators pedagogically engage students in practices of interpretation and explore how the variations in their teaching practices shape the critical thinking they seek to cultivate in their students. The piece is excerpted from an ethnographic study of Jewish and Christian seminary educator…
Descriptors: Theological Education, Teaching Methods, Instruction, Critical Thinking
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