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Showing all 14 results
Siegler, Elijah – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2015
After illustrating the joys of teaching religious studies abroad with an anecdote from my trip to China, I warn of some of its inherent pedagogical and ethical challenges. I argue that teaching some of the "new directions" in religious studies scholarship might address these challenges. These include a turning away from the abstract…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Study Abroad, Teaching Methods, Religion
Mitchell, Kerry – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2015
This paper discusses strategies I employed during seven years of teaching within a study abroad program focusing on religion. This year-long program traveled to four Asian countries and included immersion experiences in monasteries, ashrams, and other religious institutions. I identify four principles and discuss accompanying exercises that guided…
Descriptors: Religion, Religious Education, Study Abroad, Foreign Countries
Locklin, Reid B.; Tiemeier, Tracy; Vento, Johann M. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
Tomoko Masuzawa and a number of other contemporary scholars have recently problematized the categories of "religion" and "world religions" and, in some cases, called for its abandonment altogether as a discipline of scholarly study. In this collaborative essay, we respond to this critique by highlighting three attempts to teach world religions…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Online Courses, Religion, Philosophy
Trelstad, Marit – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2008
This essay asks: What are the ethics of engaging self-identified "conservative" students in topics and processes of learning that may unravel their world-view and possibly their personal lives? We should take their concerns, fear, and distrust seriously and not simply dismiss them as ignorant. We should strive to be "trustworthy" educators,…
Descriptors: Feminism, Critical Theory, Teacher Effectiveness, Political Attitudes
Sajjadi, Seyed Mahdi – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2008
With advances in information technology, the velocity of information production on the global level has expanded as well. This acceleration has led to the delegitimizing of knowledge, the equating of information with knowledge, and the giving of predominance to information rather than knowledge. This advance has created epistemological challenges…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Information Technology, Internet, Epistemology
Schmalz, Mathew N. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2006
This note from the classroom explores teaching new or alternative religions within the context of a Roman Catholic Liberal Arts College. The essay will specifically focus on a section of a course entitled "Modern Religious Movements" in which students were asked to consider different methodological approaches to the teaching and study of…
Descriptors: Religion Studies, Theological Education, Catholics, Liberal Arts
Bagli, Jehan – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2006
This essay traces the development of the Zarathushtrian (Zoroastrian) priesthood from the time of the prophet Zarathushtra, through the Median priestly tribe as Magi, and the Macedonian and Arab invasions. This sets the stage for the separation of the Zarathushti priesthood between Iran and India and the generation of independent training methods.…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Religious Cultural Groups, Clergy
Lefebure, Leo D. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2006
This article describes the transformation of Catholic theological education over the last fifty years from a highly defensive posture vis-a-vis other religions toward dialogical engagement with members of other religions and all persons of good will. Until Vatican II, most Catholic theologians and officials distrusted exploration of other…
Descriptors: Religion Studies, Catholics, Religious Education, Theological Education
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
Mosher, Lucinda Allen – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2006
This paper asserts that Continuing Education aimed at equipping Christian leaders (lay and ordained) to carry out their ministries in the midst of America's increasing religious diversity in a way that views this diversity positively must be two-pronged: (1) it must provide accurate information about the beliefs and practices of the neighbors, and…
Descriptors: Religious Cultural Groups, Religion, Continuing Education, Christianity
Fort, Andrew O. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2006
As the number of people of South Asian heritage in America has greatly increased over recent decades, the study and teaching of Hinduism has come under ever greater scrutiny. During this time, the number of students of Indian background has vastly increased in some schools in some parts of the United States. This increased presence and scrutiny…
Descriptors: Religion, Liberal Arts, Undergraduate Students, Religious Education
Berkson, Mark – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2005
This paper is a reflection on the two most significant challenges that I have faced teaching the introductory course in Islam. The first is the challenge of teaching Islam after September 11, 2001, the events of which gave rise to such pedagogical questions as how much and in what ways the course syllabus should change, and in particular how we…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Muslims, Islam, College Faculty
Burr, Elizabeth G. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2005
In this essay I reflect on my experience thus far of teaching Islam as a non-Muslim at Metropolitan State University and at the University of St. Thomas in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota. I begin by narrating a conversation about conversation that I had with one of my Muslim students. Then I introduce the theme of multiplicity as a way of…
Descriptors: Muslims, Student Attitudes, Textbooks, Islam
Swanson, Mark N. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2005
In a brief essay originally presented as part of a panel discussion with Christian and Muslim teachers of Islam in the university setting, the author describes the distinctive characteristics of the Islamic Studies Program at Luther Seminary (St. Paul, Minnesota). While the program allows Islamic studies "majors" to earn a degree (M.A. or M.Th.)…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Theological Education, Muslims, Islam

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