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Showing 46 to 60 of 222 results
Agnew, Elizabeth N. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
Religious studies classrooms are microcosms of the public square in bringing together individuals of diverse identities and ideological commitments. As such, these classrooms create the necessity and opportunity to foster effective modes of conversation. In this essay, I argue that communication attuned to shared human needs--among them needs for…
Descriptors: Religion Studies, Role Conflict, Conflict, Ethics
Webster, Jane S.; Runions, Erin; Gallagher, Eugene V.; Lopez, Davina C.; McGinn, Sheila E.; Penner, Todd C.; Howell, David B. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
What is the role of biblical studies in a liberal arts curriculum? At the 2009 North American Society of Biblical Literature conference, a panel of seven Bible scholars provided brief analyses and arguments about the appropriate goals of teaching biblical studies in undergraduate contexts in this historical moment. They consider and critique the…
Descriptors: Biblical Literature, Undergraduate Study, Critical Reading, Writing Skills
Lewis, Bret – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
Established in 2000-2001, the Center for Religious and Cross-cultural Studies (CRCS) is the only master's level religious studies program at a non-religiously affiliated university in Indonesia. In many respects, the program is experimental, operating within the dynamic political and religious environment of the Muslim world's youngest and largest…
Descriptors: Religion Studies, Democracy, Courts, Religion
Moon, W. Jay – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
A five-year research project of seminary students from various cultural backgrounds revealed that the slight majority of contemporary seminary students studied are oral learners. Oral learners learn best and have their lives most transformed when professors utilize oral teaching and assessment methods. After explaining several preferences of oral…
Descriptors: Instructional Effectiveness, Student Attitudes, Electronic Learning, Online Courses
Batten, Alicia J. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
This article employs George Lakoff and Mark Johnson's work on metaphor (1980) to examine the current use of the term "learning outcomes" within higher education. It argues that "learning outcomes" is an ontological metaphor (education becomes focused on results that one can understand and measure) that resonates with contemporary academic…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Figurative Language, Language Usage, Religion Studies
DeTemple, Jill – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
There has been significant and growing interest in teaching religious studies, and specifically world religions, in a "global' context. Bringing globalization into the classroom as a specific theoretical and pedagogical tool, however, requires not just an awareness that religions exist in an ever-globalizing environment, but a willingness to…
Descriptors: Religion, Religion Studies, Global Approach, Introductory Courses
Andraos, Michel Elias – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
This essay explores new ways of engaging diversity in the production of knowledge in the classroom using coloniality as an analytical lens. After briefly engaging some of the recent literature on coloniality, focusing on the epistemic dimension, the author uses the example of teaching a course on religion, culture, and theology, where he employs…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Religion, Sociocultural Patterns, Theological Education
Satlow, Michael L. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
During my career, I have regularly taught a survey course on the history of Jews and Judaism in the Persian, Greek, and early Roman periods (ca. 520 BCE-70 CE). Student performance in the course has long concerned and puzzled me. By the end of the course students demonstrated familiarity with the narratives and concepts we covered, but most did…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Active Learning, Familiarity, Introductory Courses
Sharp, Carolyn J.; Clark-Soles, Jaime – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
What happens when students encounter the academic study of the Bible in the seminary or undergraduate classroom? Does a teacher have a responsibility to help students navigate challenges to Christian faith that might arise? What pedagogical problems and opportunities does this encounter present? How does this issue manifest differently in…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Biblical Literature, Teaching Methods, Textbooks
Walatka, Todd – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
This essay argues for a particular form of student blogging as a powerful tool for generating and sustaining student engagement and conversation. After a brief discussion of pedagogical principles, "hub-and-spoke" blogging is presented as a means to facilitate a more student and discussion-centered classroom. Based upon recent research and the…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Classroom Techniques, Educational Principles, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
Blanchard, Kathryn D. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
Most courses in colleges and universities are taught by only one instructor. This is often necessitated by the financial exigencies of educational institutions, but is also due to an academic tradition in which the ideal is a single expert teaching in a single discipline. The rapidly changing realities of both the higher education and job markets,…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Interdisciplinary Approach, Team Teaching, Labor Market
Maruggi, Matthew – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
This paper examines the development of the concept of solidarity as expressing a sense of shared humanity, while detailing critiques of its current use, especially when it implies a privileged center setting the agenda for the sake of marginalized others. My research demonstrates how solidarity can be modified when encountering difference, and how…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Church Related Colleges, Catholic Schools, Agenda Setting
Perkinson, James W. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2012
This essay highlights a range of questions that arise when white suburban students engage urban neighborhoods of poverty and color in the United States. How can involvement in an "other" context move beyond "educational tourism"? The essay presents a pedagogical style that raises questions of the kind of socialized body one inhabits: either one…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Suburbs, Cultural Activities, Role
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
Campbell-Reed, Eileen R.; Scharen, Christian – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2011
How do seminarians move from imagining ministry to embodying pastoral imagination? Stories gathered from seminarians in their final year of study show the complexity of shifting from classroom work, which foregrounds theory and intellectual imagination, to more embodied, relational, and emotionally intense engagements of ministry. Stories about…
Descriptors: Theological Education, Church Related Colleges, Clergy, Theory Practice Relationship

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