kata ta biblia

a blog exploring Christian origins, biblical studies, social/cultural history, method, education and the journey through academia

Category: pedagogy

Soul Stories: African American Christian Education by Anne E. Streaty Wimberly

Continuing the theme of education from my last several posts, I’d like to take a moment to review a book that explores a particular angle on pedagogy for the African American community. Anne E. Streaty Wimberly’s book, Soul Stories, pays attention to the importance of connecting narratives, what she calls “story-linking.” Specifically, Wimberly suggests that one way to help people move towards ethical living in Christian education is by examining the relationships between an individual’s story with biblical narratives and also with the stories from their African American heritage.

The first phase of the story-linking process is somewhat autobiographical and introspective. The student/participant considers her identity, her social contexts, her relationships, key events in her life, and the basic meanings that she assigns her life. In the second phase, the leader/teacher guides participants through biblical passages, engaging them in ways that help participants “enter into a partnership” with the biblical characters. They also begin to envision God’s action today in light of the passage and their ongoing response to God. As a biblical scholar in training, this second phase makes me the most nervous, but I also recognize that it is perhaps the most important.

Phase three is what makes this approach somewhat different than the typical “Bible study” of a traditional Caucasian church (I can’t speak to what Christian education actually looks like in African American churches). This is where participants engage in exemplars of the past, both widely known and local heroes of faith in action, with whom they can identify. Finally, phase four is when the leader helps the participants to gather all of these stories and develop them into a way of discerning God’s call for ethical decision making today.

As you might notice, the process need not be limited to African American communities, though the way Wimberly engages her own African American heritage is insightful and instructive for other communities. Every person has a heritage that they can draw from which to draw in this process. There will surely be challenges in discerning meaning in biblical stories, as there would be with any study of the Bible at the lay level. One potential danger is that participants will simply mine biblical texts for images of themselves, rather than being challenged and convicted by them. There would certainly be hurdles in multicultural situations, but such hurdles may make the story-linking even more beneficial. The process may take some creativity for those who do not know much about their heritage. In the end, though, it’s a process seriously worth considering for all sorts of educational contexts and Wimberly’s book is a helpful jumpstart.

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Dynamics of the Classroom/Congregation

During this quarter, part of the home stretch in my seminary career, I have been thinking about education in the context of a congregation. In “The Congregation as Learning Community,” we’ve been emphasizing a holistic kind of education, using buzzwords like “discipleship” and “missional church.” I came into the class thinking that we’d be mostly covering practical aspects of education within a church. But we spent a great deal of time thinking more about the purpose of the congregation and the people who fill it. We should not merely be dumping information into people’s minds, but educational leaders in the church should be guiding and equipping people in becoming transformed disciples.

It makes me wonder: how do we conceive of the student in the classroom? It seems like its easy to forget that students are whole human beings and not just warm bodies behind desks, or numbers on an excel spreadsheet. I have often thought of my pursued vocation as not only a professor, but as a pastoral kind of professor. If I connect the dots, then, I should broaden or deepen my understanding of the people I will be teaching in the future. I should also broaden or deepen my understanding of what my role is as a future educator.

“Disciple,” after all, is just another word for “learner” or “student.” Isn’t it natural to connect the dots between the two? Just like at any church, there will be a hundred different things on the minds of those who show up. Just like at any church, those who come are hoping to “get something out of it” for themselves. What if we could transform a classroom in the kinds of ways that the “missional church” movement is trying to transform the church? How can we not only engage the minds of students but provoke them towards action? How do we not only impart information but also help students to grapple with cultural implications to what they are learning? How do we make contextual connections inside and outside the classroom? I am certain the answers will differ from one topic or classroom to the next. But I think it’s good for me to start asking these questions before I dive headfirst into life as a full-time educator.

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Do you know of any biblioblogs that . . . ?

A friend of mine asked this question:

Pat, do you know of any biblioblogs that deal particularly with…

1) teaching biblical studies in general
2) using tech in biblical studies ed (e.g. class wikis, PPT, Blackboard, etc.)

?

So, I put the question to you all. What do you think? My friend is especially interesting in Hebrew Bible and ANE stuff, I think. But it sounds like he’s open to broader topics in biblical studies too.

Doing a quick search of biblioblogs (or biblicablogs, if you prefer) on the words “pedagogy,” “education,” “teaching” and the like (especially combined with “tech” or “technology” or one of the specifics he mentioned), as well as leaning on my gut, here are some possibilities coming to mind (in no particular order):

Any corrections or additions?

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Christian High School Student Sues his Teacher for "Anti-Christian" Remarks

Okay, so when I was a fundamentalist high school student, sure, I felt like I was an oppressed minority. This is the nature of fundamentalism, you think that your group (no matter how big) is a small minority facing attacks from all sides. So, all comments, especially from authority figures, are subject to this filter that is actively searching for “Anti-Christian” attacks. Now, I don’t know if this kid is actually a fundamentalist, but he and his parents seem to at least be acting with this “minoritized” suspicion.

A LA Times article reports an ongoing story at Capistrano Valley High in Orange County, noting that 16 year-old Chad Farnan, along with his parents, “filed a lawsuit alleging that [James] Corbett[, an Advanced Placement European history teacher,] had violated the student’s constitutional rights by making ‘highly inappropriate’ and offensive statements in class regarding Christianity.” What were the allegedly offensive statements?

At the heart of the Farnans’ lawsuit is a tape recording from what they said is a class lesson Corbett taught Oct. 19. The lawsuit notes that Corbett told students that “when you put on your Jesus glasses, you can’t see the truth,” and that religion is not “connected with morality.”

Hmmm. Well, perhaps the teacher could benefit from using a little more sensitivity and, well, precision in his comments. Unfortunately, we don’t have a transcript of what he was talking about, but as one perceptive supporter of the teacher points out in the article: “It’s hard to teach European history without being somewhat critical of organized religion. But aren’t we supposed to learn from our mistakes? Isn’t that why we study history?” The article also references a Quaker student and an Irish Roman Catholic student who have not been offended by any the history teacher’s remarks. The Catholic student adds: “For hundreds of years the church was corrupt, and that has to be discussed.”

I can certainly imagine a context in which the teacher is raising legitimate concerns about corruption in the religious institutions of European history. For example, let’s say that part of the lesson for the day is this: The state churches of Europe were not interested in worshiping God, but rather protecting their power. For the religious institution, religion was not “connected with morality.” Many Christians today don’t recognize the corruption of the church’s past because they are trying to see church history through rose-colored glasses. But we have to recognize the truth of history and “when you put on your Jesus glasses, you can’t see the truth.”

This is the context within which I imagine the teacher giving his comments. Like I mentioned, he probably could have been a little more careful about the way he made the comments, but if he said something like I imagine, then he’s raising a valid point about ideological presuppositions when studying history. It seems to me that an Advanced Placement course should address the issue of preconceived notions in historical investigation.

The article highlights the 300 or so supports outside the school rallying on behalf of the teacher, Dr. Corbett. They have cool signs like, “Who would Jesus sue?” I like that one. They also talk about a Southern Baptist pastor, Wiley S. Drake, in the crowd recording interviews with the supporters for his Internet radio show. Drake is a guy, by the way, who has called his own supporters to pray for his critics to die (see here too–so much for Jesus asking us to love our “enemies”). His comments for the LA Times article are entirely in line with the attitude I mention at the beginning of this post: “I’m tired of being criticized and ostracized for being a Christian. I’m glad Chad filed his suit. It’s time we Christians fought back.”

It’s this “fighting” mentality that leads this situation in to a frenzied circus. I don’t know the context, so I’m like every other observer, but I would think that a civil conversation with the teacher would do the trick. I’m not proud of the fact that I was a creationist in high school, but a friend and I raised concerns with my high school psychology teacher about how she talked about evolution “as if it were fact” (those were my words at the time). She told us that she had thought about the issue of creationism and was sensitive to our concerns. She just didn’t see the evidence for creationism, but she’d be willing to take a look at any evidence we might have had. No law suit. Just a conversation. And it worked out okay. And I changed my mind when I got to college anyway, so I completely agree with her now.

I know that it’s tempting to see the world against you as a Christian high schooler at a public school, but honestly, I’d hope that a Christian school would give you the same kind of critical reflection on the history of the church. Christians shouldn’t feel they have to defend all the despicable acts of Christian history. I can only hope that the fever dies down and conservative Christians start to see that “fighting” is not as productive as conversing. Who knows, people might actually learn something from the conversation.

Update (12/23/07): See some reflections on this article and my post over at if i were a bell, i’d ring.

Update (12/28/07): See this editorial at the LA Times.

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Teach with vulnerability over demolition

I’ve been perusing the most recent edition of Religious Studies News, the newspaper put out by AAR, and it has some excellent material. They have helpfully shared results to the EIS employment survey, and there are two special sections, “Focus on Getting Published” and the “Spotlight on Theological Education.” You can find the issue online here. Currently they don’t have the “Spotlight on Theological Education” available for viewing online, but I have contacted the editor and he has indicated that they will be posting it online either today or tomorrow.

I’d like to highlight an article in the “Spotlight on Theological Education” written by one of my Fuller professors, Jim Butler. In the article, “Teaching and Learning Scripture as if We Remember Why We Cared about It in the First Place,” Butler challenges the iconoclastic instincts that most professors have in regards to biblical studies. Since the professors (rightfully) see that their students have so much to “unlearn” about the Bible, they take it upon themselves to dismantle and destroy those cherished, but misplaced beliefs. Butler sees this approach as detrimental, and not likely to produce fruitful results:

But as I look back over 30 years of teaching I recognize how often such therapeutic “demolition” has unintended consequences. Some students, usually those of a more academic bent, are quickly won over to their professors’ perspective, and begin to acquire the critical tools that will distance them from the cultural womb that produced them. Others will buy into the educational process enough to gain a patina of sophistication, but, faced with the demands and predilections of the theological consumer culture, they will put together the nuts and bolts of their eventual practice in ways that are largely unaffected by their professors’ insights. Finally, a few others simply will become cynical about theological education, get the required degree, and then quite intentionally fulfill their professors’ worst fears by embracing and cultivating values that are now “battle hardened” against wool-gathering academics.

Butler’s approach to teaching (and I’ve experienced it) is more gentle. He suggests that the theological educator needs to develop the skill “to recognize and to imaginatively attend to the nexus of cultures confronting our students — the culture of their earlier formation and the culture of their anticipated vocational service.” In other words, professors should be more attentive to the situations of their students. He says that he’s also found that students are more likely to share these situations with him if he is “vulnerable enough to share my own path with them at times.” This is essentially giving he students the benefit of the doubt. Rather than talk down to students as if everything they believe is wrong (that’s my phraseology), educators should let the students know that they are in “common cause” with them. And if educators do this, respecting where the students have been and where they are going, the students “will often be more severe in their critique of poor theology than we could be, and more creative in finding constructive and hopeful alternatives.”

I think that Jim’s article is wonderful and true. I would like to add a caveat, however. I think that it is wonderful and true particularly with survey courses, and then, only with a certain portion (perhaps the majority) of the class. In my undergraduate education as a Bible major, in my opinion, we had a rather heavy emphasis on iconoclasm. And though I was a fundamentalist going into college (holding to the kinds of views that my professors would want to rid their students of), iconoclasm was just what the doctor ordered. I fit into that first category of students of a “more academic bent.” I think many Bible majors were won over to the perspective of our professors. I know of only one that held out as a staunch inerrantist to the end (from my class anyway).

So you might say that, for me, the damage was already done. When I came into Fuller, I was actually surprised at how gentle the teaching was. Compared to my earlier experience, it appeared that professors at Fuller were light on the demolition. They told more stories about how they came to their points of view and how they struggled with them. Before taking my first class with Jim, many people told me that he was “pastoral.” That turned out to be true. I looked on while he helped the students wrestle with theological issues related to, say, the authorship of the Pentateuch or the historicity of the exodus account. For me, though, it was an interesting lesson in how to interact with students, a lesson on education, rather than a lesson on the Pentateuch. I had already dealt with these issues.

What I see, then, is a choice. Educators have to choose which student to direct their approach towards. Will it be the “more academic” ones (not quite as “pastoral”) or will it be the ones in the middle, who are interested but not sucked in as easily (more “pastoral”)? I think that Jim has chosen the correct direction for those survey courses. One hopes that when a class deals with those root-level issues with which students wrestle, these students-in-the-middle will feel more confident about the foundational issues and will thus pursue the more complicated subjects on their own. For the upper-level courses, I think it is more appropriate to assume that students have dealt with these issues before and move on.

For people like me, who have already been Bible majors and now have taken survey courses all over again, it is an education in education. I have learned from different approaches to difficult subjects. But I have also learned information that was not highlighted, we have gone more in depth (as graduate classes should). I’ve also had professors that simply emphasize different things. One professor in undergrad may emphasize Greco-Roman backgrounds to the NT, while a professor in seminary may emphasize Second Temple Judaism when speaking of “background” to the NT. [I recognize the privilege of the canonical texts here--I am comparing a Christian school and a seminary after all] So it’s not like I’m falling asleep in class as all my money is sucked away into tuition bills. I am getting a good education. I suppose that you could say that, even though I’m not the target student for this gentler approach, I think that Fuller does a good job of balancing the “pastoral” educating with the information sharing and development of critical thinking skills. Even though I set it up as a choice between one or the other, then, I think it has to be a balance between the two.

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Tests Schmests, Exams Ecschmams

Let me just say that I dislike, nay, despise tests. That’s not good for someone in academia, I suppose. I don’t look forward to taking my comprehensive examinations once I’m in a doctoral program, but worse than that, I don’t even like the fact that I have to take a midterm exam in my early church history course tomorrow. Even when I ace tests I feel queasy about them. It’s like this test, this document probing my brain for answers, is also prodding me with a stress-charged taser gun.

I like to talk about the material. I like to write about the material. But I don’t like to be forced into this awful, heart-pounding sweatfest demanding my memory recall, while at the same time blocking my memory and causing feelings of great inadequacy. I like to learn. I like to read. But I don’t like spending hours upon hours poring over pages of notes, both in paper and on the computer. I don’t like trying to come up with a “study guide” when there is none provided and it becomes so long and cumbersome that it just intimidates me with the amount of information that I feel I have to memorize.

Okay, what I’m describing is not the scenario of every test I take, nor do I even have that many tests. But still, they irk me. If I ever make it to the other side of graduate studies, I don’t think I’ll give tests or exams to my students. Quizzes, maybe. Papers, short and long. Perhaps even blogging, which is becoming an assignment trend now. But no tests.

Well, it’s back to the study guide for me! :)

N.B. I should add that the reason that I am so stressed out about tests is because it only allows you two hours or less to condense tons of material, whereas a paper gives you weeks of preparation time to craft your words. I worry because I care about the grade. I only care about the grade because I want to get into a good doctoral program. I want to get into a good doctoral program so that I will be well-trained to serve my future students as a teacher and, I hope, a mentor as well as to engage in scholarship in general. I would rather our whole system dropped grades, if that were possible, because it causes me to focus on meeting the requirements rather than learning the material. But there’d be no easy way for the big schools to weed out the masses of applicants.

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