Resources
Acknowledging that "there certainly are important abilities outside of what IQ tests measure," McGreal argues that calling these "intelligences" is unsupported by scientific warrants, and may produce needless confusion for educators. Further, he finds that such varying "intelligences" are "explainable in terms of existing concepts of personality and general intelligence."
Virtual visits to 3D religious sites and buildings.
Video. Collection of videos covering such topics as Religions of the World, Church History, and interviews with religious scholars.
Similar to Pinterest,but for teaching. This site helps you create a vVirtual "pinboard" for course projects Students can pin any form of multimedia content and create a digital learning portfolio.
Ideal for group projects. Similar to Googledocs. Members can work on a project and save to shared cloud space.
Ideal for group projects. Members can bookmark and tab webpages and highlight important passages for each other.
CuePrompter is a free teleprompter/autocue service. Your browser works like a teleprompter -no extra software needed.
This site would allow you to "flip your classroom" by sending students to these free online courses. The site includes religion courses from Harvard, MIT, Stanford.
Allows students or groups create their own graphic novel.
This is a mobile app that allows the professor to award points "on the go" using their smartphone. Obviously aimed at K-12 teachers, but useful as well in higher education.
Wabash Center Staff Contact
Sarah Farmer, Ph.D.
Associate Director
Wabash Center
farmers@wabash.edu