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2009-2010 Colloquy on: Writing the Scholarship of Teaching in Theology and Religion 
Dates September 25-28, 2009 - First Session at Wabash College March 5-7, 2010 -Second Session at Wabash College 
Leadership Team Patricia O'Connell Killen, Pacific Lutheran University Eugene V. Gallagher, Connecticut College Thomas Pearson, Wabash Center Facilitator 
 Description: The Wabash Center is sponsoring a colloquy on the scholarship of teaching and learning to cultivate this scholarship among teachers of religion and theology in colleges, universities, seminaries and divinity schools. The colloquy will gather a small group of experienced and critically reflective teachers for a year-long process of writing and conversation about writing the scholarship of teaching and learning. The colloquy involves two weekends and assignments between the sessions. Participants will work on their own article length manuscript through the course of the colloquy year, engage in peer review, and converse about writing this genre. The colloquy is designed with the intention that each participant will produce a publishable essay in the scholarship of teaching and learning in theology and religion. Goals: Provide a supportive context within which participants develop and produce publishable work in the scholarship of teaching in theology and religion Facilitate reflection on writing the scholarship of teaching and learning in theology and religion that helps to articulate general characteristics of quality and to refine forms of the genre. Identify strategies that will support the production of high quality scholarship of teaching and learning. Increase the number of persons in the field who are conversant with the scholarship of teaching and learning in theology and religion as well as the broader scholarship on teaching and learning. Participants: Michel Andraos, Catholic Theological Union Alicia Batten, University of Sudbury Kathryn Blanchard, Alma College Ann Burlein, Hofstra University Daniel Deffenbaugh, Hastings College Carol Duncan, Wilfrid Laurier University Rolf Jacobson, Luther Seminary Davina Lopez, Eckerd College Todd Penner, Austin College Tina Pippin, Agnes Scott College Robert Royalty, Wabash College Stipend Participants will receive a stipend of $1500 for full participation in both sessions, plus local expenses and travel. Participants will receive an additional stipend of $500 for submission of an article manuscript on teaching to either Teaching Theology and Religion or some other appropriate academic journal, by January 1, 2011. Please Note U.S. Law prohibits the Wabash Center from paying stipends to participants with certain classes of foreign national status. The Wabash Center is, however, able to reimburse ALL participants for travel and other expenses. Read More (click here) Immigration status has no bearing on the Wabash Center’s selection of participants. It impacts only our ability to pay these participants a stipend. We deeply regret these restrictions but are confident that participants who are not eligible for a stipend will nonetheless find our programs valuable even without a stipend. Eligibility Teaching in a tenure-stream or other continuing position in an accredited seminary or theological school in the United States or Canada, or in an undergraduate theology, religious studies or religion department or program in an accredited college or university in the United States or Canada Ph.D/Th/D. in hand at the time of application Commitment to full participation, from the beginning to ending date and time for the two workshop sessions Read our Policy on Full Participation (click here) Front Row (left to right): Rolf Jacobson (Luther Seminary), Michel Andraos (Catholic Theological Union), Todd Penner (Austin College), Tina Pippin (Agnes Scott College). Second Row: Carol Duncan (Wilfrid Laurier University), Robert Royalty (Wabash College), Davina Lopez (Eckerd College), *Patricia O’Connell Killen (Pacific Lutheran University), Ann Burlein (Hofstra University), Kathryn Blanchard (Alma College). Third Row: *Thomas Pearson (Wabash Center), Alicia Batten (University of Sudbury), *Eugene Gallagher (Connecticut College), Daniel Deffenbaugh (Hastings College). *leadership/staff position.

2009-10 Workshop on Teaching and Learning for: Pre-Tenure Religion Faculty of African Descent 
Dates July 21-27, 2009 - First Summer Session at Wabash College January 28-31, 2010 - Winter Session at Mustang Island June 16-21, 2010 - Second Summer Session at Wabash College 
Leadership Team N. Lynne Westfield, Drew Theological School (Director) Carol B. Duncan, Wilfrid Laurier University Alton B. Pollard, III, Howard University School of Divinity Stephen G. Ray, Jr., Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary Thomas Pearson, Wabash Center 
 Front Row (left to right): Angela Sims (Saint Paul School of Theology), Renee Harrison (Payne Theological Seminary), Velma Love (Florida A&M University), Luke Powery (Princeton Theological Seminary), Joy Bostic (Case Western Reserve University), *Stephen Ray (Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary). Second Row: *Carol Duncan (Wilfrid Laurier University), Roger Sneed (Furman University), Elizabeth Johnson Walker (Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary),*Thomas Pearson (Wabash Center). Third Row: Darius Makuja (LeMoyne College), Lisa Allen (Interdenominational Theological Center), Nyasha Junior (Howard University School of Divinity), *Alton Pollard (Howard University). Fourth Row: LeRhonda Manigault-Bryant (Wake Forest University), Jamal-Dominque Hopkins (Interdenominational Theological Center), Althea Spencer-Miller (Drew Theological School), Kenneth Ngwa (Drew Theological School), *N. Lynne Westfield (Drew Theological School). *leadership/staff

2009-10 Workshop on Teaching and Learning for Pre-Tenure Religion Faculty at Colleges and Universities 
Dates July 28 to August 3, 2009 - First Summer Session at Wabash College January 21-24, 2010 - Winter Session at Mustang Island June 9-14, 2010 - Second Summer Session at Wabash College 
Leadership Team Richard Ascough, Queen's University, Director A. G. Miller, Oberlin College Dianne Oliver, University of Evansville Martha Reineke, University of Northern Iowa Paul Myhre, Wabash Center 
 Front Row (left to right): Abraham Zablocki (Agnes Scott College), Karline McLain (Bucknell University), *Martha Reineke (University of Northern Iowa), Lillian Larsen (University of Redlands), Colleen Cullinan (St. Catherine University). Second Row: Deborah Whitehead (University of Colorado, Boulder), Angela Harkins (Fairfield University), Whitney Bauman (Florida International University), Melissa Conroy (Muskingum College), *Dianne Oliver (University of Evansville), Antonios Finitsis (Pacific Lutheran University). Third Row: Maureen O’Connell (Fordham University),Michelle Voss Roberts (Rhodes College),Sara Koenig (Seattle Pacific University), *A.G. Miller (Oberlin College), Sara Patterson (Hanover College). Fourth Row: *Paul Myhre (Wabash Center), Joseph Marchal (Ball State University), *Richard Ascough ( Queen’s Theological College). *leadership/staff

Integration? Maybe You’re Focusing on the Wrong Thing

Every once in a while, integration becomes the golden fleece in curriculum design, teaching, and assessment. Deans can feel pressured to identify the way the curriculum, and the Faculty, integrates subjects and learning in the curriculum and its course of study. They may feel frustrated when called upon to find ways to demonstrate, through assessment, that integration is taking place: what it looks like, to what degree, for what outcome. This points to a fundamental challenge: in what ways and to what extent are the things learned in seminary transferable (applicable) to ministry contexts? Novice deans often wrestle with some basic questions. What are we trying to integrate--subjects, fields of study, concepts, skills----all of them? Who is supposed to do the integration--faculty? Students? How do we assess integration? What evidence do we look for? How do you grade it? What does it look like, anyway?! Attempts to engage the faculty in how to integrate the curriculum become frustrating and ultimately futile. If you are frustrated trying to integrate, maybe you're focusing on the wrong thing. Transference of learning. A more helpful framework to focus on may be transference of learning. Transference of learning is a powerful indicator of higher order learning. It denotes the ability of a student to take something learned in one context or a particular field of study, and apply it in a different context or field of study. Transference of learning provides evidence of higher order learning: synthesis, imagination, application, innovation, and creativity. Focusing on transference of learning keeps the focus where it belongs: the student's attainment and mastery of learning. One common attempt among faculty is to focus on integrating content learning---concepts from distinct and diverse fields of study. While that is possible, in reality, it rarely happens by intent or design, and more often than not by serendipity, if at all. Busy faculty members rarely spend enough time in conversation among themselves about their own scholarship, fields of expertise or even discuss their own teaching and courses to creatively design integration in a course of study. Focusing on transference of learning can be a more effective framework for faculty discussion about teaching and learning and its outcomes. Ask a professor "How do you strive to integrate what you teach in your course with what students are learning in a course in a different field of study?" and you'll likely succeed in merely stumping the teacher. Ask, however, "What are those things in your course you want to see your students use or apply in other courses as they continue their courses of study?" and you'll likely get a clear and confident response---and a hint about what to look for. While the concept of transfer of learning is easier to grasp than the vague "integration," it must nevertheless be applied with informed rigor in order to be effective as a framework for teaching and learning in the curriculum. Dale H. Schunk provides a list of types and characteristics of transfers of learning from the literature of educational research. The summary below can serve as a guide to develop program level goals, craft course learning outcomes to align with those goals, and point to evidence for assessment. Types and Characteristics of Transfer of Learning Overlap of learning between situations and contexts: the original and transfer contexts are similar ("near") What is learned in one context enhances learning in a different setting ("positive") Knowledge of a previous topic is essential to acquire new knowledge ("vertical") Knowledge of a previous concept is not essential but helpful to learn a new concept ("horizontal") Explicit new knowledge transfers to new task ("literal") Use some aspect of general knowledge to think or learn about a novel problem ("figural") Transfer of learning involves abstraction requiring conscious formulations of connections between contexts ("high road") Abstracting situations from one learning context to a potential transfer context ("forward reaching") Abstracting in the transfer context features of a previous situation where new skills and knowledge were learned ("backward reaching"). Engaging the Teaching Faculty in conversation about transfer of learning can re-shape its thinking about course methodology and learning outcomes. Using transfer of learning as a framework for assessment may make evaluation of "integration" a less stressful and more effective way to measure student learning. Starting Questions What evidence do you have that students use what they learn in one cognate field of study as applied in another? What evidence do you have that students are able to apply what they learn in academic courses in their ministry contexts? What evidence do you have that students are able to apply what they learn in core courses in their field-based studies and supervised ministry experiences? What transference of learning do you wish to see in what students are learning in basic Bible courses to homiletic courses? What transference of learning do you wish to see between acquired academic skills and ministry context competencies? SOURCE: Schunk, D. (2004). Learning theories: An educational perspective (4th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ, USA: Pearson, p. 220.  

2010 Workshop for Fund for Theological Education Dissertation Fellows 
Dates Date: March 25-27, 2010 at Wabash College 
Leadership Team Sharon Fluker, Fund for Theological Education Carolyn Medine, University of Georgia Stephen Ray, Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary Paul O. Myhre, Wabash Center 
 Front Row (left to right): Nichole Phillips (Vanderbilt University), *Stephen Ray (Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary), *Sharon Watson Fluker (Fund for Theological Education), *Carolyn Medine (University of Georgia), Tamura Lomax (Vanderbilt University). Second Row: *Paul Myhre (Wabash Center), Monique Moultrie (Vanderbilt University), Almeda Wright (Emory University), Paula McGee (Claremont Graduate University), Stephanie Crumpton (Columbia Theological Seminary), Jeffery Thomas (Claremont Graduate University), Robert Green (University of California – Santa Clara), Eboni Marshall (Union Theological Seminary), Lerone Martin (Emory University). *leadership/staff

2010 Online Course for Theological Faculty Teaching Online 
 Dates June 1 to July 26, 2010 Course Fee: $100 per person (due upon enrollment, after being accepted, in early May) The Wabash Center is increasingly aware of the growing number of seminaries that offer at least some of their curriculum online. The circumstances that lead to the use of online seminary courses are many and complex. The pedagogical challenges and opportunities of online seminary coursework are of particular concern. Therefore, as part of our mission to enhance teaching and learning, we have contracted with the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Distance Education Certificate Program – a nationally recognized leader in instructional design for e-learning environments – to offer an 8 week online class for seminary faculty to learn about and experience effective practices for teaching online. Please direct your questions to the Wabash Center, not the University of Wisconsin program. Eligibility: We invite deans, rectors, or principals at accredited theological schools and seminaries in the US and Canada to nominate a faculty member to participate. This letter of recommendation should accompany the faculty member's application (see "How to Apply," below), and should include a brief description of the seminary's plans to use online learning in its coursework, and the applicant's role in these plans. (Only one applicant from each school.) How to Apply Application Deadline was April 1, 2010 More About the Course This an introductory course that will present the major elements involved in using the internet for instruction. It will be conducted online to provide hands-on experience with online learning. The course is designed to accommodate faculty with a wide range of online teaching experience. No prior experience is necessary; course material will be valuable to faculty at more advanced levels as well. It will use a "principles-to-practice" approach that presents guidelines and strategies for applying principles of online learning to the practices of individual faculties' online courses. Each week will include resource materials, readings, and online activities to engage participants in active discussion, debate, case studies, mini-projects, and other group or individual work. The course will use threaded discussion forums and an asynchronous format, (meaning you can log in at any time to read and post messages –), although posting early in the week and then later in the week is required for group cohesion. This is a concentrated, resource-rich, learning experience. You must think through what you're hoping to learn, to help guide you in selecting resources most relevant to your situation and context. The approximate time commitment is 8-10 hours per week for reading and activities. To participate, you must be able to login and post responses at least twice every week. There is no "certificate" that is awarded for successful completion of the course. You will need a computer with a broadband connection to the internet, a browser such as Internet Explorer 6.0 or later, and Flash Player Plug-In (or be able to download the free plug-in). 2010 Online Course Participants Kathleen D. Billman, Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago Mary Boys,Union Theological Se minary, NY John Byron, Ashland Theological Seminary Robert A. Cathey, McCormick Theological Seminary Steed V. Davidson, Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary Therese DeLisio, Seabury - Western Theological Seminary Timothy L. Ekblad, Oral Roberts University Brandon L. Fredenburg, Lubbock Christian University Timothy J. Geddert, Mennonite Brethren Biblical Seminary Deirdre Good, General Theological Seminary Pamela M.S. Holmes, Queen's University Tim Huffman, Trinity Lutheran Seminary Mignon R. Jacobs, Fuller Theological Seminary Willie J. Jennings, Duke Divinity School Lisa Kimball, Virginia Theological Seminary Lawrence M. LeNoir, Washington Theological Union, DC Diane H. Lobody, Methodist Theological School in Ohio Mary Elise Lowe, Erskine Theological Seminary David M. May, Central Baptist Theological Seminary Jean-Francois Racine, Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley Rosamond C. Rodman, Mount St. Mary's John Rottman, Calvin Theological Seminary Paula K. Sampson, Vancouver School of Theology Angela D. Sims, Saint Paul School of Theology Kristine Stache, Wartburg Theological Seminary Sharon M. Tan, United Theological Seminary of Twin Cities David T. Tomlinson, San Francisco Theological Seminary Rose van Es, Ecumenical Theological Seminary Arthur Walker-Jones, University of Winnipeg Faculty of Theology Lonnie D. Yoder, Eastern Mennonite Seminary Course Topics 1. Major differences and similarities between online teaching and face-to-face teaching 2. Online course models and best practice principles (including the "hybrid model" that blends distance education and face-to-face education) 3. The role of the instructor and course management issues 4. The role of the learner and motivation 5. Interactive teaching strategies 6. Facilitation and communication techniques 7. Formation, community, and spirituality in the online seminary classroom 8. Application issues and questions in online teaching

Understanding and Promoting Transformative Learning: A Guide to Theory and Practice, Edition: 3

In the third edition of Understanding and Promoting Transformative Learning, Patricia Cranton provides new insights into the field of transformative learning. Cranton promotes transformative learning, addresses transformative learning theory, and offers strategies for the concept itself. The author examines and promotes transformative learning in multiple contexts: higher education, business industry, government, health professions, nonprofit organizations, and community development. Cranton traces the origin of the concept of transformative learning and then gives a full description of the theory from an integrative perspective. In doing so, she shows the reader that transformative learning takes place both individually and communally.   A minor weakness of the book is its use of specialized psychological terminology; the reader unfamiliar with it may lose focus on the overall purpose of the book as they strive to understand the meaning of particular words and phrases. That said, the book is helpful for understanding transformative learning theory, practice, and strategy. These insights alone aid faculty in developing effective teaching strategies to advance student learning. In addition, the author shows not only the importance of the subject, but how it can be used in real life applications. This book is valuable because it focuses on the core of what it means to learn. At the forefront of this learning is an acknowledgement of various ways of knowing and the author provides examples of these. I was ­­particularly drawn to the section that discusses dialogue, discourse, and support. This section of the book resonates with me because it fits into my own theory of critical pedagogy. The student should be impacted by learning in such a way that it transforms not only the learner, but the learner’s society as well. Understanding and Promoting Transformative Learning is particularly valuable for helping educators see their role in the learning process. The methodology described throughout the book leads to self-reflection, critical reflection, and thinking about how one’s teaching may fit into contemporary contexts. Furthermore, it converts the process of reflection into active participation in society. Additionally, the book discusses empowerment and the importance of dialogue to this process. This book is valuable in its demonstration of how dialogue is critical to transformative learning and can help the reader see how this affects student self-awareness and consciousness. Overall, I found this book to be a valuable asset for those interested in social justice and especially for teachers interested in transformative learning.

Innovative Practices for Higher Education Assessment and Measurement

Editors Cano and Ion offer a group of international voices in their contribution to the Advances in Higher Education and Professional Development Book Series (series editor, Jared Keengwe), with this volume focusing on innovative practices in assessment. The book’s organization structure involves general contents followed by a detailed table of contents with full abstracts for each chapter, then a thorough summary of each of the twenty authors’ works in the preface before turning to relevant chapters. Such a format facilitates pinpointing the reader’s interest in particular methodologies for assessment, measurement, and data-gathering. The volume itself is divided into three main sections: (I) Theoretical Approaches on Students’ Assessment, (II) Research-Based Evidences on Assessment, and (III) Innovative Practices in Students’ Assessment. The editors claim that the purpose of their book is to attend to an international level of assessment innovation with a triple perspective (theoretical, practical, and research-based), that integrates theory and practice to enrich the field of assessment (xvii). Authors have created scenario-specific assessment innovations and practices in each of their chapters so readers have a variety of choices from which to draw ideas. Section I focuses on engaging students in self-, peer-, and professor-based assessment loops. Self-regulated learning that is based on assessment, both in face-to-face and online environments, is addressed in the chapters one through three, and six. Competency-based assessment, where student competencies are measured against standards of performance, is illustrated in chapter four. “Brain-Based Learning” discusses the neuroscience of feedback and application to contexts in chapter five. “Comparative Judgement” is introduced in chapter seven as an alternative assessment domain to counter standardized tasks and test scoring. Section II moves to research about assessment versus testing cultures, beginning in chapter eight with meaning-oriented learning rather than recall and recognition learning. Research in this chapter shows that students will make the effort to succeed when asked to do more complex thinking than is required for standardized testing. Feeding back and feeding forward are discussed as case studies and analyses in chapters nine and ten. Self-direction and student participation are also analyzed in case studies in chapters eleven and twelve, followed by online assessment projects conducted in Portugal and Spain in the remaining two chapters of this section. Section III names innovative practices in student assessment. The remaining chapters in the book (fifteen through twenty) attend to pedagogical approaches to incorporate assessment into the learning endeavor. The chapters include case studies and strategies. Practical applications including project-based learning and formative assessment are outlined by each set of authors. The book is a reference resource, best used by browsing topics and making choices about which innovative approaches to assessment best fit one’s own context. There is some overlap in authors’ experiences, reinforcing the validity of the international research and pedagogical approaches. This resource, filled with illustrations, should be available in libraries for institutions of higher education that are working on self-study and self-assessment. There is much here to aid teachers in honing their attention to assessment excellence as part of the pedagogical task.

An Evidence-based Guide to College and University Teaching Developing the Model Teacher

Richmond, Boysen, and Gurung’s work provides a much-needed resource for new teachers and is valuable to experienced teachers as well. The text is both concise and comprehensive concerning the current state of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL). The authors are psychologists who include their disciplinary insights, as well as provide important examples and resources from disciplines in the sciences, social sciences, and humanities. Chapters one and two set up the context of the “model teacher.” Rather than providing an essentialist answer to the definition of the model teacher, the authors focus on behaviors that produce consistent ideal results in the classroom. Chapters three through five – focused on teacher training, instructional methods, and student learning respectively – are useful to new teachers. As a text for initiating teachers, these chapters provide a reliable systematic introduction to key ways in which teachers interact with students in the classroom. These chapters should be complemented with discipline-specific examples or readings in graduate school teaching programs. Chapters six and seven on assessment of student learning and syllabus construction are the most valuable to teachers at any stage in their career. The insights into the scholarship on assessment is invaluable for the development of class, departmental, and university-wide curriculum. These two chapters are the most practical chapters for reconsidering the significance and purpose of teaching strategies and assignments. Finally, chapter eight examines student evaluations. There are many important insights in this chapter for new teachers on how to engage meaningfully with student summative evaluations. One point of interest was the authors’ statement on the significance of student satisfaction with a course. The authors could have included a lengthier conversation on how to meaningfully address the question of student satisfaction. In the end, “evidence-based” means that one organizes the multiple resources we employ in higher education in a way that substantiates the claims we wish to make. This text provides concrete advice that is useful for the novice; it is also a helpful aid for anyone wishing to mentor others in the art of teaching. An Evidence-based Guide to College and University Teaching employs an engaging hypothetical dialogue with the reader and an interactive approach. There are self-assessments at the beginning and end of each chapter along with hypothetical case studies for each chapter. An appendix at the end presents the uninterrupted self-assessment scale on sixty-four criteria for model teachers. These elements are excellent resources for group discussion in graduate seminars or faculty retreats. This book presents an accessible synthesis of the SoTL literature. It is successful as a gateway resource to the dialogue from the last forty years on pedagogical best practices. The text is limited in terms of the depth that it covers given the myriad topics it addresses, but it provides a solid beginning to engage the conversation.

Tectonic Boundaries: Negotiating Convergent Forces in Adult Education (New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, Number 149)

This slender volume presents a collection of essays examining concerns for adult education. The first chapter frames the problem with the concept of “liquid modernity,” which is the idea that structures such as family, occupation and career, and social life are fluid in an unprecedented way (12). Education and informal learning serve learners if they teach them how to navigate complex contexts and to recognize and adapt to changing circumstances. The metaphor of “tectonics” is used to describe forces which are sometimes convergent, divergent, and/or transformative in adult learner’s lives (93). This metaphor underscores the paradox that for adult learners, education needs to complement the structures of their lives while at the same time responding to the modern world’s shifting demands. Other chapters explore various contexts of adult learning. Chapter Two discusses the concerns of adults learning English as a second language. As immigrants, these learners are in transition, adjusting to new circumstances and a new culture. In order to make their education meaningful and engage them in learning, the authors describe strategies of using prompts to get students speaking and writing about their lives and their experiences to practice English, to engage students, and make their education meaningful (25). Chapter Three describes the growth of job clubs among communities of African-American women. These clubs are often attached to other institutional social networks in their lives, such as faith-based communities. These networks facilitate informal learning by providing tips and resources for members to update their skills. Chapter Four addresses education for the dissemination of health information, describing interrelated cultural, social, and economic factors that impinge on health education and which in turn impact health care outcomes. Chapter Five takes the digital native versus digital immigrant divide to examine intergenerational differences in approaching education. The challenge for educators is to design educational content which engages natives yet is also friendly and inviting for immigrants, and to shift the mode of adult education from thinking about teaching to thinking about learning. Chapter Six describes the significance of the ancient art of storytelling, not just to preserve culture, but to evoke and shape the meaning of life experiences for adult learners. Chapter Seven begins with the context of a post-recession economy in which low-skilled workers are increasingly vulnerable. This context provides the foundation for a discussion of the role of adult education: to build human capital, to make better citizens, and to enrich the course of learner lives. Chapter Eight outlines problems of delivery, credit, and accreditation that result from the tectonic shifts of the modern digital age. These shifts include such varied educational modes and attainments as badges, MOOCs, and "direct assessment competency-based programs" (87). The book’s strength rests in its ability to point to the concerns that frame contemporary adult education, although it does not describe pedagogical strategies in an equally consistent fashion. The book ends with the important reminder that in adult education, negotiation is key. Adaptability and flexibility complement the issue of fluidity. Good pedagogy meets learners where they are and recognizes their needs and concerns.

Wabash Center Staff Contact

Sarah Farmer, Ph.D.
Associate Director
Wabash Center

farmers@wabash.edu