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Resources

On Teaching and Learning: Putting the Principles and Practices of Dialogue Education into Action

On Teaching and Learning takes the ideas explored in renowned educator Jane Vella’s best-selling book Learning to Listen, Learning to Teach to the next level and explores how dialogue education has been applied in educational settings around the world. Throughout the book, she shows how to put the principles and practices of dialogue education into action and uses illustrative stories and examples from her extensive travels. Dialogue education values inquiry, integrity, and commitment to equity—values that are also central to democracy. Learners are treated as beings worthy of respect, recognized for the knowledge and experience they bring to the learning experience. Dialogue education emphasizes the importance of safety and belonging. It is an approach that welcomes one’s certainties and one’s questions. (From the Publisher)

Developing Learner-Centered Teaching: A Practical Guide for Faculty

Developing Learner-Centered Teaching offers a step-by-step plan for transforming any course from teacher-centered to the more engaging learner-centered model. Filled with self-assessments and worksheets that are based on each of the five practices identified in Maryellen WeimerÕs Learner-Centered Teaching, this groundbreaking book gives instructors, faculty developers, and instructional designers a practical and effective resource for putting the learner-centered model into action. (From the Publisher)

The Teaching Professor, Volume 22, Number 9

A 15,000 word article from AAUP (American Association of University Professors), addressing faculty recruitment,  tenure and advancement, sexual harassment, academic freedom, and protections against personal liability. “In the end, if you apply institutional policies consistently and fairly, you will be in a solid position to defend decisions.”

Seminary Journal vol. 14, no. 2, 2008
Issues in Theological Education—2008 (pdf)
Designing Learning from Module Outline to Effective Teaching

New lecturers, part-time teachers and graduate teaching assistants are often required to both deliver an existing course and design their own teaching based on a module description. But where do they start? Underpinned by sound theory, Designing Learning is a practical guide that aims to help busy professionals design, develop and deliver a course, from module outcome outline to effective teaching. Illustrated with useful checklists and action points, this book covers the essentials of designing learning: supporting and promoting student learning, matching content to outcomes, selecting effective teaching and learning methods, assessment that supports and promotes learning and provides feedback, learning materials and resources for diverse learners, C&IT tools and how to use them best, creating an inclusive learning environment, managing and evaluating your course, quality enhancement and assurance processes. Guided by principles of good practice and reflecting the educational research that underpins them, this book is essential reading for anyone new to teaching in higher education.(From the Publisher)

Being Black Teaching Black: Politics and Pedagogy in Religious Studies

A group of eminent African American scholars of religoius and theological studies examines the problems and prospects of Black scholarhip in the theological academy. They assess the role that prominent African American scholars have played in transforming the study and teaching of religion and theology, the need for a more thorough-going incorporation of the fruits of black scholarship into the mainstream of the academic study of religion, and the challenges and opportunities of bringing black art, black intellectual thought, and black culture into predominantly white classrooms and institutions. (From the Publisher)

Wabash Center Staff Contact

Sarah Farmer, Ph.D.
Associate Director
Wabash Center

farmers@wabash.edu