Skip to main content
Home » Resources » Scholarship on Teaching » Inviting Perspective Transformation: Sexual History Awareness for Professional Formation
Scholarship April 19, 2017

Inviting Perspective Transformation: Sexual History Awareness for Professional Formation

The Wabash Center

Author
Ott, Kate
Publisher
Teaching Theology and Religion 20, no. 2 (2017): 117-125
How do we deal with our own sexuality as teachers and as learners in the classroom? As a seminary professor in a mainline Christian context, I find that discussing sexuality increases student discomfort levels by threatening to raise questions about the connections between morality, behavior, and bodies of those in the room – questions we have been culturally trained to avoid. In order to decrease discomfort, many instructors approach sexuality only as content-based subject matter. Particularly for ministry students, this approach can be a disservice to their discernment process and preparation for future ministry contexts, especially for those in turmoil regarding sexuality-related issues. By explicitly engaging how personal experience and cultural contexts shape our sexuality, pedagogical models can promote critical self-reflection and seek perspective transformation, not values change, as a resource for professional sexual ethics training in ministry.