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The Elements of Great Teaching

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      There are brilliant scholars and there are enthralling teachers. We want to help you merge these qualities. SemClass posts support the student/teacher relationship in ways that bring energy and expertise to both sides of the podium. »

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      • The Last Thesis Proposal Guide Your Students Will Ever Need
      • YOU CAN’T FISH WITHOUT BAIT: Teaching for Sticky Learning — Part 2
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      • Designing a Student-Centered Learning Environment
      • Before I Take My Classes Online (3 of 3): “So, I’ll Be Able to See All Their Faces, Right?”
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      From LMS to MOOC, the technology of teaching is changing faster than we can keep up. Once confident about our content, we are now being asked to present it in radical new ways. Do you need some support in this? Our SemTech bloggers can help. »

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      • Wikis: A Tool for Fostering Interest and Engagement in Biblical Studies (1 of 2)
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      Loci is Latin for “localities” or “centers of focus.” It is shorthand for disciplines like comparative religions, theology, hermeneutics and history. We don’t all have the same AOC, and so SemLoci posts will touch on what is unique teaching your discipline. »

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      The world of higher academics is in flux. Private, public, and seminary institutions are remaking themselves. Studies about how and why students learn are transforming classrooms. Our SemTrends bloggers will help you stay on top of it. »

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      • Teaching the Bible and Race in the USA
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Welcome to Seminarium

Posted on July 23, 2013 by A+ Brooke Lester, Curator

Well-known-as-excellent Instructor 1: “Some of us were talking at lunch about how our efforts in course design, treatment and in the scholarship of teaching & learning, buy fit in as part of our professional development here at Local Seminary.”

Well-known-as-excellent Instructor 2: “I really want to hear more as you work that out, sale because–in all sincerity–it would never have occurred to me in a hundred years that someone would ‘design’ a course.”

It’s in the spirit of this exchange that we welcome you to Seminarium: The Elements of Great Teaching, a group blog and resource site dedicated to pedagogy for religious studies in higher education.We invite you to join with us here as we “bootstrap each other up” on our understandings and practices in the craft of education.

What do we here at Seminarium hope to bring? And what do we hope for you to bring?

  1. We hope to bring two things: an ever-growing body of resources, and toward that end, an ongoing, collaborative discussion on pedagogy that is grounded in theory and practice.
  2. We hope that you will bring your lively and thoughtful participation. Please participate freely in the Comments sections. Link profligately to your own relevant material on the Web. Ask follow-up questions, share your own perspectives and experiences, offer your constructive criticisms. Notice our licensing: Seminarium content is offered under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA license: you may (and should!) link to our content, share it with others, even “mix” it; but, DO include attribution, DO refrain from commercial use, and DO offer any derivative works under the SAME license (CC BY-NC-SA).

As a topic, “Pedagogy” here should be broadly conceived: when our pool of bloggers brainstormed about what we would find useful in a pedagogy blog, these are some of the topics that came up. As far as I can see, all of them are relevant to both online and to face-to-face learning:

  • The instructor’s role: When should the teacher be center stage, and when should she be de-centered (the old, “sage on the stage” vs. “guide on the side”)? How do I weigh the task of knowledge-dissemination alongside that of facilitating meaning-making student activity? How much control should I try to exert over our students’ learning? Can a teacher be both a co-learner and an authoritative expert?
  • Trends, trends, trends: MOOCs! Adjunctification! MOOCs! Financial crisis! Mobile learning! And, MOOCs!
  • The “new transparency”: digital learning and teaching (and the accompanying public scrutiny) seem to force us all to talk with one another about our classroom methods and habits. Is it safe? Should it be?
  • Selecting among web resources: There are a lot of suggestions out there for resources and activities. What guiding principles about how learning happens can help me separate the wheat from the chaff?
  • The place of teaching in professional development: How do we balance our teaching with scholarship in our fields of study and with institutional service? Is there a correct “special blend,” and how can we know what it is? How can we teach AND thrive?
  • Academic study and faith formation: How should a learner relate her own religious commitments—whatever they are!—to their subject matter’s materials and methods, whether in biblical studies, or church history, or ancient Near Eastern history and literature, or theology, or liturgy, or pastoral care, or…?
  • Time management: What are some of the habits of excellent teachers who also have a life? Can I design a great course that it takes up less of my time? For example, what is a good “contact policy” in this age of constant contact?
  • Assessment and outcomes: Does good grading have to take forever? Do grading rubrics help to clarify expectations, or do they discourage student creativity? Is there such a thing as too much detail in a grading rubric? Is a “contract” a good thing or a bad thing, and why?
  • Blackboard, Moodle, Canvas: What’s good about a “learning management system”? Do they free learning by taking the resources and activities beyond the classroom, or is an LMS just another box? Can–and should–they have doors and windows to the World Wide Web?

While you’re here, look around: Seminarium blogs include Categories and Tags. Categories are few and fairly stable, whereas Tags are numerous and grow unpredictably. The current Categories are SemClass (relating to the classroom); SemTech (relating to educational technologies); SemLoci (relating to a blogger’s academic field of study); and SemTrends (relating to trends in higher education). Try them now if you like: float your cursor over one of these categories above.

Please have fun, and please speak up.

Seminarium is a brainchild of Fortress Education.

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Filed Under: Curator Tagged With: assessment, Biblical Studies, blogging, faith, G. Brooke Lester, MOOC, Moodle, pedagogy, Religious Studies, sage on the stage, seminary

Brooke Lester, Ph.D, is an Assistant Professor in Hebrew Bible and Director for Emerging Pedagogies, at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary (Evanston IL). He received his degree in Old Testament at Princeton Theological Seminary.

We are pleased that Brooke has agreed to serve as Seminarium’s curator, because – in his own words – I am an instructor who has “discovered” the scholarship of teaching and learning, and who talks about it with something of the fanaticism of the convert.

Brooke writes: There is a famous curse about being doomed to live “in exciting times,” and it’s not always fun to be living through the greatest upheaval in literacy since Gutenberg (or possibly since the dawn of writing), but, well…here we are!

My favorite thing about “digital learning” is that the stakes are in fact as high as we think they are: the digitization of language makes us talk together about how we really think learning happens, and then it makes us reconsider almost everything we think we know about that.

More insight into Brooke’s pedagogical “reconsiderings” can be found on his personal blog: http://www.anumma.com.

About Brooke Lester

Related Posts

Before I Take My Classes Online (3 of 3): “So, I’ll Be Able to See All Their Faces, Right?”

Posted on February 5, 2015 by A+ Brooke Lester, Curator

girl with groucho glasses in grass

For the face-to-face teacher and learner, entering the online teaching environment is a cross-cultural experience. It’s natural to try to hold on to the familiar, even when aware that this can interfere with a genuinely immersive, transformative experience of an unfamiliar environment. Find your points of discomfort, and ask questions (like those in this blog series) of instructors who already teach online….

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Filed Under: Books, Curator, SemClass, Seminarium Elements, Understanding Bible by Design Tagged With: Asynchronous, Before I Take My Class Online Series, Blackboard, Brooke Lester, G. Brooke Lester, LMS, online classes, Seminarium Elements, synchronous, Understanding by Design

Before I Take My Classes Online (2 of 3)

Posted on January 14, 2015 by A+ Brooke Lester, Curator

adult and child's fingers touch, michaelangelo style

For the face-to-face teacher and learner, entering the online teaching environment is a cross-cultural experience. It’s natural to try to hold on to the familiar, even when aware that this can interfere with a genuinely immersive, transformative experience of an unfamiliar environment. Find your points of discomfort, and ask questions (like those in this blog series) of instructors who already teach online.

“But Commmuuunniiittyyy!”

“‘Community’ only happens face to face, because of embodiment, and the incarnation.”

I don’t know what the secular, non-seminary parallels to this objection are, but I’m sure they exist. But this is how it finds expression in a seminary. I’m going to hit this one pretty hard…

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Filed Under: Books, Curator, Seminarium Elements, Understanding Bible by Design Tagged With: Brooke Lester, G. Brooke Lester, Seminarium Elements, Understanding by Design

Seminarium Blog 2015: A Call for Bloggers

Posted on December 10, 2014 by A+ Brooke Lester, Curator

Since July 2013, Seminarium Blog (powered by Fortress Press) has hosted essential conversations about teaching and learning in today’s religious-studies and seminary classrooms.

Many of us of the large changes sweeping other academic disciplines into new learning models, content delivery technologies and deep systemic changes. How are these reflected and perceived among the institutions, professors and learners that have come to count on Fortress Press for progressive leadership in religious academic publishing?

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Filed Under: Curator Tagged With: call

Before I Take My Classes Online (1 of 3)

Posted on December 9, 2014 by A+ Brooke Lester, Curator

male face with rows of questions marks

It may be that you’re already excited about the possibilities of online learning, or maybe find yourself compelled while yet skeptical. Perhaps you have been invited to teach online for the first time…or have been coerced by some means into doing so. Perhaps you have had some experience with online teaching, and it hasn’t worked out well. Whatever your trajectory to this point, you stand at the start of a trek into a foreign land. I frequently tell my learners that reading the Bible is always a cross-cultural experience. Here, I invite you to see online learning and teaching too as a cross-cultural experience—but into a foreign land in which you might elect to establish a permanent residence. Think of it as a second home.

Venturing into this foreign country, you’ll naturally be drawn to grasp at any practices or ways of thinking that promise as little change as possible…

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Filed Under: Books, Curator, Seminarium Elements, Understanding Bible by Design Tagged With: backwards course design, Before I Take My Class Online Series, Brooke Lester, course design, education, G. Brooke Lester, hybrid, instructional design, online learning, Seminarium Elements, Understanding by Design

Forks in the Road/Nodes in the Web toward Digital Learning

Posted on October 6, 2014 by A+ Brooke Lester, Curator

I usually don’t see the fork in the road at the time I take it. It’s only looking back that I can say, “Huh. Made a choice there.” Or, occasionally, “Huh. Made a meaningful choice there.”

As 2008 slid into 2009, a recent addition to the rank of PhDs and already-long-time member of the adjunct-faculty class, I read a blog post–I suppose for me in that year it must have been a blog post, rather than a Tweet or a Facebook status update–by Dr. A.K.M. “Akma” Adam, recommending his readers’ attention to a *then* recent digital learning video by Michael Wesch. It was “A Portal to Media Literacy” (2008), following upon Wesch’s “The Machine is Us/ing Us” (2007). Both presentations concern learning and the digitization of text…

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Filed Under: Curator, SemTech Tagged With: digital, distributed learning, Internet, learning, literacy, MOOC, MOOCs, ootle, wesch

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