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Learning to Fish: Part 3—Methods for Teaching Methods

Posted on December 23, 2014 by David Rhoads

Just as our scholarly use of new methods can open vistas of interpretation for scholars, my students were awakening to ways of studying the Bible that were wholly new to them. Even more delightful was when students employing a method that had never been applied to the text they were studying. In those cases, they are on the cutting edge of biblical scholarship—not just in doctoral courses but also in college electives and seminary classes, even survey courses….

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Filed Under: Mentor Tagged With: Bible, critical thinking, david rhoads, form-criticism, historical-critical method, Learning to Fish Series, Linguistic/discourse criticism, method, methodology, Narrative criticism, Orality criticism, Performance Criticism, Reader-response criticism, reading, redaction criticism, Rhetorical analysis, Social science criticism, Source criticism, teaching methodology, Text criticism

Learning to Fish: Part 2—New Questions/New Methods

Posted on December 9, 2014 by David Rhoads

When I taught at seminary, we had a required course that actually focused on method. The course was called “New Testament Interpretation.” It was a methods course that focused on the ways we go about constructing potential meanings of a text in its first century context. Ironically, all the students assumed from the title that we were going to interpret the New Testament for them by telling them what it meant. They were disappointed in the class….

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Filed Under: Mentor Tagged With: Bible, critical thinking, david rhoads, form-criticism, historical-critical method, Learning to Fish Series, Linguistic/discourse criticism, method, methodology, Narrative criticism, Orality criticism, Performance Criticism, Reader-response criticism, reading, redaction criticism, Rhetorical analysis, Social science criticism, Source criticism, teaching methodology, Text criticism

Write Along Side of Them

Posted on October 5, 2013 by Philip Ruge-Jones

Two things often slip my mind when teaching a writing intensive research course:

  1. That students refuse to believe that writing is a process and overestimate their ability to pull off a project in the final hour, and
  2. That when I’m writing I know the lure of the same delusions….
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Filed Under: SemClass Tagged With: Biblical Studies, capstone, co-learning, criticism, Performance Criticism, Phillip Ruge-Jones, research papers, writing intensive, writing process

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