Luther, learning, and the liberal arts

The learning goals of a well‐designed course in the liberal arts include not only the imparting of knowledge but also the development of critical thinking and disciplinary expertise. A class on Luther can help students acquire those intellectual skills associated with the discipline of history and t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Teaching theology & religion 2017-10, Vol.20 (4), p.296-303
1. Verfasser: Burnett, Amy Nelson
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description The learning goals of a well‐designed course in the liberal arts include not only the imparting of knowledge but also the development of critical thinking and disciplinary expertise. A class on Luther can help students acquire those intellectual skills associated with the discipline of history and the liberal arts more generally as they consider broader questions about institutional religion, spirituality, moral choices, and human agency. Current scholarship on how people learn highlights the importance of adequate mental frameworks for the acquisition, retention, and retrieval of new ideas and information. This scholarship underlies the choice of specific strategies used to teach about Luther and the Reformation. Assignments provide “scaffolding,” which begins with modeling and then moves from simpler to more complex assignments. Students practice the specific intellectual skills of critical reading and textual analysis over the course of the semester.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/teth.12401
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ispartof Teaching theology & religion, 2017-10, Vol.20 (4), p.296-303
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subjects 95 theses
Critical thinking
disciplinary expertise
Humanities
Learning
Luther, Martin (1483-1546)
Martin Luther
Religious studies
scaffolding
Skill development
Theology
title Luther, learning, and the liberal arts
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