Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas...

15
Assessment for Learning Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009

Transcript of Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas...

Page 1: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

Assessment for Learning

Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion

ClassroomLinda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School

Vancouver, B.C.November 2009

Page 2: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

Opening Prayer Reflection† A wise woman once said: “Prayer is the

raising of the heart, mind, body and soul to God in a relationship of love (not mushy gushy infatuated love) with God, self and others.” (Sr. Josephine Carney)

† We, therefore, pause to begin in prayer. May the Holy Spirit guide our formative time together:

† http://www.loyolapress.com/assets/Bookcovers/5208_gifts-of-grace.swf

Page 3: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

What do I hope to achieve and inspire as a Religious educator in today’s classroom?

 † Increase student ownership and

relevance to enhance the meaning of assessment in Religion class, and to reach a diverse spectrum of learners within the classroom to bring them to understand that Jesus ROCKS!

Page 4: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

Jesus R.O.C.K.S ?

Based on ideas from Virginia Smith’s article 50 St. Mary’s Press: Touching the Hearts of Teens http://www.smp.org/resourcepage.cfm?Article=50&Print=Ye

s

Page 5: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

† Relevance – “relevant to their fast paced lives”

† Observation – “observe the elements of their† world and come to grips with† God’s place in it”

† Challenge – “what appears murky, ambiguous, † even erroneous”

† Knowledge – “unless they possess knowledge that

† is verifiable”

† Spirituality – “build a spirituality that is their own”

Page 6: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

OR ELSE . . .“…the chances of religious faith achieving centrality in their lives are slim.”

Virginia Smith

Page 7: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

Relevance:† “Pope John XXIII understood that church teachings

would have to be compelling to modern believers in order to survive

† Seek new ways to express old truths, new forms for old practices

† Does not imply change for the sake of novelty, but change for the sake of clarity

† Pat answers are unacceptable and rote replies are routinely rejected

† This generation wants its religion on the level of where the rubber hits the road

† Science and Religion need to be brought together”

Page 8: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

Observation:† “To be trained to observe carefully the world

in which they live.† Compare their world with the ones they find

in the bible.† Pointless to teach the elements of the

historical-critical approach to Bible study. In and of itself, the approach is as dry as dust.

† If the search focuses on what biblical books mean for us in this era, it becomes fascinating.

† What is its message today?”

Page 9: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

Challenge:† “We do not teach the Catholics of tomorrow.

These are the Catholics of today.† We need to be realistic and optimistic.† We need to increase growth.† Independent study of other religions is strongly

recommended.† The greatest challenge is to instill critical thinking

skills.† The adventure is in the search.† Class participation constitutes anywhere from 25

to 33 percent of the grade .”

Page 10: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

Knowledge:† “Magic answer boxes we are not.† Fonts of wisdom we are not as often as we would

like to be.† Masters of our fields we are only in our dreams.† But knowledgeable professionals in our discipline,

especially this discipline, we simply must be.† What we know and how much we care are not

mutually exclusive.† Young people must be equipped with both belief

and basis for that belief.† If they do not possess a solid, rocklike foundation

upon which to erect their faith structure, they will build a house of cards.”

Page 11: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

Spirituality:† “To know about God is one thing; to know God,

quite another.† …must unite the two without slighting either, a

neat feat.† We would not put God in a box, we should not

confine our students either.† They need plenty of spiritual elbow room.† Among other things, that involves exposure to

many forms of prayer and styles of spirituality.” † NB: Assessment tasks should match the different

learning styles and intelligences of the students. (CISVA)

Page 12: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

An anonymous prayer says:

“May you hear God’s call to follow the Christ in your own unique way, united with the church, in service to all the world.”

Page 13: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

“My hope is to become one of the R.O.C.K.S in my students’ lives… to teach rather than to preach the word of God.”

Linda GrahamSTA – November 2009

Page 14: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

Closing Reflection

† Consider :The Classroom as Holy Ground,

Kevin O’Brien, S.J., 2003

†Faith, Hope and Love† http://www.loyolapress.com/assets/Bookcovers

/4991_changing-focus.swf

Page 15: Hope and Inspiration for the Secondary School Religion Classroom Linda Graham – St. Thomas Aquinas High School Vancouver, B.C. November 2009.

Appendages† ROCKS: (Article 50) Virginia Smith Teacher, Department Chair, Billings Central Catholic High School,

Billings, Montana http://www.smp.org/resourcepage.cfm?Article=50&Print=Yes

† Assessment: Excerpt from the Philosophy of Catholic High School Teaching (CISVA) http://www.rcav.org/Diocesan_Offices/Default.aspx?id=1812

† The Classroom as Holy Ground, Kevin O’Brien, S.J., 2003 http://www.americamagazine.org/content/article.cfm?article_id=3009