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Ayres, Jennifer R. – Religious Education, 2013
When people of faith participate in movements for social change, how are their religious and moral identities formed, challenged, and transformed? Although they have explicit and tangible goals as they participate in advocacy, protest, and boycotts, religious social activists also, James Jasper argues, craft "lives worth living" (1997).…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Religion, Identification (Psychology), Social Change
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Eschenauer, Donna – Religious Education, 2012
Memory and imagination, complex activities of the brain, act as the cornerstone for ritual prayer. These brain functions ground us in hope and aid in our discovery of what it means to be human at a deep level. This article explores the ritual of the Paschal Triduum, the Roman Catholic Church's highest expression of faith. It interprets the Triduum…
Descriptors: Imagination, Catholics, Memory, Brain
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Daily, Eileen M. – Religious Education, 2013
This article reviews the history of public religious education in the United States with an eye to its learning outcomes, contexts, and approaches. That history suggests that public religious education is still needed today but that informal learning contexts may be more appropriate than public schools. Recent trends in learning habits are then…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Handheld Devices, Telecommunications, Religious Education
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Hogue, David A. – Religious Education, 2011
Twenty-five years ago the author was taking a required class in neuropsychology in which students were introduced to the amazing structure and functions of the brain. During the very last class session, exams completed, students were relaxed, and by then had enough basic information to ask interesting questions. The author ventured a question…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Religion, Brain, Neuropsychology
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Brady, Judith Ann – Religious Education, 2010
Dorothy Day's love of the poor originated from reading novels that portrayed the poor as persons worthy of respect. This article explores how Day's reading novels opened her mind and heart to the realities of poverty. The methodology is literature-based. Dorothy Day's autobiography reveals the novelists who captivated her mind and cultivated a…
Descriptors: Poverty, Economically Disadvantaged, Intimacy, Young Adults
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Bischoff, Claire; Moore, Mary Elizabeth Mullino – Religious Education, 2007
The thesis of this article is that teaching through oral history cultivates a spirit for justice and peace, as well as knowledge and skills that contribute to that spirit. The authors examine periodical literature focused on justice and peace education and analyze a course taught through oral history. Both the literature and case study yield…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Educational Practices, Peace, Empathy
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Price, Elizabeth Box – Religious Education, 2004
Do congregations that becomelearning congregations require a certain level of cognition?Members and leaders of learning congregations know themselves to be co-creators of the congregation's culture and shapers of its decisions and life, engaging in and reflecting on the shared practice of ministry. These congregations find that education occurs…
Descriptors: Churches, Thinking Skills, Imagination, Religious Education
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Loomis, David J. – Religious Education, 1988
Describes imagination as the cognitive faculty that mediates a person's relationship with God. Discusses imagination's integrative function and its realm of pure possibility which facilitates openness to God. States that only through imagination grounded in God's spirit can humankind hope to perceive, with increasing degrees of clarity, God's…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Imagination, Intuition, Religion
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Hyde, Brendan – Religious Education, 2004
This article aims to explore the connections between a religious education curriculum's methodology in the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne, Australia and some contemporary theories about children's spirituality. "The Good Shepherd Experience" curriculum is intended for use with 5- and 6-year-old children in the first years of formal schooling.…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Imagination, Foreign Countries, Religious Factors
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Kunzman, Robert – Religious Education, 2006
Helping students learn how to engage thoughtfully with religious diversity is a vital component of democratic citizenship. This article argues for the importance of such a curriculum and considers the challenges and potential inherent in fostering "imaginative engagement" with religion in public school classrooms. It first explores conceptual…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Field Experience Programs, Democracy, Religion
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