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Practice and Profile: Christian Formation for Vocation

Practice and Profile: Christian Formation for Vocation

David I. Smith
0/5 ( ratings)
Too many students are disappointed. They want to make a difference in their chosen professions. They are inspired by successful visionaries, but they have little idea how to follow in their oversized footsteps. Their colleges and universities promise more professional development than they can possibly deliver, especially in terms of moral development for the professions.
Experts coming from a range of perspectives in higher education agree that moral formation for the professions must increasingly take place in higher education. Tragically, the recent evolution of teaching has stripped educators of much of the rationale for moral formation. The recent record of moral lapses by managers testifies to this crisis of moral education.
The authors call for a revival of moral formation in higher education for the professions. They supply the needed resources to redesign classic as well as cutting-edge teaching and learning toward practical moral education in the professions.
This book is carefully designed to apply traditional Christian principles appropriately to evolving professional practices. The authors' strategies address the problems surrounding calling, vocation, and the growing need for virtue training in the professions. In particular, the authors provide clear direction for how to meet the need for professional profiles that meet the standards of the marketplace.
Practice and Profile provides the reader with a tested and proven model of faith formation appropriate to the professions. It also goes into specific, useful detail as to how the model mobilizes learning in classroom and professional settings. It aids institutions of higher learning in their struggle with demands for new learning environments and new moral competencies. Foremost, it gives students a grasp of how to become dedicated professionals who make a difference.

"This is a very special book about the relationship between persons and vocations. It bridges old gaps between the technical side of professions and worldviews. Remarkable also is that it allows educators to bridge gaps between those modules treating worldviews, spirituality, and ethics and those oriented toward practice and skills. Commonly, such courses appear not to touch each other. The result is that the student may fail to integrate these different types of knowledge in practice. Anyone unwilling to accept this situation does well to read this book. It takes some effort, but this effort pays off."
--Peter Blokhuis
Professor of Philosophy, Chair of the Department of Journalism,
Christelijke Hogeschool Ede University of Applied Science, Ede, the Netherlands

"It is my express wish that many colleagues in higher education will become acquainted with this book, so that our young generation may increasingly become more proficient in maintaining their posture as Christians in the often complex professional context."
--Kees Boele
President
Christelijke Hogeschool Ede University of Applied Science, Ede, the Netherlands

Johan Hegeman is Senior Professor of Ethics and Social Sciences in the Academy of Theology at Christelijke Hogeschool Ede in The Netherlands.
Margaret Edgell is Associate Professor of Business at Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Henk Jochemsen holds the Chair of Reformational Philosophy at Wageningen University and is General Director of Prisma in The Netherlands.
Pages
340
Format
Kindle Edition
Release
February 28, 2011

Practice and Profile: Christian Formation for Vocation

David I. Smith
0/5 ( ratings)
Too many students are disappointed. They want to make a difference in their chosen professions. They are inspired by successful visionaries, but they have little idea how to follow in their oversized footsteps. Their colleges and universities promise more professional development than they can possibly deliver, especially in terms of moral development for the professions.
Experts coming from a range of perspectives in higher education agree that moral formation for the professions must increasingly take place in higher education. Tragically, the recent evolution of teaching has stripped educators of much of the rationale for moral formation. The recent record of moral lapses by managers testifies to this crisis of moral education.
The authors call for a revival of moral formation in higher education for the professions. They supply the needed resources to redesign classic as well as cutting-edge teaching and learning toward practical moral education in the professions.
This book is carefully designed to apply traditional Christian principles appropriately to evolving professional practices. The authors' strategies address the problems surrounding calling, vocation, and the growing need for virtue training in the professions. In particular, the authors provide clear direction for how to meet the need for professional profiles that meet the standards of the marketplace.
Practice and Profile provides the reader with a tested and proven model of faith formation appropriate to the professions. It also goes into specific, useful detail as to how the model mobilizes learning in classroom and professional settings. It aids institutions of higher learning in their struggle with demands for new learning environments and new moral competencies. Foremost, it gives students a grasp of how to become dedicated professionals who make a difference.

"This is a very special book about the relationship between persons and vocations. It bridges old gaps between the technical side of professions and worldviews. Remarkable also is that it allows educators to bridge gaps between those modules treating worldviews, spirituality, and ethics and those oriented toward practice and skills. Commonly, such courses appear not to touch each other. The result is that the student may fail to integrate these different types of knowledge in practice. Anyone unwilling to accept this situation does well to read this book. It takes some effort, but this effort pays off."
--Peter Blokhuis
Professor of Philosophy, Chair of the Department of Journalism,
Christelijke Hogeschool Ede University of Applied Science, Ede, the Netherlands

"It is my express wish that many colleagues in higher education will become acquainted with this book, so that our young generation may increasingly become more proficient in maintaining their posture as Christians in the often complex professional context."
--Kees Boele
President
Christelijke Hogeschool Ede University of Applied Science, Ede, the Netherlands

Johan Hegeman is Senior Professor of Ethics and Social Sciences in the Academy of Theology at Christelijke Hogeschool Ede in The Netherlands.
Margaret Edgell is Associate Professor of Business at Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Henk Jochemsen holds the Chair of Reformational Philosophy at Wageningen University and is General Director of Prisma in The Netherlands.
Pages
340
Format
Kindle Edition
Release
February 28, 2011

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