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Engaging Technology in Theological Education: All That We Can't Leave Behind (Communication, Culture, and Religion)
 
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Engaging Technology in Theological Education: All That We Can't Leave Behind (Communication, Culture, and Religion) [Paperback]

Mary E. Hess (Author)

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Book Description

Communication, Culture, and Religion June 2005
We live in a media culture, surrounded by ever-evolving digital technologies. While state schools and secular organizations have embraced the new teaching tools and models for learning that technology affords, religious institutions have struggled with how and why to do the same. All that we can't leave behind: Engaging technology in theological education is a breakthrough book that invites religious educators to both engage and adapt their pedagogy to incorporate new media and technology.

Drawing from her expertise as a seminary professor and consultant to religious institutions on the use of technology in teaching, Mary Hess invites professors, pastors, seminarians, and anyone interested in religious education into critical reflection on ways of engaging technology to enhance learning and serve as critical interpreters within communities of faith.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Mary Hess is one of the most innovative and interesting voices working in theological schools today. Her insights both surprise and enlighten. She understands the pedagogical potholes and possibilities that technology presents for seminary education. Reading her work will change the way I teach. (Scott Cormode )

Mary Hess has produced an engaging set of reflections on popular culture, viewed through the lens of an educator. In the tradition of Brookfield and Palmer, she both respects and queries her subject and invites the reader into her reflections. Her analysis draws the reader into her reflections rather than merely declaring her conclusions. A spirited book! (Richard Nysse )

Philosophically deep and culturally diverse and relevant...seminary faculties have in Hess’s book a series of wonderful discussion starters about the 'why-to' of technology for theological education. (Teaching Theology and Religion )

A thoughtful analysis on the ways in which media culture can, and ought, to be used in the seminary context. In the process of explaining her rationale for a distinctly modern approach to theological education, she makes a variety of practical points as well, that would certainly prove helpful to those wishing to adopt her methodological and theoretical propositions. (Religious Education )

Mary Hess’s essays probe deeply the most crucial questions about technology in theological education. She makes the compelling case that responsible theological education must engage digital culture—not in an instrumental how-to way but in an adaptive one—if we are to remain faithful to the life of Jesus Christ. The conversation is unquestionably two-way: mass mediated popular culture produces, circulates, and contests meaning, but Christian faith provides critical tools and practices by which contemporary meanings are tested for adequacy as God continues to reveal Godself for our time. Being the outstanding teacher she is, the author does not merely set the issues before us but effectively frames them with pedagogical insight, suggestions, examples, and implications rooted in the essential practices of our teaching and learning. Through this invitation into sustained reflection about our processes of meaning-making through digital cultures, and her persuasive argument for its significance for the life of the church, Mary Hess clearly succeeds in giving back to the communities that have nurtured her. This book is a must-read for those who are committed to quality theological education and the preparation of leaders for the church. (Lucinda Huffaker )

Part of the great value of Engaging Technology in Theological Education, is implicit in its calling and challenging theological educators to consider the multiple-intelligences and varied learning styles among students....Hess has written a wonderful resource for faculty in reflecting on their pedagogical strategies and approaches - especially if and when anticipating developing online course and curricula. It would serve especially well as the heart of a faculty conference or retreat on technology and pedagogy.

(Review & Expositor )

About the Author

Mary E. Hess is assistant professor of educational leadership at Luther Seminary, St. Paul, Minnesota.

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More About the Author

Mary Hess is Associate Professor of Educational Leadership at Luther Seminary, where she has taught since 2000. She has a BA from Yale, an MTS from Harvard and a PHD from Boston College. She directed the Religious Education and Challenge of Media Culture Project prior to coming to Luther, and currently directs the Open Source Religious Resources project, which is developing the www.feautor.org site. Her most recent books include Teaching Reflectively in Theological Contexts: Promises and Contradictions, and Engaging Technology in Theological Education. She is a frequent contributor to the journal Religious Education. She is currently president-elect of the Religious Education Association/Association of Professors and Researchers in Religious Education, and a member of the Catholic Theological Society of America, the College Theology Society, and the American Academy of Religion. She consults widely with US theological school faculties on topics of distributed learning and pedagogy, and has worked with both the Wabash Center and the Lexington Seminar. She has written the blog Tensegrities since early 2003, and is active in a variety of digital contexts.

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