As tenure-track professors at a Catholic liberal arts college, we began our academic careers four years ago with a strong desire to excel in our research and teaching. Most importantly, however, we hoped to come to a deeper understanding of how we might imbue our work in a Christian higher education context with a strong sense of purpose and connection to our beliefs. This reflection details our experience of co-developing a sense of vocation and sacramentality in ourselves and our students during the busy pre-tenure years. We discuss how religious and scholarly texts, workshop and retreat experiences, and course design focused on experiential learning have deepened our ability to live out vocation and sacramentality through our work
Elizabeth Johns, a Fellow at the Center for Religion, Ethics, and Culture at the College of the Holy...
The purpose of this qualitative phenomenological study was to explore perceptions of vocation, calli...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. Unlike many of my peers, I started...
Bringing together narratives and theory-based analyses of practice, this volume illustrates collabor...
Teaching as discerned vocation in urban Catholic schools has the potential to provide a far-reaching...
The overriding purpose of Christian liberal arts colleges in the United States is to offer a compreh...
Underneath Teaching there lies a conceptual framework through which we view its role and purpose. Di...
My first reaction upon hearing the theme for this year's conference was puzzlement. I never tho...
Young adults today experience an extended adolescence, a period of time now commonly referred to as ...
The current study surveyed 100 first-year students in order to answer the research question, “What a...
In unpacking the concept of teaching as a vocation in Chrisrian tradition, the research aims to arti...
Course Description This course addresses the question, How is a vocation to Christian ministry disce...
One of the unique aspects of Jesuit Ignatian education is the focus on vocation and discernment. Sti...
Course Description This course seeks to ask and address the question, How is our vocation as those c...
When considering vocation options, people rarely find a box to check for "theological field educator...
Elizabeth Johns, a Fellow at the Center for Religion, Ethics, and Culture at the College of the Holy...
The purpose of this qualitative phenomenological study was to explore perceptions of vocation, calli...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. Unlike many of my peers, I started...
Bringing together narratives and theory-based analyses of practice, this volume illustrates collabor...
Teaching as discerned vocation in urban Catholic schools has the potential to provide a far-reaching...
The overriding purpose of Christian liberal arts colleges in the United States is to offer a compreh...
Underneath Teaching there lies a conceptual framework through which we view its role and purpose. Di...
My first reaction upon hearing the theme for this year's conference was puzzlement. I never tho...
Young adults today experience an extended adolescence, a period of time now commonly referred to as ...
The current study surveyed 100 first-year students in order to answer the research question, “What a...
In unpacking the concept of teaching as a vocation in Chrisrian tradition, the research aims to arti...
Course Description This course addresses the question, How is a vocation to Christian ministry disce...
One of the unique aspects of Jesuit Ignatian education is the focus on vocation and discernment. Sti...
Course Description This course seeks to ask and address the question, How is our vocation as those c...
When considering vocation options, people rarely find a box to check for "theological field educator...
Elizabeth Johns, a Fellow at the Center for Religion, Ethics, and Culture at the College of the Holy...
The purpose of this qualitative phenomenological study was to explore perceptions of vocation, calli...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. Unlike many of my peers, I started...