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Explore the role of evangelization and catechesis in faith life. Discover different learning styles and teaching methods to pass on the Christian message effectively. Reflect on historical and modern practices to strengthen your faith education skills.
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Teaching and Learning Welcome to the CCRS@brighton
Passing on the good news • Where did we hear the good news? • How? Who was responsible? When? • What did we hear? • What role does evangelisation / catechesis have in our faith life?
What questions is this module trying to answer? • How do we do it now? • How should this be done? • To whom? • When? • Whose job is it?
Sessions sequence • Learning – faith learning – history – catechesis • Content: what are we passing on? • Delivering catechesis: planning a presentation • Your presentation and feedback
Your presentation • A short ‘catechesis’ in the last session • Working in pairs perhaps? • Choose a topic • Find relevant tools • Plan a session and tell us about it • Receive feedback from the rest of us • Could be written up as an assignment
You will need: • A Bible • A commentary • A Catechism of the Catholic Church • A developing sense of how adults learn best
Your experiences of learning..... • Think of a really good learning experience • What made it good? • ~think of a really awful learning experience. • What made it so bad? • Think / pair/share – then write on the poster
So • What constitutes ‘good’ learning?
Ways of understanding learning and teaching • Information processing • Social • Personal • Behavioural • + • Reflective • experiential
Information processing • People need to make sense of the world • People naturally categorise / classify • We develop data into concepts • We invent a language to communicate this
Learning styles • Different versions • assumptions? Warranted? • Can learning be restricted to a ‘style of learning’? • Implications for your teaching
Social • People naturally from learning communities • Learning develops through interaction with others • Emphasises group work and group skills
Informal learning contexts • Situated learning • A specific context • The development of a specific language • Learning means a movement from the periphery to the centre • E.g. An apprenticeship
Cont. • Communities of practice • Communities of people • Learning within this • Building identity within that • Developing meaning within this community • Learning and membership entwined
Personal • Begins with the individual • Focuses on self-knowledge and self understanding • Seeks the creative • Aims to achieve confidence, competence and self-worth • Associated with the work of Carl Rogers
Emotional intelligence • Daniel Goleman – associated author • ‘Intelligence ‘and ‘competence:’ confused? • Promotes learning – the claim
Behaviour • Human beings can correct / modify behaviour • Feedback from failure allows modification • Rewards and threats can be used to stimulate appropriate behaviour
Experiential learning • Builds on concrete experience • Which leads to further observation / reflection • Leads to generalisation and abstraction • Leads to testing implications • A spiral process
Reflective learning • Practitioners reviewing own practice • A reflective cycle: experience – reflection – amended plan – experience • Important for religious people?
Key elements • Words • Definitions • Education or socialisation • History • Tools • What is ‘learning in faith’? • What framework will help you?
History • Early Church – Didache (?50-60 AD) • Constantine (312) • Dark Ages (600-1000) • Middle Ages (1000-1450) • Reformation / Counter Reformation (1519 – 1564 +) • 20th century: educational and ecclesiological change • Catechetical movement (1960s +) • 2012 – secularism; anti-authority; anti-church; anti-Christian; symbolic poverty
Catechisms • Existed in 8th century – Alcuin • Common format of question – answer • Luther produced a catechism • ‘Penny Catechism’ produced by Charles Borromeo after the Council of Trent 1560+ • Need for orthodox statement of faith • Danger of ‘cementing in stone’
Kids v adults • Pedagogy – teaching children • Androgogy – teaching adults • Today adult learning is seen as the priority
Evangelisation • Is usually used of an initial pronouncement of the ‘good news’ • But the term ‘new-evangelisation’ is used of those who are Catholic but not evangelised • Kerygma – the basic formula of Christian faith eg the fish • This would be followed by catechesis
Catechesis • A very old term • Resurrected recently particularly in the RC Church • Means faith-sharing within a community • Re-echoing or re-telling • Is concerned with maturation of faith
Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults • RCIA – now the norm for acceptance of adults into our communities • Template for modern catechesis • Key issues: sponsorship; readiness; learning in community
Important things in RCIA • Faith seen as dynamic • Faith journey and faith story important ideas • Staged initiation • Celebration • The community is seen as both the source and expression of faith • Anthropocentric • Christological and Trinitarian • Scriptural
Religious education - schooling • Originally all schooling was religious • 19th England: Christianity made a huge contribution to English school until 1988 • ERA 1988 – no confessional RE anymore for state schools • Support for religious pluralism now required • Education about religion – the tolerance agenda • Faith schools within this
The task is: • To explore your own experience of faith formation • To find the framework which best describes this • To reflect on this and consider the implications for your parish / school context • To apply these thoughts to your presentation
Look at your Catechism • Look at the contents page • Then the different parts • Where are the sections on the creed? • And the section which includes the 10 Commandments? • And the section on prayer? • Where is there material on forgiveness? • Check out some references – abbreviations given on P. xv