Cub Scout Camping "OverNighter"
Cub Scouts from Pack 277 had their annual camping “overnighter” at Mar-Lu-Ridge in Jefferson, MD last night and today. Rain threatened but held off all day, and the cloud cover added much needed relief from the heat. Activities included setting up and breaking down camp, learning about rules for hiking and earning their “hiking” belt loop,” preparing their own dinner and breakfast, a campfire program, learning about maps and compasses, where they earned their “maps and compass” belt loop, “whipping” a rope and knot tying. The boys went to bed around 9:00pm and most were up by 6:30am.
Determining Curriculum (part five)
Brummelen offers some help in this decision making process when he says, “The guiding principle for justifying curriculum decisions is whether the curriculum enhances the possibility of students’ becoming responsible and responsive disciples of Jesus Christ.â€[1] The researcher begins with the assumption that the Christian teacher desires to teach his student Christian doctrine from the Bible. Therefore, the curriculum that teaches the Bible one should ask, “Which ones direct the student to change and become more like Christ?â€
Brummelen also offers a list of questions that are helpful in making a curriculum choice; “Do students become familiar with and experience a Christian worldview and its implications for life in society? Do students investigate and build on their experiences with the world around them? Do they learn about and respond to what for them is new and significant knowledge? Do they learn how humans have developed culture and how they have taken care of the earth, both in positive and negative ways? Are students given opportunities to develop their diverse abilities? Do they create products, procedures, and theories that unfold God’s reality and develop their own gifts? Do they use their learning to contribute to life both inside and outside the school? Does the curriculum encourage them to be and become servant leaders? Do students become aware of and critique the shared meanings of our culture? Do students begin to understand key trends in society and develop their personal response? Do they learn to discern and confront the negative aspects of our culture? Do they respond to and have the opportunity to choose and commit themselves to a biblical way of life?”[2]
On a foundational level, whoever is choosing which curriculum will be used, or if one decides to write the curriculum oneself, there must be a set of beliefs and learning objectives that is looked for in order to be able make any kind of informed decision. Can the person choosing one lesson over another, or one curriculum over another, justify their decision based upon a set of learning and life change goals?
John Dettoni suggests that a guide for spiritual formation is found in several passages of Scripture. He gives, Romans 12:2, “Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.†Galatians 4:19, “My dear children, for whom I am again in the pains of childbirth until Christ is formed in you.â€
Matthew 28:19, “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations.â€Â Colossians 1:28-29, “We proclaim him, admonishing and teaching everyone with all wisdom, so that we may present everyone perfect in Christ. To this end I labor, struggling with all his energy, which so powerfully works in me.†and Ephesians 4:13, “until we all reach unity in the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God and become mature, attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ.â€
Dettoni suggests that from these passages one can lay a foundation that has three major areas: formation, disciple, and maturity.[3] Dettoni explains that spiritual formation based on these passages should be where the “inner being of the person is radically altered so that he or she is no longer the same. Information alone will not make the difference. The person who has taken in the information has been reshaped, remolded, and significantly altered by the active transformation of the data into meaning for oneself.â€[4]
Oliva believes “that using a model in such an activity as curriculum development can result in greater efficiency and productivity.[5] Oliva gives insight that is helpful for this topic when he says, “Curriculum development is seen as the process for making programmatic decisions and for revising the products of those decisions on the basis of continuous and subsequent evaluation.â€[6]
The researcher believes that these “programmatic decisions†for a church’s foundational teaching should use an inductive method of determining curriculum where the actual development of the curriculum is established and then go a generalization from there. In other words, one should not determine what is going on in the lives of the children and build the lessons around those needs.
Instead, teaching should begin with the Bible and teach it in such a way that includes what is transpiring in the lives of the children. Modeling can help churches in this process of determining what to teach and what not to teach. This decision making process helps the developer to consider relevant issues.
Ralph Tyler proposed a model for curriculum planning. He proposes that curriculum developers could ask, “What educational purposes should the school seek to attain?, What educational experiences can be provided that are likely to attain these purposes?, How can these educational experiences be effectively organized?, and How can we determine whether these purposes are being attained?â€[7]
While these questions are designed for a school environment, they are very applicable to the church. This process breaks material down into “small, manageable, and measureable behavioral objectives.â€[8] In discussing Tyler’s model for curriculum development Brummelen says, “The rationale has no place for considering overall aims rooted in a worldview.
It only allows some objectives from a list suggested by subject specialists and others to be filtered out by philosophical and psychological discrepancies. It also assumes that teachers are technicians who are to follow instructions for processing students efficiently. The result is that the way the rationale has been used fits especially the process/mastery orientation to curriculum.”[9]
Three sources could be drawn from in making curriculum choices: “the learners, contemporary life outside of school and the subject matter.â€[10] Once the material has been established it is then filtered through two screens: the social philosophy of the school and the psychology of learning.[11]
The various objectives and material that make it through these screens is what is organized into teaching segments. When Tyler refers to “goals,†“educational objectives,†and “educational purposesâ€, he is referring to what is to be taught in the school setting. But this model could assist the church is making curriculum decisions.
The church begins by identifying its source or sources. The screens that the church passes its decisions through (i.e., philosophy and psychology) begin with the Bible as the source of teaching materials. At this point in the process there is more potential teaching material than one would have time to teach in a short period of time.
From there one could proceed to choose teaching material based upon the vision, direction, current needs of the congregation, or even church tradition. Then passing through the church’s philosophy of education and psychology of learning “screens,†more precise teaching objectives will begin to appear.
[1] Brummelen, Steppingstones to Curriculum, 16.
[2] Ibid.
[3] John Dettoni, The Christian Educator’s Handbook on Spiritual Formation (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1997), 14.
[4] Ibid., 15.
[5] Ibid., 143.
[6] Peter Olivia, Developing Curriculum, 4th Edition (New York, NY: Longman, 1997), 144.
[7] Brummelen, Steppingstones to Curriculum, 43.
[8] Ibid.
[9] Ibid., 40.
[10] Olivia, Developing the Curriculum, 145.
[11] Ibid.
Determining Curriculum (part four; interview with Group Publishing)
Interview with Group Publishing
Whereas the first two publishers had a challenge to narrow down the Bible to specific sections of the Bible, Group Publishing narrows it down even further. The Schultz’s strategy for teaching says, “At Group Publishing we use a “one lesson, one point†approach in the children’s Bible curriculum we create. The kids often spend an entire hour delving into one short Bible passage. And our loudest critics cry, ‘There’s not enough Bible!’ They believe if kids would just trudge through umpteen verses per hour, then they’d really learn.â€[1]
Their point is that oftentimes learning does not take place, nor is the lesson remembered, because too much information was covered in a given period of time. In an interview with Danny Fisher at Group Publishing the question was asked, “How do you determine which parts of the Bible to teach in your curriculum?â€[2]
Fisher explained that they have several different types of products that focus on various topics so churches can choose which topic or topics they would like to cover in a period of time. He also explained that all of their curriculum have scope and sequences, and stories are selected based upon the age and need of the church. Group determines these needs through interviews and focus groups. They have one particular product that “covers all the major biblical stories in three years.â€[3]
The interviewer then asked, “Who makes the choices of what to teach and what to leave out?†Fisher explained that Group Publishing follows the Revised Common Lectionary. He said, “We follow it about ninety percent of the time.â€[4] During the summer months they add in more Old Testament stories because they feel the Revised Common Lectionary is weak in covering the Old Testament.
The interviewer then asked, “Who makes the choices of what to cover in the summer months when you do not follow the Revised Common Lectionary?†Fisher responded by saying, “The curriculum you are referring to was written over ten years ago, and I’m not sure how they determined which of the Old Testament stories to teach.†He went on emphasize that “every major Bible story is covered in three years.†Fisher also shared that Group’s materials were moving away from dated to non-dated materials to give churches more freedom of choice in the selection of teaching materials.
Whereas Dale’s and LifeWay’s choices regarding biblical material selection was through a corporate independent process, Group relies upon church tradition and an already established liturgical lectionary for most of its teaching choices. While Group still has made some independent choices, the corporation, for the most part, still relies on past decisions to support how they move forward. The Revised Common Lectionary was not developed until 1983, so in all three interviews, there is no mention of church history, the early church or even biblical references as to an outline for what material should be covered in a given period of time.
More information about Group Publishing can be found at http://www.group.com/
[1] Thom Shultz and Joani Schultz, Why Nobody Learns Much of Anything At Church (Loveland, Colorado: Group Publishing, 1996), 66.
[2] Information obtained for this section were from a personal interview with Danny Fisher of Group Publishing, January 5, 2009. Fisher is the Sunday School Children’s Ministry Curriculum Representative at Group.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.
Determining Curriculum (part three; interview with Lifeway Publishing)
Interview with LifeWay Publishing
LifeWay is described on their website as being, “Established in Nashville, Tenn., in 1891, LifeWay Christian Resources of the Southern Baptist Convention is one of the world’s largest providers of Christian products and services, including Bibles, church literature, books, music, audio and video recordings, church supplies and Internet services through lifeway.com. The company also owns and operates 131 LifeWay Christian Stores throughout the United States, as well as two of the largest Christian conference centers in the country. Through its publishing division, B&H Publishing Group, LifeWay has produced one of the most accurate and readable Bible translations ever—the Holman Christian Standard Bible. LifeWay is a religious nonprofit organization that receives no funding from the denomination, and reinvests income above operating expenses in mission work and other ministries around the world.”[1]
While significantly larger than Spiritual Formation Ministries, the approach to determining what should be taught to children and then published as curriculum was very similar. The process through which two companies went was very similar as well. To determine the process of curriculum development the researcher interviewed Landry Holmes.[2]
He is the Director of Children’s Ministry Publishing with the LifeWay Corporation. When interviewed, Holmes admitted that at the beginning of their recent Children’s Sunday School curriculum development process, LifeWay did not have a specific list of principles to be taught or Bible stories to be covered. An ad hoc team from the Children’s Ministry Department was gathered together with some of them being specialists and some administrators.
They were collected from within and without of their corporation to answer the question of what to teach. They sat in a conference room and began to determine what should be taught and published through their Sunday School materials. The result of their meeting was a document entitled, “Levels of Biblical Learning.â€[3] It is their belief that “certain stories are so important that they must appear frequently in childhood so that the child will understand not only the facts of the story but the biblical principles that it communicates.â€[4]
LifeWay, like Dale, (see article two) seeks to take children through a certain pathway of learning various doctrinal concepts and principles. LifeWay’s website states, “At LifeWay we have been working hard for several years to develop a ministry tool that can provide milestones for us and churches in guiding boys and girls to grow spiritually.
The question we have been pondering relates to the pathway to reach these goals. We call this path Levels of Biblical Learning.â€[5] Their curriculum seeks to coordinate all of their children’s ministry age levels by using the same ten content areas.
[1] “Levels of Biblical Learning†2003, www.lifeway.com/lwc/mainpage/0,1701,M%253D200724,00.html (accessed November 13, 2006).
[2] The information for this section was obtained through a personal interview with Landry Holmes on November 13, 2006.
[3] This document can be found at www.lifeway.com/lwc/files/lwcF_kids_levels_biblical_learning.pdf
[4] Ibid.
[5] Ibid.
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