All my students have read the Bible.
And they haven't read it because they are all religious fanatics -- some may be, but whatever. All my students have read the Bible in an intelligent, academic, manner in a required "Bible traditions" Freshman seminar. Its been three days, and I never want to leave.
I am teaching three classes at St. Olaf this year, one in an intensive interim fashion (2 hours a day, every day, for four weeks, staring on the third), and two in the spring semester. The class I am teaching now is Medieval Women, and I love my students. They are engaged and articulate, and find interesting primary documents to be ... interesting. I can't count how many times I've showen really cool sources to students and had to do a whole song and dance routine to get them involved. These students seem to START involved. It's really amazing.
And today I discovered every one of them has to read the Bible in their first year in the context of a "Christian Tradition" class (you have to take the Bible class and then any other theology class, including Buddhism or whatever).
For a medievalist teaching in modern American academia, the concept that every student has read the Bible, recently (not just in some church group as a kid) is AMAZING. I'm so pleased.
And they haven't read it because they are all religious fanatics -- some may be, but whatever. All my students have read the Bible in an intelligent, academic, manner in a required "Bible traditions" Freshman seminar. Its been three days, and I never want to leave.
I am teaching three classes at St. Olaf this year, one in an intensive interim fashion (2 hours a day, every day, for four weeks, staring on the third), and two in the spring semester. The class I am teaching now is Medieval Women, and I love my students. They are engaged and articulate, and find interesting primary documents to be ... interesting. I can't count how many times I've showen really cool sources to students and had to do a whole song and dance routine to get them involved. These students seem to START involved. It's really amazing.
And today I discovered every one of them has to read the Bible in their first year in the context of a "Christian Tradition" class (you have to take the Bible class and then any other theology class, including Buddhism or whatever).
For a medievalist teaching in modern American academia, the concept that every student has read the Bible, recently (not just in some church group as a kid) is AMAZING. I'm so pleased.
no subject
Date: 2005-01-05 07:24 pm (UTC)Well, no, you can. A whole class who've read the Bible, in addition to the above. That would beat it.
You win!
no subject
Date: 2005-01-06 02:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-05 07:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-06 02:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-05 08:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-05 10:59 pm (UTC)Lynn's about to defend her dissertation on Monday, and I get to go back and begin thinking about dissertating. As it is, I'm also thinking about where I want to end up after graduating, and it sounds like a decent liberal arts college would be really neat.
Good for you! Glad to hear you've found a good position (and yes, is it tenure track?).
no subject
Date: 2005-01-06 02:55 pm (UTC)