released 8/23/2024
Educator Paul Spears, co-author of Education for Human Flourishing: A Christian Perspective, discusses ugly trends within education and how a fuller understanding of human nature can aid Christian educators in fostering learning environments that do justice to students. Spears argues that humans, as rational created beings, are meant to develop their minds in pursuit of God’s redemptive purposes for the world, including but not limited to individuals. Spears discusses how various educational pedagogies can train students to deny inevitable failures rather than to learn from them and to see education merely in terms of making money, thereby fostering a sour cynicism and despair.
Co-author Steven Loomis discusses how a technical managerial ethos imported from the secular business world reduces education to a flat, standardized set of procedures which ignores the context and the fullness of truth. Education thus follows the rest of secular culture in its drive for efficiency and ease at that cost of messy values and non-quantifiable wisdom. Loomis believes that resisting this tendency within education is a singularly important task for educators who seek to make wise disciples of Christ. These two interviews first appeared on Volume 101 of the Journal.
23 minutes
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In an interview from Volume 116 of the Journal, Stratford Caldecott (1953–2014) talks about his 2012 book Beauty in the Word: Rethinking the Foundations of Education. Caldecott argues that Creation has a harmonious quality — a fitting fitting-togetherness — which should inform the shape of education. Ken Myers introduces the conversation with quotes about the ends of education from James K. A. Smith (Desiring the Kingdom), Josef Pieper (Leisure, the Basis of Culture), Luigi Giusanni (The Risk of Education), and James S. Taylor (Poetic Knowledge).
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