Calvin professors team up to refresh, reimagine teaching in new book
Ten years ago, David Smith and Susan Felch began dreaming up a project with one eventual goal: to help weary teachers everywhere reimagine their callings through a Christian lens.
What followed was a group of Calvin faculty who came together over the course of a decade to build the recently published book, 聽(Eerdmans, 2016), by Smith and Felch, with Barbara Carvill (German), Kurt Schaefer (economics), Timothy Steele (music) and John Witvliet (Calvin Institute for Christian Worship).
A thoughtful approach
Felch, an English professor and director of the , and Smith, an education professor, director of the 聽and director of the , worked together to lead group discussions over the course of several years that became the foundation of聽the book.
The authors say the book is less a linear set of recipes鈥斺淒o this and you鈥檒l be successful鈥濃攁nd more a collection of biblically and traditionally grounded images that should be read and pondered slowly, and used to help enliven the imagination over the course of time.
On weariness in teaching
Smith said there are various kinds of weariness teachers experience, and they especially wanted to zero in on one type: weariness of checking off boxes.
鈥淭here are quite strong cultural pressures right now to emphasize those aspects of teaching that are most like repeatable, countable, testable techniques that can be divided up into small, discrete targets, that can be measured and listed as outcomes and so on,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd there鈥檚 an aspect to that that can become very dispiriting for teachers over time, because if you get to the point where you鈥檙e not only tired, but you feel like all you鈥檙e doing is just getting to grading the next essay or filling out the next rubric or whatever, it鈥檚 easy to lose sight of any particularly exciting reason to keep investing energy in it.鈥
Felch agreed: 鈥淲e don鈥檛 want learning to be a matter of checking off the boxes. We don鈥檛 want teaching to be a matter of checking off the boxes. We want to give examples that stimulate without becoming recipes to follow.鈥
Three images
The book is anchored by three sections with three images the authors used to stimulate creativity and imagination: 鈥淧art One: Journeys and Pilgrimages,鈥 鈥淧art Two: Gardens and Wilderness鈥 and 鈥淧art Three: Buildings and Walls.鈥 Each section draws on Scripture verses and quotations from Christian authors and scholars throughout history. Each also includes many stories from the classroom that illustrate imaginative ways of thinking, learning and teaching.
The book鈥檚 audience
Beyond the obvious audience of teachers, Felch and Smith say the book also could be used by pastors, educational administrators, small group facilitators, human resources leaders, parents and industry professionals of many kinds.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of settings where teaching and learning are taking place,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not saying all those people will find it directly addressed to their own kind of teaching, but I certainly think anyone who sees themselves as an educator could benefit, partly because it鈥檚 going for the imagination level, not exactly for the how-to level.鈥
Added Felch: 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a stimulus to conversation.鈥
The book is available at the Calvin College Campus Store (1745 Knollcrest Circle SE, Grand Rapids, Mich.)