The Future of Catholic Higher Education
Autor James L. Heften Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 oct 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197568880
ISBN-10: 0197568882
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197568882
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
The Future of Catholic Higher Education: The Open Circle, by James Heft, SM, is a must read for a younger generation that is called to serve God by serving students. It is also a hope-filled message for those who already have dedicated themselves to that ministry, which, at times, may seem to have capitulated to the "consumerization" and "technologization" of Catholic higher education in the United States.
The tone is measured, unpolemical, irenical, practical, and constructive. Heft is a committed insider to the tradition he describes, confident in what he has to offer, but also humble about its shortcomings.
Anyone who cares about this ecosystem and especially its Catholic dimension will benefit from James Heft's fine volume.
Catholic schools exist in an ecosystem with other private, church-related institutions ... Anyone who cares about this ecosystem and especially its Catholic dimension will benefit from James Heft's fine volume. Having served as a professor and administrator at several Catholic institutions and as founding director of the Institute for Advanced Catholic Studies at the University of Southern California, Heft brings theoretical depth and practical experience to his analysis.
...most intriguing...
Based on a combination of scholarship and personal experience, The Future of Catholic Higher Education offers great imagination, sparkling clarity, and good common sense. Heft's book will be a valuable resource for orientations and retreats at Catholic universities, but many of its insights apply to higher education more broadly.
In The Future of Catholic Higher Education: The Open Circle, Fr. Heft engages the reader thoroughly and on multiple levels. As one has come to expect from Heft, the argument is lucid, though not simple, the language direct but nuanced, the themes rigorously researched and passionately human. The reader is left with a sense of hope that Catholic higher education can overcome the challenges we face in education today, perhaps most significantly in its 'creation of an interior spirit responsive to ethical questions.
Reading Heft's The Future of Catholic Higher Education was an enlightening experience, especially his chapters on Jesus and Mary. He writes about the gospel's treatment of their lives and reflects on the ways their teachings influence discourse, both in classrooms and the literature on the Catholic tradition. These essays will inform faculty in secular universities about some of the ways contemporary arguments about social justice are consonant with faith, an important aspect of teaching about diversity.
The tone is measured, unpolemical, irenical, practical, and constructive. Heft is a committed insider to the tradition he describes, confident in what he has to offer, but also humble about its shortcomings.
Anyone who cares about this ecosystem and especially its Catholic dimension will benefit from James Heft's fine volume.
Catholic schools exist in an ecosystem with other private, church-related institutions ... Anyone who cares about this ecosystem and especially its Catholic dimension will benefit from James Heft's fine volume. Having served as a professor and administrator at several Catholic institutions and as founding director of the Institute for Advanced Catholic Studies at the University of Southern California, Heft brings theoretical depth and practical experience to his analysis.
...most intriguing...
Based on a combination of scholarship and personal experience, The Future of Catholic Higher Education offers great imagination, sparkling clarity, and good common sense. Heft's book will be a valuable resource for orientations and retreats at Catholic universities, but many of its insights apply to higher education more broadly.
In The Future of Catholic Higher Education: The Open Circle, Fr. Heft engages the reader thoroughly and on multiple levels. As one has come to expect from Heft, the argument is lucid, though not simple, the language direct but nuanced, the themes rigorously researched and passionately human. The reader is left with a sense of hope that Catholic higher education can overcome the challenges we face in education today, perhaps most significantly in its 'creation of an interior spirit responsive to ethical questions.
Reading Heft's The Future of Catholic Higher Education was an enlightening experience, especially his chapters on Jesus and Mary. He writes about the gospel's treatment of their lives and reflects on the ways their teachings influence discourse, both in classrooms and the literature on the Catholic tradition. These essays will inform faculty in secular universities about some of the ways contemporary arguments about social justice are consonant with faith, an important aspect of teaching about diversity.
Notă biografică
Fr. James L. Heft S.M. (Marianist) is Alton Brooks Professor of Religion at the University of Southern California and founder of the Institute for Advanced Catholic Studies. He served for nearly thirty years at the University of Dayton as the chair of Religious Studies Department, then Provost, and finally Chancellor and University Professor, before moving to Los Angeles to found the inter-faith and inter-religious research center.