2012-2013 Undergraduate Bulletin [ARCHIVED BULLETIN]
Religion
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Return to: Undergraduate Department and Program Information
Department Chair—Burgdoff
Professor—Belcastro, Schroeder (Bergener Chair), Burgdoff
Assistant Professor—Bryant, Mueller
Adjunts—Ben Dor, Layne, McAlister, Wiebe
The six learning goals for Religion state that students who major in Religion should:
- Grapple with a broad range of questions and issues about themselves and their Worlds, including, but limited to: human connectedness to nature; rationality and justice; evil and the grounds for human hope; people as symbol users.
- Be able to articulate their own views, express themselves well in speech and writing, and participate productively in a critical community of discourse.
- Connect and apply their learning to other disciplines, to contemporary issues, and to areas of life and work.
- Engage in critical and self-critical thinking. Students should practice the criticism not only of the works and views other but also their own thinking. Students should be able to think critically about cultures, ideas, values, ways of knowing and subjects studied. And they also should be able to think critically about claims encountered in the media and in the daily life.
- Be practiced in the careful reading of texts in a variety of media. Students should demonstrate the skills and attitudes necessary for engaging, appreciating, interpreting, comparing, and evaluating texts.
- Demonstrate a knowledge of important views, authors, and approaches essential to their discipline and area of focus.
NOTE: The religion faculty also teach four classes related to Greek language for the purpose of reading in relationship to religious studies. See GREEK in this Bulletin.
Return to: Undergraduate Department and Program Information
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