"The essays in this collection will prove relevant to all faculty, graduate students, and undergraduates seeking to be Christians of incarnational faith in the academy. ... Scales and Howell have collected excellent essays that reflect the common desire to integrate faith and learning. ... The conversation that Scales and Howell facilitate does not reinforce a weak conjoining of faith and learning, but calls for a stewardship wholly animated and brought to life by faith." (Paige Ray, International Journal of Christianity & Education, Vol. 22 (2), 2018)
Chapter 1. Stewardship Reconsidered: Academic Work and the Faithful Christian
Chapter 2. Responding to a Summons: A.J. Conyers and the Academic Vocation
Chapter 3. Embracing Wisdom
Chapter 4. “Vocation is Something that Happens to You”: Freedom, Calling, and Christian Education
Chapter 5. Putting Down Roots: Why Universities Need Gardens
Chapter 6. “Expound this Love”: Naming Your Heart in the Classroom
Chapter 7. Christian Teachers Integrating their Faith Traditions: A Taxonomy of Practical Methods
Chapter 8. A “Radical” Approach to Education: Teaching as though the Church Still Matters
Chapter 10. Pedagogical Practices: Lessons from Augustine of Hippo
Chapter 11. Finding God in All Things: On Re-imagining the University
Chapter 12. The Mind is its Own Place: Gnosticism and Why Scholars Need the Church
Chapter 13. Cultivating Intellects in a Democracy: Privilege, Education, and John Henry Newman’s The Idea of a University
Chapter 14. Pragmatic Pluralism and the American University's Loss of Soul
T. Laine Scales is Professor of Higher Education and Associate Dean for Graduate Studies and Professional Development at Baylor University, USA.
Jennifer L. Howell is a PhD student in Religion at Baylor University, USA.
This book provides new insights on the unique role of graduate students within Christian higher education. Weaving together a variety of voices–doctoral students, new faculty, and seasoned scholars–with findings from empirical qualitative research, the book examines how faith and stewardship guide how they pursue scholarship and teaching as well as the academy’s relationship to the church. The result of this examination is a coherent and thematic narrative that will appeal to Christian graduate students and new faculty seeking to enter the academy with a clear sense of purpose and responsibility.