Chapter 1. Introduction; Ros Stuart-Buttle & John Shortt.- PART I. Framing the Discourse.- Chapter 2. The Naming of Parts: Faith, Formation, Development and Education; Jeff Astley.- Chapter 3. Is Talk of ‘Christian Education’ Meaningful?; John Shortt.- Chapter 4. The Christian University and an Anthropology for Adulthood; Mario D’Souza.- Chapter 5. The Faith-full Intellect: Catholic Traditions and Instincts about the Human Person and their Significance for Teaching and Learning; Clare Watkins.- Chapter 6. Deeply Christian, Healthily Plural: A Vision for Schooling; David F. Ford.- Chapter 7. Living Tradition and Learning Agency: Interpreting the ‘Score’ and Personal Rendition; John Sullivan.- Chapter 8. Formation and Christian Education in England; Trevor Cooling.- Chapter 9. Theological Education and Professional Practice; Ros Stuart-Buttle.- PART II Reflections on Practice.- Chapter 10. Journeys of Faith: Personal Stories, ‘Multi-logue’ Narrative and Faith Formation in Schools; Andy Wolfe.- Chapter 11. A Sense of Belonging: Spiritual Development in Christian-Ethos Secondary Schools; Ann Casson.- Chapter 12. Religious Education – Where to from here? Reflections on the Trajectory of Australian Catholic School Religious Education 1965-2017; Graham Rossiter.- Chapter 13. ‘We Need to Keep the Door Open’: A Framework for Better Understanding the Formation of Younger Teachers in Catholic Schools; Richard Rymarz.- Chapter 14. Interpreting Texts More Wisely: A Review of Research and the Case for Change in English Religious Education; Robert A. Bowie.- Chapter 15. Christian Leadership in Education; David Cracknell.
Ros Stuart-Buttle is Senior Lecturer in Theology and Education and Director of the Centre for Christian Education at Liverpool Hope University, UK. She is author of Virtual Theology, Faith and Adult Education: An Interruptive Pedagogy.
John Shortt is Professorial Fellow in Christian Education at Liverpool Hope University, UK. He is co-author of The Bible and the Task of Teaching and author of Bible-Shaped Teaching.