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How does the Christian faith inform Christian student affairs practice? How should it? Instead of placing Christ outside the realm of education, Christ should serve as the motivating and animating force for all of Christian student affairs. With Christ at the center of education, the Christian story distinctly transforms the nature of the work education professionals do. With research from a national mixed-methods study, Christ-Enlivened Student Affairs avoids the common response of anecdotal evidence by providing a catalog of some of the best thinking and practices in the field. Glanzer,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
How does the Christian faith inform Christian student affairs practice? How should it? Instead of placing Christ outside the realm of education, Christ should serve as the motivating and animating force for all of Christian student affairs. With Christ at the center of education, the Christian story distinctly transforms the nature of the work education professionals do. With research from a national mixed-methods study, Christ-Enlivened Student Affairs avoids the common response of anecdotal evidence by providing a catalog of some of the best thinking and practices in the field. Glanzer, Cockle, Graber, and Jeong use the framework of educational philosophies to trace how Christianity animates the who, why, what, and how of student affairs, offering evidence-based resources, and new tools for engaging new practitioners in the field, and a larger theological perspective for Christian student affairs.
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Autorenporträt
Theodore F. Cockle (Ph.D., Baylor University), is a higher education scholar-practitioner pursuing more theologically animated forms of leadership and education. He is co-author of Christ-Enlivened Student Affairs (ACU Press, 2020) and is currently studying character development in college communities as a Postdoctoral Research Associate at Baylor University.Ted also serves as the editor of Ideas, an online publication of the Association of Christians in Student Development (ACSD).When he is not reading or writing, Ted and his wife, Kate, enjoy spending time outside and reading to their four boys. Britney N. Graber is the Associate Director of Institutional Effectiveness at Baylor University, and a PhD graduate of Baylor University's Higher Education Studies and Leadership program. She earned her BS and MA from Taylor University, and MAT from Morningside College.