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Engaging Faith

Practical Lesson Ideas and Activities for Catholic Educators
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Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen to be Beatified

The Vatican has announced that Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen (1895-1979), a prominent evangelist of the mid-twentieth century who hosted a highly rated program, Life is Worth Living, on the new medium of television in the 1950s, will be beatified. The diocese of Peoria, Illinois, reported that Sheen interceded after a baby born in 2010 and showed no signs of life. For 61 minutes the family and friends of the infant prayed to Sheen to intercede. After the baby was transferred to a Peoria hospital near the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception where Sheen was ordained in 1919 the baby showed signs of life.The baby's heart began beating and the child breathed. Today, the young child remains healthy. Msgr. Jasno Gray of Peoria who investigated the miracle explains it in an interview on EWTN. No date for the beatification was immediately announced. One additional miracle must be credited to Archbishop Sheen before he can be canonize a saint. Assign the following questions: What was the controversy concerning Archbishop Sheen's relics? What is the connection between Jack Benny and Lucille Ball with Archbishop Sheen? What did Sheen use as a prop on Life Is Worth Living?

Religious Liberty in America and around the World

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops offer several articles, videos, alerts and other resources on the topic of religious liberty. Also, Ave Maria Press offers a free digital five-day mini unit, "Religious Liberty and Catholicism in the United States," that is suitable for both Catholic high school religion courses and very adaptable to parish youth ministry programs as well.

Fielding Questions about Why I Am Catholic

Brandon Vogt’s bestselling and aware winning Why I Am Catholic (And You Should Be Too) is a remarkable and persuasive argument for truth and beauty in the Catholic Church and for reasons why young people should throw off the common urge to leave the Church for the more radical decision to “join the rebellion” and go against the tide and remain or become Catholic. Coming soon are teacher resources (lesson plans, assignments, quizzes, and more) to support this 180 pages engaging and clear read. There is also a companion study guide already available for the trade edition. Brandon Vogt is an award-winning author, blogger, and speaker who serves as content director for Bishop Barron’s Word on Fire Catholic website. In this recent podcast, Non –Catholic Q&A w/Bishop Barron (June 2019), Brandon and Bishop Barron field questions on the faith from non-Catholic listeners, including atheists and agnostics.  

New Edition of Your Life in Christ: Foundations in Catholic Morality!

Have you received a review copy of the third edition of the all-time best-selling Your Life in Christ: Foundations in Catholic Morality? If you are a high school theology teacher connect with Bob Wieneke to have a complimentary copy sent to your high school.

Do You Offer Your Students Extra Credit?

What is your opinion on offering extra credit to students especially during exam time? A college professor, Deborah J. Cohan, explains why she changed her mind on offering extra credit and some of its benefits in the article “A professor explains why she offers extra credit in her classroom.” In our research with high school theology teachers, we have likewise found a majority do offer extra credit opportunities to their students. Hence we have included some questions and assignments in the Chapter Review portions of our text to help facilitate those opportunities. Some of the questions and assignments are based on the overall Focus Question of the chapter. Others are directly related to the particular section content. Even teachers who do not offer extra credit have shared that they use these questions and assignment as study guides to help their students prepare for quizzes and exams.

Church History: Comparing and Contrasting Alternate Beliefs

Helping students engage and remember Church history can be very overwhelming and is often abstract.     The following cards offer a quick template that can assist students to quickly label, compare, and contrast specific factors of heresies, schisms, and various creeds that differ from the tenets of Roman Catholicism.  This type of assignment can also be beneficial for developing research skills, through digital literacy, and negotiating web resources to find the correct information.  For easy and creative access: use a hole punch and keep the grid cards on a ring for quick comparison. Some of the groupings that I have used for this activity have included: Gnosticism, Arianism, Apollinarism, Nestorianism, Lutheranism, Calvinism, Mormonism, Anabaptist, Mennonite, Seventh Day Adventist, Islam, Iconoclasm, Methodist, Anglicanism, the Hussites, Presbyterianism, Baptist, and Scientology. Scour a Church history text for items that can serve to head up other groupings.     Group: ________________   Time period: __________________   Name of the founder of the movement:   ______________________________   Country of origin:   ______________________________   Main Tenets   1 –     2 –     3 -       Grouping: _______________   Time period: __________________   Name of the founder of the movement:   ______________________________   Country of origin:   ______________________________   Main Tenets   1 –     2 –     3 - Written by: Thomas Malewitz, M.T.S., Ph.D. St. Xavier High School (Louisville, KY)

Five Tools for Implementing Technology in a Theology Classroom

In 2006 I had my first experience teaching in a 1:1 environment using technology. At the time, students had laptops and the classroom had a SMART board. Today, technology in the classroom includes e-textbooks and learning management systems (LMS). Since then I have worked with the iPad, Chromebook, and Surface Pro to integrate technology-based pedagogical methods into Christian religious education. From this experience, I would like to share five tools for implementing digital technology in a theology classroom.   Nearpod   Nearpod is a web-based application that engages students in the teacher’s presentation of the class content and offers immediate assessment of student learning. With Nearpod, a teacher can create slides or upload an already prepared PowerPoint, Google Slide, or PDF. Additionally, a teacher can insert interactive slides to poll students’ views on a topic or ethical question, evaluate the student’ prior knowledge on a topic, or create a real-time formative assessment after a concept has been presented. For example, a teacher could create a multiple-choice, true-false, matching pairs, or fill in the blanks questions quiz. The open-ended question slide permits students to express their thoughts on the topic, as well as respond to application or evaluation questions. The teacher can then show student responses on the main classroom display. Lastly, the teacher may opt to have students view the presentation on their 1:1 device. This allows students to follow the teacher presentation on their device or work at their own pace. Some limitations with Nearpod are its inability to allow users to rearrange the textboxes on a slide to make room for other textboxes or images, write on a slide while presenting, and to animate the content on a slide so the content does not appear all at once.   Wooclap Wooclap is a web-based application like Nearpod. However, Wooclap offers several interactive features not available in Nearpod, e.g. brainstorming, a rating-scale, finding a correct area on an image, prioritization, and sorting. Wooclap too allows for live messaging, gamification, and is compatible with PowerPoint. Compatibility with PowerPoint allows the user to insert Wooclap interactive slides into one’s PowerPoint presentation. Wooclap shares the same limitations noted for Nearpod. Unlike Nearpod (that is designed for educators), Wooclap is tailored for a broader population. Consequently, while Wooclap offers more features, Nearpod attends more to specific needs of educators.   Kami Kami is also a web-based application that allows the user to annotate e-books and PDFs. In Kami, the user can highlight text, use textbooks to make annotations, add notes on the side, draw and handwrite, and insert audio annotations. This means students can interact with their class textbook on PDF as they would with a hardcopy textbook. Moreover, students can add typed, hand-written, or audio annotations. Teachers can also go paperless as students can download handouts, complete them on Kami, and then submit the annotated assignment to the class’ LMS. As Kami is designed for educators, Kami offers blogs for educators to share best practices.   Storyboard This web-based application is a great tool for digital story telling as users can create a storyboard with scenes, characters, props, dialogue, and explanations. This is a helpful tool for presenting content and evaluating student learning, particularly when teaching a Scripture or Church history course.   PowerPoint PowerPoint’s strength lies on the user’s capability to customize the slides by mixing images, fonts, textboxes; along with the animation and transition of slides features. Additionally, when presenting, the teacher can highlight and write explanations on the slide with content or use the white screen function to have a clean whiteboard for which to offer further explanations. This is a valuable tool for classroom management as, when used with a tablet, a teacher can offer explanations from anywhere in the classroom. Lastly, the narration feature records the slide transitions and animations along with the teacher’s verbal and written explanations. This narration can be exported into video to create Vodcasts. This is a valuable tool as students can access the lecture on their own device in class or at home. Also, students can work at their own pace. One limitation of PowerPoint is that the teacher is the active participant and students are passive recipients. However, the integration of Wooclap into PowerPoint overcomes this limitation. The integration of Wooclap also does away with the teacher having to choose between PowerPoint and another application that engages students and with switching between applications when presenting class content   Written by: Israel Diaz, M.T.S., M.A. Theo Department of Theology  St. Thomas Aquinas High School

Three Rules for Living a Good Life by Lou Holtz

Lou Holtz, the Hall of Fame former Notre Dame coach, has written a new book Three Rules for Living a Good Life: A Game Plan for Graduation. The book provides a simple formula for success for young adults entering the workforce and moving toward committed relationships. Just for fun, take a look at ten famous Lou Holtz quotations. Ask your students to pick out a favorite and tell why they chose the one they did. 1. “Motivation is simple. Eliminate those who are not motivated.” 2. “If you’re bored with life—you don’t get up every morning with a burning desire to do things—you don’t have enough goals.” 3. “You were not born a winner, and you were not born a loser. You are what you make yourself to be.” 4. “Everyone needs something to do, someone to love, something to hope for, and something to believe in.” 5. “One thing is certain: there will be one thing that will dominate your life. I strongly suggest it be something you can be proud of.” 6. “Ability is what you are capable of doing. Motivation determines what you do. Attitude determines how well you do it.” 7. “Without self-discipline, success is impossible. Period.” 8. “Virtually nothing is impossible in this world if you just put your mind to it and maintain a positive attitude.” 9. “Making a big life change is pretty scary. But you know what’s even scarier? Regret.” 10. “I can’t believe God put us on this earth to be ordinary.”