Written by and for Christians in education, the Journal of Education and Christian Belief (JECB) is a high-quality international peer-reviewed academic journal. Published biannually by the Association of Christian Teachers (ACT), Kuyers Institute for Christian Teaching and Learning and The Stapleford Centre, JECB is concerned with current educational thinking from a Christian perspective.
Editorial Policy: views expressed by individual contributors and books reviewed or advertised in the journal are not necessarily endorsed by the editors, publishers or sponsoring bodies.
Article abstracts, editorials and contents from recent editions:
- Volume 11-1 - Spring 2007
Subscriptions:
|
Current JECB Subscription Rates |
|
Period |
Institutions |
Individuals |
| |
UK |
USA and
Canada |
Elsewhere
Overseas |
UK |
USA and
Canada |
Elsewhere
Overseas |
|
One Year |
£24.00 GBP |
$65.00 USD |
£25.00 GBP |
£24.00 GBP |
$45.00 USD |
£25.00 GBP |
|
Two/Three Years, Per Year |
£22.00 GBP |
$60.00 US |
£22.00 GBP |
£22.00 GBP |
$40.00 US |
£22.00 GBP |
|
Secure online payment of subscriptions by credit card is available at www.jecb.org
2/3rds world, individuals and institutions:
50% discount on the ‘Elsewhere Overseas’ sterling (£ GBP) rates listed above. |
To subscribe and/or order back numbers please contact:
JECB
The Stapleford Centre
The Old Lace Mill
Frederick Road
Stapleford
Nottingham
NG9 8FN
United Kingdom
T: +44 (0) 115 939 6270
F: +44 (0) 115 939 2076
E: subs@jecb.org
W: www.jecb.org
Editors, Management Group, Editorial Advisers
Editors:
Dr. John Shortt
Dr. David I. Smith
Management Group:
Rupert Kaye (Association of Christian Teachers)
Dr. Andrew Marfleet
David Morton (The Stapleford Centre)
Andrew Palfreyman (Association of Christian Teachers)
Dr. John Shortt
Dr. David I. Smith (Kuyers Institute for Christian Teaching and Learning)
Phil Whitehead (The Stapleford Centre)
Editorial Advisers:
Professor Harro Van Brummelen - Trinity Western University, Canada
Dr. Allan Harkness - Asia Graduate School of Theology, Singapore
Dr. Susan Hasseler - Calvin College, USA
Professor Brian V. Hill - Murdoch University, Australia
Rev. Dr. William K. Kay - University of Wales, Wales
Dr. D. Barry Lumsden - University of Alabama, USA
Samson Makhado - Association of Christian Schools International, South Africa
Dr. Mark Pike - University of Leeds, England
Dr. Signe Sandsmark - Norwegian Lutheran Mission, Norway
Dr. Pablo J. Santana Bonilla - University of La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain
Dr. Elmer J. Thiessen - Medicine Hat College, Canada
Professor Michael S. Totterdell - Manchester Metropolitan University, England
Professor Keith Watson - University of Reading, England
NOTES FOR CONTRIBUTORS
To read the JECB Information and Instructions for Contributors click here.
To read the JECB Bibliographical Citation Guide (the ‘house style guide’) click here.
To read the JECB Peer Review Policy click here.
(To download files, right-click link and select Save As.)
Volume 11:1/Spring 2007
Article abstracts:
Michael W. Goheen
The Surrender and Recovery of the Unbearable Tension
(pp.7-22)
FAITHFUL
CHRISTIAN ENGAGEMENT in education means both being at home and at
odds with dominant culture. This stance of critical participation
should produce an unbearable tension: can one both live in solidarity
and dissent? Yet this unbearable tension is often not present in
Christian experience — why? This article suggests four reasons: the
fragmentation of the Scriptural story, a comfortable cohabitation in
a seemingly neutral culture, a Christendom mindset that accepts a
privatized role, and an eclipse of the antithesis by an emphasis on
creation. The articles closes suggesting that seeing education in
terms of witness to God's kingdom may help us recover this tension.
Keywords: Christ and culture, Christian education, Christendom, witness, tension.
top
Trevor Cooling
The Challenge of Passionate Religious Commitment for School Education in a World of Religious Diversity: reflections on evangelical Christianity and humanism
(pp.23-34)
PASSIONATE
RELIGIOUS COMMITMENT is often viewed as a problem in education
because believers are thought to impose their views on others in the
belief that they are public truth. This article examines two case
studies and concludes that this concern is real. An influential
response is to argue that religious commitment should therefore be a
private matter. However, using ideas from a significant English
report on Citizenship Education, I argue that if teachers can make
the distinction between secured public truth and controversial public
truth, this difficulty with passionate religious commitment is
overcome.
Keywords: Religious commitment, controversial, humanism, evangelical, creationism, public truth, respect, Crick Report.
top
Telford Work
Education as Mission: The Course as Sign of the Kingdom
(pp.35-48)
EDUCATION
IS AN opportunity for cross-cultural mission on behalf of the
eschatological Kingdom of God. The cross-cultural exchange that
happened between Jews and Gentiles at Antioch (Acts 11:19-26) was a
moment of true education that makes the town a fitting metaphor for
educational excellence: an eschatological location at which the old
creation meets the new in unpredictable encounters that leave all
parties forever changed. A course in any field across the curriculum
is an event of situated Christian mission whose devices,
relationships, and goals invite the manifestation of the
eschatological Reign of God. Awareness of this fact can inform
pedagogy fruitfully.
Keywords: mission, education, kingdom of God, cross-cultural, Christian course.
top
Margaret S. Edgell
Afrocentric Christian Worldview and Student Spiritual Development: Tapping a Global Stream of Knowledge
(pp.49-62)
A
LOCALIZED ETHNOGRAPHY of African Christian students revealed
consistently robust Christian faith across all respondents, the core
elements of which were rooted in an explicit Afrocentric worldview.
These findings support multicultural critiques of classic student
spiritual development theory, and point toward further research from
a multicultural frame into the many ways that Christian students form
their worldviews, form their identities, and act on their beliefs.
Keywords: African, Afrocentric, Christian, critical, ethnography, faith formation, spiritual integration, globalization, higher education, multicultural, qualitative, student spiritual development, worldview.
top
Harro Van Brummelen
Reconciliation, Constructivism, and Ecological Sustainability: A Review Essay
(pp.63-71)
THIS
ARTICLE REVIEWS and explores the links between Chet Bowers' recent
book on constructivist theories of learning and the paper by Gormas,
Koole, and Vryhof on learning for reconciliation published in this
journal (Spring 2006). The reviewer holds that Bowers' critique of
constructivism has merit, but that his emphasis on eco-justice leaves
gaps in both the foundations and practices of education. While the
biblical concept of reconciliation is more encompassing, the reviewer
questions whether it can be the sole chief purpose of education and
suggests that Christian educators need to develop a defensible
comprehensive pedagogical framework.
Keywords: Chet Bowers, Jan Gormas, Robert Koole, Steven Vryhof, constructivism, ecological sustainability, liberalism, reconciliation.
top