If you spend much time on a college campus, read college ministry-related blogs, or talk to students (or their parents), sooner or later you will run into talk about the problems of students consuming too much alcohol and “hooking up”
If you spend much time on a college campus, read college ministry-related blogs, or talk to students (or their parents), sooner or later you will run into talk about the problems of students consuming too much alcohol and “hooking up”
Here’s an article from “Insider Higher Education” that I think stimulates some very timely thinking for religious leaders of all sorts. Notice: 1. The word “organic” and what it says about leading change. 2. The word “leadership” (for the same
In a recent post, I took a swing at the problem of using the rhetoric of critical thinking without actually employing it ourselves in higher education. So, let me try to explain a little more of what I mean by
A news item about Shorter University, a Baptist school associated with the Georgia Baptist Convention, has given me another opportunity to worry about the way we talk to one another about contentious matters. The school apparently has made a policy
I mentioned in the previous post my beef with the faux tolerance on college campuses. (I generalize without demeaning examples of real tolerance.) Desiring to think a bit more closely about what tolerance actually is, I hied myself to the