Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Response to Ben's Draft and Bill's Rubric

Ben,

Thanks for your attachment on the core competencies. These are very well stated and make complete sense. Another competency that I would add is toknow the missional polity/structure of the UMC and know where to findresources, how to enter a covenant relationship with a UM missionary, how to support disaster relief, where to get UMVIM training, etc. I would still like to go back to Paul's question and ask what is our mandate as a sub-committee: Are we to develop course objectives, core competencies or both? Another way to put the same question is to ask: At the "UM @ 40" consultation how could we best use our time to influence theother UM professors? I think we should do both, but realize that as a professor we can really only have control over the course objective, as the competency is a much loftier goal that depends more on the student's ability to assimilate and appropriate the course content into his or her own life and ministry.

In response to Bill's proposal that we relate course objectives andcompetencies with the UM vision statement, I would say that both mission and evangelism relate to each of these four areas. I think that we would have to write a fairly in depth paper to show where each objective and competency fits into each of the four areas.

Phil

1 comment:

Ben Hartley said...

Phil mentioned the following: "as a professor we can really only have control over the course objective, as the competency is a much loftier goal that depends more on the student's ability to assimilate and appropriate the course content into his or her own life and ministry."

I tend to disagree with this comment. I think we do need to keep our eyes on the "competencies" we hope students will have. There are some ways we can be reasonably confident that students "get it." That, after all, is what assignments should be - namely, ways to measure whether learning outcomes (competencies) were achieved.

But mostly, this post is a "trial post" to see if it works.

Ben Hartley