2017
DOI: 10.1111/teth.12373
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Embodied learning: Teaching sexuality and religion to a changing student body

Abstract: Sexuality, more so than other subject areas, magnifies the embodied nature of teaching and learning as well as conspicuously silences open dialogue given its taboo status in many religious and theological contexts. Yet, student learning about sexuality that incorporates knowledge of and about religion, in particular, may greatly improve the public discourse about sexuality through our students as responsible citizens and as leaders in their chosen professions. To bridge this gap, through a year-long collaborat… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…The activities and discussion to this point in the workshop have served to attune participants to the contextual, experiential, and performative aspects of the classroom environment. By establishing ground rules for discussion, sharing in pairs and as a large group, and debriefing each exercise, participants have replicated a similar but much more extensive process of peer‐to‐peer learning led by Ott and Stephens through a yearlong pedagogy project funded by a grant from the Wabash Center and administered through Drew University (). Having framed their own pedagogical questions, participants should be ready to appreciate the issues raised in the form of the “guiding questions” handout (see Appendix).…”
Section: Workhop Outline Explained and Annotatedmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The activities and discussion to this point in the workshop have served to attune participants to the contextual, experiential, and performative aspects of the classroom environment. By establishing ground rules for discussion, sharing in pairs and as a large group, and debriefing each exercise, participants have replicated a similar but much more extensive process of peer‐to‐peer learning led by Ott and Stephens through a yearlong pedagogy project funded by a grant from the Wabash Center and administered through Drew University (). Having framed their own pedagogical questions, participants should be ready to appreciate the issues raised in the form of the “guiding questions” handout (see Appendix).…”
Section: Workhop Outline Explained and Annotatedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ott and Stephens (), in a separate article in this volume, offer a detailed discussion of the importance of teaching about sexuality and religion, the potential benefits to individual students, educational institutions, and society, and a pedagogical strategy for doing this well:
Sexuality, more so than other subject areas, magnifies the embodied nature of teaching and learning as well as conspicuously silences open dialogue given its taboo status in many religious and theological contexts. …This is a personal and political topic fraught with tension, and it influences classroom learning even in its absence from the explicit curriculum.
…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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