The big news in the publishing world today is that our friend Hunter Baker, author of The End of Secularism, will be the author of one of the volumes in a forthcoming series from Crossway Books.
JACKSON, Tenn. – January 24, 2012– Union University President David S. Dockery has been named the editor of a new series of books designed for Christian students and others on college and university campuses.
In “Reclaiming the Christian Intellectual Tradition: A Guide for Students,” published by Crossway, Dockery and other experts argue that vibrant, world-changing Christianity is not anti-intellectual but assumes a long tradition of vigorous Christian thinking and a commitment to the integration of faith and scholarship….
Four other books in the series will also be released in 2012, including “The Liberal Arts: A Student’s Guide,” by Gene C. Fant Jr., Union’s vice president for academic administration, in May, and “Political Thought: A Student’s Guide,” by Hunter Baker, associate dean of arts and sciences at Union, in July.
Good luck with the book, Hunter. It sounds like a much-needed contribution.
I feel the need to comment on a recent news story that hasn’t gotten (I think) as much attention as it deserves.
As I grow older, a particular experience becomes more and more common (and no, I’m not talking about anything having to do with the bathroom). An announcement is made, in a rather low-key way, about some grand theory which was all the rage when I was younger, often one that was used, hammer-wise, to pound on Christians, given as “proof” that we are moral luddites motivated by pure hate. The news item now tells us that new research indicates that the wonderful, world-changing theory has, in fact, not borne the weight of either experience or further research. Take this story from The Washington Post:
For decades, the prevailing wisdom in education was that high self-esteem would lead to high achievement. The theory led to an avalanche of daily affirmations, awards ceremonies and attendance certificates — but few, if any, academic gains.
Now, an increasing number of teachers are weaning themselves from what some call empty praise. Drawing on psychology and brain research, these educators aim to articulate a more precise, and scientific, vocabulary for praise that will push children to work through mistakes and take on more challenging assignments….
You know, just once I’d like an apology from the people who called us names. But I don’t expect that to happen. It might damage the apologizers’ self-esteem, after all.
Yeah, I’m still waiting for proponents of the “population explosion” crisis, who told me when I was in high school that having more two children would be immoral and barbaric, to apologize. Not happening.
I hear that the leading “expert” of the population theory has never predicted right and yet is still asked to comment on the news shows. I don’t remember who he is, though.
Sometime back, Lars, I heard someone say American students weren’t excelling in various fields of study, but they were the most confident and even cocky.
I read not too long ago of a seminary professor who surveyed his students and found that 80% considered themselves to be in the top 10% of their class. In the same article he shares another survey that found 38 of 40 ministry students expected to work for the largest 5% of the churches in his denomination.