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Many colleges and universities informally highlight the value of
mentoring among academic professionals. Yet scholars often lack
clear definitions, goals, practices, and commitments that help them
actually reap the benefits mentoring offers. As new faculty members
from younger generations continue to face evolving challenges while
also reshaping institutions, their ability to connect with more
experienced mentors is critical to their vocations—and to the
future of higher education. In Cultivating Mentors, a distinguished
group of contributors explores the practice of mentoring in
Christian higher education. Drawing on traditional theological
understandings of the mentee-mentor relationship, they consider
what goals should define such relationships and what practices make
their cultivation possible among educators. With special attention
to generational dynamics, they discuss how mentoring can help
institutions navigate generational faculty transitions and
cultivate rising leaders. Contributors include: David Kinnaman Tim
Clydesdale Margaret Diddams Edgardo Colón-Emeric Rebecca C. Hong
Tim Elmore Beck A. Taylor Stacy A. Hammons This book offers
valuable insights and practical recommendations for faculty
members, administrators, and policy makers. Whether pursuing their
vocation in Christian or secular institutions, Christian scholars
will benefit from the sharing of wisdom mapped out
in Cultivating Mentors.
Many colleges and universities informally highlight the value of
mentoring among academic professionals. Yet scholars often lack
clear definitions, goals, practices, and commitments that help them
actually reap the benefits mentoring offers. As new faculty members
from younger generations continue to face evolving challenges while
also reshaping institutions, their ability to connect with more
experienced mentors is critical to their vocations-and to the
future of higher education. In Cultivating Mentors, a distinguished
group of contributors explores the practice of mentoring in
Christian higher education. Drawing on traditional theological
understandings of the mentee-mentor relationship, they consider
what goals should define such relationships and what practices make
their cultivation possible among educators. With special attention
to generational dynamics, they discuss how mentoring can help
institutions navigate generational faculty transitions and
cultivate rising leaders. Contributors include: David Kinnaman Tim
Clydesdale Margaret Diddams Edgardo Colon-Emeric Rebecca C. Hong
Tim Elmore Beck A. Taylor Stacy A. Hammons This book offers
valuable insights and practical recommendations for faculty
members, administrators, and policy makers. Whether pursuing their
vocation in Christian or secular institutions, Christian scholars
will benefit from the sharing of wisdom mapped out in Cultivating
Mentors.
Evangelical Christians are active across all spheres of
intellectual and public life today. But a disconnect remains: the
work they produce too often fails to inform their broader
communities. In the midst of a divisive culture and a related
crisis within evangelicalism, public intellectuals speaking from an
evangelical perspective have a critical role to play-within the
church and beyond. What does it look like to embrace such a
vocation out of a commitment to the common good? Public
Intellectuals and the Common Good draws together world-class
scholars and practitioners to cast a vision for intellectuals who
promote human flourishing. Representing various roles in the
church, higher education, journalism, and the nonprofit sector,
contributors reflect theologically on their work and assess current
challenges and opportunities. What historically well-defined
qualities of public intellectuals should be adopted now? What
qualities should be jettisoned or reimagined? Public intellectuals
are mediators-understanding and then articulating truth amid the
complex realities of our world. The conversations represented in
this book celebrate and provide guidance for those who through
careful thinking, writing, speaking, and innovation cultivate the
good of their communities. Contributors: Miroslav Volf Amos Yong
Linda A. Livingstone Heather Templeton Dill Katelyn Beaty Emmanuel
Katongole John M. Perkins and David Wright
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