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This book explores in a theoretical and practical sense the
challenges and opportunities arising in the initial and ongoing
formation processes for teachers in Catholic schools. It showcases
a range of international perspectives on how prospective teachers
for Catholic schools are prepared both academically and pastorally
for their professional role. Divided into two parts, Part 1 of the
book focuses on certain countries in the Anglosphere; each country
with a dedicated chapter in which the academic and pastoral
approaches to teacher formation are examined in the context of its
particular cultural, political and religious landscape. Part 2 of
the book examines specific areas of interest with particular
reference to what it means for the Catholic Church's mission to
offer suitable formation to its corps of teachers. Building on the
editors' previous work, this book offers a fresh perspective on
this subject by bringing together observations from selected local
contexts on what Catholic teacher formation looks like as a set of
organised processed and structures. It also shows how the study of
educational themes offers challenges to current practices, but also
opportunities for fruitful engagement with other educational
perspectives.
The expectations of the Catholic Church and the demands of the
state are a precarious balancing act that have been apparent
throughout the history of Catholic education. It is a relationship
that is under scrutiny, even in the contemporary context. Drawing
on the works and lives of key figures in the history of teacher
preparation in Catholic education internationally, this important
text illuminates the contributions they made and the challenges
they faced. In providing this rich historical synthesis, the
authors invite further reflection on the most appropriate methods
of teacher preparation for contemporary Catholic schools and on
possible contributions to wider teacher preparation from cogitating
the history of the Catholic tradition. This book addresses teacher
preparation for Catholic schools at both the 'pre-service' and
'in-service' levels by looking at the Church and its relationship
with the state. The former will allow opportunities for a deep
study of the role of 'faith' in Teacher Preparation, while the
latter focuses on how a distinctive faith-based model of education
can be in dialogue with the expectations of civil society. By using
this multi-layered framework, the book offers exciting and
innovative opportunities to inform contemporary practice from
international examples, proving an invaluable text for researchers
in the fields of comparative education, theology and the sociology
of religion.
This book explores Pope John Paul II concept of the New
Evangelisation and examines some of the implications that this has
for Catholic schools. For John Paul II the New Evangelisation arose
out of the deliberations of the Second Vatican Council and its
aftermath. At its core it sees a relationship between believers and
Christ, through the ministry of the Church, as the key for an
authentic Christian life in the third millennium. The New
Evangelisation recognizes that the cultural milieu in which
Catholic schools operate is very different from even a few decades
ago and as such schools need to reconfigure themselves to meet new
challenges. Catholic Schools can no longer rely on passive
socialization as a primary means of catechesis. It needs to better
articulate their message in an era when religious beliefs and
practises are increasing marginalized, often seen as a private
concern or one option amongst many. By emphasizing, amongst other
things, an engaged and responsive mentality, cultivation of
supportive groups and the need for a reconceptualisation of
religious education, Catholic schools can address the significant
challenges the New Evangelisation puts before them.
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