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Overcoming Religious Illiteracy

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3) the profound role that religion plays in human social, cultural and political ... 2) Equation of Islam with violence and terrorism. 3) Antagonisms within traditions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Overcoming Religious Illiteracy


1
Overcoming Religious Illiteracy
  • Professor Diane L. Moore
  • Harvard Divinity School
  • diane_moore_at_harvard.edu

2
Three Premises One
  • There exists a widespread illiteracy about
    religion that spans the globe

3
Premise Two
  • Many consequences most significant is that it
    fuels antagonism and hinders respect for
    pluralism, peaceful coexistence, and cooperative
    endeavors in local, national, and global arenas

4
Premise Three
  • It is possible to diminish religious illiteracy
    by teaching about religion from a nonsectarian
    perspective in schools.

5
Definition of Religious Illiteracy
  • A lack of understanding about
  • 1) the basic tenets of the worlds religious
    traditions
  • 2) the diversity of expressions and beliefs
    within traditions that emerge in differing
    social/historical contexts and
  • 3) the profound role that religion plays in
    human social, cultural and political life in
    both contemporary and historical contexts.

6
Definition of Religious Literacy
  • Religious literacy entails the ability to discern
    and analyze the fundamental intersections of
    religion and social/political/cultural life
    through multiple lenses

7
Religious Literacy Continued
  • Specifically, a religiously literate person will
    possess
  • 1) a basic understanding of the history, central
    texts (where applicable), beliefs, practices and
    contemporary manifestations of several of the
    worlds religious traditions as they arose out of
    and continue to be shaped by particular social,
    historical, and cultural contexts and

8
Religious Literacy Continued
  • 2) the ability to discern and explore the
    religious dimensions of political, social, and
    cultural expressions across time and place.

9
Examples of Religious Illiteracy
  • 1) Religious traditions are represented
    inaccurately.

10
Examples of Illiteracy
  • 2) Religious traditions represented as internally
    uniform and static as opposed to diverse and
    evolving.

11
Examples of Illiteracy
  • 3) Religious traditions represented as wholly
    positive or wholly negative.

12
Examples of Illiteracy
  • 4) Religion is deeply and nearly exclusively
    equated with sectarianism.

13
Examples of Illiteracy
  • 5) Practitioners and religious leaders assumed to
    be experts of their traditions.

14
Examples of Illiteracy
  • 6) Religion is assumed to be a private matter and
    not appropriately relevant to the public sphere.

15
Consequences of Religious Illiteracy Some
Examples
  • 1) Christian anti-semitism
  • 2) Equation of Islam with violence and terrorism
  • 3) Antagonisms within traditions
  • 4) Blanket portrayal of religion as obsolete,
    irrational, and/or oppressive

16
Religious Illiteracy Can be Diminished Through
Education From a Nonsectarian Perspective
  • Curricula must be Intentional and Informed
  • Teachers must be adequately trained
  • Must be justified in local and national context

17
Challenges to Teaching About Religion Responsibly
  • 1) Few teachers are adequately trained.

18
Challenges
  • 2) Teachers and students harbor strong,
    imbedded, often unconscious assumptions about
    religion.

19
Challenges
  • 3) Efforts may be misconstrued as
    proselytizing.

20
Challenges
  • 4) How to teach about religion is as important as
    what is taught.

21
Components of a Cultural Studies Model
  • 1) The approach is multidisciplinary and
    interdisciplinary

22
Cultural Studies
  • 2) All knowledge claims recognized as situated

23
Cultural Studies
  • 3) Situatedness applies to all dimensions of
    inquiry

24
Cultural Studies
  • 4) Includes an analysis of power and
    powerlessness

25
Cultural Studies
  • 5) Must be relevant

26
Review of Cultural Studies Model
  • 1) The approach is multidisciplinary and
    interdisciplinary
  • 2) All knowledge claims recognized as situated
  • 3) Situatedness applies to all dimensions of
    inquiry
  • 4) Includes an analysis of power and
    powerlessness
  • 5) Must be relevant

27
Two Examples of Programs Employing Cultural
Studies Model
  • 1) Program in Religious Studies and Education
    (PRSE) at the Harvard Divinity School.
  • 2) Citation in Religious Studies and Education
    through the Harvard Extension School

28
AAR Guidelines Project
  • American Academy of Religion Guidelines for
    Teaching About Religion in Kindergarten through
    Twelfth Grade Pubic Schools

29
VISUAL CULTURE AND CULTURAL STUDIES
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