I sure hope they were not as unbelieving and apostate as Furman was 25 years ago. Furman was thoroughly rotten when I was there over 30 years ago. Did you know John Henry Crabtree?
Covington Theological Seminary ??
Discussion in 'Baptist Colleges & Seminaries' started by Jabbezzz, Dec 8, 2004.
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When I teach, the meat of the course is my teaching, not the textbook. It is my scholarship, my knowledge, my expertise, and my new challenging ideas. After all, I am as competent as the author of the textbook. The textbook is simply a resource tool that I use for students to read and understand on their own. The textbook brings additional information. It is not the course.
Any teacher who teaches it straight from the textbook isn’t worth his salt. Covering the textbook page by page is spoon feeding. It is laziness on part of both the teacher and the student. A good rigorous education dares you to think and to learn independently. The competent teacher shares new information and perspectives from his own scholarship, research, and ideas. He uses the textbook and outside materials as resources for independent student learning. A good teacher challenges you to think, not just swallow pabulum and barf it back up on the exam. Spoon feeding from the textbook and regurgitating is poor teaching and low-level learning (i.e. rote without understanding).
Your post has confirmed my suspicions and created a rather low opinion of Covington. I dare say there’s not an ounce of scholarship in the whole faculty. Anyone, who reads at a minimal level, can rehash a textbook -
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I do still pull for the Paladins, though!!!!! -
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I don't want a man's opinion. I want to know what scripture teaches.
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I do too.The difficulty is that a teacher saying what Scripture teaches may be just opinion. -
I agree with you that rigour should be a Christian attribute. We owe God our best. I am not now speaking about Covington as I do not know anything about them. However, Christians should seek not to bring discredit on the cause of Christ in any way (conduct, education, etc). -
I agree with you that rigour should be a Christian attribute. We owe God our best. I am not now speaking about Covington as I do not know anything about them. However, Christians should seek not to bring discredit on the cause of Christ in any way (conduct, education, etc). </font>[/QUOTE]To me, this is the central issue. If, indeed, our chief end is "to bring glory to God and enjoy Him forever," how is God glorified when we opt for a formal education from an institution which cannot meet the minimum requirements of secular institutions, namely, accreditation? Sometimes fellow Christians chide us for being proud of having gone to accredited institutions. Proud for studying at places which meet the minimum? Folks say that there are more important issues than accreditation. I agree. Realize, though, that that if an institution cannot even meet the minimum standards of accreditation, then what does that say about other issues?
As has been pointed out elsewhere, there are exceptions. It is well known, however, that exceptions don't make the rule.
Away with pseudo-humility and pseudo-spirituality attempting to justify substandard institutions of higher education.
Blessings,
Bill -
Gee, Bill, you don't pull any punckes, do you?
I have to say that I agree with you 100%. Just wish I' known all this before I gave my money to a diploma mill.
In Christ,
Trotter
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