The “4Cs”: A Focus on Creative Thinking

Written by Annie Gumm

Scroll through your preferred social media outlet and chances are you can find pictures of children demonstrating their creative-thinking abilities. Perhaps it is that toddler with chocolate all over his face who somehow reached the cookies on top of the refrigerator. Maybe it is a LEGO build designed by tweens or the random “Coronavirus quotes” that are spoken by a teenager.

Education has shifted from focusing on the “3Rs” of reading, ’riting, and ’rithmetic to now including the “4Cs” of developing communicators, creators, critical thinkers, and collaborators (NEA, 2012). Practicing creative-thinking and problem-solving skills should be an essential part of classroom instruction. Continue reading

Changing Our Relationships with School Families

Written by Brett Bengel

Even though parents and teachers both want what’s best for children, they often find themselves at odds with each other. Educators receive emails, phone calls, and after-school visits from parents who are frustrated with out-of-touch, disconnected, and unsympathetic teachers. Teachers are frustrated with clueless, distracted, and overbearing parents. Who is correct? Continue reading

A COVID-19 Response: Why We Should Be Teaching Evolution

Written by Professor Dan Fenske

It was mid-March 2020 at Martin Luther College. I’m sure that the time frame needs no elaboration. Students had just left for Spring Break, and the campus was not yet locked down. Two student workers approached me with a simple question: “Professor, if we Christians don’t accept Evolution (when referring to the Theory of Evolution, I will indicate that by capitalizing Evolution), then where did this virus come from?” Many thoughts flooded through my head, but my priority was to address the honest question held by two troubled students.

After 30 minutes of discussion with these two students, I better understood their thought process. They were (mistakenly) thinking that since Christians reject Evolution, we must also reject data or observations that are used to support Evolution. Therefore, Christians reject the concept of genetic mutations.  So, how can a novel virus emerge if there is no genetic mutation? Continue reading

Is School Choice the Right Choice for Your LES?

Written by Dan Johnson

The model of parish education is changing in our synod. A greater number of schools are looking outside the church walls to continue their ministry, and that brings up questions of funding. How does a church continue to carry out the Great Commission and fund a well-rounded education? The student tuition could be raised, but higher tuition means that many families will be unable to consider the school because of their financial situation. The answer for many schools and congregations is to turn to school choice programs, using public money to pay for private school education. Continue reading

What We’ll Keep

Reflections from the MLC Faculty & Staff

Gathered by Laurie Gauger-Hested

We’ve all learned a lot during this strange time: new ways of teaching and connecting and being. These lessons learned are certainly not worth the pain and loss of life this virus has wrought. Still, we don’t want them to go to waste.

I asked the MLC faculty and staff what new corona-inspired habits they’d like to keep when (or if) things get back to normal. Here are some of their thoughts on teaching. Yes, they’re college profs, but many of these ideas apply at every level of education. Continue reading

Social-Emotional Learning in the Distance Learning Classroom

Written by Professor Kelli Green

Dear Educators,

Remember the beginning of the school year? When we spent extra time each day creating a warm and structured learning environment for our students, a safe place for them to express themselves and take risks required to grow and belong as part of a community of learners? In the past month, our world has completely changed due to the coronavirus, moving our classrooms into our homes, where we interact over a distance through technology. Our once-normal teaching and learning environments, full of the expected school day routines and the safety we had so carefully created, have moved into an online audio and video environment with which we have little experience. Continue reading

Why Bother Teaching History?

Written by Professor Peter Baganz

In the 5th century BC, the ancient Greek Olympics not only featured athletic competitions, but Herodotus, often considered the first historian, read his Histories aloud to a great crowd of people. In 1893, the Chicago World’s Fair not only featured the marvels of technology for that time, but Frederick Jackson Turner presented his famous “Frontier Thesis.” When I mention these famous historians, I tell my students that they had the greatest gig ever, to have crowds gather to hear them talk about history. Then after pausing, I point out, “Wait, that’s what I get to do, to spend each day talking with you about history. I have the greatest gig ever!”[1] Continue reading

Creating Expert Learners in Our WELS Classrooms

Written by Dr. Kari Muente

It is a challenging time to be a teacher. As our WELS classrooms are becoming more academically, culturally, and linguistically diverse, tension is rising between curriculum and instruction. Federal and state mandates are requiring students to pass tests, which leads to a more fact-based curriculum, while 21st-century learning encourages the engagement of students in more critical thinking skills.

As our classrooms become more diverse, students are challenging the traditional instructional design framework with their various backgrounds, cultures, and learning abilities. Diversity of learners, or the exceptional learners, require teachers to engage in more inclusive instruction and practices. Teachers struggle and even feel inadequately equipped in designing and delivering inclusive instruction to engage and train all their students to become expert learners (De La Paz, 2005; Minarik & Lintner, 2016). Inclusive instructional practices require not only close teacher involvement but instructional support for all learners. Continue reading

Raising Godly Children In a Godless Culture

By Kenneth J. Kremer

In a world turned upside-down by revolutionary ideas, the ancient proverb sounds quaint, if not old-fashioned: “Start children off on the way they should go, and even when they are old they will not turn from it” (Proverbs 22:6). The prospect of bringing up future generations of young Christians in a culture hostile to our faith should concern all of God’s people. Continue reading