Center on Religion & the Professions

Improving religious literacy among professionals.

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Online "Religious Literacy" course under way

June 17, 2009 by Debra Mason

June 17, 2009 – “Religious Literacy for the Public and Professions,” a new online course offered through MU Direct: Continuing and Distance Education, is under way. The course (REL ST 3100) teaches students to engage and encounter religion in day-to-day life and in the professional workplace. Its primary goal is to examine religious diversity in private and professional contexts from a practical standpoint by examining a variety of case studies. The course is open to University of Missouri students who are absent from campus for the summer or unable to attend day classes and to nontraditional students.

  • See more about the course
  • See more about MU Direct: Continuing and Distance Education

The course is offered through the University of Missouri’s Department of Religious Studies. The course was created by the department and the Center on Religion & the Professions at University of Missouri. The instructor is Justin Arft. The eight-week class runs June 8-July 31.

  • E-mail the instructor

Textbooks for the course include “Religion and the Workplace” by Douglas A. Hicks and “How to Be a Perfect Stranger: The Essential Religious Etiquette Handbook” by Stuart M. Matlins and Arthur J. Magida.

After the course is completed and assessed, a team from the Center on Religion & the Professions (CORP) will author a chapter for a monograph about the project that will be distributed nationally through the Institute on Religion in Curriculum and Culture of Higher Education.

The Center on Religion & the Professions was founded in 2003 with a mission of improving religious literacy among professionals, to help them serve a diverse public. For more information about the Center, contact Director Debra L. Mason at (573) 882-9257 or MasonDL@missouri.edu.

Filed Under: News 2008-2009 Tagged With: center on religion & the professions, class, course, Department of Religious Studies, faith, journalism, medicine, multicultural, Muslim, public, religion, religious literacy, science, spirituality, university of missouri, workplace

The Ill Girl

May 28, 2009 by Debra Mason

Lia Lee, a young child of Hmong immigrants, has been brought to the emergency room of a California medical clinic. It took several days for the doctors to diagnose the case because the interpreter, a Hmong whose English was poor, was inadequate. The problem was made worse because the parents considered Lia’s illness to be both a threat to her health – hence their trip to the clinic – and a sign that she may be destined to be a shaman. The doctors prescribed a drug regimen. The parents said they understood how to administer the medicine, although they couldn’t understand English or read what was written on the bottles.

Issues and Study Questions

  • Based on the overview above, what are the issues?
  • What beliefs are at issue here?
  • Were the parents “noncompliant?”
  • What could the doctors/nurses do differently?
  • What do you feel the doctors/patient/parents should do here?
  • How could a social worker or skilled interpreter assist in this situation?
  • Was religion an issue in this situation?
  • What is the responsibility of the health care community in such a situation? What about other professions?
  • Do you think there is a “right” and “wrong” way to handle this situation? Why? Why not?
  • Have you faced similar issues in your own profession or personal life? If so, what were they? Were they resolved?
  • What can be learned?
  • Do you think education about religious literacy would have helped/harmed in this situation? How so?

Source: Religion and the Professions (General Honors 1030) taught by Dr. Jill Raitt, University of Missouri

Filed Under: News Tagged With: case study, center on religion & the professions, class, conversation, faith, Hmong, multicultural, public, religion, religion news, religious literacy, science, spirituality, spiritualty and health, university of missouri, workplace

Prayerful Patient

May 28, 2009 by Debra Mason

Mrs. Albert is 83 years old. She has multiple medical problems that are quite real and that produce chronic, progressive pain and weakness. She is on a number of medications, and she is faithful to the regimen her doctors prescribe. Nevertheless, nothing the doctors do seems to help her. On the other hand, her faith helps her to cope and to maintain independence and the church-related activities that are so important to her. She told her doctors, “Whenever you pray, you get healing from God.”

Mrs. Albert’s doctor is impressed by his patient’s fortitude, and he wants to understand better the relation of health to religion. He has read articles by Dr. Harold Koenig of Duke University, so he wrote to Dr. Koenig asking for some advice. Dr. Koenig’s answer regarding chronic pain and prayer has both medical and spiritual elements. Other doctors, however, disagree fundamentally with Dr. Koenig and explain differently the relation of Mrs. Albert’s prayer to her condition.

Issues and Study Questions

  • Based on the overview above, what are the beliefs and issues here?
  • If you were the doctor, what would you do differently?
  • Would the other doctor’s advice change how you treated your patient?
  • Is there an issue here, if Mrs. Albert is compliant in her care?
  • Was religion an issue in this situation?
  • What is the responsibility of the doctor in such a situation? What about other professions?
  • Do you think there is a “right” and “wrong” way to handle this situation? Why? Why not?
  • Have you faced similar issues in your own profession or personal life? If so, what were they? Were they resolved?
  • What can be learned?
  • Do you think education about religious literacy would have helped/harmed in this situation? How so?

Source: Religion and the Professions (General Honors 1030) taught by Dr. Jill Raitt, University of Missouri

Filed Under: News Tagged With: case study, center on religion & the professions, churches, conversation, course, faith, medicine, multicultural, public, religion, religious literacy, science, spirituality, spiritualty and health, university of missouri, workplace

CORP Newsletter – Feb. 26, 2009

February 26, 2009 by Debra Mason

crp-logo

News, Research, Calls for Papers and Events from the University of Missouri’s Center on Religion & the Professions (CORP)
Feb. 26, 2009

CORP EVENTS
March 5 Film Series: “Spirituality & Health” Free. “Acting on Faith” a documentary looking at the lives and work of three American women – a Buddhist, a Hindu, and a Muslim – for whom faith, activism and identity are deeply intertwined. Discussion led by Dr. Guy McCormack, clinical professor and chair of the Department of Occupational Therapy in the MU School of Health Professions. Free refreshments courtesy of DAYS INN/TRAVELODGE. Wrench Auditorium, South Memorial Union, 7 p.m.

March 14 Conversation: “Meditation and Medicine, Across the Faiths.” More doctors are prescribing meditation to combat medical conditions, but meditation has been rooted in spiritual traditions for thousands of years. Relax, take a breath, and contemplate the meditation-health connection with experts and practitioners. Free. Part of the “Sects and the City: Coffee and Conversation on the Intersection of Faith and Life” series. The Cherry Street Artisan, 111 S. 9th St., Columbia, 11 a.m.-noon.

CORP NEWS
Successful Workshop:
About 40 members from nine Columbia churches attended the Teen Relationship Education and Empowerment (TREE) workshop in Columbia on Feb. 21, 2009. They learned how to address issues of sexual, physical and emotional abuse in teen relationships from within church communities. TREE was established with a $50,000 grant from the Missouri Foundation for Health submitted with CORP assistance. Read article in the Columbia Missourian.

Big Turnout: More than 500 people came to hear Christopher Hedges speak on Feb. 17, 2009, on “The Looming Collapse of the American Empire.” Hedges spoke in a public lecture and to classes in the Missouri School of Journalism. The event was sponsored by the MU Peace Studies Program, College of Arts and Science, and CORP. Read article in The Maneater.

New Course: CORP and affiliates have developed a new course, “Religious Literacy for the Public and Professions” (Religious Studies 3100) that will be taught online in Summer 2009 through MU Extension’s Center for Distance and Independent Learning. The course provides practical knowledge about religion as it is encountered in the professional world in a pluralistic society. For information, call 882-9257.

Public Speaking: CORP Director Debra L. Mason was a panelist speaking on “Gutenberg 2.0: Sharing the Gospel in the Information Age” at the Missouri Ministers’ School during the Missouri Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church Jan. 13-15, 2009. She also spoke Jan. 25, 2009, at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Jefferson City on “Religion, Media and Meaning.”

Presentation: Brick Johnstone, head of CORP’s Spirituality and Health research team, spoke Feb. 15, 2009, at St. Andrew’s Lutheran Church in Columbia on “Selflessness as a Neuropsychological Basis of Spirituality.” The talk was based on team research determining a link between brain function, spiritual experience and selflessness recently published in Zygon: A Journal of Religion and Science.

CO-SPONSORED EVENTS
Feb. 7-March 7, 2009 E
xhibit: “Global Journalist, The Face of Conflict in Darfur, Central African Republic and Uganda,” photography exhibit by Gina Bramucci, award-winning journalist, photographer and humanitarian relief worker, recently returned from Eastern Congo. Presented by the MU Center for the Study of Conflict, Law and the Media; School of Journalism; Black Studies Program; Center for Arts and Humanities; and CORP; and numerous university, community, government and professional organizations. Lee Hills Hall Rotunda, 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

March 10 Lecture: “The New Shape of Nuclear Danger” by Jonathan Schell, 2005 Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Yale Center for the Study of Globalization; former New Yorker, Newsday and The Nation writer; and author of numerous books, including Pulitzer Prize-nominated “The Fate of the Earth.” Schell has taught at Emory, Princeton, New York and Wesleyan universities and now writes and speaks on the nuclear issue. Sponsored by the MU Peace Studies Program and CORP. Fisher Auditorium, Gannett Hall, 7:30 p.m.

OTHER CAMPUS AND COMMUNITY EVENTS
March 7 Training: Multicultural Center’s Diversity Train the Trainers
, a program to instruct participants on diversity exploration activities. Free. Registration required. Sponsored by the Multicultural Center. Gaines/Oldham Black Culture Center, 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. For more information, call 882-7152.

March 9 Film: “Four Sheets to the Wind.” A young Native American man journeys to the city to fulfill a promise to his dead father. Featured at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. Sponsored by Four Front, the MU Department of English, and the Multicultural Center. Free. Wrench Auditorium, South Memorial Union, 5 p.m.

March 13-15 Symposium: “Darwin’s Ongoing Revolution.” 5th annual MU Life Sciences & Society Symposium explores evolutionary research 200 years after Darwin’s birth and 150 years after publication of “On the Origin of Species.” Seven featured speakers, including Ron Numbers, University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of religious studies and of history of science and medicine, speaking on “Creation, Evolution, and the Boundaries of Science and Religion.” Meals, reception. Free and open to the public. Bond Life Sciences Center. See schedule.

March 15 Forum: “Care for Creation with Other Faith Communities.” Be a part of discussing how the creation care environmental movement moves forward. Free. Bring tea, instant coffee, or hot chocolate mix and fruit, cookies, or a treat to share. Missouri United Methodist Church, 204 S. 9th St., Columbia, 2:30 p.m. For more information, call (573) 443-4717.

CALLS FOR PAPERS
March 2 Deadline: Symposium on Religion and Human Rights in China
. Focusing on the diversity of religious practice in China, Communist Party religious policy, the contributions of religion to human rights and civil society in China, and the connection between religion and dissent. Symposium to be held May 30, 2009, in Toronto. Hosted by the York Centre for Asian Research at York University, Centre for Asian-Canadian Theology and Ministry at University of Toronto’s Knox College, and Hudson Taylor Centre for Chinese Ministries at Tyndale College. For information, visit http://www.yorku.ca/ycar/Events/religion_human_rights_china.html

March 31 Deadline: Nida School for Translation Studies, a program of the E.A. Nida Institute for Biblical Scholarship at the American Bible Society, aimed at supporting advanced training and research into translation studies. Theme is “Translation and Culture.” Conference to be held Sept. 7-9, 2009, in Rimini, Italy. For details, visit http://www.nidainstitute.org/TheNidaSchool/NidaSchool2009.dsp.

April 1 Deadline: Restorative Justice Symposium. Focusing on restorative justice in adult criminal courts. Symposium to be held Nov. 13, 2009, at MU. Hosted by the Restorative Justice in Criminal Courts Committee of the Missouri Restorative Justice Coalition, MU School of Law’s Center for the Study of Dispute Resolution, and MU Peace Studies Program. For details, e-mail colemanl@missouri.edu.

April 15 Deadline: Annual Meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion. Meeting to be held Oct. 23-25, 2009, in Denver. Papers and sessions accepted. For information, visit http://www.sssrweb.org.

April 30 Deadline: Symposium on the Social Study of Religion in China. Focusing on the globalization and localization of religion. Symposium to be held July 7-8, 2009, in Wuxi, China. For information, visit http://www.sssrweb.org/news.cfm?newsid=113.

CONFERENCES
March 6-7: Gender and Power in the Muslim World
. Sarah Lawrence College. For more information, visit
http://www.slc.edu/womens-history/conference/.

June 11-17: Survey Research & American Religion seminar designed for graduate students and recent Ph.D. graduates. Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Mich. For more information, visit http://www.calvin.edu/henry/schedule/gradstudwkshp/2009announc.pdf.

RELIGION IN THE NEWS
Read what’s in the news about religion this week on CORP’s home page.

• Click links for more information about events.
• Bookmark CORP’s Web site here.
• See additional events here.
• Read our publication and promotion policy here.
• This newsletter comes out every three weeks. To subscribe to an e-mail version, send a request to whiteab@missouri.edu.

Filed Under: News 2008-2009 Tagged With: acting on faith, brick johnstone, calls for papers, care for creation, center on religion & the professions, christopher hedges, creation, darwin, debra l. mason, debra mason, Events, evolution, faith, film, gender and power in the muslim world, global journalist, jonathan schell, medicine, meditation, multicultural, neuropsychological basis of spirituality, News, nida school for translation studies, professions, public, religion, religion news, religious literacy, Research, restorative justice, science, sects and the city, selflessness, society for the scientific study of religion, spirituality, spiritualty and health, survey research and american religion, teen relationship education and empowerment, zygon

Religion and health research

February 26, 2009 by Debra Mason

Feb. 2brick6, 2009 – Religion and health research conducted by CORP-affiliated researchers has been published in the Missouri Medicine Quarterly. The article, “Spirituality, Religion and Health Outcomes Research: Findings from the Center on Religion and the Professions,” was authored by Dr. Brick Johnstone, head of CORP’s Spirituality and Health research team. The issue comes out in March 2009.

Citation:

Johnstone, B. (2009). Spirituality, Religion and Health Outcomes Research: Findings from the Center on Religion and the Professions. Missouri Medicine Quarterly, 106 (2), 63-66

Filed Under: News 2008-2009 Tagged With: brick johnstone, center on religion & the professions, faith, medicine, missouri medicine quarterly, News, public, religion, religion and health outcomes research, Research, science, spirituality, spiritualty and health

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The Center on Religion & the Professions

University of Missouri
30 Neff Annex
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Tel: 573-882-9257

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