RL 200
Social Justice Praxis
14 September 2009
WHY?
This course is designed to help students learn to read both the Bible and life
in a critically engaging way. It is not enough to read the words of the Bible as
a passive bystander, nor to sit in a lecture as the words wash over you, nor simply
to endure the events of daily life. As Socrates once said, "the unexamined life
is not worth living." The foremost benefit of a University education is not factual
knowledge ("what to think"), but rather the analytical ability which one
gains from pursuing University-level studies ("how to think").
This assignment is designed to help the student synthesize the various resources
for learning in this course—texts, discussions, lectures, projects, the Library,
the City of Cleveland, etc.—and to focus them on analyzing one current social
problem or challenge for contemporary U.S. society. To do this, the student will
have been engaged for a minimum of 10–12 hours in some kind of direct-service work
with a particular human or animal population or direct examination and response
to a particular environmental/ecological condition. The service activity benefits
the "recipient" in that the student does real work in service to the target population;
it benefits the "doer" to the extent that the student learns to ask real questions
about the individual's or group's life situation, needs and values. In turn, this
provides the student with the impetus to re-think her or his own values, to analyze
their social impact (both good and bad), and to evaluate their efficacy in promoting
the common good.
As the final product of your social justice project, this paper provides the rest
of the class (and, hopefully, the wider university community) with the opportunity
to learn about this social challenge, and to pool their intellectual and moral resources
to decide what key strategy or strategies would serve best to respond to this challenge.
FOR WHOM?
The primary audience of this assignment is the RL 200 class; the secondary target
audience is the JCU community, perhaps even the greater Cleveland area. Keep in mind
this wider audience when designing your paper and presentation, particularly when
outlining your remedial strategy.
Requirements:
The Social Justice Praxis will involve:
- Direct service to a human or animal population, or direct examination and response
to a particular environmental/ecological condition, at a placement approved by
the JCU Center for Community Service. Working at a faith-based agency is preferable.
- Time commitment: I am asking for a total of 10-12 hours over the course of the semester. This could be spread out as one hour weekly, two hours bi-weekly, or 3-4 hours at a time, depending upon the needs of your particular placement. However you choose to arrange your hours, they must be spread over a period of at least 8 weeks and at least 3 individual days;
- Registration of the Project on the BB Discussion Board (BBDB) for the Social-Justice Praxis (SJP). The description should
include:
- Basic facts about your placement (site, supervisor's name, population you
will be serving, schedule of service hours, etc.)
- What social problem is the focus of your Praxis?
- Why did you choose to highlight this particular issue?
- How do you hope this project will make Cleveland a more just place to live?
- What exactly do you expect to be the results of this project—for you,
for the group with whom you are working, for the city as a whole?
- What criteria will you use to judge whether or not your project is "successful"?
- Would you classify your project as "religious" behavior?
- Orientation interviews with your supervisor and one or two other workers at
your placement site. The transcript of the interviews should be posted on the
BBDB SJP interview thread, and should address the following questions (and any
others you find of interest):
- Why did they choose this kind of work?
- What kinds of affects do they see from their efforts?
- What keeps them coming every day (rather than giving up and getting a different
job)?
- How do their view their work (e.g., would they call it a "vocation"
or "ministry")?
- What else do they think you should know as you begin this Praxis?
- Weekly journal entries (via the BBDB SJP). Your first Journal post should answer the question in #2.1. The later
posts should address the prompts given there, and also may: discuss the service project in relation to the course topics for that
week, especially the theology of the covenant; respond to questions posed
by the instructor (e.g., questions #2.2–3, below); or address other issues that arise as your
Praxis progresses.
At least twice weekly you should interact with topics
or questions raised by other students in their BBDB SJP posts (see #6 below).
- Share with the BBDB SJP group some basic information about your particular
Praxis.
- What social problem is its focus?
- Why does that problem exist (i.e., what socio-economic, political,
or other factors give rise to it)?
- How many people are affected by it, and who are they (i.e., what is
the demographic)?
- What other data can you tell us about this problem?
- How do you hope your Praxis will help to rectify this social problem?
- What changes are you seeing resulting from this project—for you, for
the group with whom you are working, for the city as a whole?
- What affect is your social justice praxis having upon your understanding
of religion? Of the Bible, esp. the Old Testament? Of God's Covenant with
Israel, with humanity as a whole, and with you in particular?
- Weekly contributions to the BBDB SJP in
response to two other students' entries each week (and be sure it is not the same
students every time). Each contribution should raise specific questions or make
specific observations about how the student's project relates to lectures or other
course materials;
- Research on the social justice issue which is the subject of your praxis.
- A 7–10 page retrospective essay developing a personal, convenantal ethic
and relating the specific the service activity to particular Old Testament understandings
of the Covenant as outlined in the monograph by Delbert Hillers. This essay may be done in collaboration with 1–3 student colleagues who were
engaged in the same kind of social justice project as you. See here for more details on writing
the Paper.
- A website, PowerPoint, or other type of audio-visual presentation based on
your retrospective essay highlighting your service activities and showing
their relationship to O.T. theology in general, and covenant theology in particular;
this is to be done in collaboration with 1–3 student colleagues who were
engaged in the same kind of social justice project as you;
and
- A 7–10 minute group presentation to the class, using the PPT or website
and other pertinent audio/visual/material aids developed above.
Deadlines
- Create an account with the JCU Center for Service and Social Action, complete the online orientation module, and Register do any paperwork necessary
for them to track your service activity. DUE SEPTEMBER 11.
- Select a direct service placement that begins no later than
the third week of the semester and fits the parameters above.
- "Register" your project on the Blackboard (BB) by writing the first Journal entry on the BB Discussion Board (BBDB) for the Social-Justice Praxis. DUE by class time SEPTEMBER 15.
- Begin your service activity by SEPTEMBER 19.
- Interview your supervisor and one or two other volunteers at your placement.
See the BBDB journal prompts for due dates..
- Weekly journal entries are due by midnight each Saturday—BEGINNING SEPTEMBER 19 —for
the duration of the project. See the BBDB for details.
- The retrospective essay is due in the Blackboard "drop box" by midnight
NOVEMBER 20th.
- The website/PowerPoint/audio-visual presentation is due in the Blackboard "drop
box" by midnight NOVEMBER 30th.
- The group presentation to the class is due about mid-November (see the class
schedule for details).
Evaluation
Click here to view the grading protocol for
this project.