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Jerome W. BerrymanCríticas

Autor(a) de Godly Play

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Críticas

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Assinalado
Sarahgc | Nov 2, 2019 |
"Jerome W. Berryman is co-author of 'Young Children and Worship' and a contributor to 'Harper's Encyclopedia of Religious Education'. He is a consultant in the area of religious education, child development, and the spiritual direction of children." "'Godly Play' invites us to consider spiritual development as a process in which the creative spirit is alive in the education of both young and old. Berryman awakens us to new ways of seeing ourselves and helps us to discover 'our deep identity as Godly creatures.'" Source: The book's back covers. This book is well-indexed.
 
Assinalado
uufnn | 2 outras críticas | Sep 24, 2018 |
The Good Shepherd is a visual retelling of the biblical lesson as taken from The Complete Guide to Godly Play and told with revised text and original art. The book recreates the experience of hearing this core and possibly best-loved, best-known Bible story.
 
Assinalado
wichitafriendsschool | Aug 5, 2016 |
The Great Family is a visual retelling of the Abraham and Sarah Godly Play story. The book recreates the experience of hearing this seminal Godly Play story.
 
Assinalado
wichitafriendsschool | Aug 5, 2016 |
Berryman's Montessori style approach to religious education is amazing. Godly Play has been adapted by the Unitarian Universalists as "Spirit Play" and we love it. Recommended to educators, religious or non.
 
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engpunk77 | 2 outras críticas | Aug 10, 2015 |
In this video, Jerome W. Berryman demonstrates for Godly Play teachers two of the lessons featured in The Complete Guide to Godly Play, Volume 4 (20 Presentations for Spring), "Trinity Synathesis" and "The Synagogue and the Upper Room." The former incorporates three earlier lessons, "The Faces of Easter," "Paul's Discovery" and "Creation."
 
Assinalado
DioceseofOttawa | Jan 13, 2011 |
This excellent book does two things: It provides a new and powerful model for teaching children in the Sunday School setting, and it takes the reader on a fascinating voyage into the question, "What do we really want children to learn in Sunday School?"

Jerome Berryman is an Episcopal (Anglican) priest at Christ Church Cathedral in Houston, Texas. He was previously a Presbyterian minister, and is also a trained Montessori teacher.

This Montessori background provides to the ethos of Berryman's Sunday School class at the Cathedral. I would love to see his room

He discerns four levels of language about God. "AH", (the deep sigh of recognition that God is with us), the insight "AHA!", and the awareness of paradox and fun in God's creativity - "HAHA!"

Berryman builds these four responses into a theology of ritual, sacred story, parable and silence and shows how these relate to developmental processes and how there is a need for balance between the four for healthy Christian living.

Back in his classroom, the Children's Center is the desert - a transparent plastic box containing sand (a piece of the desert) - where so many things happened.

I have a suspicion that many important things in our children's learning could happen if we took Fr Berryman's insights seriously - and playfully.
 
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TedWitham | 2 outras críticas | Feb 6, 2008 |
 
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Sarahgc | Nov 2, 2019 |
 
Assinalado
Sarahgc | Nov 2, 2019 |
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