Bringing Faith into the Classroom

Unsure of how you can bring faith into the classroom?

Prayers

  • See Resources page for specific prayers
  • Open class with a prayer
  • Have the class memorize a prayer (e.g., Salve Regina)
  • Put prayers for knowledge, peace, etc. on the bottom of exam sheets
  • Bring students and their needs into your personal prayer
  • Have religious items in your office or lab such as crucifix, icon, etc.
  • Offer prayer cards during exam/difficult weeks
  • Outside of class, pray for your students by name (at home with family, at beginning of semester, in a chapel, etc.)
    • Ask for the Holy Spirit’s guidance for each and every lecture, meeting, etc.
  • Periodic email announcements whose purpose is to encourage and build up
    • Lighting candles at Grotto, sending picture to students during finals saying that you are praying for them
  • Asking if students want to lead prayers
    • Can gauge individual interest at beginning of the semester using so as not to cold-call

Discussion

  • Take time to talk about important matters, including relationships, discernment, responsibility, etc.
  • Remind them of the true source of worth and value
    • “You don’t have to be perfect”
    • “Your worth is not dictated by your GPA”
  • In science and technology classes, directly confront questions of “what is a human” when considering things like biology, robotics, AI, etc.
  • Ask the students to reflect on what makes a Catholic [career/profession] different than others (e.g., what makes a Catholic engineer versus a secular engineer?)
  • Students across all disciplines would benefit from re-emphasizing the need for silence, meditation, and prayer especially as a tool for discernment
  • Remind/link content to nearby feast days (Saints’ feasts, other liturgical days)
  • Use order/Logos/sense of wonder to point to God’s existence, especially in quantitative courses
    • Compare the tempo of a Mozart symphony to the heartbeat during an ultrasound, use to discuss the principle of ratios
  • Ethics centered on Catholic social teaching and/or Christian account of the Common Good
  • Most students will have already taken a foundation theology course: Ask how these theological ideas manifest in your specific discipline

Relationship with Students

  • Arrange one on one meetings with the students about discernment
    • Not just career discernment, but marriage, family, religious life, etc. These are rarely mentioned in career centers
    • Cast careers in your discipline as vocations or callings from God
    • What are the ultimate goods in life? Strictly material? How to avoid seductions of money, power, etc?
  • Meet the students where they are. There is no “typical situation”, even if you might start to think that way.
  • Have a mechanism so that students can feel comfortable talking and you can listen
  • Help the students, even temporarily, to be free from ambition and lean on God’s mercy
  • Mental health is an opening: where is the source of your worth?
  • Attend events of your students to get to know them and show you care (sports, plays/performances, etc)
  • Provide students with opportunities to see your family/extracurricular life
  • Graduate students have a very different experience from undergraduate
    • Many resources are targeted towards undergrads
    • Stage in life is different (families, job outlooks, etc)
    • Many current/former ND graduate students recall being very isolated
    • Advisor/advisee relationship is an opportunity for close discussion
    • See remarks from 9/22/23

Outcomes

  • In a theology class students were asked to write something that they wanted to professor to know.
    • 14 out of 16 said that they were “scared” because they “know nothing about the Church/Faith”
  • Zero instances of reported student discomfort, negative comments on CIFs, etc.
  • Many anecdotes of students personally thanking instructors for bringing spiritual matters into classroom discussion