303,901 research outputs found
Exploring Vocation: Early Career Perspectives on Vocation in Action
As tenure-track professors at a Catholic liberal arts college, we began our academic careers four years ago with a strong desire to excel in our research and teaching. Most importantly, however, we hoped to come to a deeper understanding of how we might imbue our work in a Christian higher education context with a strong sense of purpose and connection to our beliefs. This reflection details our experience of co-developing a sense of vocation and sacramentality in ourselves and our students during the busy pre-tenure years. We discuss how religious and scholarly texts, workshop and retreat experiences, and course design focused on experiential learning have deepened our ability to live out vocation and sacramentality through our work
ORGANIZATIONAL COMPETENCES FOR THE ROMANIAN TOURISTIC FIRM AND WAYS TO CONCEIVE THEM
Between the vocation and the competence of an organization there is a complexand a subtle relation. If the vocation it means searching and finding the need or the need typethat will be covered, the competence means to know, to want and to be capable to deliver theservices that can produce the user satisfaction in efficiency conditions for the firm.competences, vocation, capability, knowledge
Exploring Vocation: Early Career Perspectives on Vocation in Action
As tenure-track professors at a Catholic liberal arts college, we began our academic careers four years ago with a strong desire to excel in our research and teaching. Most importantly, however, we hoped to come to a deeper understanding of how we might imbue our work in a Christian higher education context with a strong sense of purpose and connection to our beliefs. This reflection details our experience of co-developing a sense of vocation and sacramentality in ourselves and our students during the busy pre-tenure years. We discuss how religious and scholarly texts, workshop and retreat experiences, and course design focused on experiential learning have deepened our ability to live out vocation and sacramentality through our work
The Christian View Of Vocation For Librarians
Like two brothers, western civilization and Christianity grew up together. Christianity gave the civilization its virtues, its view of work, and its view of service. With the decline of Christian influence, there is an increasing separation between virtue, service and work. This has led to vocational crisis in professions which have described themselves as vocations. Nurses, doctors and teachers have noticed the problem. This paper will make some observations concerning the crisis, give historical and biblical insights into our view of vocation, discuss some errors with the viewpoints, give some proposals for improving the situation and conclude with a summary
Choosing to Make a Difference: Reflections on Mentoring Students
Reflecting on the journey of mentoring students for the past two decades yields one librarian’s insight about mentoring for career options and mentoring for vocation. The need for guidance exists among undergraduate students. Mentoring opportunities depend on the institutional support available. While research universities may at times support some career mentoring, Christian higher education affords a venue for vocational mentoring that is enriching for both mentor and students. It is meant to assist graduating students approach life from a Christian worldview that has been thought out through theological reflection on vocation
Doing the Holy Things: Baptism and Vocation
(Excerpt)
Thank you, David, and thank you all. I\u27m honored to come here once again. Honored really to stand with you and to thank you who in season and out of season have cared about setting out the holy things of God in the midst of the holy people so that the holy One might be encountered and known and proclaimed, and that is the task you have done, you at the heart of many others in the Lutheran churches of North America. You have done this, in season and out of season, and it\u27s a task for which I thank you
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