MA in Global Leadership Seminar 2 (one-week intensive
winter Fall 2012) - Pasadena
ML583A: Fall 2012; ML583B: Winter 2013 (Cohort 24)
Downes
ML583 A & B: GLOBAL LEADERSHIP: IMPLICATIONS FOR MINISTRY (A is 2 units, B
is 2 units)
Dr. Donna R. Downes, Associate Professor of Global Leadership
DESCRIPTION:
- This course sequence primarily serves as a capstone to the cohort
portion of the Master of Arts in Global Leadership. Students will be required
to demonstrate competencies consistent with the stated learning outcomes of the
MAGL degree through a combination of discussions, small group projects,
presentations, reading reports, field trips and a final integrative paper. They
will have the opportunity to reflect upon and synthesize their learning in the
MAGL, to focus on key discoveries and transformative themes that have impacted
their lives and their ministries, and to understand more deeply the
implications of Christian faith and praxis in their ministry context. The work
for this course sequence (4-units) spans 2 quarters. Part A - pre-seminar work
and in-class activities. Students meet in Pasadena for a one week campus
seminar and urban exegesis experience with other cohort members; and Part B -
post-seminar work and final paper.
LEARNING OUTCOMES: As a result of this course sequence students will have
- assessed their learning throughout the cohort courses against their own
learning plans and the stated MAGL learning outcomes;
- built on prior knowledge and synthesized all previous coursework and
readings through the writing of an integration paper about the transformative
themes of the degree program;
- presented their learning to the class and gained feedback from their
peers;
- experienced an urban exegesis of downtown Los Angeles/Hollywood, viewing
the local context from a missiological perspective;
- decided on a revised "community rule" now that the cohort portion of the
program is completed.
COURSE FORMAT:
- ML583A will meet for the second week of a required two-week
intensive residency for the MA in Global Leadership from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday. The course will include one traveling day (using public
transportation) in Los Angeles for field education. Before the on-campus
seminar, students will (1) prepare a presentation of "their story"
including an outline of their capstone writing project; (2) read Bakke,
Gorringe, and the book assigned for a panel discussion, and (3) prepare
analytical Reading Reports on Bakke and Gorringe and upload them to
"Assignments" prior to the first day of class; and (4) prepare a one-hour
book panel discussion on one of the course texts (group assignments made by the
professor). Sessions are designed to facilitate student learning through
discussion, clarifying lectures, opportunities to teach, group-building
exercises, field education, and collaboration on research. ML583B will involve
post-seminar readings of five texts and completion of assignments in the
students' ministry contexts after they return home.
REQUIRED READING: 1,300 pages from seven of the books listed below:
- Urban Theology/Missiology
- Bakke, Raymond J. A Theology as Big as the City.
InterVarsity Press, 1997. ISBN-13: 978-0830818907. Pub. List Price: $17.
- Gorringe, Timothy. A Theology of the Built Environment: Justice,
Empowerment, Redemption. Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN-13:
978-0521891448. Pub List: $32.99.
- Issues Arising from Globalization
- Escobar, Samuel. The New Global Mission.
InterVarsity Press, 2003. ISBN-13: 978-0830833016. Pub. List: $16.
- Ramachandra, Vinoth. Faiths in Conflict? InterVarsity Press, 2000.
ISBN-13: 978-0830815586. Pub. List: $20.
- Leadership theology, theory and practice: (Select TWO of
the following to read)
- Frost, Michael. Exiles: Living Missionally in a
Post-Christian Culture. Hendrickson, 2006. ISBN-13: 978-1565636705. Pub
List $20.
- Rah, Soong-Chan. The Next Evangelicalism: Freeing the Church from
Western Cultural Captivity. InterVarsity Press, 2009. ISBN-13:
978-0830833603. Pub. List: $12.
- Woodward, J.R. Creating a Missional Culture: Equipping the Church for
the Sake of the World. InterVarsity Press, 2012. ISBN-13: 978-0830836536.
Pub. List: $16.
- Lest We Lose Sight of the Goal
- Willard, Dallas. The Great Omission. Harper San
Francisco, 2006. ISBN-13: 978-0060882433. Pub. List: $23.99.
ASSIGNMENTS AND ASSESSMENT (subject to change as the course progresses):
- ML583A (Fall 2011)
- Seminar participation (67% of grade) includes:
- General Participation in discussions, group work, etc. (10%)
- Oral Presentation and Final Paper Outline (37%)
- Book Review Panel--book assigned prior to seminar (20%)
- Work completed outside of on-campus seminar (33% of final grade)
includes:
- Two Urban Exegesis Papers (6-8 pages) (27%)
- Two 500-word (two-page) reading reports on Bakke, Gorringe - completed and
uploaded prior to seminar (6%)
- ML583B (Winter 2012)
- Five 500-word (two-page) reading reports for the remaining required texts
(15%)
- Updated Learning Plan (2%)
- A Reflection Paper (3-5 pages) on MAGL Learning Outcomes (10%)
- A Final Paper (25 pages) integrating the transformative themes of the
degree program (73%)
PREREQUISITES: This course sequence is only available to MA in Global
Leadership students.
RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM: This two-quarter sequence, ML583A&B, is part of
the required MAGL cohort series of courses. NO AUDITORS.
FINAL EXAMINATION: None.
This ECD is a reliable guide to the course design but is subject to modification. (July 2012)