Lesson plan: Week 1
Religions of the Hebrew Bible
MONDAY
editProposed agenda | Start | End | |
---|---|---|---|
Chat | <10 | 2:30 p.m. | 2:40 p.m. |
Critical thinking | <15 | 2:40 | 2:55 |
Overview of course | <15 | 2:55 | 3:10 |
Baseline essay | <15 | 3:10 | 3:25 |
Readings for Wednesday | < 3 | 3:25 | 3:30 |
What is the Hebrew Bible? | <20 | 3:30 | |
Timelines! | ? | 3:50 |
Chat (and survey?)
Critical thinking Done
- What is critical thinking? What is critical thinking about the Hebrew Bible at a public university? How does it differ from religious thought?
- Brainstorm (meaning of the term; assumptions for teaching Bible)
- Discussion
Overview of the course Done
- Goals, competencies, learning outcomes
- Schedule of assignments and readings (N.B. readings will be cut back)
- Key points in handout version:
- Absences. Binders. Books. Collaboration in teams
- Social impact (~ service learning)
- Tour of Niihka and Wikipedia course sites?
Baseline essay Done
- Due Monday, Feb. 2nd (though preferably this Wednesday :)
- 1-page essay governed by a suitable claim
- At least one footnote and bibliographic reference
Readings for Wednesday Done
- I Kings 4:25 and Coogan p.292 on Shishak
- Jeremiah 36:1-4,32 and 39:1-10
- Coogan. Ch 1. 3-10, Ch 2. 13-15 (Land), (*15-21), 21-25 (Boundaries, History), 27-9 (Archaeology)
- Syllabus -- must read all the policies and bring questions or concerns to class
What is the Hebrew Bible?
- Canon not book.
Ezra 7.6Done- Canonization. Apocrypha. Why is "Old Testament" less NPOV?
- Divisions: Pentateuch/Torah, Prophets, and …. Done
- Tanakh
- Textual criticism
- Septuagint.
- Redaction criticism (Jer 36:1-4, 32)
Timelines! (time-permitting) → Partially done and bumped to Wednesday
Ezra as example
- When does the narrative take place within the Bible? Biblical chronology and Anno Mundi
- When was the narrative composed, according to scholars? Composition theories
- When does the event take place, if ever, according to historians and archaeologists? Historical chronology
- Terms. Anno Mundi. BCE. CE.
WEDNESDAY
editProposed agenda | Start | End | |
---|---|---|---|
Chat | 5 | 2:30 | 2:35 |
Policies and other syllabus details. | 5 | 2:35 | 2:40 |
Timelines and Places | 20+ | 2:40 | 3:00 |
Readings for Monday | 5 | 3:00 | 3:05 |
Baseline exercise, include Lipson | 20+ | 3:05 | 3:25 |
Texts --> key concepts | 20 | 3:25 | 3:50 |
Policies and other syllabus details. Q&A with students. Done
Timelines! Done
- Biblical chronology. When does the narrative take place within the Bible?
- Composition timeline. When was the narrative composed, according to scholars?
- Historical chronology. When does the event take place, if ever, according to historians and archaeologists?
- Box 2.1, p.23
- Chronologies at back and in most chapters
- Example: Ezra-Nehemiah
- Example: 1 Kings 14:25
- Terms to learn. Anno Mundi. BCE. CE. Cyrus cylinder. Exile. Ezra-Nehemiah.
- Dates to memorize.
- 722 BCE Assyria (around time of Hezekiah) 587 BCE Babylonians (Destruction). 538 BCE Persian (Return estimated), 333 BCE Greeks, 165 (Hasmoneans),
- 70 CE Destruction of Temple by Romans
- Dates might learn: 924 BCE Shishak, 63 BCE Roman control, 5th vs. 4th Century -- events vs. composition of Ezra (p.1661)
Places and maps Done (a few terms not covered)
- Current Middle East and Ancient Near East (ANE). 2.1, p.15
- Ancient Land of Israel. 2.3
- Places to learn include: Levant. Mesopotamia. Canaan. Israel. Kingdom of Judah. Kingdom of Israel (Northern Kingdom). Assyria, Babylonia, Egypt, Persia.
Biblical texts and key concepts
- Canonization. Canon. Jewish, Christian, Samaritan Done
- Textual criticism -- studying the origin and versions of the text Not done
- Genesis 1 from BHS
- Redaction criticism -- studying the editing process!
- Jeremiah 36:1-4,32 and 39:1-10 Not done
- Biblical chronology example Done
- When does historical evidence corroborate the Biblical narrative? Done
- I Kings 4:25 and Coogan p.292 on Shishak
- Ezra-Nehemiah and the Cyrus Cylinder
Readings for Monday -- include how to read the schedule Done
- Genesis chapters 1-3, in conjunction with Coogan
- (Coogan. Ch. 2, review if needed)
- Coogan, Ch 3. 33-43, (*41-45) and learn some of the comparison with Enuma Elish for BWE
- Wikipedia background reading, which might be useful for your baseline essay. Have fun!
- Browse on your own and go behind the scenes. Might try "Community Portal" and various "Talk" pages.
- Browse articles on Genesis, and key terms in Biblical studies
- ? Hand out the booklets Evaluating Wikipedia and Editing Wikipedia
Baseline essay Done
- Questions
- Sampling of ideas
- Canonization. Are documents authorized? How and by whom?
- Canon. Are there multiple canons?
- MT vs OT. Different languages or SImple English Wikipedia.
- Textual criticism. Cf. versions of an article?
- Composition. Cf. merging of articles, versions from competing reliable sources, etc.
- Students shared their ideas, discussion of the class as a whole
Lipson book Done
- Notetaking
- Tip on skimming p.6
- Paraphrasing
- Citation
Handed out Wikipedia brochures Done
Teamwork experiment Not done
Groups more to allocate, share, and peer review ("critique") your individual work, rather than to collaborate in writing a document togetherGroups are formedChoose one (or both) of these optionsFor the Baseline Essay due Monday, share your ideas by [choose a deadline for yourselves]For Coogan reading due on Monday, split up note-taking and share notes (with those who did it) by [choose a deadline for yourselves]Another goal?
Report on Monday about what worked and didn't work with your group
Bumped to week 2
editThese items were on the ideal lesson plan, but not covered in week 1. They may be covered in week 2 or dropped:
- Jeremiah text as an example of redaction criticism
- Textual criticism -- with example -- more needed?
- Places not mentioned enough? Canaan. Israel. Kingdom of Judah. Kingdom of Israel (Northern Kingdom)
- Example of a doublet (?)
- Noah at 6:5-7 and 6:11-13