Vocation and Purity—Let’s Be Honest

This post presents an imagined dialogue between Sarah and her mentor Joel, exploring the conflict between support of authentic vocational exploration for students and the pursuit of an idealized programmatic outcome. They discuss the dangers of constraining students with pre-imagined paths, emphasizing the need for individual differences and a more flexible approach to discernment.

This post is framed as an imagined dialogue between two friends: Joel is a mentor to the narrator, Sarah. In what follows, Sarah narrates a conversation between the the two of them about an ongoing tension between authentically helping students with vocational discernment and aiming at the ideal and pre-imagined results of programmatic “purity.”

brown wooden table with chairs
Photo by Kampus Production on Pexels.com

My friend Joel sat at a coffeehouse table in the sun with a small stack of art books and his notebook. When I arrived, he welcomed me, no matter that I was a little late for our appointment yet again. He and I have been meeting frequently since right after I arrived on campus in my new role as lead vocational counselor.

The last time we met, Joel had made a cautionary remark about purity that I wanted to follow up on. When I sat down, he smiled broadly and began chatting about spring flowers, as the two of us share a keen interest in plants and gardening. On this day, he had been reading and writing about the American painter, Philip Guston; Joel’s writing about his reading seems to be an admirable life habit.

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Liberty and Learning: Mustafa Akyol

Mustafa Akyol, a prominent Muslim modernist and senior fellow at the Cato Institute, is featured in the latest NetVUE podcast episode. He discusses his journey as a journalist and academic, emphasizing empathy and collaboration for peace. Akyol reflects on religious liberty, democracy, and his aspirations for peace in the Middle East.

Mustafa Akyol

The most recent episode of NetVUE’s podcast Callings features Mustafa Akyol, a public intellectual who is widely regarded as one of the most notable Muslim modernists and reformers in the world today. Named one of the world’s top 50 thinkers by the UK magazine Prospect, he is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute’s Center for Global Liberty and Prosperity in Washington, D.C., as well as a senior lecturer at the Islamic Civilization and Societies program at Boston College and the director of the Islam and the Muslim World course at the Foreign Service Institute.

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Imagining Sisyphus Happy?

In this post, Jason Mahn expresses feelings of frustration and burnout amid challenges in teaching, which include lack of student engagement, prison lockdowns disrupting classes, and international students facing visa issues. Drawing on Albert Camus’ “The Myth of Sisyphus,” Mahn reflects on the gap between ideals and reality, emphasizing the importance of acknowledging despair while fostering hope.

My work as an educator has felt Sisyphean of late. Just this past week, I’ve experienced some acute frustration and setbacks, not to mention an overarching sense of fatigue, ineffectuality, and even cynicism.

Monday afternoon, I found myself walking up the stairwell toward my classroom remembering the apathy in the students’ faces the prior week. I was dreading another session during which I would try—too hard!—to be and sound excited and engaged. I stopped and mumbled aloud to myself: “I don’t want to be here.”  

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Storytelling as Vocation: Kiran Singh Sirah

The seventh episode of NetVUE’s podcast features Kiran Singh Sirah, a renowned storytelling artist and folklorist. He discusses storytelling’s role in fostering connection, agency, and communal healing in relation to vocation. A past president of the International Storytelling Center, Kiran’s initiatives have received global recognition. He emphasizes the importance of sharing personal narratives to bridge divides.

Kiran Singh Sirah

The seventh episode of this season of NetVUE’s podcast Callings features Kiran Singh Sirah, an award-winning storytelling artist and folklorist. He is the creative lead for Storytelling: A Gift of Hope, a project that harnesses the art of storytelling to create intimate healing and justice spaces to build dialogue, agency, and change for communities on their own terms. As well, he is the past president of the International Storytelling Center in Jonesborough, Tennessee.

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Hope through Connection III: Cultivating Skills as Vocational Discernment

This series of posts explores integrating vocation into gateway courses, highlighting discussions between professor Deirdre Egan-Ryan and her student Caroline Van Sistine. Focusing on vocational discernment within English enhances students’ understanding as members of a guild, equipping them with critical skills like effective communication and problem-solving, which prepare them well for the workforce. As they cultivate these skill and apply them in real-world setting, they also clarify their future aspirations.

A series of posts on integrating vocation into a gateway course for the major, featuring conversations between a professor and her student.

Deirdre and Caroline

Gateway courses typically focus on discipline-specific training, assignments, and formation. When we emphasize these foundational habits in the context of vocational discernment, our students begin to recognize that they are members of a guild, with its craft and notions of purposeful living made more apparent. As they enter this community, students become more able to apply their disciplinary knowledge in contexts that help them name and own those skills in ways that resonate with their emerging sense of vocation.

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