Sunday, October 29, 2006

RESOUND! The On-Line Catechetical Resource

The home page of the Web site of the Office of the Religious Education of the Diocese of Salt Lake City has the following as an introductory statement:
This website was set up to assist catechists by providing a place to find resources that work in the religious education classroom. Besides certification information, DRE materials, and classroom tools, we offer some fun ways of bringing the Word of God to your students.

There are literally thousands of pages of information to help the catechist or DRE from adult formation to stress management.

One document, I found interesting and worth reading is called Catechesis and Faith Development Book.

The stated objectives of the booklet are the following:
  • 1. Discuss the classic catechetical techniques
  • 2. Review a model of faith development
  • 3. “Imagine” the catechetical techniques that lead one “ grow, and persevere in the until the end (Catechism of Catholic Church, 162).”
For more resources on catechesis:

Catechetics - Resources for Catholic Educators
http://www.silk.net/RelEd/catechetics.htm

Catechesis for Persons with Developmental Disabilities
http://www.silk.net/RelEd/disabilities.htm

Resources for Catholic Educators Store - Catechesis
http://astore.amazon.com/resouforcatho0b-20?_encoding=UTF8&node=2

Thursday, October 26, 2006

All Hallows Eve, All Souls and All Saints Day

Read a Catholic Christian history of Halloween (All Hallows Eve), learn the legend of the jack o'lantern and discover what Catholics believe about witches, ghosts and magic.

This is part of the the intro to the section called All Hallows Eve, All Souls and All Saints Day on the AmericanCatholic.org Web site. Articles featured are listed below:

Halloween’s Christian Roots
When you think of Halloween, what comes to mind? For a lot of people, Halloween has become synonymous with candy, costumes, scary stuff, witches, ghosts and pumpkins. But do you know the Christian connection to the holiday?

Catholics and Halloween
How can Catholics take back “holy” Halloween and use the holiday as a time for evangelization? Listen to American Catholic Radio to find out.

Why do we carve pumpkins for Halloween? Read a story from Catholic Update that explains the origin of this yearly tradition.

Witches, Ghosts and Magic: What Catholics BelieveWhat are Catholics to think about the devil, exorcism, psychic
hotlines, fortune tellers, ESP, ghosts and magic in the light of current
Church teaching? Curiosity about the supernatural is normal especially
for teenagers during Halloween but is it “of the devil” as some Christians
claim?

How can Catholics keep All Hallows Eve from becoming “hollow”? Celebrate Halloween and All Saints Day while remembering both the Christian connection to Halloween and the positive messages that stem from the holiday.

Why Pray for the Dead?
What is the basis for the Catholic Church’s teaching about purgatory and praying for the dead? Why do Catholics pray for the dead?

Visit Our Saints Section!
Who are the saints? Who decides who is and is not a saint? How many are
there? Are saints’ names required for Baptism? Find the answers to these
questions on Catholic saints and more.

Sunday, October 22, 2006

Survey question

If you have a few minutes, please answer the following survey question. The answer will be posted on in the next edition of the Catholic Educators News that will be published in early December, 2006. The responses will be transmitted to me anonymously. The question is: What advice would you give to a new catechist or religious education teacher? Click on the question to answer.

Thursday, October 19, 2006

PROFESSOR CREATES RELIGIOUS ART SANCTUARY ON THE INTERNET

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. --- HolyCards.com, founded by Santa Barbara City College marketing professor Julie Ann Brown, is not your everyday e-commerce venture. Inspired by a desire to preserve and share antique European religious images from prayer books and holy cards, Brown has devoted much of her limited free time, and all of her inheritance, to collecting, scanning and posting over 100,000 of "God's calling cards" on the web.

Taking advantage of travel discount tickets obtained through her airline pilot husband, she scoured eight European countries collecting holy cards and lavishly illustrated antique prayer books at auctions, bookstores and estate sales. In spite of knowing it will be years before she can recoup her $150,000 investment, she is thrilled she is accomplishing her goal of preserving this fragile, paper-based religious art for future generations.

"Time is running out for most antique paper," said Brown. "Modern technology is a part of God's plan to help not only with remembering the past but creating future possibilities that at this time we cannot imagine. My goal is to get my entire collection up on the Web before I die. I want to preserve this art, this history, for future generations."

A fan of holy cards since childhood, she hopes her website's religious images of Jesus, angels, saints, Easter and Christmas scenes will inspire a new generation of the faithful. "I'm hoping this art will create a resurgence of faith in Europe," said Brown.

She may be onto something. Entrepreneurs from around the world are finding their way to HolyCards.com for affordable images to use in a multitude of projects. Since the website's religious images are at least 75 years old, with the majority created in the 1800s and early 1900s, they are royalty-free because they are classified as "public domain" under copyright law. Brown charges a nominal one-time fee of $2-3 per image.

Customers have used her images for projects such as wedding and christening announcements, needlepoint patterns, t-shirt transfers, home schooling materials and personalized holy cards. Sophia Loren's production company in Canada used many of the images for a mini-series on the lives of the saints while the Hallmark Channel in the U.S. recently used an image of St. Hildegard of Bingen obtained from HolyCards.com. "These images can be used by anyone, from the little entrepreneur to the Vatican," said Brown. Log on to www.HolyCards.com for downloadable, royalty-free Christian religious images.

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Genesis 1 Flash Video



Creation - Experience the Genesis chapter 1 creation story for children in stunning images and with gentle background music.

Friday, October 13, 2006

ChristArt

ChristArt offers free Christian clipart and art for Web sites and for print material. There are certain conditions so read the terms of use. One of the features on the site is quite innovative and and could be fun to use in creating resources for your students. Under the Clip Art section of the site, there is a page called "My Name". On that page you can write the name of one your students in a form and simply click on "Create Image" and the name you have written will be integrated in a graphic that says "Name" loves Jesus. I have done this with my first name in the graphic above. You could do that for all of your students, and save the images to use on individualised worksheets or any handout for that matter.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Liturgical Year Calendar

interparole-catholique-yvelines.cef.fr - This French Web site has all you need to build a beautifully illustrated yearly liturgical calendar to color, cut out and assemble with your students. If you cannot read French, it would still be worthwhile to use a translator such as Babel Fish to make out the meaning of the sections "Pourquoi un calendrier liturgique ? (Why a liturgical calendar) and Tableau récapitulatif de l'année liturgique (Summary table of the liturgical year). Both of these provide useful and interesting background information on how to help children understand the different liturgical seasons and feast days and their meanings.

Monday, October 09, 2006

Updates and Additions - Resources for Catholic Educators

¤ Daily Mass readings can now be easily accessed on our Resources for Mass Readings page. The daily Gospel reading with commentary is also now available on our 4CatholicEducators.com Web site.

¤ New for webmasters of Catholic sites (parishes, schools, resources sites...): an easy way to add relevant content on your Web sites - automatically refreshed daily, weekly or monthly. Samples are provided below. Click here for more information.

Mass Readings - October
S M T W Th F St
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31
October 9 - Week 27
I
Gal 4:22-24, 26-27, 31–5:1
Ps
Ps 113:1b-2, 3-4, 5a and 6-7
G
Lk 11:29-32


"Let the children come to me;
do not prevent them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these.
Mark 10:14 NAB

Click to enlarge image  - by Zamora Crosby

Monday, October 02, 2006

Daily Inspirations by Tarrywood Designs, Inc.

Tarrywood Designs, Inc. offers excellent liturgical and Christian art for church bulletins and for other needs. One of the pages on this site offers a different "Daily Inspirations" graphic every day. Quite well done and well worth a visit.