ABSTRACT

In this study, first published in 1965, the author explores the implications of research for an alternative approach to religious education. The book deals with the psychological bases of religious development, reviewing the natural limitations as well as the basic needs of the young, and how religious education should be affected by educational theory and practice.

The author also examines what content and methods of teaching are consistent with the healthy development of children and adolescents. Teachers in schools, students in training, lecturers, clergy and ministers, and local education authority committees will welcome the book as an important aid to the task of rethinking syllabuses and the need for more child-centred methods of teaching.

part One|2 pages

The Psychological Bases of Religious Education

chapter 1|8 pages

Why This Book Was Written

chapter 2|14 pages

The Children and Adolescents We Teach

chapter 3|15 pages

Developmental Limits in Religious Growth

chapter 4|18 pages

What is Readiness for Religion?

chapter 5|17 pages

What We Should Be Trying To Do

part Two|2 pages

The Content and Methods of Developmental Religious Education

chapter 6|25 pages

Early Childhood

chapter 7|28 pages

Middle Childhood

chapter 8|30 pages

Late Childhood and Pre-Adolescence

chapter 9|32 pages

Adolescence

chapter 10|35 pages

A Total View