Christian School Education

A Magazine for Christian School Educators Volume 18 Number 1 | 2014/2015

Download at: http://cdn.coverstand.com/33582/223268/6542b50b894090e25ba9ff0f53d71d7a0606cccb.1.pdf

21stCentury

Defining Twenty-first-Century Education

By Jeremy A. Ervin

Let's Make Our Schools More Thrilling

By Barrett Mosbacker

Strengthening Your Core: Effective Practices for Board Governance

By Ken Coley

Applying the Five Love Languages at Work?

By Paul White

In Defense of the Christian Private School Bubble

By Andrea Palpant Dilley

The Four Hurdles to Flipping Your Class

By Jon Bergmann and Aaron Sams

What Religious School Parents Want

From the Cardus Religious Schools Initiative (CRSI)

The New Minority

By Susan J. Karrer

How Technology Will Change Your School

By Greg Bitgood

Pre-Need: Planning and Relationships

By Tim Thompson

What We Can Learn From Creative Insubordination: Consider Differentiated Leadership

By David K. Wilcox

Cultivating a Grateful Heart

By Dan Egeler

 

October 2025 Highlights

Thank you for your partnership in the ministry of ACSI Europe! We would like to give you an update on the highlights of our recent activities and also request your prayers for some important upcoming programs.

SLC report 2025

Praise the Lord for His faithfulness and blessings poured out during the ACSI Student Leadership Conferences (SLC) this year! These gatherings brought together students and chaperones from 47 schools across Europe for a time of worship, discipleship, and leadership growth centered on the theme “Leaders Who Love Truth.”

Strengthening Critical Thinking

Christian schools are often intentional about teaching worldview and preparing students to engage with competing ideas. Yet the way we structure this engagement can either nurture deep critical thinking or unintentionally foster shallow habits of argument. Here are some practical tools to support critial thinking in the classroom.

Education as a Restoration of Hope

Today we turn to the good news: God’s plan of restoration through Christ. This is not only a personal hope but also a framework for how we think about education, leadership, and the shaping of society. How can we build meaningful outcomes into the process of teaching and learning which truly reflect the hope we have in Christ?