- Teachers have a growing relationship with God.
- Understand the Bible, God’s Word, and allow it to guide their lives.
- Love God and others.
- Bear the fruit of the Spirit.
- Practice spiritual disciplines.
- Participate in Christ’s Body, the Church.
- Make Christian disciples of all nations.
- Care for God’s creation.
- Teachers articulate a Christ-centered worldview.
- Articulate Biblical answers to the big questions of life.
- Explain the creation-fall-redemption-fulfillment/restoration framework.
- Teachers apply a Christ-centered worldview to education.
- Articulate a Christ-centered philosophy of education.
- Articulate the implications of a Christ-centered philosophy of education.
- Articulate a worldview education framework.
- Articulate that the target is student's understanding and then applying a Biblical perspective to the course content and skills, and ultimately to their lives.
- Articulate what student understanding and application of a Biblical perspective is/is not.
- Teachers develop a curriculum that targets students understanding and then applying a Biblical perspective to course content and skills, and ultimately to their lives.
- Develop, document, and explain schoolwide learning outcomes.
- Develop, document, and explain schoolwide curricular themes.
- Develop, document, and explain a Biblical perspective of their academic discipline(s).
- Develop, document, and explain content and skill standards/benchmarks.
- Articulate a Biblical perspective of the content and skills they teach.
- Develop, document, and explain enduring Biblical perspective understandings
- Identify and document a menu of formative and summative authentic assessments.
- Identify and document a menu of effective instructional strategies.
- Teachers design and implement unit plans that result in students understanding and then applying a Biblical perspective to course content and skills, and ultimately to their lives.
- Design and ask essential questions.
- Design effective essential questions.
- Use listening and inquiry skills when asking essential questions.
- Document and teach students Biblical content.
- Document and teach students skills.
- Design and give assessments.
- Design a variety of quality formative and summative authentic assessments.
- Use rubrics to clarify expectations, assess student learning, and provide feedback.
- Give students specific, timely feedback.
- Use assessment data to modify instruction.
- Design and ask essential questions.
- Teachers design and implement lesson plans that result in students understanding and then applying a Biblical perspective to course content and skills, and ultimately to their lives.
- Use effective lesson plan models.
- Use effective instructional strategies.
- Identify and meet student learning needs.
- Teachers collaborate with other teachers.
- Participate in professional learning communities that set student learning goals
- Participate in professional learning communities that provide support, encouragement, and accountability for achieving student learning goals through mentoring, coaching, and group interaction.
- Contribute to a bank of quality instructional materials.
- Lead Biblical perspective workshops for other teachers.