As part of the Archdiocese of Paderborn's Digital Week, the Forum for Comparative Theology is offering an online workshop on interreligious and intercultural learning with children on Friday, 20 February from 4 to 5.30 pm. Primary and lower secondary school teachers are invited to explore the potential of interreligious children's literature and utilise it in their teaching practice. Registration is free and possible online.
The workshop offers an introduction to the importance of interreligious children's books and the role of comparative theology in the classroom. The focus will be on the picture book "Who owns the snow?" (Antonie Schneider, Pei-Yu Chang) and the children's book "And yet all apples are round" (Christine Hubka, Agi Ofner). Both books serve as an exemplary basis for initiating conversations about religious and cultural diversity, encouraging a change of perspective and supporting children in an appreciative encounter with diversity. The participants then develop specific teaching ideas in an interactive group phase.
This text was translated automatically.