The conference


Announcing the 10th Kuyers Institute conference on teaching and learning. INCHE (International Network for Christian Higher Education) will again co-host, and this year we are also partnering with the de Vries Institute for Global Faculty Development.

Contemporary culture contains powerful forces that push toward a reduction of learning to some single facet. Whether it is a matter of reducing identity to political alignment, learning outcomes to countable skills or economic pragmatism, formation to individual academic success, or human flourishing to the material, the drive to simplify and control seems to repeatedly push us toward taking some part for the whole. Yet it is easier to talk about the integrity of creation and a holistic approach to learning and scholarship than it is to design approaches to faith-informed educational practices that can gain traction. The conference invites examination of how Christian approaches to teaching and learning can expand our understanding of how learners grow, and shape practices that resist reductionism and undergird a more holistic pursuit of student and teacher flourishing. How do we honor the coherence of Christian faith and life in teaching, learning, scholarship, and service in a reductionist age?

Registration


Registration is now open! Click here to register and to find more information about lodging options.

Registration fees include attendance at all sessions, conference materials, Thursday and Friday lunch, Thursday and Friday evening dinner and reception, and all breaks during the conference.

Please note that overnight accommodations are NOT included as part of the registration fee.

Schedule


The conference will begin with dinner on October 10 and end with lunch on October 12. Return to this page for updates on scheduling.

Plenary Speakers


Dr. Katie Kresser (PhD Harvard University) is a Professor of Art History and Visual Studies at Seattle Pacific University. Her work focuses on art theory, modern/postmodern art, and the intersection of material culture with theology, religious practice and anthropology. Katie has written two books, including the award-winning Bezalel’s Body: The Death of God and the Birth of Art (Wipf and Stock, 2019) along with dozens of essays, blog posts and book reviews. Her current research examines dynamics around the collapse of shared symbolic systems and the rise of individualistic, traditional, mystical, or occult solutions to problems of the soul.


Dr. Justin Ariel Bailey is associate professor and chair of the theology department at Dordt University. He is the author of two books: Reimagining Apologetics (IVP Academic, 2020) and Interpreting Your World (Baker Academic, 2022). He hosts the In All Things podcast, and preaches regularly as an ordained minister in the Christian Reformed Church. He is married to Melissa and they are blessed with two teenage children.


Dr. Matthew Kaemingk is the Richard John Mouw Assistant Professor of Faith and Public Life at Fuller Theological Seminary where he also serves as the director of the Richard John Mouw Institute of Faith and Public Life. His books include Christian Hospitality and Muslim Immigration in an Age of Fear (2018), Work and Worship: Reconnecting Our Labor and Liturgy (coauthor Cory Willson, 2020), and Reformed Public Theology (2021). Kaemingk serves as a fellow at the Center for Public Justice and a scholar in residence at the Max De Pree Center for Christian Leadership. An ordained minister in the Christian Reformed Church, Kaemingk lives in Missouri with his wife, Heather, and their three sons.