A culminating discussion on applying worldview concepts, guiding students to articulate their own worldview, analyze case studies, assess characters’ beliefs and behaviors, and reflect on personal growth, academic readiness, and future challenges in graduate study.
A detailed exploration of major worldviews—Christian theism, deism, naturalism, nihilism, existentialism, Eastern pantheistic monism, new age spirituality, postmodernism, and Islamic theism—emphasizing critical comparison, behavioral implications, and the role of worldview analysis in academic evaluation.
An introduction to critical thinking and worldview analysis, covering interpretation, evaluation, synthesis, common cognitive biases, and the integration of a Christian worldview within academic inquiry.
Instruction on structuring time effectively for graduate study, including developing weekly plans, prioritizing tasks, coordinating academic and personal responsibilities, and using organization to sustain progress.
A thematic exploration of leadership concepts such as influence, authority, accountability, and planning, linking these ideas to course readings and emphasizing leadership as relational rather than positional.
A foundational explanation of how to distinguish scholarly from non-scholarly sources, including primary and secondary materials, peer review standards, and strategies for selecting credible evidence.
An outline of course expectations covering graduate writing, APA style, scholarly sourcing, library use, time management, critical thinking, and ethical academic practices, including the appropriate role of AI.