Links to Web Resources for Teaching Biblical Studies
"Super Sites" - That is, pages of links to other pages.
Wabash Center Guide to Internet Resources. | The purpose of this guide is "to encourage and facilitate the incorporation of electronic resources into teaching." From the Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion.
Resources Pages for Biblical Studies
SBL Sites of Interest. | A page of links, updated regularly.
Jesus Real to Reel. | Bibliography and Web Resources for Religion/Theology and Film, compiled by Richard Ascough of Queen's Theogical College.
K. C. Hanson's home page. | Hanson is a New Testament professor currently working as an editor at Fortress Press. There is a lot here on the social and archeological background of the New Testament.
Mary Hess's list of web design sites that are useful. Included here are sites with guidelines for making content accessible and sites to get teaching/learning ideas from.
Help with Primary Texts
Gospel Parallels | Build your own online synopsis! Edited by John Marshall of the Univ. of Toronto.
SBL Article, "Scholars and Fonts: A Solution." | There's little here that's immediately helpful, but the article describes a developing solution to scholars' font woes.
General Teaching Tools (and sites mentioned in the workshop)
The Confessions of Augustine and another Augustine Site
Christopher Siren | Myths and Legends | Assyro-Babylonian Mythology
Parade of Games | Not devoted to any particular subject area, this is a site of free PowerPoint templates for Games that Teach.
Help with Web Quests
Biblical Studies Teaching Tools
The Bible Tutor | This site offers a demo of The Bible Tutor, a product developed by Prof. Craig Koester of Luther Seminary and marketed by Luther Productions.
BibleDudes.com | A site that builds on solid scholarship, presented in a manner aimed at young people.
Free resources from Luther Seminary Professor Craig Koester:
Miscellaneous
e-learning reviews | A site devoted to sharing research on e-learning.
Designing Distance Theological Education | This is a two-part bibliography (without annotations) compiled by Andrew Grannell in 1999. Part one is on Distance Education. Part two is on Theological Education. For all the work that must have gone into it, it strikes Mary Hess as having been presented in a peculiarly unhelpful format.