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Special Issue: Research & Theory

“What Should I Be When I Grow Up?” Vocational Discernment and Spiritual Well-Being

 

Abstract

The purpose of this article is to describe a systematic method of evoking students’ vocational discernment through the practice of spiritual well-being. Engaging spiritual well-being as a means of vocational discernment requires that the student and the advisor explore the student’s sense of connectedness by tapping into the tacit dimension of spirituality and to make the tacit explicit. Vocational discernment is a conceptual activity in which students examine their individual design, community affirmation, and transcendent beliefs to help point to and highlight their sense of place.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Garland T. Dunlap

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Garland T. Dunlap ([email protected]) is assistant director of internships at Dallas Theological Seminary where he explores how spirituality, personality, and motivation relate to work, vocation, and calling.

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