How Religious Literacy Builds Global Competence And Civic Skills

January 8
19 mins

Episode Description

In this episode of the Arizona Civics Podcast, host Liz Evans is joined by Dr. Tim Hall, educator and founder of Religion Matters, for a thoughtful conversation on religious literacy—what it is, why it matters, and how it can be taught responsibly in public schools.

Dr. Hall explains how religious literacy helps students better understand history, civic life, global affairs, and one another in a pluralistic democracy. The conversation explores constitutional guardrails, classroom strategies, and trusted resources for educators who want to approach religion academically, not devotionally.

What You’ll Learn

  • What religious literacy means in a public school context
  • Why religion is essential to understanding history, civics, and global issues
  • How religious literacy supports global competence and civic engagement
  • Constitutional guidelines for teaching about religion in K–12 classrooms
  • The Six-Point Framework and the “lived religion” approach
  • Why the Scopes Trial still matters nearly 100 years later
  • Trusted, classroom-ready resources for educators


Resources & Links Mentioned in the Episode

Core Religious Literacy & Civics Resources

Teaching & Curriculum Resources

Global Competence Resources

Historical & Civic References

  • The Scopes Trial (1925) – Religion, science, and public education
  • Declaration of Independence – Religious influences on the Founders
  • First Amendment Religion Cases – Including cases related to the Pledge of Allegiance

The Arizona Constitution Project

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