Civic Life

K-12 Educators: Join Our Interfaith at Work Cohort

November 30, 2022

High school educator in classroom with students. (Monkey Business Images/Shutterstock)

Interfaith at Work Cohorts provide a space for members of the Emerging Leaders Network to build relationships with other professionals in your sector who are interested in promoting interfaith cooperation.

Interfaith at Work is a place to be creative and collectively impact your professional sector to be inclusive of the religious diversity that makes our community great.

All members of the Emerging Leaders Network are welcome to join a cohort focused on the professional sector that you work in or hope to work in the future.  As a part of the cohort, you will have access to virtual group sessions three times a year, funding support to attend annual in-person convenings with fellow members of the network at a professional conference or professional development opportunities such as the Conference on Medicine and Religion, and one-on-one coaching with a cohort lead.  You will also have access to networking with dozens of interfaith leaders in your specific professional sector.

Join the Interfaith at Work Cohort today!

Are you a K-12 educator?

Join us on December 7

Are you a K-12 educator?

The Interfaith Education Cohort’s next event will be on December 7 from 6-7 p.m. Central. The focus of this gathering will be “Interfaith within your education expertise” and current Emerging Leaders can invite guests as well.

In our session we will:

  • DEVELOP models of what interfaith action and education can look like within your classroom and larger school community.
  • LEARN how to integrate interfaith education in your curriculum, content area, and across grade levels.
  • WORKSHOP new ideas for interfaith events and learn strategies to overcome common obstacles.
Join today!

Interfaith Education Cohort

Interfaith America seeks contributions that present a wide range of experiences and perspectives from a diverse set of worldviews on the opportunities and challenges of American pluralism. The opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect those of Interfaith America, its board of directors, or its employees.

Join us today!

Let’s build an interfaith America, where people of all beliefs work together for the common good.

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