Let us make a short summary of our findings. Calling as a phenomenon has a structure that can be presented as follows: Desire (Passion) - Talent (Abilities) - Realization - Social Benefit and Good. In case of religious belief, the structure of calling looks like this:
Faith - Gifts - Deeds - Religious or Spiritual Benefit. There could be no calling when it is a lack or a gap in it. Whatever structures can be invented, we feel that calling goes from
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the depth of human being and from the wonder of co-existence with people, or even from the transcendent being of God. Calling is a sacred possession or rather a gift that one is free to take or to lose.
The aim of transpersonal goodness is the core of the phenomenon of calling and gives the integrity of its structure. Calling is for good, it cannot ruin. It is a kind of participation in creation within this world. What is opposite to it is not an evil. It is human laziness and fears that can be overcome with faith, love and wisdom.
Because of free character of the phenomenon, calling cannot be a criterion for a formal assessment of teacher"s ability to work at school. That is rather a regulative idea for some more detailed instruments for the improvements and training of teachers and for the politics in education. Teacher"s calling is to bring young people to their own callings.
If the essence of education is raising people to the level of spirit out of the level of matter, the task of a teacher is to bring up that ability in the youth. That is the core the teacher"s mis-sion in the world.
Calling is not all in our life. It has its limits, its horizons of appearance and there is al-ways something else or someone else beyond it. That is why calling needs ethics and, as we can say, first of all calling needs faith. However, the attention to the phenomenon of calling is definitely a part of caring for the future of humanity.
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Educational Cognitive Technologies as Human
Adaptation Strategies
Marja Nesterova - Doctor of Philosophy, Associate Professor
National Pedagogical Dragomanov University
(Kyiv, Ukraine)
E-mail: marja@nesterova.com.ua