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111 TH 996 Theology Thesis Proposal Students submit a thesis proposal by the due date of the term of registration and receive a grade of satisfactory/unsatisfactory. Once students register for thesis proposal, they must remain enrolled in TH 998 in subsequent semesters until the term of registration for TH 999. Prerequisite: instructor permission. Two hours. TH 998 Theology Thesis Continuation Students who are not ready to enroll in TH 999 should register for TH 998 each semester until they are ready to enroll in TH 999. Course is graded satisfactory/unsatisfactory. Two consecutive semesters of receiving an unsatisfactory grade and/or two consecutive semesters of not paying the continuation fee will result in withdrawal from the program. $280 fee per semester. Prerequisite: TH 996 Theology Thesis Proposal. No credit. TH 999 Thesis in Theology Students should register for TH 999 when they are ready to complete the thesis process in a particular semester. Note that there are no course extensions for theses. Prerequisite: TH 996 Theology Thesis Proposal. Four hours. TRAINING AND MENTORING Denver Seminary is committed to equipping leaders for Kingdom service who are theologically minded, godly in character and highly competent in their work as they respond to the needs of the world. This requires intentional and purposeful partnerships between each student, the Seminary and other contexts of learning (church, parachurch, non-faith based organizations). Denver Seminary's training and mentoring courses require collaboration between a student, a mentoring director and an external mentor. The student is required to meet in person and one-on-one with their mentor. Distance mentoring does not satisfy this requirement. Each TM course builds upon another as students create integrative and theologically informed learning experiences. The educational objective is that, upon completion of the entire TM course sequence, the student will have developed a greater capacity for self-directed and life-long learning. For the purposes of the training and mentoring experience, it is not permitted for a mentor to be another current Denver Seminary student, a spouse, or a relative. TM 500 Introduction to Mentored Formation This course provides a theological framework for Christian formation, which prepares students for mentored learning in subsequent training and mentoring courses. Students will integrate a biblical understanding of calling, work, mission and spirituality into personal reflection assignments that will create a theological framework for the formation process while in seminary. They will also be prepared to identify and begin meeting with a mentor in TM 501 and beyond. One hour. TM 501 Mentored Formation In this semester of Mentored Formation, the students learn how to discern, develop and manage a personalized learning plan focused on the formation of the whole person. The students are required to utilize cognitive, experiential, and relational learning practices, some of which are familiar and others that uniquely challenge their learning style. These practices include the engagement of a self-procured mentor, in person and one-on-one, for a minimum of 10 hours each semester. While the student must have identified his/her mentor before the commencement of this course, the student is not required to begin meeting with the mentor until the first week of the semester. The intended outcome of the semester is to