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There’s a stack of Christian higher ed books I keep near my desk – they are a mix of books I’ve read recently, months ago, and even years ago.
What they have in common for me, though, is that I often flip back through each of them. And they are the books I find myself recommending to colleagues and coworkers. If you find yourself on a Google Meet call with me for any length of time, there is a 50/50 chance I will pick up one of these five books and restate the author’s thoughts.
For some of these books, I’ve had the opportunity to cross paths with their authors at conferences, advisory board meetings, or as podcast guests. Collectively, this group of authors represents leaders in Higher Education who care deeply about their faith, their students, and God’s heart for the world. My hope is that these resources might help enrich your work in the day-to-day of student development

1. Academically Speaking (2024)
Academically Speaking (2024) by Dr. Rick Ostrander is one I’ve learned a lot from recently. In his autobiography, Rick shares about his journey as a student, working at and consulting for a variety of institutions within Higher ed, including Moody, Grand Canyon, John Brown, Cornerstone, the CCCU, Westmont College, and now leading a Christian Study Center at the University of Michigan. He’s worked in the public, private, Christian, for-profit, and ed-tech sectors. Additionally, he has served on our Advisory Board at Living & Learning International and has been a long-time advocate for Study Abroad.
When we work on one side of the multi-layered field of higher education, we can’t see a complete picture of what’s happening. Rick’s book illuminates the landscape in a helpful and winsome way, providing lessons for navigating higher education regardless of the seat (and organization) in which you find yourself.
2. Christian Higher Education (2023)
In my role overseeing partnerships at Living & Learning International, I find myself speaking with faculty and staff across a broad range of Christian colleges and universities. Christian Higher Education (2023) was the crash course introduction to the contemporary landscape I have been needing. It’s both an abbreviated history of North American Higher Ed and a guide to how Christian faith is operationalized today at schools that profess to be distinctively Christian. The book provides an empirical ranking of select markers related to Christian identity through the Operationalizing Christian Identity Guide (OCIG). As you consider the next stop in your career journey through Christian higher ed, this guide can serve as a helpful reference in your evaluation.
3. Mission-Driven Colleges (2025)
Dr. Rick Langer served as the Keynote speaker for the 2025 Christian Study Abroad Conference hosted at Biola University. In his book, Mission-Driven Colleges (2025), Langer and his coauthor, Scott B. Rae, provide shared language and a framework for administrators, faculty, and staff to have thoughtful conversations in order to integrate faith throughout all elements of a college, university (or study abroad program). Did your institution’s OCIG score come in lower than you may have hoped? Mission-Driven Colleges should be the next book you reach for.
4. Development in Mission (2021)
Working in Global Education, I find myself at the cross-section of theory and practice quite often. We go into the field on a study abroad program to see in context how great ideas bump up against the realities of the world. While not a book specifically on Higher Ed, Development in Mission (2021) provides a how-to for thinking about meaningful engagement with the world’s poor. Study abroad has a part to play in this high call. Coauthor Dr. Rob Gailey shares that for business schools specifically, the Global South is an incredibly overlooked setting for learning:
Business Schools are finding value in study abroad experiences for their students. Yet, most business schools ignore Global South countries, the countries poised to have the most demographic and economic growth in the future. Many Christian faith-based universities have ministry trips to Global South countries, but these trips primarily focus on service projects that emphasize doing rather than being or learning. Students preparing for careers in global ministry or international development are particularly in need of first-hand educational and experiential learning before pursuing their vocational calling. (Gailey, 2025)
As students step into these settings, professionals working in student development are uniquely equipped to provide support. There are pathways for student life professionals to spend a season of their career facilitating semester and summer programs abroad. Just like on a college campus, the role of student life is distinct and complementary to the work of faculty abroad.
5. Transformations at the Edge of the World (2009)
While most of the books on this list have been written in the past four years, I also want to include Transformations at the Edge of the World. This 2009 text is a collection of essays capturing the programs leading the field of Christian Study Abroad from that era. As we seek to design academically excellent global programs where students live in community, engage the challenges of the world, and learn to respond with a Christ-centered worldview, understanding where the field has come from is essential. The leaders in this book share their knowledge, priorities, and observations, and pave the way for the next generation of programs available to Christian colleges and universities.
These five books continue to serve as a reference point for me as I think about both the global and local realities of Christian higher ed. I hope they can be the same for you!
References
- Gailey, R. (2025, April). A pedagogical case for college students to study abroad in the global south [Conference presentation abstract]. Christian Study Abroad Conference, La Mirada, CA.
- Glanzer, P. L., Cockle, T. F., and Martin, J. (2023). Christian higher education: An empirical guide. ACU Press.
- Langer, R., and Rae, S. B. (2025). Mission-driven colleges: Keeping first things first in Christian higher education.
- Lynn, M., Gailey, R., and Reese, D. (2021). Development in mission: A guide for transforming global poverty and ourselves. ACU Press.
- Morgan, R. J., and Smedley, C. T. (2009). Transformations at the edge of the world: Forming global Christians through the study abroad experience. ACU Press. Ostrander, R. (2024). Academically speaking: Lessons from a life in Christian higher education. William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.




