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Jim Mannoia - 1999
It is my conviction that there are few if any Christian colleges
that have clearly identified and articulated what makes them really
distinct in the world of American higher education. I believe there
are practical, pedagogical, and theological reasons why this sharpened
focus is essential. I think Christian colleges can and must discover
their genius.
Christian higher education has both intrinsic and instrumental values.
These values should forcefully shape an institution's goals. Briefly,
the intrinsic value is to help students become a certain kind of
person rather than just teaching them to do certain kinds of things.
This is character development and I believe it requires colleges
to help their students go beyond both dogmatism and scepticism to
what I call critical commitment. Christian colleges will not be
content to produce dogmatic graduates with "all the answers"
but who have never risked asking the questions. Nor should they
be content with graduates who have asked all the questions but like
the sceptical products of most secular institutions have embraced
relativism and abandoned hope that there even are answers. This
means two things. First, Christian education is risky business.
Faculty, students, and parents must understand this. Second, this
means the work of Christian colleges is doubly difficult and must
go beyond both what is normally done in Bible schools and what is
done on secular campuses. Expectations for faculty will also be
commensurately higher. But I believe that given a clearer picture
of this distinctive role, faculty at Christian colleges will take
great pride in the task and will eagerly rise to the challenge.
The instrumental value means helping students learn to tackle real
world problems not just narrow disciplinary ones. This task requires
colleges to help their students go beyond both dilettantism and
esotericism to true integration. Unfortunately, too many Christian
colleges have traditionally pursued "integration" at the
cost of academic quality. "Integration" has meant dabbling.
But it is equally unfortunate that more recently, some Christian
liberal arts colleges, in understandable reaction, have swung to
the other extreme, pursuing the esoteric research agendae of their
secular counterparts. This has often meant a severe strain on resources
to compete in the same game as those often wealthier institutions;
not to mention the crucial loss of distinctive I allude to above.
I believe true integration goes beyond both of these models. It
demands the best disciplinary competence and at the same time a
commitment to bring that competence to bear on "real world"
problems. Such problems inevitably integrate multiple disciplines,
values and learning, and theory with practice. With clearer vision,
Christian liberal arts institutions can be distinctive by providing
faculty and graduates capable of resolving the thorniest dilemmas
facing society and the Christian community.
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