ESR Reports Vol. V, No. 1

   
New Faculty Member Michael Brenneis: An Ecumenical Spiritual Journey
New Faculty Member Michael Brenneis: The Quaker Connection
Introducing Marty Sulek, Director of Development
A Closer Look: New Grants for Faculty Research, Digital Quaker Collection
Curious Connections: Quaker Seminary and Richmond's African American Churches
Summer Reunions: ESR Sends Representatives to Yearly Meetings
Recommended Reading: Bonus Online Review
Traveling in Ministry: One Alum’s Experience
Alumni/ae News: Extended Online Version
 

Foundation Grants: A Closer Look at New Support for Faculty Research, Digital Quaker Collection

As announced in ESR Reports, the seminary has recently received two new foundation grants. Here is more information about the grants, and the projects they fund.

Funder: Arthur Vining Davis Foundations
Project: The Digital Quaker Collection

Grant Amount: $150,000. Most of the funds will be spent on the actual digitizing process, which costs about two dollars per page. Existing faculty and staff will handle project activities such as research, planning, and outreach.

Key facts:

The project will make available more than 60,000 pages of primary documents, accessible at no cost to anyone with an internet connection and a standard web browser.

The collection will focus on, but will not be limited to, material published in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

Tim Seid, Associate Dean of Distributed Learning, is functioning as Project Director, and Steve Spyker, Director of Information Technology, is the Chief Technical Consultant.

Quaker scholars who developed the bibliography include ESR’s David Johns and Steve Angell, as well as Tom Hamm, Mary Garman and Michael Birkel from Earlham College.

There are four parts to the digitizing process: scanning, data entry, coding, and the creation of the custom browse and search software which will make it easy to locate and search through documents of particular interest to each reader. On May 15, ESR signed a contract with TechBooks to handle the project. By July 15, two-thirds of the material had gone through the initial scanning process.

You can view the bibliography, follow the progress of the project, and learn how the digitizing process works by visiting the project webpage: esr.earlham.edu/dqc/

The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, based in Jacksonville, Florida, are a national philanthropic organization established through the generosity of the late American industrialist, Arthur Vining Davis, who became president of the Aluminum Company of America in 1910 and served as chairman of the board for many years.

From Jay Marshall’s proposal to the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations:

As it fulfills it educational mission, ESR is a major source for Quaker scholarship, both as a context in which Quaker scholars learn, teach, and write, and as a producer of materials for use by Friends and other groups interested in Quaker perspectives on various issues.…

From its inception in the mid-17th century, Quakers were known as “publishers of the truth.” The theological and organizational biases of Quakers have historically inhibited the production of systematic presentations on theological topics. As a result, the great wealth of Quaker thinking is contained in primary materials such as journals, epistles, and monographs. It is there that one discovers the depth of Quaker spirituality reflected in epistles about the Light of Christ, inner struggles to discern Truth, or the potentially sacramental nature of all life. Journals chronicle Quaker efforts to abolish slavery, emphasize education, work with the mentally ill, or insist on prison reforms.

Most of these texts are available only on a limited basis given the age and nature of the documents. Quaker colleges have become the guardians of these written treasures, with at least one pitfall. This situation places geographical restrictions on the availability of the materials. If persons do not live near such a collection, then it is nearly impossible to research them. Not only does this mean that many, many Friends simply are never exposed to these riches, but this restricted availability is also problematic for ESR’s mission….

1. These texts are crucial to ESR’s educational program. For students in the residential program, most of these texts are available in the Friends Collection housed in Lilly Library at Earlham. Students in the ESR Access program do not enjoy this access [even though they have access to excellent theological libraries]…. As we believe ESR Access provides the greatest opportunity for the school to serve as a resource for renewal at the most basic, local level of meetings and churches, making these texts accessible has become a high priority for ESR.

2. A digital collection of primary texts is also needed as ESR fills its role as a provider of resources to Quakers in general. The greatest growth among Quakers at this point in time is occurring in Africa. These Friends hunger for resources that will help shape their faith and worship according to Friends principles and values. ESR is considering ways we might help address this matter…. For this to be accomplished, we must find a way to make Quaker texts accessible to these Friends across the waters.

The value of a digital collection of Quaker texts is not limited to ESR students and Friends in Africa. In the United States, “arm chair” Quaker scholars abound….Though this alone would not be motivation for ESR to pursue this project, we recognize that this additional group would benefit from this project. As they benefit, so too will those who are influenced by them.

A few individuals have independently undertaken the task of digitizing a limited number of Quaker texts. While these are to be applauded, the quantity is too small. Furthermore, to date this approach proves to be frustrating as resources move from site to site, or disappear completely.…As an educational institution with a firm commitment to provide resources, an ESR-led project would provide consistency of quality and of availability.

In sum, ESR observes a need for accessibility to old and rare primary Quaker documents. A digital collection of these materials would serve four groups:

ESR Access students;

international Friends new to the faith who desire foundational material;

other Friends who enjoy research for personal reasons, but who share their newfound insights with other interested individuals;

others who recognize the riches of Quaker faith and spirituality.

This project serves ESR’s role as a leader in harnessing technology to expands its capability to fulfill its mission. It helps break through one of Quakerism’s greatest challenges: isolation and ignorance that easily develop in decentralized organizations, especially those that are scarred by splits from historical schisms.

Funder: E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation
Project: Faculty Research

Grant Amount: $27,000 for one year, with an invitation “to consider reapplying for funding for the project annually for the next two years.”

Key facts:

Funding will cover the non-salary costs of research projects, such as travel to conferences and archives, and copying and acquisition of materials.

This new initiative is structured into three tiers of funding — each larger and more selective than the next — along with opportunities for faculty to present their research to the ESR community.

The Carpenter Foundation has supported ESR before, with a major grant in the late 1990s to launch the Cooper Scholars program.

This grant creates a pool of research funding where none has existed before.

The funding priorities of the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation include Asian Art and graduate education. The foundation has funded a number of major initiatives at US seminaries.

From Jay Marshall’s proposal to the foundation:

So much has happened at Earlham School of Religion since the school’s mid-90s collaboration with the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation. The Cooper Scholars Program, for which the foundation provided seed money, is well-established, and has made the benefits of an ESR education available to a splendid array of alumni and the communities they serve. The school has also adopted a strategic plan that emphasizes improved communication and accessibility to its constituents and target population groups. Less than three years into implementation of that plan, we are already seeing exciting results, such as:

Our distributed education program, ESR Access, is up and running in four satellite locations around the United States, bringing graduate level theological education to those for whom relocation to Eastern Indiana is not a reasonable option;

A recent $150,000 grant from the Arthur Vining Davis Foundation will allow ESR to convert hundreds of early Quaker texts to electronic form and make them freely available worldwide through our website;

ESR’s unique Ministry of Writing program has experienced a surge of interest and resources, including most recently the news of a million-dollar planned gift from Frank Mullen;

Promising conversations are underway that could lead to educational endeavors with prison inmates, and with theological educational institutions in Kenya and Indonesia, each of which will provide additional stimuli in the area of multicultural engagement.

Perhaps the most exciting development — one that was beginning in the late-90s, peaked in 2001, and is continuing today — is the changing face of ESR’s faculty. Through a series of retirements and new hires, ESR’s current faculty is a young group — not in the sense of maturity as persons, ministers and instructors, but in terms of their recent arrival at ESR. [Thirteen] of the school’s seventeen teaching and administrative faculty members began their ESR careers in 1998 or later.…

In recognition of the needs of a young faculty — especially at a small denomination’s small seminary in a small town! — we have in recent years taken several faculty development initiatives, including:

The ESR Tour of Quaker England in the summer of 2001, which built community amongst faculty and staff and offered valuable first-hand experience with the historical sites where the Quaker movement was born more than 350 years ago.

Our current series of peer workshops on assessment in theological education. In a roundtable environment, faculty members take turns reporting and critiquing one of the books recommended by the Association for Theological Education’s project on the Character and Assessment of Learning for Religious Vocation. Like the England trip (albeit in a less extraordinary environment!), this project builds knowledge and community simultaneously.

A small increase in the professional development budget…. Faculty make fine use of these modest funds, primarily to attend professional conferences.

These are good times for Earlham School of Religion. I am personally committed to making them even better for this very special group of scholars and persons of faith who have come to serve as ESR’s faculty. These women and men possess not only an unquestionable commitment to their work in the classroom and administration, but also a remarkable appetite for research. As I hope the attached documents will show, the research they have done — and with a modest infusion of additional resources, will be able to do — promises many benefits to the school, to the Society of Friends, and to society as a whole.

8/1/03