Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Back to school...

Hello again! We're beginning the second week of the semester here in Collegeville and things have been very busy on campus. At this point in time I don't have a lot of super exciting news or any earth shattering developments for my project but I figured I'd post a quick update about where I am and what I hope to accomplish in the near future.

At the Summer Fellows symposium Dr. Hemphill from the History department was kind enough to offer assistance with digging through old documents from the initial conception of CIE. I'll absolutely be taking her up on her offer and I will also seek out Dr. Stern of the Politics department since word on the street has it that he's one of the people responsible for the program.

I anticipate that studying the origins of CIE will lead me to discoveries that I don't expect so I'm trying to keep my options open. With that in mind, if anyone has any thoughts about resources I can utilize or any ideas about where I should move my project to next then I absolutely welcome suggestions.

In addition to pursuing the CIE route I am also in the process of looking through Richter's papers which are available in the Ursinusiana Archives in their entirety or here in a more abbreviated form. What interests me most about these documents are the bits in the Chronicle of Ursinus College about "Fostering Socialization," "Conveying Knowledge," "Sustaining the Institution," and "Conveying Culture." The papers begin in 1970 which is about a year after the abolition of compulsory chapel so I hope that I will be able to use them to form a slightly better picture of what the program at Ursinus looked like during the years following.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Intro/Conclusion

Summer Fellows is officially over and even though I'm going to be working on this project for the next two semesters I figured I'd include in a post on here the intro and conclusion from my SF paper. The paper is merely the entries from this blog (including comments!), but the intro and conclusion are somewhat personal reflections on how this came to be. No worries though - I plan for my honors paper to be much more academic/formal!

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Earlier this summer I spoke with a prospective student whom I was interviewing in Admissions. I related my own personal experiences at Ursinus and, as I usually do, zeroed in on what is commonly referred to as “the freshman experience.” I explained the way the freshman dorms were set up, the orientation process, and what I believe to be the core of an Ursinus education – the Common Intellectual Experience. As I rattled on about these things and why they are important I began to consider how far I’ve come in the last three years and what exactly brought me to where I am today.

The first week of school freshman year I recall talking with some of my hall mates about various things that concern eighteen year olds. Our discussion mostly revolved around what we knew we all had in common since we’d only been acquainted for a few days. We started with complaining about the summer reading, went on to who was going to go try to find a party that weekend, and then finally to why we all chose Ursinus. One person had turned down Penn, another Harvard, and yet another a full ride at the Ohio State University. Others hadn’t considered other schools and some just came for the bio and pre-med programs. I loved the fact that all of us came from the widest range of backgrounds imaginable and that we were all planning to go into an even more varied range of fields, but what really blew my mind was that a place like Ursinus College could bring us all together that night through something as simple as an ancient Mesopotamian epic. The whole concept of a course like the Common Intellectual Experience is unique in and of itself, but bringing together ten years’ worth of Ursinus students through a common appreciation for the liberal arts has created an unparalleled sense of community.

I’d never really thought too much about Ursinus’ roots beyond the basics that all freshmen learn during the academic convocation at orientation. However, my father is one of those academic types who will read up on anything and everything he encounters in his daily life. Once I decided to attend, Ursinus was no exception. His readings on the German Protestant Reformation shed a lot of light on why things are the way we are here at Ursinus. I learned a good amount of pre-history (everything from who Ulrich Zwingli and Zacharias Baer were to why it is that the College doesn’t have big fancy buildings or any of the other bells and whistles commonly associated with academic institutions) and brushed up a bit on the founding of the school itself. What I was left with was a lot of what my friends refer to as my “fun facts” but, I see now, just as little perspective as I began with.

When I first approached Dr. Nathan Rein about the possibility of doing a Summer Fellows project about the religious history of Ursinus and how our former affiliation with the Reformed Church has impacted the identity of the school he reminded me that I had overlooked something very important. In all of my excitement about finding out what the implications of the Heidelberg Catechism had on the whole concept of a liberal arts education I managed to forget that there was once a time during which Ursinus was affiliated with the German Reformed Church (now the UCC), that we are no longer affiliated with them, and that something happened during the last 140 years that changed that. When I left Dr. Rein’s office that afternoon I had a whole new crop of questions swimming around in my head, but the subject that came to the forefront was that of change. Within that broad subject came such foci as what I began this summer researching – that is, when was compulsory chapel abolished and what repercussions came of it?

When I began working in the Ursinusiana archives in June I sifted through a lot of Ursinus Weeklies, faculty minutes, course catalogues, and other old Ursinus documents. At that point I didn’t really knowing how anything was going to turn out and all I had to guide me was my original question about chapel at Ursinus. At the request of Dr. Rein I began to organize a journal of sorts to organize my research and to keep track of my thoughts about each document I came across. As I gleaned various dates and such from the archives I realized that my project wasn’t going to go anywhere if I didn’t figure out a way to make my research accessible to the rest of the Ursinus community. All we have in the archives is what people send in and all I had was my personal analyses of these documents. What if I were to somehow get my friends, professors, and even alumni involved with the project? Not only would I be able to share my findings with them but they would be able to open new doors to me through their own observations and, in the case of alumni, memories of Ursinus back in the 1960s.

This resolution lead to my beginning a blog entitled “Ursinusiana Project.” While blogs are still new and somewhat untraditional in the academic world, I can’t imagine any tool that would have been more helpful to me and my progress in the archives this summer. Getting feedback from professors, alumni, my peers, and even my parents has taken me on an extremely unpredictable path through my research but, at the same time, has yielded a newer, better, more exciting path as I prepare to begin the next stage of my Fellows project as I pursue honors.

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If being an Ursinus student has taught me anything it’s that if the final product of a research project answers the same question you started out with then you’ve done something wrong, and I certainly take comfort in the fact that as I write this I’m totally off base from the research topic I started with. As interesting as the implications of the abolition of compulsory chapel at Ursinus are to me, the similarities between compulsory chapel and CIE have caught my attention and throughout the summer really taken over as a primary concern in my project. What I have found is that when Ursinus College opted to slowly phase out the chapel program the sense of community dwindled. For thirty years Ursinus students who came in as biology and pre-med majors had little reason to mingle with the philosophy and English majors in any sort of organized or academic setting. As I reflected on those discussions I had during my first week of freshman year that revolved around the Epic of Gilgamesh and tried to make them fit into the feedback I’d gotten on my blog about the old chapel program, it became very clear to me; as I mentioned in the blog, CIE has filled the community void left behind by chapel. I have yet to go into much more detail since this is a recent revelation, but I look forward to pursuing this hypothesis of mine as I continue my research for honors this coming year.

Right now my plans for the continuation of this project include gaining an even better understanding of the chapel program by tracking down such documents as minutes from the meetings of the Men’s Student Government Association, the Board of Directors, and faculty committees on chapel. I also hope to find former President Donald Helfferich’s personal letters, papers, and other documents that we are missing in the Ursinusiana archives as well as conduct interviews with alumni, former professors, and other people affiliated with the College during the 1960s. I feel that having gone through two semesters of CIE I have a fairly detailed understanding of how it works, but I am also hoping to review documents concerning the program (such as Middle States reports) and speak with some of the faculty who assisted in implementing the program. At this point, though, I’m open to any new direction or approach that comes my way.
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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

"Swallow it son, it's good for you!"

The summer is winding down and this will be the last of the new and exciting Ursinusiana discoveries for awhile...and this sure is an exciting one! This editorial cartoon was published in the Weekly at the end of the 1963-63 academic year and I don't think it needs much more of an introduction than that.


(Ursinus Weekly, Vol LXIII, No 23, May 11, 1964, page 2)

It's interesting to me that this was published when it was because it was at the very end of the first semester during which the school began to trim the chapel schedule. The student who drew it (and I wish I knew who the student was - I haven't been able to decipher the name well enough to locate the artist in any directories) must have had some sort of personal issue with the tradition as s/he would only have been required to attend chapel twice a week. The only possibility that I can fathom is that a student (or group of students) were beginning a campaign of sorts in order to sway the Board of Directors and the faculty committee appointed to review the tradition because the announcement about the beginning of the end of compulsory chapel did include a bit about how "The faculty committee on Chapel is still meeting so further changes may be forthcoming”(Chapel Changes Announced, page 1, Ursinus Weekly, Vol. LXIII, No. 11, January 13, 1964).

The identity of the cartoonist and what their angle was shall remain a mystery for now as I conclude this last of the summer posts with the same sort of wishful thinking I have for the past 8 weeks...

Perhaps I'll figure it out and have more perspective as I get further into my research.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

By the way...

By the way, the official title for my summer project is "Examining Our Roots: How Over 100 Years of Religion Yielded a Secular Liberal Arts Program at Ursinus College." It's long but I think it effectively conveys what I'm focusing on in my project.

Right now I'm tentatively scheduled to present my project at the Summer Fellows Symposium on July 24 at 11am here at Ursinus.

I'm famous!

Check out this article about the rising popularity of undergraduate research in Philadelphia area colleges and universities. Kelly, Roger, and I are featured in it along with comments from President Strassburger, Dr. Weight, and my advisor Nathan Rein.