
EDUCATION as Transformation
A National Project on
Religious Pluralism, Spirituality and Higher Education
On September 27 and 28, 1998, over 800 representatives (including presidents,
faculty, administrators, students, religious life professionals and trustees)
from more than 250 colleges and universities gathered at Wellesley College
for a National Gathering to explore issues of religious pluralism and spirituality
in higher education. This was the inaugural event of the EDUCATION as Transformation
Project.
" I came here because I knew that a movement was starting..."
-- Cheryl Keen - Professor of Self, Society and Culture, Antioch College
"This
movement is about awakening the desire for wholeness that lies deep
in every human heart."
-- Victor Kazanjian - Dean of Religious and Spiritual Life, Wellesley College
"The
openness to transformation, to new knowing, has to move from head to
heart."
-- Arthur Zajonc - Professor of Physics, Amherst
College
"Our
task is to envision a whole new place for spirituality in education."
-- Diana Chapman Walsh - President, Wellesley College
"Authentic
spirituality wants to open us to truth: whatever truth may be, wherever
truth may take us."
-- Parker Palmer - Writer and traveling teacher; Senior Associate, American
Association for Higher Education
"The
college and university campus is America's most promising experiment
in religious pluralism..."
-- Peter Laurence - Project Director, EDUCATION as Transformation Project
"(In
seeking this pluralism) we have an opportunity to steer into some of
the most intractable differences and seemingly most difficult
problems
right here on our campuses."
-- Diana Eck - Professor of Comparative Religion and Indian Studies, Harvard
University
"We
need a change whereby our colleges and universities become supportive
of particular religious expressions and exemplary of the way
in
which all spiritual paths are finally leading to the same sacred
ground."
-- Susan Laemmle - Rabbi and Dean of Religious Life, University of Southern
California
"I
am going to carry that vision (of the multi-faith service led by students)
at the chapel yesterday home with me and I am promising
myself
that I want to be faithful to that vision all the rest of my life."
-- Vincent Harding - Professor of Religion and Social Transformation, Iliff
School of Theology
What is the EDUCATION as Transformation Project?
Educational professionals from around the country have initiated a multi-year
project entitled EDUCATION as Transformation: Religious Pluralism, Spirituality
and Higher Education. The goals of this project are:
to explore the impact of religious diversity on higher education and the
potential of religious pluralism as a strategy to address the dramatic growth
of religious diversity in American colleges and universities
and to consider the role of spirituality at colleges and universities
and particularly its relationship to: teaching and learning pedagogy,
the cultivation of values, moral and ethical development, and the
development of global learning communities and responsible global
citizens.
The EDUCATION as Transformation Project is a multi-year organizing
effort begun in 1996 to initiate a national dialogue about religious
pluralism and spirituality in higher education. The project is currently
working with more than 350 colleges and unviersities to facilitate
the creation of multi-constituency dialogue teams including faculty,
students, administrative staff, alumni, trustees and religious life
professionals within their institutions to consider the above questions
through materials provided by the project. With leadership from a
national group of project advisors, the EDUCATION as Transformation
Project has generated great excitement within the higher education
community.
The Project's First Event ~ A National Gathering
This excitement was dramatically portrayed in September of 1998 as representatives
-- presidents, chancellors, deans, faculty, administrators, students, alumni,
trustees and religious life professionals -- from more than 250 colleges,
universities and related institutions came together at a two-day national
gathering entitled EDUCATION as Transformation: Religious Pluralism, Spirituality
and Higher Education and held on the Wellesley College campus. This inaugural
event for the EDUCATION as Transformation Project has been hailed as the
beginning of a movement that will enable institutions of higher education
to provide leadership for the country and the world in areas of religious
pluralism and spirituality as a part of the educational experience. 28 college
and university presidents attended this event, together with 210 faculty
members, 170 administrators, 205 students, 112 religious life professionals
and 83 alumni, trustees and representatives from education related institutions.
The presenters at the National Gathering included some of the top educators
in the country on these issues including: Parker Palmer, Senior Associate
of the American Association of Higher Education; Diana Eck, Professor of
Comparative Religion and Indian Studies at Harvard University and director
of the Pluralism Project at Harvard; Vincent Harding, Professor of Religion
and Social Transformation at the Iliff School of Theology; Diana Chapman
Walsh, President of Wellesley College; Peter Gomes, Plummer Professor of
Christian Morals at Harvard University; Robert Thurman, Jey Tsong Khaka
professor of Indo-Tibetan Studies at Columbia University; and more than
75 other scholars. Participants attended plenary sessions, roundtable discussions
and workshops on topics ranging from definitions of spirituality, moving
from religious diversity to pluralism, and how institutions can better
reflect an educational process which includes moral, ethical and spiritual
issues and global citizenship.