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Degree Plan

Radical Encounters: Finding and Forming Community in the 21st Century

OVERVIEW:

Radical Encounters: Finding and Forming Community in the 21st Century
A multi-college residency sponsored by Empire State College
A 3-credit course on religion and community with a nine-day residency

  1. Prepare with assigned readings.
  2. At the residency, study historic communities, visit living communities, form a community of students and faculty from several colleges.
  3. Research and write about some aspect of community that interests you.
See the detailed description, below.

Dates: May 28 - June 7, 2007 (Plan to arrive by 5 p.m. on Monday, May 28)

Location: Mount Savior Monastery, Elmira, NY

Cost:
$600 registration, program fees, room and board.
$400 (commuters) registration, program fees.
Plus tuition at your home college or Empire State College.

Registration and Payment: Registration form and payment are due by May 1, 2007.
Registration form (PDF; 38 Kb): registration for students.pdf
You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader version 2.0 or higher to use this file. If you are unable to open this file, please contact Kathie Stickler (Kathie.Stickler@esc.edu; 607 962-1421) to have a copy sent to you.

For a full prospectus, contact Dr. Mary Skinner at Mary.Skinner@esc.edu, 607 962-1421 (Empire State College)

DETAILED DESCRIPTION:

"Radical Encounters: Finding and Forming Community in the 21st Century" is a 3-credit undergraduate course on religion and community with a nine-day residency at Mount Saviour Monastery, Elmira, New York from Monday, May 28 (5 p.m.) through Thursday, June 7, 2006 (noon).

Faculty Coordinators:
Faculty Associates:
  • Suzanne Wilcox, Manhattan College
  • Susan St. John-Jarvis, Corning Community College
  • other session leaders as listed below

In our divided world, many of us long for an experience of community that enables us to use our creative gifts of mind, body and spirit to support shared values and pursue compassionate goals. How can we discover authentic historic communities as well as attractive and vital communities in the contemporary world and what can they teach us about forming our own living communities? “Radical Encounters” brings together young people for nine days of meditation, study, dialogue and experience of community. Guided by teachers and mentors from various faith traditions, participants will study models of and explore insights into community from diverse spiritual and cultural perspectives and interview and visit significant contemporary communities.

The "Radical Encounters" experience helps students to understand the essential elements of human intentional community through exposure to a number of variously structured communities, through personal reflection, through dialogue with the other participants and through reading. The specific goals are:
  • to gain an appreciation of the role that community can play in energizing and supporting individual gifts.
  • to visit several diverse communities in order to understand important components of community.
  • to read some theoretical works in order to have an intellectual framework for the experiences.
  • to better understand one’s own spiritual journey and search for community.
  • to reflect on one’s current and future lifestyle in the light of community experiences.

Radical Encounters is structured in three parts:
  1. Assigned reading and a short essay to prepare for the residency
  2. Full participation in the residency from May 28 (5 p.m.) through June 7 (lunch) 2007, keeping a journal on one’s reading and experiences to draw from in the preparation of a final essay.
  3. A short essay (ca. 10 pages) on an aspect of religion and community based on one’s reading and personal participation (due June 15).

PART 1. Preparation for the Residency
The participants are requested to bring the following anthologies to the residency from their local bookstore or college library. Selected chapters are assigned from each for particular sessions and evening discussions as indicated below. Short chapters of other books and journals will be copied and distributed during the week. It would be helpful to read ahead if possible because study time during the residency is somewhat limited. We will have a reserve shelf for borrowing required and recommended reading for those who need it.
  • Susan Love Brown, Intentional Community
  • Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Commitment and Community
  • Dorothy Bass, Practicing our Faith
  • Dorothy Day, Loaves and Fishes
  • Jean Vanier, Community and Growth (revised edition)
  • The Rule of St. Benedict (at the monastery)

Prior to attending the "Radical Encounter"s experience students are to prepare a one to two page essay on the subject “What is Community?” reflecting on experiences of community in their own lives.

PART 2. Residency
Each day there will be two academic sessions or a field trip and time during the evening for study and informal discussion of the reading, presentations and field trips. (please see the schedule that follows). Relevant community experiences include:
  • The Benedictine community of monks at Mount Saviour Monastery
  • Peace Weavers: Buddhist/Native American-inspired community committed to stewardship of the earth.
  • The Catholic Worker community and Loaves and Fishes, two overlapping communities that offer hospitality and work for social justice in Ithaca.
  • Tibetan Buddhist monastic community, founded by the Dalai Lama.
  • Transfiguration Monastery of Camaldolese Benedictine nuns in Windsor, NY.
    Daily life at Mount Saviour Monastery in which all are invited to participate in order to understand monastic community:

    7:00 a.m. Lauds/Morning Prayer in the Chapel
    7:30 a.m. Breakfast at St. Gertrude’s and in the Conference Room
    8:15 a.m. Meditation in Crypt (Centering or Zen Meditation)
    9:00 a.m.Worship Service in the Chapel
    10:00-12:00 Morning Session in the Conference Room
    12:30 p.m. Main Meal (usually at St. Gertrude’s House);
    Rest, Study or Work with Monks
    3:00-5:00 p.m. Afternoon Session in the Conference Room
    5:30 p.m. Supper in the Conference Room
    6:30 p.m. Vespers/Evening Prayer in the Chapel
    7:00-8:00 p.m.Evening Discussion
    8:15 p.m. Compline/Night Prayer in Chapel and Crypt;
    Monks keep the Great Silence until the following morning
    Calendar of Sessions

    Day of the WeekMorning Session
    10 a.m. to noon
    Afternoon Session
    3 to 5 p.m.
    Evening Session
    7 to 8 p.m.
    Monday, May 28Arrive in the afternoon.5 pm. Light supper
    Introductions to the program, our community and life at the monastery.
    Tuesday, May 29Introductions to one another; sharing our essays and experiences of communityIntroduction to Centering Prayer (Fr. Martin) and Tai Chi (Trude deJong)View and discuss the film “The Everyday” about Mount Saviour Monastery
    Wednesday, May 30
    8:15 a.m. Centering Prayer
    Communities Past: Choosing an early Christian Community – a simulation game defending the life-style of your community (Mary Skinner)Benedictine Traditions of Work Study and Prayer – then and now
    (Father Martin Boler)
    Informal discussion of the assigned reading
    Bass, Ch. 3, 5, 8 and 9
    Kanter, Ch. 2
    Vanier, Ch. 2
    Rule of St. Benedict and background handout.
    Thursday, May 31
    8:15 a.m. Centering Prayer
    Community Discussion
    How are we doing so far?
    The value, role and process of journaling (Suzanne Wilcox).
    followed by Tai Chi with Trude de Jong
    Art and Community Hands-on Workshop with local artist. Robert Ivers
    Friday, June 1
    8:15 a.m. Centering Prayer
    Field Trip to Ithaca
    Lunch with Loaves and Fishes. Walk or swim in a gorge at a state park.
    Meeting with Catholic Workers
    Meditation/conver-
    sation with Tibetan Buddhist monks
    Dinner at a Thai Restaurant and return to Mount Saviour
    Saturday, June 2
    8:15 a.m. Zen and walking meditation led by
    Patricia Cunningham
    Psychosocial Dynamics of Community especially the concept of “Belonging” led by Deborah Allen, social worker.Profile of five Emmaus Experience Weekends: Have we formed community? 5 p.m. Swimming and 7 p.m. cook out at Mary Skinner’s house with Emmaus Experience Participants.
    Sunday, June 3
    8:15 Zen and walking meditation
    Sunday worship and coffee hour with the Mount Saviour community and friendsVisit to the Peace Weavers Community, Bath NY. Talking Stick Circle, drumming, swimming and other activities. Open discussion of reading and experiences
    Bass, Ch. 2 and 11
    Kotler III and V (handout)
    Dorothy Day, Loaves and Fishes, Part I
    Monday, June 4
    8:15 Centering Prayer
    Social Dimensions of Healthy Community. Exploration of interpersonal relationships in community with Susan St. John-Jarvis, sociologistChoosing a 19th century Utopian Community. Interview “representatives” of the Shakers, Mormons and Oneida Community (Gail, Mary and guest)Evening Rehearsal of African American Gospel
    Music with the Reconciliation Choir
    Tuesday, June 5
    8:15 Centering Prayer
    Creativity and Community – a tour of the art and architecture of the monastery. (Brother Gabriel)Communities in Other Cultures (Trude de Jong) followed by Tai ChiOpen discussion of reading and experiences
    Kanter, Ch. 1
    Brown, Ch. 1, 2 and 4
    Bass, Ch. 13
    and handouts
    Wednesday, June 6Discuss our ideals of community; sharing of journals; reflections on exploring communities and our week-long community.Field trip to Windsor, NY to Transfiguration Monastery for Vespers, supper and discussion of monastic life for women with Sister Donald Corcoran.Open Discussion
    Kanter, Ch. 7
    Brown, Ch. 8
    Vanier, Ch. 1
    Mandell, Madeleva
    8:30 Celebration
    Thursday, June 7Conclusions and evaluations of the week’s experience and discussion of proposed final essays.

    Monday Evening, 5/28
    Exploring Community
    Introductions – Introduction to the Radical Encounters Experience and the activities of our week together. How do we propose to form community? Who or what do you think embodies “true community” in your experience? What do you hope to gain from this experience?

    Tuesday Morning, 5/29
    Describe yourself, your institutions, your experiences of community, and your interest in community. Students will share the essays on community they have written ahead.
    Reading:
    • Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Commitment and Community: Chapter 2 “Society’s Maternal Bed: Idealizations of Communal Life” (32-57);
    • Dorothy Bass, ed., Practicing Our Faith: Chapter 9: Rasmussen, “Shaping Communities,” (119-132) and Chapter 3: Pineda, “Hospitality” (29-42).

    Tuesday Afternoon, 5/29
    Centering Prayer (Fr. Martin) and Tai Chi (Trude de Jong); handouts will be given.

    Tuesday Evening, 5/29
    “The Every Day” - Film on Mount Saviour Monastery

    Wednesday Morning, 5/30
    Choosing a Radical Early Christian Community
    Handouts will be given describing four very different Christian communities of the fourth century and students will be asked to choose and imagine living in one of them that they will defend to the others.
    Reading:
    • Bass, Practicing Our Faith, Ch. 5, Copeland, “Saying Yes and Saying No” (59-73) and Ch. 8, Rogers, “Discernment” (105-118);
    • Vanier, Ch. 2 “Walking Toward the Covenant” (61-83);
    • Recommended: Peter Brown, The Body and Society: Men, Women and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity Parts II – III, (210-447).

    Wednesday Afternoon, 5/30
    Benedictine Traditions of Work, Study and Prayer with Fr. Martin, Prior of Mount Saviour Monastery
    Reading: The Benedictine Rule (available at Monastery book store) and background handout.

    Wednesday Evening, 5/30
    Discussion of our Community Experience so far and the reading.

    Thursday Morning, 5/31
    Continued discussion of our community so far.

    Thursday Afternoon, 5/31
    Journaling Workshop with Suzanne Wilcox
    Journals and handouts on the Progoff Method will be given out.

    Thursday Evening, 5/31
    Workshop with artist, Bob Ivers.

    Friday, 6/1
    All day field trip to Ithaca
    Lunch and conversation at Loaves and Fishes; Possible swim or walk in a gorge; Informal discussion on social justice communities with the Catholic Worker community; visit to Namgyal Monastery and conversation with the Tibetan Buddhist Monks; dinner in a Thai restaurant.
    Reading:
    • Dorothy Day, Loaves and Fishes (Part I -- full book recommended);
    • selections from Engaged Buddhist Reader, ed. Arnold Kotler: Part III, Compassion in Action (copies given);
    Recommended:
    • M. Scott Peck, The Different Drum: Community Making and Peace, Ch. 3, “The True Meaning of Community” (59-76);
    • Vanier, Community and Growth, Ch. 3 “Mission,” (84-103).

    Saturday Morning, 6/2
    Psychosocial Dynamics led by Deborah Allen
    Readings:
    • Parker Palmer, A Hidden Wholeness: Journey Toward an Undivided Life, Ch. IV;
    • “Being Alone Together: A Community of Solitudes” 52-69, and other handouts given

    Saturday Afternoon, 6/2
    Emmaus Experiences of Building Community: Interaction and activities with participants in the Emmaus Experiences, who generated the Radical Encounters Program.

    Saturday Evening, 6/2
    Cook Out at Mary Skinner’s One-Room School House

    Sunday Late Morning and Afternoon, 6/3
    Trip to the Peace Weavers Community in Bath; Holistic Health Practices and Spirituality inspired by Buddhism and Native American Traditions.
    Reading:
    • Selections from Kotler, Engaged Buddhist Reader, Part V, “Community” (191-219, handout);
    • Bass, Practicing Our Faith, Ch. 2, Stephanie Paulsell. “Honoring the Body” (13-27) and Ch. 11, John Koenig, “Healing” (149-162).
    Recommended:
    • Kanter, Commitment and Community, Ch. V, “Issues in Group Life” (125-138);
    • Peck, The Different Drum, Ch. 4- 6, “Genesis, Stages and Dynamics of Community” (77-135).

    Sunday Evening, 6/3
    Discussion of our Community Experience so far and the assigned reading.

    Monday Morning, 6/4
    Social Dimensions of Healthy Community (with Susan St. John-Jarvis)
    Reading:
    • Susan Brown, ed., Intentional Community, Chap. 1, Introduction and Chap. 2. Kamau, “Liminality, Communitas, Charisma” (1-40).
    Recommended:
    • Brown, Intentional Communities, Ch. 7, Andelson, “Coming Together and Breaking Apart;”
    • Vanier, Community and Growth, Ch. 6-8, “Authority, Gifts and Welcome;” (205-283);
    • Palmer, A Hidden Wholeness, Ch. V, “Preparing for the Journey: Creating Circles of Trust.” (72-87)

    Monday Afternoon, 6/4
    Utopian Communities in Nineteenth-Century New York
    American Utopian Communities: Mormons, Shakers and Oneida
    Faculty will role play members of these communities seeking new recruits in the mid-19th century (possibly special guests).
    Reading:
    • Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Commitment and Community, Ch. 1 “Refuge and Hope,” pp. 9-18 (on Oneida);
    • Susan Brown, ed., Intentional Community: An Anthropological Perspective, Ch. 4: Lawrence Foster, “Between Two Worlds: …Development of Alternative Marriage Systems” (67-81).
    Recommended:
    • Thomas More, Utopia. Book II;
    • America’s Communal Utopias. ed. Donald Pitzer: Priscilla Brewer, “The Shakers of Mother Ann Lee,” (38-50);
    • Dean May, “One Heart and Mind: Communal Life and Values among the Mormons,” (135-155);
    • Lawrence Foster, “Free Love and Community: John Humphrey Noyes and the Oneida Perfectionists.” (253-270);
    • Kanter Ch. 4, “Live in Love and Union”;
    • Brown, Ch. 6, Elizabeth De Wolfe, “The Mob at Enfield: Community, Gender, and Violence against the Shakers” (107-128).

    Monday Evening, 6/4
    Rehearsal with the Reconciliation Choir
    Reading:
    • Bass, Practicing Our Faith, Ch 13, Don Saliers, “Singing Our Lives” (179-193).
    Recommended:
    • Martin Luther King, Where do We Go from Here: Community or Chaos;
    • David Steindl-Rast, The Music of Silence.


    Tuesday Morning, 6/5
    Art of the monastery with Br. Gabriel

    Tuesday Afternoon, 6/5
    Communities in Other Cultures with Trude de Jong – handouts will be given – followed by Tai Chi.

    Tuesday Afternoon, 6/5
    Discussion of our Community Experience so far and recent reading assignments.

    Wednesday Morning 6/6
    What have we learned about community? How might we find community with a significant spiritual dimension in our lives? Share our journals and proposals for our essays on issues or themes of community.
    Reading:
    • Kanter, Commitment and Community, Ch. 7 “Retreat from Utopia” (165-190);
    • Susan Brown, Intentional Community Ch. 8, “Community as Cultural Critique” (153-179);
    • Vanier, Ch. 1, “One Heart, One Soul” (1-34).
    Recommended:
    • Kanter, Ch. 9, “Limits of Utopia”;
    • Vanier, Ch. 4, “Growth” (104-164);
    • Daloz Parks, L. and S., Keen, C. and J., Common Fire: Lives of Commitment in a Complex World;
    • Kotler, Engaged Buddhist Reader, Part VI, “For a Future to be Possible.” (223-252).

    Wednesday Afternoon 6/6
    Afternoon and evening field trip to Transfiguration Monastery (Camaldolese Benedictine women);
    Reading:
    • Gail Porter Mandell, Madeleva: One Woman’s Life (handout)
    Recommended:
    • Gretchen Siegler, “In Search of Truth: Maintaining Communitas in a Religious Community,” Chapter 3 of Intentional Community;
    • Sandra Schneiders, New Wine Skins: Re-Imagining Religious Life Today, Chapters 7-13 (114-285);
    • Janet Kalven, Women Breaking Boundaries: A Grail Journey, 1940-1995 (reserve).

    Thursday Morning 6/7
    Drawing conclusions, planning our proposed essays (due in a week, although extensions are possible) and projecting possibilities for the future.
    Departure after lunch.
    During the following week students should catch up on relevant assigned and recommended reading and do extra research as necessary to compose a 10-page essay on an issue or theme of community. (Sources cited in MLA style; to be e-mailed by 6/15 to an assigned faculty mentor)

    Important Dates

    • April 19:
      Requests for Empire State College Foundation loans may be made.
    • May 5 - May 9:
      No appointment period for faculty.
    • May 5 - May 16:
      Late registration for May 2008 term.
    • May 15:
      Spring March and Spring Combined Time Payment Plan # 3 is due.
    • May 16:
      Study outcomes due for January 2008 term.
    • May 19:
      Summer Terms A and B start.
    • May 30:
      Student evaluations due for January 2008 term.
    • See all term dates
    • Go to Calendar

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