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Catholic Mission and Identity: The Case of Gonzaga

Catholic Mission and Identity: The Case of Gonzaga. Michael Lieberman Carey, Ph.D. Associate Professor Department of Organizational Leadership School of Professional Studies Gonzaga University. GONZAGA’S MISSION STATEMENT: three dynamics.

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Catholic Mission and Identity: The Case of Gonzaga

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  1. Catholic Mission and Identity: The Case of Gonzaga Michael Lieberman Carey, Ph.D.Associate Professor Department of Organizational Leadership School of Professional Studies Gonzaga University

  2. GONZAGA’S MISSION STATEMENT:three dynamics • As Catholic, we affirm the heritage which has developed through two thousand years of Christian living, theological reflection, and authentic interpretation. • As Jesuit, we are inspired by the vision of Christ at work in the world, transforming it by His love, and calling men and women to work with Him in loving service of the human community. • As humanistic, we recognize the essential role of human creativity, intelligence, and initiative in the construction of society and culture.

  3. GONZAGA’S MISSION STATEMENT:three key issues • Partnership and Diversity • Curriculum Development/Pedagogy • Faculty Hiring and Evaluation

  4. Gonzaga Catholic Humanistic Jesuit

  5. OVERVIEW OF EACH TRADITION:goal, method, issue • Goal: each tradition has a purpose which drives its decisions and actions • Method: each tradition has a particular approach to accomplishing its goal • Issue: each tradition has an inherent question that can’t be answered from within the tradition

  6. Humanistic Goal Virtuous Action

  7. Humanistic Goal Method Virtuous Action Study of Humanities

  8. Humanistic Goal Method Virtuous Action Study of Humanities Issue Faith and Reason

  9. Catholic Goal Universal Mind

  10. Catholic Goal Method Universal Mind Theology and Inter-discipline

  11. Catholic Goal Method Universal Mind Theology and Inter-discipline Issue Mandate and Freedom

  12. Jesuit Goal Discerning Heart

  13. Jesuit Goal Method Discerning Heart Magis

  14. Jesuit Goal Method Discerning Heart Magis Issue Lay-Jesuit Collaboration

  15. Gonzaga Catholic Humanistic Jesuit

  16. TRADITIONS AND THE MISSION:from the general to the particular • One approach to the three traditions of the Mission is to view them as encompassing increasingly more narrow fields.

  17. HUMANISTIC CATHOLIC JESUIT

  18. TRADITIONS AND THE MISSION:from the general to the particular • However, this implies that one tradition is more “on-target” than the other two.

  19. Score=100 HUMANISTIC CATHOLIC JESUIT 50 30 10

  20. TRADITIONS AND THE MISSION:developmental perspective • Another approach to the three traditions of the Mission is to view them each as building upon and expanding the others.

  21. CATHOLIC JESUIT HUMANISTIC

  22. TRADITIONS AND THE MISSION:developmental perspective • However, this also presumes that one tradition is more “advanced” than the other two.

  23. JESUIT CATHOLIC HUMANISTIC

  24. TRADITIONS AND THE MISSION:separate but equal • Another approach to the three traditions of the Mission is to view them each as three separate but equal aspects of the Gonzaga experience.

  25. Gonzaga Catholic Humanistic Jesuit

  26. TRADITIONS AND THE MISSION:separate but equal • However, those with power decide which of the traditions will be “more equal” than the other two.

  27. Gonzaga Catholic Humanistic Jesuit

  28. TRADITIONS AND THE MISSION:an integrative model • Rather than pitting one against the other, the three traditions may be understood as in dialogue with each other, producing a unique Gonzaga Mission.

  29. GONZAGA MISSION

  30. TRADITIONS AND THE MISSION:an integrative model • That only is true enlargement of the mind which is the power of viewing many things at once as one whole, of referring them severally to their true place in the universal system, of understanding their respective values, and determining their mutual dependence. . . . Possessed of this real illumination, the mind never views any part of the extended subject-matter of Knowledge without recollecting that it is but a part, or without the associations which spring from this recollection. It makes everything in some sort lead to everything else; it would communicate the image of the whole to every separate portion, till that whole becomes in imagination like a spirit, every where pervading and penetrating its component parts, and giving them one definite meaning. (John Henry Newman. The Idea of a University. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1982, page 103.)

  31. IMPLICATIONS:partnership and diversity Humanistic tradition must be understood to the same degree as are the Catholic/Jesuit traditions. Power structures must be transformed to support dialogue among the traditions. Non-Catholic, non-Western, and non-Jesuit traditions must be brought into the dialogue.

  32. IMPLICATIONS:curriculum development/pedagogy The strengths of each tradition must be incorporated into the goals of the curriculum. The biases of each tradition must be identified and overcome by the use of inclusive teaching strategies. Emphasis must be given to inter-disciplinary courses, team teaching, service learning, and collaborative research.

  33. IMPLICATIONS:hiring and evaluation Hiring of new faculty must be based on both their standing within one tradition and their commitment to dialogue among the traditions. Faculty promotion and tenure granting criteria must include activities which give evidence of the above. The University administration must provide resources (e.g., structured conversations, release time) for faculty to engage in the above.

  34. RECOMMENDATIONS:support, emphasize, change • Provide support (i.e., time, money, environment) for inter-disciplinary courses, team teaching, service learning, collaborative research and inter-tradition dialogue. • Increase the emphasis of the Mission in the Faculty Handbook regarding hiring, re-appointment, tenure, and promotion decisions. • Change the membership of the Board of Members to include non-Jesuits; open the position of President to non-Jesuits; orientate the Board of Trustees to Mission dialogue.

  35. SUMMARY:dialogue, dialogue, and more dialogue • The Gonzaga Mission is made up of three separate traditions—humanistic, Catholic and Jesuit—which are different yet complimentary. • If the three traditions remain separate, each tradition will deteriorate, and the Gonzaga Mission will suffer. • If the three traditions dialogically engage the others, each tradition will develop and the Gonzaga Mission will flourish.

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