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Denvers Augustine Institute Spreads Message Through DVD Courses
BY Joseph Pronechen
July 12-25, 2009 Issue |
Posted 7/4/09 at 7:02 PM
DENVER — In Wichita, Kan., newly
married Mary Kroupa wanted to earn a master’s degree in theological studies
from the Augustine Institute in Denver, but relocating was impossible. Her
friends in Atlanta and Wisconsin were in the same situation.
In Glenwood Springs, Colo., high
school teacher Pat Gabriel also wanted to earn a master’s from the institute,
but the 2 1/2-hour, one-way constant commute over the Continental Divide was
prohibitive.
Each one’s dilemma was solved last
August, when the Augustine Institute launched the Video Distance Education
Program.
“Certainly, shortly after our school
opened in 2005, we had people contacting us from around the country — including
people working in the Church, even some bishops — wondering if we would do a
distance education program,” said Edward Sri, the institute’s provost and
professor of Scripture and theology. “They knew they could trust the theology
is going to be fully in line with the Church because we’re committed to the
magisterium.”
The school quickly established two
topflight master’s programs: one in theological studies, one in biblical
studies. Students can earn either degree studying at home, on the road, or
wherever, on their own time and at their own pace, with no minimum residency
requirement like some other distance education programs require.
Students receive lectures on
high-tech DVDs. A full-time video professional on staff films the video
classroom lectures using a four-camera setup and high quality sound, lighting
and editing, so Augustine’s distance students feel they’re part of a class.
Technology serves the program’s main
drawing points for students. Kroupa explains one of them. She graduated five
years ago from Benedictine College, where she was inspired by John Paul II’s
call for the New Evangelization. Kroupa wanted to go to Augustine both for the
orthodox teaching and “primarily because they’re committed to the New
Evangelization,” she said, “and we’re called to bring the Gospel with new ardor
and love for Christ, to bring new life to what the Catholic Church has to give
to the world.”
Like St. Paul
Professors in the program share this
vision. Jeff Cavins, developer of The Great Adventure
Bible study timeline, believes it ties in beautifully with the New Evangelization
because “John Paul II said if the New Evangelization is going to be successful,
it will involve new methods and new ardor. The message and the problems people
are facing are the same, but we have to stay up with the methodology of
communications.”
“We can’t say as a Church we don’t
like your form of communication,” Cavins said. “We have to pay attention to the
form as long as it doesn’t compromise our message. The question is: Are you
going to be there or not be there? If you’re not, in a sense you’ve given up.”
“Being there” means the video
program can be available for 200, 300 or however many students around the world
at the same time.
Said Cavins, “It’s a natural way of
multiplying five loaves and two fish to meet the needs of the crowd.”
Tim Gray, Augustine’s president,
professor of Scripture, and Eternal Word Television Network series regular,
considers this methodology a modern-day version of St. Paul’s journeys. “In his
day, Paul used the latest technology of his time, the efficient Roman roads system,
to bring teaching and training that helped the early Christians to evangelize
and transform their culture,” Gray told students in a letter he shared with the
Register. “In our day, we now have the ability to quickly bring Christ’s
message to his disciples scattered throughout the entire world.”
Similarly, this program’s student
disciples will evangelize and transform the culture as they study either the
broad spectrum of Catholic theology, including Scripture, history and culture,
catechesis and principles for evangelization, or focus more on studying
Scripture from the heart of the Church in Tradition and come away with a big
picture of the Bible.
Sri explained that the particular
emphasis for both programs is “always done with an eye to seeing everything
about our Catholic faith in light of the larger story of God’s plan of
salvation.” The programs are dedicated to raising up leaders for the New
Evangelization who “understand and articulate the Catholic faith in a way that
will captivate the minds and hearts of modern men and women.”
Emulating Teachers
Already almost 100 people are taking
the video education program from 22 states, plus one each in Canada and Iraq.
The number surprised Augustine Institute since they announced the program
merely six weeks before launching it last fall.
Sri adds that the institute is
currently in dialogue with some dioceses interested in using the video distance
program for intellectual formation for diaconate candidates. One already using
it is the Diocese of Colorado Springs, Colo.
The range of students is broad, from
those right out of college, professionals — including doctors and businessmen —
housewives, and people working in the Church, to retirees.
One is Gabriel. He aims to go from
teaching math to teaching theology and chose this master’s program because of
how “aligned it is with the magisterium.” He
believes the institute “is doing exactly what I am in search of.”
As a teacher with summers off, he’s
also taking advantage of what Sri calls an optional “hybrid” version: coming to
the institute for the four-day intensive courses offered in summer and January.
Kroupa is another who “hybridized”
her video distance master’s study by attending a four-day course with her
husband.
“We concluded it was the best
marriage preparation we had,” she said. “We incorporated it in our family life,
prayer life, our marriage. It changed my life and work as a director of
religious education at my parish in Wichita.” She finds every course in the
program is life-changing. Every day her husband eagerly asks her to teach him
everything she learned that day.
Students doing the program entirely
via DVDs aren’t isolated. Not only do high-quality video lectures give them a
sense they’re part of a class, but Augustine provides tutors highly familiar
with its programs to help students online. Plus, a chat room allows students to
dialogue about the classes.
According
to Cavins, the key point about the videos is that they allow mentoring and
teaching without depersonalizing the process of teaching, which is the heart of
making disciples. The person teaching becomes an example: “Paul said, ‘I am a
father to you,’” he explained.
“You’re not only imparting the message, you’re
also sharing yourself,” said Cavins. “If you bring together the teacher and the
student with technology, you can utilize technology not only to impart the
message, but also impart the example of the teachers and their life. That’s
mentoring. We want teachers where students say, ‘Not only do we want to know
what they know, but we want to become who they are.’”
Staff
writer Joseph Pronechen is based
in Trumbull, Connecticut.
INFORMATION For information and to view a
sample lecture, visit AugustineInstitute.org or call (303) 937-4420.
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