Behind the table the panel sits, chaired by a Lutheran bishop from Namibia. On this side of the table the academic staff of the LTI sit. |
Today I attended the final session of a three days
evaluation process at the Lutheran Theological Institute, in Pietermaritzburg.
I contribute with some teaching there and was happy to be invited into this
process.
The process started long ago and an internal evaluation has
been carried out at the LTI. The management, the Council and the SALTTT
(Southern African Lutheran Theological Training Trust) wanted this external
evaluation in the first place and as far as I can understand the panel was well
equipped for the task.
Today they delivered an executive preliminary report. The
panel introduced it in a professional way, saying that this was not a forensic
investigation but a report that should help the institution to improve. Already
at that stage I could foresee that the critique was going to be substantial.
The report was divided into affirmations, commendations and
concerns. I will not go in and reveal details, as I don’t think this is the
correct forum. I just want to point to some areas where the panel had concerns.
These areas are well known and so they also came up this time.
The history of the Lutheran Theological Institute is
explained like this on the website:
The Lutheran Theological Institute was constituted by
consolidating the Umphumulo Lutheran Theological Seminary (LTS) and the
Lutheran House of Studies in Pietermaritzburg (Luthos) in January 2003.
Luthos had been there since maybe 30 years, run by the
Lutheran Churches with German origin, called the United Evangelical Lutheran Church in Southern Africa (UELCSA). The Umphumulo Lutheran Theological Seminary (LTS) was run by
the black church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Southern Africa (ELCSA).
When the two institutions merged, the objective was to promote Lutheran Unity.
This is still a concern. In my own understanding the process is too slow. An
overarching vision in many South African contexts is to work towards
transformation. I would like this to happen also in the Lutheran family of
churches.
Another major issue is that the LTI lacks its own accreditation.
Students get registered at the Theological Education by Extension College
(TEEC) which is a correspondence institute. Staff and management at the LTI are
working towards getting own accreditation as a tertiary educational
institution. This process is also slow. Much hope is projected to accreditation
as a quick fix. Which I guess will not be the case. But I do agree with other
staff members that the TEEC arrangement does not work at present. Instead of
being lecturers we as academic staff become tutors. My reading is that the teachers
seek to get their own accreditation, so that they can build own curricula and
teach Lutheran theology in a way that will allow them to teach with passion.
Now academic staff has to abide with TEEC material. It is never good to just
repeat what others have produced.
However, I am very happy that the evaluation took place and
I now hope and pray that the findings will be shared amongst all the relevant
stake holders and also that the institution will be transformed in this
process.
The principal concluded by saying that the panel has acted
as a mirror. When you see yourself in the mirror, he said, and find out that
something is wrong, then you correct it.
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