天美传媒

Nov 12, 2019

True to the Task

A picture of Erik Hoekstra

The Educational Task of Dordt University is an 18-page statement of purpose describing 鈥渉ow a Reformed confession of biblical faith impacts Christian higher education.鈥 Students may not know much about it, but The Task is a lynchpin for a Dordt education鈥攐r, as President Erik Hoekstra says, an educational creed鈥攁 statement of beliefs that guide action.

鈥淲hile nearly every institution has a mission statement, very few have taken the time to dive deeper into a document like The Task, and fewer still base such a document on Christian principles,鈥 says Hoekstra. 鈥淗aving a document like The Task provides the gravitational pull to align all our activities and efforts at Dordt in the same direction.鈥

The Task, says Hoekstra, has helped Dordt to stay in line with and is a deeper articulation of the Founders Vision鈥攖hat 鈥渁ll the class work, all of the students鈥 intellectual, emotional, and imaginative activities shall be permeated with the spirit and teaching of Christianity.鈥

鈥淪o, not in the sense that we just have on-campus Bible studies or chapel services wrapped around a traditional university but that, in a larger and deeper sense, everything here鈥攆rom courses to co-curriculars鈥攊s permeated with the truth of the Gospel,鈥 says Hoekstra.

Although The Task was developed and adopted between 1979 and 1996, it was not the first document of its kind; another statement, adopted in 1961, consisted of 17 propositions to guide the development of Dordt鈥檚 educational program. A more detailed statement was created in 1968, titled Scripturally-Oriented Higher Education.

The Task continues to be the foundation for our work at Dordt,鈥 says Dr. Leah Zuidema, vice president for online and graduate education. 鈥淲e are in a season of higher education where there are so many external changes and pressures on each institution. To stay viable and competitive, Dordt keeps innovating. Yet as we innovate, we need to maintain a strong sense of who we are. The Task clearly lays out our purpose. It provides a biblically based calling for us to pursue Christ-centered education. It defines how we work together鈥攖he ways in which we bear responsibilities and mutually submit to one another in our offices as students, faculty, staff, board, and president.鈥

To Dr. Wayne Kobes, professor emeritus of theology, The Task provides guidelines for what Dordt believes and why.

The Task is our attempt to draw basic principles from Scripture and Reformed thought. We show that, as an institution, this is the direction we are moving, and that biblical principles undergird our beliefs,鈥 says Kobes. 鈥淲ithin that, you can ask questions and debate issues, but we as an institution have a place to stand.鈥

Having a place to stand is a bit rare these days, especially in higher education.

鈥淢any Christian universities don鈥檛 have a clear direction or are wishy-washy in what they believe,鈥 says Kobes. 鈥淗ow do you prevent that from happening at Dordt? The Task helps us to stay the course.鈥

Living Out The Task

Students may not realize it, but The Educational Task of 天美传媒 is an integral part of the faculty and staff experience at Dordt. To apply for a position at Dordt, faculty and staff must submit a personal statement where, in addition to expressing their religious convictions, they interact with and comment on The Task and the four curricular coordinates derived from the document: religious orientation, creational structure, creational development, and contemporary response. The hiring committees consider the personal statements just as important as a r茅sum茅, cover letter, or personal references.

鈥淚 think asking faculty and staff to respond to The Task from the get-go clarifies Dordt鈥檚 identity for some. For others, it plants seeds of questions they should ask about what it means to be Reformed,鈥 says Dr. Jeff Ploegstra, a biology professor at Dordt.

Once hired, faculty and staff members wrestle with The Task again in New Faculty and Staff Orientation, a seminar designed to give new employees a background for working and thriving at Dordt. Then, after two years of teaching, faculty members respond once more to The Task, this time considering how they have developed their understanding of what it means to teach Christianly.

鈥淲hen faculty write their two-year papers for the board of trustees, the expectation is that each person is interacting with The Task,鈥 says Kobes.

And, even if faculty never specifically reference The Task in their classrooms, students are influenced by it.

鈥淪ome view a Christian college as having Bible study groups on campus, going to chapel, or doing service projects,鈥 says Kobes. 鈥淏ut at Dordt, we think about how that affects the very structure, the organizational system, the curriculum鈥攊ndividual classes. It鈥檚 not simply that I鈥檓 teaching as a Christian鈥擨 want to think about the four coordinates and how they come through in what I teach.鈥

The Task is theoretical in nature. In 1993, to make The Task more operational, Dordt鈥檚 faculty adopted The Educational Framework of 天美传媒, which addresses how to apply The Task to the overall academic program. The Framework, as its preface states, 鈥渃larifies what the academic program should look like and how it should be structured to fulfill the mission of the university.鈥 To this day, each academic department at Dordt is asked to design programs and courses that implement the goals posed under the four coordinates.

The Task is our why鈥攚hy Dordt exists鈥攁nd The Framework is our how鈥攈ow we teach in light of our reason for existing,鈥 says Aaron Baart, dean of chapel.

In his courses, Dr. Ethan Brue, professor of engineering, uses Scripture not for devotions but for providing a weekly class outline and justification.

鈥淪cripture defines the space in which we construct the simple circuit. It does not supply the content, rather it guides and directs us to the field in which the details of engineering find their ultimate context.鈥

If you attended Dordt, some of the terminology found in The Task might sound familiar. What about the word 鈥渟phere鈥濃攄efined as 鈥渁 realm of human life that has its own distinctive calling, authority, and responsibility鈥? That can be found in The Task. What about the notion of an 鈥渙ffice鈥濃攖hat, in any social context, 鈥渃ertain individuals will have responsibility to care for the common good of the community鈥? That鈥檚 in The Task, too.

The Task is very distinctly us鈥攕ome language that鈥檚 been coined here at Dordt,鈥 says Baart. 鈥淲e like that it鈥檚 weird and different.鈥

Another oft-used term is 鈥渟erviceable insight.鈥 According to The Task, a Dordt education is about more than transmission of information or knowledge; it strives for transformation of the whole person. Wholly dependent on biblical wisdom, this transformation is cultivated in community and equips individuals to serve God and neighbor. 鈥淲e do not pursue wisdom simply for wisdom鈥檚 sake or personal benefit,鈥 says The Task. 鈥淩ather, we are seeking wisdom that enables us to better know, serve, and praise our Creator.鈥 This is the definition of serviceable insight, as described in The Task鈥s glossary.

To Brue, serviceable insight is not static. Every day as he reviews last year鈥檚 notes to prepare for his control systems course, he is challenged to put it into practice.

鈥淥ur educational goal of providing serviceable insight prompts me to ask, 鈥楬ow do I step into this classroom and respond to the risen Lord who turned to his broken church and said, 鈥楩eed my sheep鈥? What implications does this invitation to service with the backdrop of an empty tomb have for the modeling of a signal filtering system made up of operational amplifiers cascaded in series?鈥欌

Brue does not go into class with an easy answer; instead, he feels challenged to enter each day with a new context.

鈥淢y primary goal is not that the students have more insight into my particular field, to theoretically know how to mathematically model and predict the performance, or to simply create a circuit that functions,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y overarching goal is that all of these activities and the students鈥攎yself included鈥攆ind their purpose and goal in the fields of the Lord. Yes, serviceable insight relates to content, but it relates even more so to context. Before we get hung up on exactly what sheep need to eat and how they should do so, we need to remember that it all starts in the pasture. Sheep wandering around by themselves in the wrong space altogether don鈥檛 get fed.鈥

Hoekstra thinks that, on a macro level, the notion of being office-bearers is what makes Dordt an engaging place to work and live.

The Task describes how, at Dordt, we have five distinctive offices鈥攂oard, student, faculty, staff, and president鈥攜et we鈥檙e all similar in that we serve as office-bearers in Christ鈥檚 kingdom, rather than simply as volunteers, consumers, or employees,鈥 says Hoekstra. 鈥淗aving us all understand our work at Dordt in that light makes a transformative difference in both how and why we labor together. I think it鈥檚 at the heart of why The Wall Street Journal has recognized Dordt as the top school in America for student engagement over the past four years. I think it鈥檚 the main reason that Dordt鈥檚 alumni engagement鈥攂oth in terms of legacy student enrollment and alumni giving percentages鈥攁re among the highest in the country. I think it鈥檚 a huge reason for our low faculty turnover and high student retention levels.鈥

Educating, according to The Task, is the responsibility of the whole campus community, no matter what office you bear. 鈥淭hese students have been entrusted into our care by their parents鈥攚e鈥檙e using the Scriptures to help students realize their potential and learn how to apply it when they graduate. Their time at Dordt is formative, so that responsibility is heavy,鈥 says Dr. Manuela A.A. Ayee (鈥06), an engineering professor.

In her research, Ayee recognizes how creation is structured and how all of creation is interconnected because God created it that way. Working on the molecular level, Ayee can鈥檛 touch, feel, or discover as much as she can deduce from experiments or computational work.

鈥淗aving God鈥檚 sovereignty in the background reminds me that, whatever I鈥檓 seeing, God is allowing me to see鈥攈e allows us to unfold his creation daily,鈥 she says.

鈥淪omething that happens in one sphere, like cells in the body, can move on and affect the rest of the body, causing disease, for example,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 see it as a breakdown of the order or structure God intended鈥攏ot as a random occurrence. And, if this is a breakdown of creational structure, what can we do to move toward restoration?鈥

Viewing belief as more than Sunday activity and recognizing God鈥檚 sovereignty over all provides an opportunity to think about what it means to be God鈥檚 disciples in all academic fields, including in research, says Dr. Abby Foreman, a social work professor at Dordt.

鈥淚f you come from a Reformed perspective and are doing research, you know that you are doing what God has called you to do, even if the word 鈥楥hristian鈥 isn鈥檛 in the title of your research project,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think that comprehensive view helps us to be confident in our research and scholarship and to think deeply about what it means to live our lives as disciples through our research.鈥

Refreshing The Task

Three years ago, Kobes, Baart, and a committee of faculty and staff worked to refresh the language of The Task.

鈥淭his was an opportunity to put The Task in the hands of the next generation of faculty to shape it and own it at a deeper level,鈥 says Baart. 鈥淥ur mandate was to refresh the language鈥攚e were not supposed to rewrite the document. Everyone loved the vision; the content was not up for grabs. We had to maintain the meaning but use language that was a better fit for today.鈥

鈥淭he goal was to make the principles more understandable to a wider Christian audience,鈥 says Foreman, a committee member.

To do that, the committee rephrased certain words or phrases that may have been difficult for some to understand and provided a glossary of frequently-used terms like 鈥渙ffice鈥 and 鈥渟erviceable insight.鈥

鈥淵ou might think that refreshing or changing a few words wouldn鈥檛 take much time, but it did,鈥 jokes Foreman.

The Task took nearly three years to refresh. Foreman believes the revised version is more readable without losing the integrity and conviction of the original version. And she thinks that the willingness to work through the long process demonstrates how much the mission and task of Dordt means to its employees.

鈥淚f we took out a sentence, the faculty wanted us to say why we took it out,鈥 says Foreman. 鈥淭hey wanted to be careful that nothing was watered down or lost.鈥

鈥淧eople care,鈥 says Ploegstra. 鈥淭hey care about Dordt鈥檚 identity, and they want the college to thrive and do its task well.鈥

The Task is our theology and philosophy of education鈥攊t鈥檚 our worldview; it鈥檚 what we believe we are trying to instill in every student that comes to Dordt,鈥 says Baart. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a longer version of the mission statement鈥攊t explains who we are, why we do what we do, and why that matters.鈥

Staying True to The Task

In the 2020 U.S. News and World Report college rankings, Dordt tied for second most innovative school in the Midwest. With programs like Pro-Tech and state-of-the-art facilities like the Carl and Gloria Zylstra Nursing Education Center, Dordt leaders try to think outside of the box regarding higher education. The Educational Task of 天美传媒 helps them do so by providing a unique take on how a Reformed confession of biblical faith impacts Christian education.

鈥淎s we innovate, The Task gives us guidance about what needs to stay the same and what can鈥攁nd should鈥攃hange,鈥 says Zuidema. 鈥淲hat endures is that we live in response to our Creator, Redeemer, and Lord鈥搃n anything and everything that students learn, whether in class, in co-curricular activities, in residence life, or in campus ministries. What changes is that each new generation of students faces new cultural challenges and opportunities. The Task holds us responsible to shape learning experiences in anticipation of what our graduates will need in order to live faithfully for Christ.鈥

One of Zuidema鈥檚 favorite passages from Chapter 6 of The Task speaks to this:

鈥淒ordt provides insight into crucial challenges and opportunities facing contemporary culture. Living in a global community, we continually encounter issues that require discernment and thoughtful engagement. Dordt implements a curriculum sufficiently flexible to address these challenges and opportunities as they arise. In our study of history and contemporary problems through a Reformed perspective, Dordt instills the ability to discern the spirits and to engage in redemptive transformation of cultural activity.鈥

鈥淚n a role where I am responsible to lead change on an ongoing basis, I find the stability and flexibility called for in The Task to be essential for decision-making,鈥 says Zuidema. 鈥淭hese principles are at the heart of developing the 2020-25 strategic plan; they are essential as we plan new online and graduate programs. I鈥檓 thankful for the foresight that the original authors had in writing The Task and for the in-depth conversations that were so crucial as our committee worked together to refresh The Task.鈥

鈥淪taying true to The Task means keeping the biblical narrative of creation, fall, redemption, and restoration central to education at Dordt,鈥 says Hoekstra. 鈥淚 believe that the core of sin is when humans put themselves at the center of the story鈥攔ather than Christ. It鈥檚 what we read about when original sin crept into the Garden of Eden鈥攊t鈥檚 what happened throughout the people of Israel鈥檚 time. It鈥檚 also what has caused the loss of vision for formerly Christian colleges and universities like Harvard and many others.鈥

The Educational Task of 天美传媒 reminds to us to remain grounded in God鈥檚 call for Dordt,鈥 Hoekstra adds. 鈥淲hile we need to keep innovating and growing as an institution鈥攁dding programs and improving delivery options鈥攚e need to test it all in light of The Task and continually ask ourselves whether we鈥檙e remaining faithful to God鈥檚 revelation to us in Scripture and creation.鈥

Sarah Moss ('10)


A picture of campus behind yellow prairie flowers