[Alumni-chat] Selling Antioch!
Mark Pomerantz
marklp2 at comcast.net
Tue Mar 27 18:42:54 EDT 2007
I have to agree with Mark S.'s major points. It never even occurred to me
that alums would be the major source of baling out Antioch from its
financial woes. My take would be to refresh the ideas that once made Antioch
great and sell them to a new generation of student looking for an activist
educational experience with a real career path as change agents (just like
Morgan used to say). There aren't too many jobs as radicals in residence
anymore. But there are an increasing number of opportunities to be a social
entrepreneur, and foundation funding and $ from "venture philanthropists"
who like this approach. Most of us are just too old to appreciate this I
think. Most of the academic programs I hear about are student driven. This
is the kind of education an increasing number of students (who have heard of
people like Mohammed Yunus) want.
Mark P. AC '71
-----Original Message-----
From: alumni-chat-bounces at w3.antioch.edu
[mailto:alumni-chat-bounces at w3.antioch.edu] On Behalf Of Mark Swanholm
Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2007 10:41 AM
To: Alumni Chat List
Subject: Re: [Alumni-chat] Selling Antioch!
To the Usual Suspects:
While it is nice in a way to see the chat again I notice that it is
the same crowd and that speaks to one of Antioch's core problems.
There are a couple of dozen folks in a dialog - some angry, some
defensive, some disillusioned, some in denial, some lurkers seeking a
glimmer of hope - just like a community meeting at Antioch. The
problem is that it is just us - we all in our way care about Antioch
or we wouldn't take the time to participate... some of us (more than
a few) were even crazy enough to go work there to try and help - but
we are not enough to turn things around. I think that BECAUSE of
Anticoh's nature, its philosphy, what it instills in people at its
core (if an institution can be imbued with such personal qualities)
is in fact its undoing. We learned to be skeptical, critical, not
joiners, adventurous, inquisitive and that new things trump old
ones... or some variation on this that we could argue about for
weeks. NONE of those things add up to a broad set of alums that
provide deep pocketed support. There are a core of us that give
time, thoughts and some that give very generously financially - but
broadly MOST alums don't participate AND many alums are not in a
position to provide hefty donations. We actually have ENOUGH of a
financial base (and I know because I have seen the research) to meet
the goals of "The Plan" - but that is in theory and that theory is
based on numbers that don't apply to our quirky, unique set of
alums. By and large our alums give more to philanthropic causes (and
here I am anecdotal - but I have talked to a lot of alums so I feel
confident in this) - they support AIDS research, Choice, politics,
whatever - and give to those causes where their passion lies. We
have a lot of donors - but not a lot of large donors... and it really
does come down to that. I really don't believe it would matter WHAT
the administration or board SAID or even what they DID - no matter
what stance, position or proposal came forth 20% would embrace it,
40% would hate it and 40% wouldn't respond.
While David makes a credible point about the message being simple and
relatively cheap the real issue is that given the average donation
size we need to reach a lot of people - and Antiochians are HARD to
reach... if we had enough people to fund the plan on the chat list NO
PROBLEM... but the 50-60 people here are NOT enough. And the TIME to
convince skeptical, questioning and ultimately interested alums is
also very high - We are fun to talk to - but gods we like to talk and
ask tough questions - to effectively reach and respond to all of the
alums would be very difficult (and having tried I can almost say
impossible) even with an adequate budget (and the alumni /
development office hasn't had an adequate budget for some time -
which is a self feeding problem). Antioch has done a great job of
turning us out into the world to question authority and hegemony...
but it really never thought self-consciously about what this would
mean for itself. Had federal funding persisted (from the 60s) and
student demographics been on a rising curve (as in the 70's) Antioch
could eat its old and go on cranking out first class rebels. But the
climate changed - and Antioch's business model (yes it is a business
at some level) was not setup to adapt. It didn't know how to hunt
alumni - it had ALWAYS (and this is born out in looking at the Morgan
years, McGregor years, all of the eras) rejected most of the alums
and looked to the future. Guskin (for all his flaws) tried to turn
this around - but it was too little, too late - the diaspora had
happened and the connection was lost to too many of the people.
Now none of this is to say that I don't think the current
administration has some serious issues - they do and it starts very
directly with Steve. But we have had Presidents with very different
strengths, styles and agendas - and the 20/40/40 rule has applied to
them all. Sure some were duds - but there were some very capable
people in there as well - and at least 1 of them should have struck a
cord with donors and students if that were REALLY the issue. I
submit to the meat grinder of the chat that THE issue really is US
(collectively the alumni) and that Antioch was TOO EFFECTIVE for its
own good. Yes we can all say that if only they would adopt a plan
that we could support for reasons x,y,z we would rise up and support
them - but I am almost certain that they HAVE tried that plan - and
it brought along 10-20 percent of us, and that not being enough they
moved on to some other plan that put us in the 80% category and
dragged someone else into the 20%. For Antioch to survive it needs
an infusion of resources - and it needs so many resources now that it
would take the support of about 50% of the known alumni base... I
have grown skeptical that we can reach that many people, and do it in
time.
I would love nothing more than to be proven wrong - because for all
its flaws David is right - Antioch does have a place in the world
that is vital. But from where I sit, in the current climate and
resource pool, it seems that Antioch will fall victim to Darwinian
forces - evolution does not favor those who have cast out their
elders, at least not right now. If we can solve this riddle, then we
can talk about esoteric issues like loss of Community Government, a
need for a Dean of Students, etc... but until we solve the resource
puzzle we will only keep adding to the list of issues that we all
love to debate.
Mark
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