Church Executive SEPT / OCT 2019 DIGITAL ISSUE | Page 26

CASE STUDY PhD Remote Academic Learning at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary A couple years back, we at NOBTS began a new delivery method for our PhD program called “Sync.” It is a format that allows remote students to watch and participate in seminars, live through interactive two-way video. As a part of an ongoing evaluation, we spoke with students who were using this new delivery system. “The connection I have with the cohorts and professors,” one Sync student told us, “is so valuable. They share resources, encourage me, challenge me, and pray for me.” Another Sync student told us: “I have learned and studied more about the deep burning questions people have about life and God and about how to answer them from the Bible and Christian theology.” As happy as we are about this feedback, we wanted to understand more about our students enrolled in the PhD Sync program. Specifically, what was working for them…and what wasn’t. Why did Sync students choose this method for their PhD? Most, we found, were already serving in established ministries. As one respondent told us, it really came down to “schedule conflicts with ministry where I had to be in town.” Others simply felt called to stay where they were. “I chose Sync,” one told us, “because I’m serving in a role in Kentucky where I still feel God’s call. Sync allows me the best of both worlds: first-class theological education and convenience for family and work.” 26 CHURCH EXECUTIVE | SEPT / OCT 2019 Another common theme we came across came from those further along in life and ministry. Many had already relocated during their master’s work and were not able to do it again. Now that they are further in their career, with their families more rooted, relocating wasn’t an option. What is the nature of the ministry of those doing Sync? Just about all who responded to our survey were in some kind of pastoral or administrative ministry. And most, but not all, were full-time. They simply didn’t have the time or money to travel. A pastor in the Midwest told us he couldn’t “live in New Orleans and take classes there and also pastor a church in Oklahoma.” Another, a bi-vocational pastor, told us, because “I need a full- time job to support my family financially, Sync allows me the possibility to pursue a PhD.” And yet another told us about his aging parents and said he simply needed to be physically present for them. The ability to have one foot in each setting—the world of scholarship and the vocation that supports them—was a common theme in the feedback we received. What didn’t work about PhD Sync? The feedback we received on Sync was overwhelmingly positive. Every single person who replied to our survey told us if they could rewind and do it all over, they’d “pick Sync again.”   One student -- who also said he would do Sync again -- told us: Sync “I do believe being in an on-campus setting is the best scenario. I have made many trips to campus and to the library, but being there would have been the best.” This sums up our own thoughts on the matter as well. We believe the best possible education happens on campus.    But that option is not a reality for everyone. And so with Sync, we set about doing everything we could to bring that same education to students, no matter where in the world they are. The overwhelmingly positive feedback we received is a sign that Sync is a delivery format our students appreciate. 84% PARTICIPATION The Sync Program is also open to traditional on-campus students who cannot make an in-person meeting during a regular semester. 84% of last semester’s PhD students used the Sync technology for at least one meeting. Meaning, they may have been in the city or far away on a trip, and they may have attended all of the other meetings in person. But for at least one meeting, they chose to join in remotely. LEARNMORE gonobts.how/phdsync