Trinity College of the Bible and Theological Seminary
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File:Trinity College of the Bible and Theological Seminary logo.JPG | |
Motto | And the things that thou hast heard of me among many witnesses; the same commit thou to faithful men, who shall be able to teach others also. (II Timothy 2:2, KJV) |
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Type | Unaccredited Private, Seminary |
Established | 1969 |
President | Harold F. Hunter |
Location | , , |
Courses | Independent Study, Online Course, Webinar/Seminar |
Colors | Royal Blue and Silver Gray |
Website | www.trinitysem.edu |
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Trinity College of the Bible and Theological Seminary, also known as Trinity College of the Bible, is a conservative evangelical Bible college and seminary located in Newburgh, Indiana. Trinity offers distance education programs at undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral degree levels for self-directed adult learners. Programs include Certificate, Bachelor, Masters, Executive MBA, and Doctorate (DMin and Ed.D) studies.[1] In 2006, Trinity claimed more than 7,000 active students worldwide.[2]
History
In April 1969, John D. Brooke founded Trinity College and Theological Seminary and in mid-1978, Trinity moved to Evansville, Indiana, and changed its focus from offering traditional on-campus degree programs to its current emphasis on distance education, providing undergraduate, graduate and post-graduate courses for self-directed adult learners. Trinity offers various distance education learning formats and delivery systems, such as self-paced independent study courses, online courses, webinars, and face-to-face seminars on-campus and at other locations in the United States.[3] In 1981, the school relocated to Newburgh and current has a nine-building campus.[4]
As of 2013, Trinity also lists about 70 faculty.[5]
Accreditation
In January 1992, Trinity achieved accreditation with the National Association of Private Nontraditional Schools and Colleges,[6] a now defunct organization that is not recognized as an accreditor by the United States Department of Education or the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.[7] As such, its degrees and credits might not be acceptable to employers or other institutions, and use of degree titles may be restricted or illegal in some jurisdictions.[8] Students who attend institutions of higher education that are accredited through associations not recognized by the US Department of Education do not qualify for Title IV funding (Pell Grants, Stafford Loans, etc.).[9]
Prior to 2002, Trinity pursued endorsement of its courses with the University of Liverpool.[10] The university, however, did not endorse theological courses. In 2002, Liverpool decided to “transfer the accreditation role to a theologically orientated institution” after consultation with the QAA.[10] In the United Kingdom, the QAA oversees the Academic Infrastructure of institutions, which includes frameworks for higher education qualifications, code of practice, subject benchmark statements, and programme specifications.[11]
In 2004, Trinity was granted candidacy status with the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. The institution provided a self-study report, hosted a team of North Central Association evaluators for a site visit, and expected a second campus visit in autumn 2006.[2] However, Trinity resigned from candidacy status effective October 20, 2006.[12] This choice was made after the HLC continually went back and forth on Trinity, costing multiple thousands of dollars each year. Initially the reason for being denied accreditation was for course work that was "too challenging", but ultimately Trinity did not have enough "financial stability reserve."
From 2002 to 2007, Canterbury Christ Church University ,whose Chancellor is the Archbishop of Canterbury,[13] endorsed courses and programmes offered by Trinity.[10] The endorsed courses and programmes were subject to the university’s “academic and quality-assurance processes[14] but students did not receive its degrees or awards.”[10]
In August 2007, Trinity received support for set courses and programmes by the University of Wales. Validation with the university is awarded to an institution developing and delivering a programme of study equivalent to the quality and standard followed by the university.[15] The validation made it possible for Trinity to offer degrees from the University of Wales—rather than from Trinity itself—up to the graduate level. To be awarded validation, Trinity was required to document and satisfy all quality assurance standards as outlined by the university, which includes QAA national standards related to the framework for higher education qualifications, programme specifications, subject benchmark statements, and code of practice. A validation site visit of Trinity by a panel of assessors appointed by the university was also required for Trinity to demonstrate evidence of the attainment of said standards.[16]
At the time of validation in 2007, there was no requirement for the university to work only with accredited institutions.[17] However, in July 2008 the QAA advised U.K. institutions they should not form collaborative relationships with institutions not accredited in their home country.[10] This prompted the university to begin to question their collaborative relationship with Trinity. Although Trinity successfully completed the validation process in order to achieve validation, in November 2008 the university cut ties with Trinity.[17]
In 2008, Trinity applied for accreditation with the Distance Education Training Council (DETC), which is recognized by the CHEA and the USDE. On October 7, 2011, DETC denied initial accreditation to Trinity citing Trinity's "failure to demonstrate compliance with Standard IX (Financial Responsibility)" as the reason for DETC's denial.[18] Trinity did not appeal DETC's decision, but Trinity disagreed with the DETC commissioners' decision, noting the demonstrated confidence of Trinity's banking institution. Trinity's comments also noted that Trinity had complied with all other requirements, including all academic standards, for DETC accreditation and that Trinity would continue seeking accreditation.[18]
Notable faculty
- John Warwick Montgomery was Professor of Apologetics and Vice-President for Academic Affairs, UK and Europe.
- Stephen Olford was Professor of Expository Preaching and Sermon Development until his death in 2004.
Notable alumni
- Kim Hammer - Republican member of the Arkansas House of Representatives; hospice chaplain in Benton, Arkansas
- Sam Seamans - Bishop, Reformed Episcopal Church.
- Larry D. Soderquist - author and law professor at Vanderbilt University Law School, director at Corporate and Securities Law Institute from 1993 to 2005.
- Dr. B. Rick Curtis,West Region Mobilizer for the North American Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention [1] [2]
- Dr. Gil Stafford,former President of Grand Canyon University.[3] [4]
- Rev. Yaahn G. Hunter,Superintendent for Church Of God In Christ [5],[6]
- Dr. Dean Doster, former Executive Director of Louisiana Baptist Convention [7] [8]
- Dr. James L. Clark,President of Calvary Bible College & Theological Seminary in Kansas City, MO [9][10]
- Dr. Kevin Pat Parnell, Father of former Lt. Governor and Governor of Alaska, Sean Parnell [11]
- Dr. Joel Southerland, Executive Director of Evangelism Strategy at North American Mission Board Mid-America Christian University [12]
- Dr. Mark Deckard [13] , Faculty at Faith Theological Seminary & Adjunct Professor at Lancaster Bible College & Graduate School [14]
- Dr. John D Fozard, President of Mid America Christian University in Oklahoma City, OK [15]
- Dr. Larry W. Jordan, President of Maple Springs Baptist Bible College & Seminary in Capital Heights, MD [16]Mid-America Christian University[17]
- Dr. Tracy Marx, Faculty at Louisville Bible College [18] Louisville Bible College, Louisville, KY [19]
- Dr. Ronald J Kovack, President (ret.), Knox Theological Seminary [20] [21]
- Dr. Ed Bulkley, Faculty, Veritas Evangelical Seminary [22] [23]
- Dr. Daniel Chadwick, Professor, Taylor University [24] Online [25]
- Dr. Paul Madtes, Jr., Professor, Mount Vernon Nazarene University [26] [27]
- Dr. Bryan Hughes, Faculty at Montana Bible College [28] [29]
- Dr. Steven Collins, Faculty, Veritas Evangelical Seminary [30] [31]
- Dr. Danny Burnley, Former President of the South Carolina Baptist Convention [32] and current Pastor of Laurel Baptist Church, Greenville, SC. [33]
- Dr. Kenneth Berding, Faculty, Talbot School of Theology at Biola University [34] [35]
- Dr. Albert D. Spalding, Jr, Associate Professor, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI [36] [37] [38]
- Dr. Jeffrey Khoo, Principal, Far Eastern Bible College, Singapore
- Dr. Siew Fong Yap, Head of Science, Kingsway Christian College, Darch
References
- ↑ Trinity Degree Programs
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Susan Orr, Raising its sights: Newburgh's Trinity College of the Bible and Theological Seminary aiming higher, Evansville Courier & Press, July 1, 2006.
- ↑ Trinity Delivery Systems
- ↑ http://in-warrick-assessor.publicaccessnow.com/PropertySearch.aspx?s=trinity%20college
- ↑ Trinity Faculty
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ ED.gov Accrediting Agencies Recognized by the US Department of Education
- ↑ College Accreditation in the United States - TOC
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 Wales Spurns QAA Advice
- ↑ QAA Academic Standards and Quality
- ↑ Higher Learning Commission Institution Directory - Trinity
- ↑ Canterbury Christ Church University
- ↑ Canterbury Collaborative Provision
- ↑ Information About Validation
- ↑ Validation Unit Quality Handbook - Contents
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 BBC News | UK | Wales Uni’s US College Link Damaging 21 November 2008
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 DETC Web Site: accessed November 9, 2011
External links
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles using infobox university
- Pages using infobox university with the image name parameter
- Indiana articles missing geocoordinate data
- Seminaries and theological colleges in Indiana
- Universities and colleges in Indiana
- Unaccredited Christian universities and colleges in the United States
- Educational institutions established in 1969
- Nondenominational Christian universities and colleges
- 1969 establishments in Indiana