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College Asks Students to Power Down, Contemplate
By ALAN SCHER ZAGIER , Associated Press
Last update: December 25, 2009 - 9:40 AM
COLUMBIA, Mo. - Dianne Lynch wanted to give the
students of Stephens College a break from the constant digital communication
that pervades their generation. So she asked them to put their phones
and computers away and revive the 176-year-old school's dormant tradition
of vespers services.
On a bitterly cold December night, with the start of final exams just
hours away, about 75 of Stephens' 766 undergraduates grudgingly piled
their cell phones into collection baskets and filed into the school's
candlelit chapel, where they did little but sit, silently. For an hour,
not an iPod ear bud could be seen. There were no fingers flying on tiny
computer keyboards, no chats with unseen intimates.
Alexis Dornseif, a senior from suburban St. Louis majoring in fashion
marketing and management, said she needed time away from her busy life.
"Sometimes it's really overwhelming," she said. "It's
good to have time to think, to not worry about what's going on tomorrow."
Lynch, the president of the women's college, is no technophobe. Her
doctorate research focused on "digital natives," teenagers
who grew up with "the Internet as a part of their operating assumption
in the world." She knows most of her students consider their cell
phones a social necessity. The Pew Research Center's Internet &
American Life Project has found that 82 percent of 16- and 17-year-olds
own cell phones. Ninety-four percent of teens spend time online.
But Lynch fears all that time spent in the 21st century's town square
leaves few opportunities for clutter-free thought. She wants the students
to also pursue the more elusive state of mind that comes with silence.
Several other schools are encouraging technology-free introspection.
Amherst College in Massachusetts hosted a "Day of Mindfulness"
this year, featuring yoga and meditation and a lecture on information
technology and the contemplative mind entitled "No Time to Think."
"Students welcome it," said Amherst physics professor Arthur
Zajonc, director of the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society. "It's
a complement to the very hurried world of gadgets they normally live
in."
At Stephens, Lynch hit on the idea for reviving vespers after an alumnae
group regaled her with fond memories of Sunday nights in the school
chapel. Once a Baptist school but now secular, Stephens required vespers
services as often as four times each week starting in 1920.
"Just a wonderful opportunity to calm down," said Neel Stallings,
a career-development consultant in Charlotte, N.C., who graduated from
Stephens in 1967. "To have a place to go to just tune out all of
the extra noise, and to tune into yourself, was the most valuable thing."
By the late 1960s, vespers had become more spiritual than religious,
no longer mandatory and held only once a week. By the 1980s the program
was gone.
The new vespers program is voluntary, at least for now. Lynch hopes
to have the services twice a month, to reinforce the school's mission
of teaching young women to be self-reliant.
"You will need to be able to sit, to be quiet, to be alone with
yourself, to have those moments of self-reflection," she said.
Those moments are infrequent on the modern college campus. Seconds after
the end of the first revived vespers service, students got their cell
phones back, and the flickering assortment of screens replaced the need
for mood-setting candlelight.

