Antioch College — Head fundraiser appointed

Steve Sturman has been hired by Antioch as its new vice president for advancement. (Submitted photo)

Steve Sturman has been hired by Antioch as its new vice president for advancement. (Submitted photo)

Steve Sturman, the new head fund raiser for Antioch College, sees similarities between the school where he most recently worked, Culver Academies in Indiana, and Antioch College. Both schools are small and old, with aging physical plants. Both have passionate alumni. And both schools see themselves as having a unique approach to preparing young people for the world.

Specifically, Sturman said, he’s impressed with Antioch College’s singular educational model, with its three-fold emphasis on academic excellence, co-op work experience and an emphasis on community.

“To incorporate all that into an academic program means developing well-rounded individuals who are prepared for real life,” Sturman said in an interview this week.

On Friday, May 27, Antioch College President Mark Roosevelt announced that Sturman would serve as the college’s new vice president for advancement, heading up the school’s fund-raising efforts.

“Steve is committed to community and to purpose — the notion of making a difference in one’s work — and it’s that sensibility that makes him a good fit for Antioch right now,” Roosevelt said in a press statement. “His work at Culver required that he get to know a specific kind of institution with a particular history and highly engaged alumni. That experience, together with his proven track record in fund raising and sales, will be an invaluable asset as we work to firm up our foundation going forward.”

At Culver Educational Foundation, which includes Culver Military Academy and Culver Girls Academy, Sturman was a senior development officer and part of a team that raised $376 million over an eight-year period. The amount, which is the largest ever raised for a secondary school, was the combined effort of a development staff that began with seven employees and grew to a staff of 30, he said.

Sturman has a long family history with the Culver academies, and both his son and daughter graduated from the schools.

Coming to Antioch College fulfills Sturman’s lifelong dream of heading his own department and having his own fund-raising team that uses “best practices to serve the institution and its alumni,” he said.

At Antioch College, Sturman will head up a nine-person group that includes Micah Canal, director of the annual fund; Wendy Ernst, senior major gifts officer; Eric Miller, major gifts officer; Fred Kraus, researcher; Steve Duffy, alumni relations; Aimee Maruyama, director of foundation relations and senior major gifts officer; Stacey Wirrig, director of alumni relations and Anna Hogarty, administrative assistant. Interim Director of Advancement Ron Napal will be leaving around the end of June, and Sturman will begin his job July 1.

President Roosevelt has repeatedly stressed that ending the “cycle of poverty” at Antioch College is critical to its revival. The school will have an $8 million a year budget when faculty and students arrive next fall, Roosevelt said recently, and aims to raise about $3 million in its annual fund drive that ends June 30. The funding gap of about $5 million will be filled by major gifts, Roosevelt has said, emphasizing that the college is especially dependent on donors in its first years in which students are not paying tuition.

Since its revival two years ago, Antioch has also raised $22.4 million in a multi-year capital campaign, according to Director of Communications Gariot Louima.

The fund-raising job he’s taking on is a huge one, Sturman knows, but he’s excited. He’s spent much of the past several years in airplanes flying to meet donors, and expects to do the same at Antioch to meet with alums to “share the news that Antioch is alive,” he said.

Since Sturman’s appointment, some concerns have been raised on an Antioch College alumni discussion board regarding his political views, since on his Facebook page Sturman expressed enthusiasm for a former Republican candidate for the Indiana state legislature.

That Facebook statement did not indicate a political endorsement, according to Sturman this week, who said he was not even aware of the candidate’s political views. Rather, he said, the man is a friend.

Still, Sturman said, political views are a “personal thing,” although he said he has “embraced progressive values — that’s important to me.”

But Sturman does not see his new job as promoting a certain political perspective.

Regarding Antioch College graduates, “We have graduates on both sides of the aisle and I have to serve all graduates,” he said. “My goal is to work toward the school’s goals, not to promote one value or another value.”

Sturman was not looking for a new job, he said, when he was contacted by the search firm Isaacson Miller for the Antioch position. But he was intrigued at the prospect, and especially interested after he came to the college and interviewed with its new president.

“Mark Roosevelt has a bright intellect and I thought it would be a fascinating place to work,” he said.

Sturman plans to move to the village soon. His wife, Paula, will join him when she can, but first the couple has to sell the farm they own outside of Plymouth. Currently, Paula Sturman manages the Culver Academy fitness center. The couple has two children, Eric, who works as a graphic designer in Columbus, and Meg, who consults for an Indianapolis business that specializes in green solutions to business problems.

In Yellow Springs, Sturman hopes to pursue his passion for gardening, and he and his wife both enjoy fixing up old houses. A potter as a young man, he said he’s excited to be joining a community of artists. He’s also looking forward to taking advantage of the bike trail.

“Yellow Springs looks to be a delightful place,” he said.

Before working as a fund raiser for the Culver Academies, Sturman for 23 years operated Sturman and Company, a manu­facturer’s representative sales agency. He and his family lived then in Delaware, Ohio, where he managed the Ohio sales territory.

Sturman earned a bachelors of science in management degree from Purdue University and attended the fund raising school at the Indiana University Center for Philanthropy.

State of the College: ‘You have a college that’s yours again’

In his State of the College address Friday night, Antioch College President Mark Roosevelt articulated a new vision for Antioch as a college that will focus on addressing the challenges of sustainability. The May 20 talk, which was open to the community and held in Herndon Gallery, launched the weekend meeting of the college’s pro tem board.

“The way we live in America today is not sustainable. Period. The evidence for this is overwhelming and mounting every day,” Roosevelt said to an audience of about 50 college and village community members. “Our unwillingness to deal with this threatens every single aspect of life as we know it.”

Providing students with a multi-disciplinary program to meet this challenge will prepare them for a wide range of careers, Roosevelt said.

“I believe Antioch College can become a place where the faculty, students and community are working together to find better ways of living,” he said.

Roosevelt also emphasized the need for the college and the Yellow Springs community to join forces, both for practical reasons and because students benefit from being rooted in a community.

“This village lends itself to this being a community college,” he said, using the term not as most frequently used but as “a college in which young people are deeply integrated into the community.”

The loss of community has contributed to a lack of centeredness in not only American culture but the culture of many college campuses, Roosevelt said.

“People are searching for that kind of life,” he said, stating that while some may consider him overly idealistic, “If reading Arthur Morgan has taught me anything, it’s that it’s better to be super idealistic and go for it, than not.”

What is Antioch?

Regarding the issue of environmental sustainability, Roosevelt described himself as having “dramatically changed” in the four months since he came to campus as college president.

“I was woefully, inadequately knowledgeable about what has happened and what we need to do,” Roosevelt said.

Citing a speech by Bennington College President Elizabeth Coleman as an inspiration, Roosevelt stated that Coleman’s basic message is that “America is in significant and serious decline, and academic institutions are on the sidelines and doing nothing about it. It’s an amazing disconnect.”

The most pressing issues of environmental sustainability involve food and water, Roosevelt said, citing statistics that out of 6 billion humans alive today, 1 billion are hungry, another billion are on the brink of hunger and a billion are obese. In this country, there’s been a 300 percent rise in obesity in the past 20 years, Roosevelt said, stating that while lack of exercise contributes to that significant health problem, the largest contributor is the way food is produced and processed.

“We had to step back and look at, what is Antioch? Where is Antioch? We’re in the breadbasket, surrounded by people who are doing interesting things with food,” Roosevelt said, stating that regarding the importance of food to a host of environmental issues, “Kids get it. They get it and know it. They feel it and want to live it.”

At Antioch College, students will “live it,” he said, stating that talks are underway regarding creating a farm on the campus “golf course.” All students will be required to work 10 hours weekly on campus, and many of the first term’s co-op jobs will be on campus as well, giving students the opportunity to be involved in food production.

While specifics about the farm haven’t been ironed out, “We want it to be beautiful and meaningful, to the village as well as the college,” Roosevelt said. “If we do it, we have to do it well.”

Because the new college faculty is small, the approach to sustainability is necessarily multi-disciplinary, Roosevelt said. He also identified other areas of the new college’s focus to be its core curriculum, which students are required to take in their first two years, excellence in writing and the college’s historic emphasis on work and its relationship to academics.

Economic sustainability as well

Sustainability at Antioch College goes beyond environmental issues, Roosevelt said, citing the college’s need to become economically sustainable.

“Ending the chronic poverty of this college is pre-eminently important if we want to become what we want to become,” he said. And the college is a long way from that goal.

“We are nowhere near a position of financial security,” he said.

The college has a budget of about $8 million yearly. It can draw down about $1.5 million annually from its endowment, and has received about $1.5 million so far this year from its annual fund drive, for a total this year of around $3 million.

“The board and I have been in discussions because I’m not comfortable with that situation,” Roosevelt said.

The central financial challenge is that the college’s first group of students is not paying tuition, and significant campus upgrades need to be completed before tuition can be charged, Roosevelt said. College leaders have planned for alumni to take up the financial slack until tuition kicks in, but many alumni remain hesitant to give.

“Many donors are still in a “wait and see” mode,” he said. “The complexity is having enough support to get through the next three years while we build a donor base and heal wounds. It’s not an uncomplicated task.”

The college did receive an anonymous challenge grant of $1.5 million until the end of June, Roosevelt said, and fund-raising for that matching grant is going well.

The college is also in the final stages of hiring a new director of development, who will play a significant role in raising money for the college.

New students give hope

The college’s new students are a “pretty dang cool, interesting and capable group,” Roosevelt said.

The college was thrilled to have 35 out of the 45 students it accepted choose to attend Antioch, 10 more than expected, he said. Because the first-year class is larger than expected, the second-year class, which had been envisioned at around 50, will likely be larger as well.

The new students have an overall grade point average of 3.56, and 18 of the 45 speak a second language. One is a National Merit Scholar finalist, two are semi-finalists and several completed rigorous secondary school programs, including International Baccalaureate.

According to a report to the board, 30 percent are interested in the social sciences, 29 percent in the humanities, 19 percent in the arts, 10 percent in the sciences and 3 percent are undecided.

One new student has been a circus performer, one a blacksmith, and the group includes musicians, journalists, filmmakers and students with “extensive experience in restorative social justice and leadership at their previous schools,” according to the report.

Twenty percent are students of color, including three African Americans, one Hispanic, one Middle Easterner, one Native American and one multi-racial student. Sixty percent of the new students are women.

But the college has not yet achieved the diversity in the student body and the new faculty that would be consistent with Antioch College values, Roosevelt said, in response to a question from board pro tem member Prexy Nesbitt.

Hiring continues

The college has hired three tenure-track faculty, in the areas of chemistry, philosophy and anthropology, and will soon announce the hiring of three more, in Spanish, the arts and literature, Roosevelt said.

“We had an enormous amount of interest in these jobs,” he said, regarding the number of applications received. While the sluggish economy accounts for some of that interest, many applicants also expressed specific interest in the traditions and values of Antioch.

Roosevelt said he continues to talk with former Antioch College faculty, and “desires to place as many former faculty as possible” at the college. Roosevelt described the talks as a “delicate” conversation that continues to move forward.

A key staff position currently being searched is the college’s dean of community life, “a hugely important job,” according to Roosevelt, who described the position as including work with students and faculty to create the college’s community government and campus culture, along with maintaining a relationship with the Yellow Springs community. That search should be finalized soon, he said.

Searches for a campus facilities manager and director of admissions are also taking place.

While Antioch College is still a “work in progress,” the college continues to move ahead, Roosevelt said. “A lot of work has occurred and there’s much more to be done. But in the main, better days are here.”

At the end of his talk, Roosevelt asked the audience to celebrate the successes of the past few years.

“You have a college that’s yours again,” he said to the alumni and community members present. “You have a president, staff and board that’s dedicated only to it. The students are wonderful. You have a college that once again has a chance to become the kind of college that makes a difference in American life.”

 

Antioch College names advancement head

On Friday, May 27, Antioch College President Mark Roosevelt announced that Stephen W. Sturman has been hired as the college’s new vice president for advancement.

The college, with assistance from the search firm Isaacson Miller, has been searching for a head fund-raiser for the college for about six months, since Roosevelt began his tenure as president.

Sturman, who will begin his work at Antioch July 1, was formerly a senior fund raiser for the Culver Educational Foundation, which supports the Culver Military Academy and Culver Girls Academy, both in Culver, Indiana.

He was instrumental in raising $376 million for the schools, according to an Antioch College press release.

“Steve is committed to community and to purpose — the notion of making a difference in one’s work — and it’s that sensibility that makes him a good fit for Antioch right now,” Roosevelt said in the press statement. “His work at Culver required that he get to know a specific kind of institution with a particular history and highly engaged alumni. That experience, together with his proven track record in fund-raising and sales, will be an invaluable asset as we work to firm up our foundation going forward.”

Sturman worked as a fund-raiser for the Culver Foundation since 2003. In that position, he managed a portfolio of 150 significant prospects and donors. His successes at Culver include the generation of deferred major gifts of more than $13 million; the creation of a $4 million endowment to support merit salary increases to faculty and staff; and generating an excess of $7 million over the 2009-2010 fiscal year.

Before that job, Sturman for 23 years operated Sturman and Company, a manufacturer’s representative sales agency founded in 1914. As a sales representative and owner/partner, he managed the Ohio sales territory, including accounts responsibilities for Jo-Ann Stores, Revco Drug Stores and Kroger.

Sturman earned a bachelors of science in management degree from Purdue University and attended the Fund Raising School at the Indiana University Center for Philanthropy.

Sustainability new focus for Antioch College

Leaders of the revived Antioch College intend to make the crisis in sustainability a focus for academic programs, according to President Mark Roosevelt in his State of the College address on Friday, May 20. The talk was given at the beginning of the college pro tem board’s weekend meeting.

“The way we live in America today is not sustainable. Period. The evidence for this is overwhelming and mounting every day,” Roosevelt said.

As part of the sustainability focus, the college may create a working farm on campus, on what is now the college golf course, according to Roosevelt, who said he and the board are talking about specifics. If the farm project takes place, students, all of whom are required to work 10 hours a week on campus, could take part in food production.

Many young people have an intuitive understanding of the importance of food in sustainability issues, Roosevelt said.

“Kids get it,” he said. “They get it and know it, they feel it and want to live it.”

To be able to offer the necessary classes, the tiny college will need to make good use of all of its human resources, according to Roosevelt.

“We need breadth,” he said. “We’ll have to cross boundaries. I want to soften the boundaries between administrators and faculty.” Specifically, he said, that could mean that some administrators, including himself,  take on some teaching responsibilities.

For a more detailed look at Roosevelt’s talk, see the May 26 Yellow Springs News.

John Sims exhibit to open at Antioch College

“Rhythm of Structure: Mathematics, Art and Poetic Reflection, Bowery and Beyond, an exhibit by artist John Sims, will open with a reception this Saturday, May 21, 6–9 p.m., at the Herndon Gallery on the Antioch campus.

The show, which runs to Nov. 1, “explores the poetic intersections between mathematics and art through a wide range of medium: painting, installation, poetry, films and sound art,” according to a press release.

The show, which was created by Sims from a year-long series of exhibits that premiered at the Bowery Poetry Club in New York City, also features the work of contemporary artists Sol LeWitt, Karen Finley, Dread Scott and DJ Spooky, among others.

A 1991 graduate of Antioch College, Sims currently lives in New York. At Antioch, he created as a senior project a week-long series of events focusing on African-American culture, which later turned into the African-American Cultural Works, or AACW.

The intellectual foundation of his current show “coincides with the Antioch vision for education,” Sims said in an interview this week. Specifically, he said, the show looks at “where mind meets hand, where theory meets practice and where the soul meets the body.”

Larger-than-expected enrollment at new Antioch

Antioch College leaders planned for 25 new students to help launch the college next fall, but recently they’ve revised their plans to accommodate a greater-than-expected interest in the revived college.

About 130 to 140 young people applied to Antioch, of which about 45 were accepted by the college, according to Antioch College Director of Communications Gariot Louima this week. College leaders anticipated that of those 45, about 25 would end up choosing Antioch.

But 35 students sent in their deposits and letters of intent by the May 1 deadline.

“It’s exciting. The interest in Antioch is really high,” Louima said.

All of the college’s first-year students will be Horace Mann fellows, and will receive free tuition.

The group of first-years is diverse and academically strong, according to Louima, who said many have completed some college coursework and most completed  rigorous post-secondary education curricula, such as International Baccalaureate programs or Advanced Placement courses. One new student was a National Merit Scholar Finalist and two others were semi-finalists for the award. They hail from a cross-section of the country.

For a more detailed story on the first-year students of the revived Antioch College, see the May 12 issue of the Yellow Springs News.