Our History
NTL Institute was created over 50 years ago, a product
of both the vision of its founders and the demands of
their times.
The worst war in history had just ended-a war
ostensibly fought over the concepts of freedom and
democracy. No one understood the dangers and the
opportunities of those times more clearly than Kurt Lewin.
Having fled the encroaching Holocaust of Nazi Germany in
1932, he knew the potential that humanity had for good and
evil, and he firmly believed the social sciences could,
and must, be used to address that potential.
While teaching at the University of Iowa, Lewin met Ronald
Lippitt, then a graduate student. Over the course of the next
10 years, Lippitt introduced Lewin and his ideas to Kenneth
Benne and Leland Bradford. All four men shared a personal
and professional interest in the applied behavioral sciences
and in the belief that science should be used to integrate
democratic values in society. Lippitt, Benne, and Bradford
would become the founders of NTL.
In 1946, while serving as director of MIT's new
Research Center for Group Dynamics, a group he helped
found, Lewin was contacted by the American Jewish Congress
Committee on Community Interrelations and the Connecticut
Interracial Commission to assist in the training of
leaders who would deal with intergroup tensions in their
home communities. The training, scheduled that summer in
New Britain, Connecticut, was organized by Lewin to
include three continuing learning groups, each with a
leader and an observer, who was to record interaction
among the participants. Lippitt was recruited to lead one
of the groups, and he, in turn, recruited Benne and
Bradford to lead the other two.
What happened next has become legendary in the annals
of NTL and the field of group training.
At the start of one of the early evening observers'
sessions, three of the participants asked to be present.
Much to the chagrin of the staff, Lewin agreed to this
unorthodox request. As the observers reported to the
group, one of the participants-a woman-disagreed with the
observer on the interpretation of her behavior that day.
One other participant agreed with her assertion and a
lively discussion ensued about behaviors and their
interpretations. Word of the session spread, and by the
next night, more than half of the sixty participants were
attending the feedback sessions which, indeed became the
focus of the conference. Near the conference's end, the
vast majority of participants were attending these
sessions, which lasted well into the night.
Lewin, Bradford, Benne, and Lippitt knew that something
exciting had happened, a new and important method of adult
learning had been discovered and needed development. This
methodology confirmed Lewin's beliefs that experiences
shared by the training group-learning by experience rather
than lecture and reading-provided high potential for
diagnostic study, evaluation and, most important, for
changing behaviors. This was action-research at its best.
Could this process of group building and learning
derived from it be used in a variety of organizational and
community situations, nationally and cross-culturally? The
four men were determined to find out. The Training Group
was born.
The Beginning of NTL
Incorporating learning from the first, planning for a
second conference began almost immediately. Funding was
secured from the Office of Naval Research and the National
Education Association (NEA) where Bradford was serving as
Director of Adult Education. The planning group was named
the National Training Laboratory for GROUP development,
later shortened to NTL, and eventually to NTL Institute
for Applied Behavioral Science.
Believing that change could more readily occur if the
learning took place some distance from the participant's
home environment, Lewin had chosen Bethel, Maine, a
mountain community of 2,200 people, as the site, or
"cultural island" for the first conference.
Unfortunately, Lewin, the leading theorist of the
T-Group, did not live to see the first NTL program
enacted. Lewin's death in February of 1947 was a shock;
however, the successes of the 1946 conference and the
potential of the new methodology was already drawing some
of the best and brightest in social psychology to NTL.
These included Paul Sheats, R. Freed Bales, Kurt Back,
Morton Deutsch, Henry Reicken, and Stanley Schacter.
The success of the 1947 Laboratory was evident to all
in attendance, and word of this new concept in training
spread rapidly. More than 100 delegates, as participants
were called then, participated in the second conference of
1948, and others had to be turned away.
Even in its formative years, NTL was in the foremost of
meeting the changes and challenges of its times. Funding
support was supplemented by a major grant from the
Carnegie Foundation and numerous in-kind services from
several major universities. Clinical psychologists were
added to the staff to help persons experiencing stress in
the training groups (now called T Groups); the number of
participants and sessions increased; and a Wives' Group
was formed (the feminist movement was still almost two
decades down the road, and NTL, while broadly viewed as
progressive, still reflected many of the sexist tenets of
the time).
By 1949, NTL was consciously expanding its staff to
include scientists and educators from a wide variety of
groups and occupations. Similarly, research around the T
Groups was conducted at multiple levels, paralleling this
variety of disciplines.
The concept of sensitivity training emerged as a version
of the T Group, and NTL became a quasi-independent
organization operating under the aegis of NEA, eventually
offering many different program offerings beyond the T
Group.
T Group Technology Expands and Gains Credibility
Growth brought along expansion in geographical
offerings and training methodology. Regional labs and
liaisons were established in Ohio, Colorado, California,
Illinois, Massachusetts, Washington state, and
Pennsylvania. On an international level, between 1954 and
1956, several labs were conducted in Europe, and a program
for hospital administrators was conducted in Puerto Rico.
Paralleling this growth was the development of different
training configurations to supplement the T Group. These
included: S Groups (skill development), A Groups (action),
C Groups (community leadership), and X Groups (for those
not benefiting from T Groups).
A 1949 meeting of the Society for the Psychological
Study of Social Issues, a division of he American
Psychological Association, included a demonstration by
Bradford, Lippitt, and others in the use of role playing
in the T Groups. The presentation was attended by numerous
well-known scientists, including Margaret Mead, friend and
former collaborator of Lewin, and drew the attention of a
broader community of social scientists to NTL's work. In
1957, NTL formalized its circle of influence with the
formation of the NTL network, which included the
founders-Benne, Bradford, and Lippitt-as well as others,
including Richard Beckhard, Jack Gibb, Murray Horowitz,
Gale Jenson, Gordon Lippitt, and Alvin Zander.
The original focus of NTL on leadership training, and
its obvious success in this area, attracted the interest
of organizations in many areas. For NTL, the drive was to
create and develop the skills of "change
agents," as they came to be called. For
organizational leaders, particularly those in corporate
America, the new mechanisms of problem-solving arising
from T Group methodology presented new opportunities for
addressing growing confrontations in various sectors of
society.
Complementing programs at Bethel and the regional
sites, programs were condensed on a consulting basis with
such organizations like the American Red Cross, Standard
Oil of New Jersey (now Exxon), the National Council of
Churches, and the Department of Health in Puerto Rico. The
work also fit well with NTL's growing work with strategic
constituencies, such as the Key Executive Conference in
1957 for presidents and vice presidents (now the Senior
Executive's Challenge), and programs dealing with
significant conflicts. Indeed, NTL's cadre of leading
social scientists strongly contributed to the evolving
field of Organizational Development (OD), and had a
dynamic effect on administration and management in
organizational America.
The Vision and Pain of Success
The growth of NTL in the sixties was phenomenal. Income
between 1963 and 1968 had multiplied by five, contracts by
nine, and the NTL network had nearly doubled. More
specialized labs were being developed for industry,
religious and community leaders, as well as for college
youth and school executives. In 1965, NTL began publishing
The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, capitalizing on
and building its credibility within the field. Indeed,
through its programs, NTL had itself become a change
agent.
With strong revenue projections and the apparent
growing interest from many constituencies, the NTL Board
began planning for sustained growth. In 1967, after many
years as a part of the NEA, the NTL Institute for Applied
Behavioral Science was incorporated with Bradford as
executive director and with a vision to develop an NTL
University.
As the sixties came to a close, a number of factors,
both internal and external, had a profound effect on NTL
and its future growth. The rising feminist movement and the
demand for transformative socio-political change in the
black community found voice in the ranks of NTL members.
In the summer of 1968, a Black Caucus of NTL members
presented Bradford with a list of demands relating to
hiring, governance, and recruiting. Women's groups within
NTL had been organizing for several years and in the
summer of 1971, the first NTL Women's Caucus was held in
Bethel (to date the only project directed towards women
was the Wives' T Group). Both groups saw the Board and
staff as overwhelmingly white, male, and over 40. The
discrimination in the NTL system was exacerbated and
exemplified by the Board's suggestion that the proposed
NTL University be named the University of Man.
Other problems within the membership had been
developing over a number of years. The NTL Network was
divided into three levels of membership-fellows,
associates, and affiliates-which created a strong
impression of elitism, particularly among younger minority
and female members who were sorely underrepresented in
NTL's governance. The sheer size of the Network, now
numbering 400, was creating accreditation problems for the
organization. Even the burgeoning OD movement had created
a new constituency of entrepreneurial members and
participants, who looked to NTL for training, credentials,
and contracts and then successfully competed with NTL for
contracts. For longtime NTL members, these developments
represented a major alteration and abuse of the
organization's original mission.
Externally, the economy was entering a recession. At
NTL, the Department of Defense cancelled major training
contracts; the Board's plan for the proposed NTL
University ended abruptly when the site selected was
reappraised and found to be too expensive; and the
organization incurred a large debt to finance a sorely
needed renovation of the Bethel facility. All these issues
came to a head as Leland Bradford, NTL's only director
since it's inception, announced that he would retire in
1970.
Entering the 1970's, NTL faced a membership disillusioned
by the growing image of an organization in decline.
Paradoxically, NTL was facing changes and difficulties in
its own organization that it had helped other
organizations to solve. The Board focused on changing
governance, dissolving the Network, increasing financial
stability, and basing membership on qualifications.
However, by 1975, the debt remained unpaid, the Board was
essentially the same gender-racial makeup of its
predecessors, and the network stood dissolved. With
contingency plans for bankruptcy in hand, the Board formed
a committee determined to save NTL. Called the Four
Horsepersons, the committee consisted of Barbara Bunker,
Hal Kellner, Edith Seashore, and Peter Vaill.
In November of 1975, the Four Horsepersons presented the
Board with the names of 65 past NTL network members
willing to give two weeks of unpaid work over the next two
years, and a reorganization plan to reconstitute the Board
with one-third white males, one-third women, and one-third
minorities. The Board accepted the plan and NTL set out
again to become a viable organization of consequence.
NTL's Evolution and Learning Continues
The 1975 reorganization of NTL was a turning point for
the organization and set the stage for its continued
evolution.
In governance, Elsie Cross was elected as Chair of the
Board, the first African-American and the first woman to
hold that post; Edith Seashore became the first President of NTL; and the reconstituted Board put in
place a "cohort system," NTL's institutional
commitment to diversity ensuring that the Board,
committees, program staffs, and member recruitment equally
represent women of color, men of color, white men, and
white women.
Financially, NTL was able to pay its debts by 1979. In
programs, labs in Bethel were thriving; the organization
was again developing programs for individual, group, and
organizational development; and in 1981, NTL, in
collaboration with American University, initiated a
Master's Program in Human Resource Development (now a
Master's in Organizational Development).
By recognizing and embracing the diversity of its
members in the sweeping reforms of the mid-seventies, NTL
not only learned the value that differences can bring to
an organization's internal workings, but studied and
shared these practices in its approach to individual,
group, and organization change.
Over the last decade, NTL has struggled and succeeded
in advancing the method, practice, and theory initiatives
of its founders by seizing the potential for democracy in
educational and organizational settings. The character of
the NTL membership reflects broader diversity and mastery
of disciplines than ever imagined, and is drawn together
by core values and authentic colleague-ship. NTL's
renowned Journal of Applied Behavioral Science contributes
a body of knowledge to the field that increases our
understanding of change processes and outcomes; and the
publication continues to grow in reputation and prestige
around the world. Human Interaction labs are still the
most popular, the most replicated, and simply the most
effective programs ever for changing human attitudes and
behaviors. And new applications of experiential learning
have emerged to represent the most current and cutting
edge programs in the fields of change management, human
resources, organizational development, training, and
diversity.
NTL's vision of the next fifty years includes a
membership dedicated to the personal and professional
advancement of each individual and organization whom we
touch; an organization stimulated by research and inquiry
seeking the continuous renewal of NTL members through our
learning community; and NTL programs, products, and
services that are of the highest quality providing
discovery and application of knowledge in group dynamics,
organizational change, and societal change.
The founders of NTL and the many who have followed them
did not set out to change the world. But, their influence
and contributions undeniably transformed the field of
Applied Behavioral Science. The "exciting adventure
into the unknown" continues.
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