There are 27 Jesuit colleges and universities across the U.S. for students seeking this type of Catholic education.
As 1,952 students with exuberant cheers graduated from Seattle University last weekend, we Jesuit educators trusted they would carry forward not only their high degree of professionalism, but also the ...
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, at least 20 Jesuit colleges and universities began admitting women to their undergraduate programs. While many had already admitted women to graduate programs, ...
Jesuit educational environments have inherited a distinctive characteristic directly derived from the spirituality of St. Ignatius of Loyola and the mindset of the earliest companions who co-founded ...
In the United States, there are 28 Jesuit colleges and universities and 60 high schools. The first of these was Georgetown, established in 1789. Boston College was the eleventh when it was founded in ...
In an era of rapid change in higher education, University President Rev. William P. Leahy, S.J., believes Jesuit schools can evolve while staying grounded in what has worked for almost 500 ...
The Ignatian Colleagues Program (ICP) is a national program of the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities (AJCU) designed to educate and form administrators and faculty more deeply in the ...
When asked about the immense challenges facing higher education today, Linda LeMura, the president of Le Moyne College in Syracuse, offered a response of encouragement to all of our Jesuit ...
As part of Jesuit Heritage Week, a panel of university faculty reflected yesterday on different aspects of “Women in Jesuit Education.” The panelists, including University Provost Dorothy Brown, ...
I have now spent the past six years of my life in a Jesuit learning environment and as most know that comes with a lot of reflection. In fact, I probably spent at least a third of my high school ...
Throughout American education, the statistics are glaring: Boys are twice as likely to be diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; five times more ...