More than 200 American colleges and universities call themselves Catholic. This affiliation contains surprising variability in its organizational and cultural manifestations, as well as its adherence to Church teachings and practices. Prospective students, parents, alumni, benefactors, accrediting agencies, and Church leaders all have an interest in gauging the effective “Catholicity” of an institution. However, there are no easy metrics to separate the most “orthodox” from the most secular, and public reputations are often misleading. This article suggests that one way to assess an institution is to go directly to the students with carefully designed surveys of religious belie...
Catholic studies programs seem to be springing up like mushrooms all over the country\u27. Typically...
This study compared the perceptions of the mission identity and mission-driven campus activitie...
When students are in the college search process, they look to many different resources to help them ...
Catholicism on Campus: Stability and Change in Catholic Student Faith by College Typ
Catholic colleges and universities in America have significantly changed philosophically, demographi...
Since the publication of Ex Corde Ecclesiae (John Paul II, 1990), Catholic colleges and universities...
As a ministry of the Catholic Church, Catholic schools are charged with educating students’ hearts ...
This article shows how Merrimack College’s Catholic heritage and Augustinian tradition provide...
It can be difficult to define Catholic university identity in universal terms — or to compare one Ca...
Divided into three parts, this article first describes the impact that historical and sociologi...
Institutional vision is a philosophical template”a concept of what, at its best, a college or univer...
This paper considers the Catholic culture of American Catholic colleges and universities in light of...
This paper proposes a new model for Catholic educational institutions in secular culture. This ...
Catholic higher education is prospering, but most colleges and universities exhibit uncertainty abou...
All Catholic institutions are increasingly involved in discussions about what constitutes Catholic i...
Catholic studies programs seem to be springing up like mushrooms all over the country\u27. Typically...
This study compared the perceptions of the mission identity and mission-driven campus activitie...
When students are in the college search process, they look to many different resources to help them ...
Catholicism on Campus: Stability and Change in Catholic Student Faith by College Typ
Catholic colleges and universities in America have significantly changed philosophically, demographi...
Since the publication of Ex Corde Ecclesiae (John Paul II, 1990), Catholic colleges and universities...
As a ministry of the Catholic Church, Catholic schools are charged with educating students’ hearts ...
This article shows how Merrimack College’s Catholic heritage and Augustinian tradition provide...
It can be difficult to define Catholic university identity in universal terms — or to compare one Ca...
Divided into three parts, this article first describes the impact that historical and sociologi...
Institutional vision is a philosophical template”a concept of what, at its best, a college or univer...
This paper considers the Catholic culture of American Catholic colleges and universities in light of...
This paper proposes a new model for Catholic educational institutions in secular culture. This ...
Catholic higher education is prospering, but most colleges and universities exhibit uncertainty abou...
All Catholic institutions are increasingly involved in discussions about what constitutes Catholic i...
Catholic studies programs seem to be springing up like mushrooms all over the country\u27. Typically...
This study compared the perceptions of the mission identity and mission-driven campus activitie...
When students are in the college search process, they look to many different resources to help them ...