This article is a direct outgrowth of the appearance of Ex Corde Ecclesiae and the need for Catholic colleges and universities to address their hiring practices in order to maintain their identity as Catholic institutions of higher learning. The author draws a parallel between the personal philosophy of individuals within the community and the perceived, if not real, institutional philosophy of the college or university as Catholic. Catholic institutions can lose their souls while climbing the ladder of success and prestige simply because they have paid insufficient attention to the question of the philosophical fit between their employees and their espoused Catholic mission and philosophy. Hiring the right people will determine, in the lon...
The impact of increases in lay leadership in Catholic higher education is an issue of considerable d...
Catholic colleges and universities in America have significantly changed philosophically, demographi...
It can be difficult to define Catholic university identity in universal terms — or to compare one Ca...
This article is a direct outgrowth of the appearance of Ex Corde Ecclesiae and the need for Catholic...
This article presents how the division of student affairs at Siena College developed a framewor...
Although Catholic universities face a number of challenges in an increasingly unsettled economy...
When students are in the college search process, they look to many different resources to help them ...
Dialogue about Catholic identity has been taking place at American Catholic colleges and universitie...
Catholic institutions of higher education continue to wrestle with the demands of John Paul II’s Apo...
The Mission Office is a new structural administrative center slowly being established by a growing n...
With its 25th anniversary nearing, it is time to reassess the significance of Ex corde ecclesiae. In...
Catholic higher education is prospering, but most colleges and universities exhibit uncertainty abou...
This article argues that any quest to establish or strengthen Catholic identity in educational insti...
Responding to challenges questioning the possibility of distinctively Catholic higher education, thi...
Since the publication of Ex Corde Ecclesiae (John Paul II, 1990), Catholic colleges and universities...
The impact of increases in lay leadership in Catholic higher education is an issue of considerable d...
Catholic colleges and universities in America have significantly changed philosophically, demographi...
It can be difficult to define Catholic university identity in universal terms — or to compare one Ca...
This article is a direct outgrowth of the appearance of Ex Corde Ecclesiae and the need for Catholic...
This article presents how the division of student affairs at Siena College developed a framewor...
Although Catholic universities face a number of challenges in an increasingly unsettled economy...
When students are in the college search process, they look to many different resources to help them ...
Dialogue about Catholic identity has been taking place at American Catholic colleges and universitie...
Catholic institutions of higher education continue to wrestle with the demands of John Paul II’s Apo...
The Mission Office is a new structural administrative center slowly being established by a growing n...
With its 25th anniversary nearing, it is time to reassess the significance of Ex corde ecclesiae. In...
Catholic higher education is prospering, but most colleges and universities exhibit uncertainty abou...
This article argues that any quest to establish or strengthen Catholic identity in educational insti...
Responding to challenges questioning the possibility of distinctively Catholic higher education, thi...
Since the publication of Ex Corde Ecclesiae (John Paul II, 1990), Catholic colleges and universities...
The impact of increases in lay leadership in Catholic higher education is an issue of considerable d...
Catholic colleges and universities in America have significantly changed philosophically, demographi...
It can be difficult to define Catholic university identity in universal terms — or to compare one Ca...