Sister M. Madeleva Wolff, C.S.C., teacher, essayist, poet, and college administrator, through her creative ability and innovative practices made possible major contributions to Catholic education in her lifetime. Without her strong personality and boundless energy, many of her dreams for an ideal college curriculum would not have come to fruition. Her most significant legacy, the Graduate School of Theology, afforded for the first time the opportunity for the laity and religious women to study theology at the graduate level. She served as president of St. Mary’s College, Notre Dame, Indiana, from 1934 to 1961
Thesis advisor: Hosffman OpsinoWomen Religious founded more than half of the current two hundred and...
This paper includes part of an interview with Sr. Carol Navitski, a woman religious and teacher. Dur...
shape the first national organization of American women religious, the Sister Formation Conference (...
Sister M. Madeleva Wolff, C.S.C., teacher, essayist, poet, and college administrator, through her cr...
It is often stated that Catholic schools in the US were built on the foundation of the poverty of th...
administrator, through her creative ability and innovative practices made possible major contributio...
Mary Emil Penet, I.H.M., (1916-2001) used her talents and charisma to shape the first national organ...
This paper dives into some of the adventures that Sister Colleen Clair has experienced throughout he...
The author, a principal in the diocese in which Sr. Lucille Kalinowski served as superintendent, ref...
A decline in the number of vowed religious who teach and administer in Catholic high schools has pla...
It is often stated that Catholic schools in the US were built on the foundation of the poverty of vo...
Through the dedicated labor of women religious, the Catholic school system represents the largest pr...
I entered high school at Convent of the Visitation School, a private, all-girls Catholic school in M...
I interviewed Sr. Celia in January of 2018, where she discussed her life as a woman religious. The p...
Nuns in the Newsroom: The Sisters of Marillac College and U.S. Sisters\u27 Involvement in Social Jus...
Thesis advisor: Hosffman OpsinoWomen Religious founded more than half of the current two hundred and...
This paper includes part of an interview with Sr. Carol Navitski, a woman religious and teacher. Dur...
shape the first national organization of American women religious, the Sister Formation Conference (...
Sister M. Madeleva Wolff, C.S.C., teacher, essayist, poet, and college administrator, through her cr...
It is often stated that Catholic schools in the US were built on the foundation of the poverty of th...
administrator, through her creative ability and innovative practices made possible major contributio...
Mary Emil Penet, I.H.M., (1916-2001) used her talents and charisma to shape the first national organ...
This paper dives into some of the adventures that Sister Colleen Clair has experienced throughout he...
The author, a principal in the diocese in which Sr. Lucille Kalinowski served as superintendent, ref...
A decline in the number of vowed religious who teach and administer in Catholic high schools has pla...
It is often stated that Catholic schools in the US were built on the foundation of the poverty of vo...
Through the dedicated labor of women religious, the Catholic school system represents the largest pr...
I entered high school at Convent of the Visitation School, a private, all-girls Catholic school in M...
I interviewed Sr. Celia in January of 2018, where she discussed her life as a woman religious. The p...
Nuns in the Newsroom: The Sisters of Marillac College and U.S. Sisters\u27 Involvement in Social Jus...
Thesis advisor: Hosffman OpsinoWomen Religious founded more than half of the current two hundred and...
This paper includes part of an interview with Sr. Carol Navitski, a woman religious and teacher. Dur...
shape the first national organization of American women religious, the Sister Formation Conference (...