UNIVERSITY OF DALLAS
The 'University of Dallas' is a Catholic institution. It seeks to educate its students to develop the intellectual and moral virtues, to prepare themselves for life and work, and to become leaders in the community.
History
The University of Dallas (founded in 1956) is a private, Roman Catholic Diocesan university. The University was started with the assistance of the Sisters of Mary Namur and the Cistercian fathers at Our Lady of Dallas Monastery. The slogan of the university is 'The Catholic University for Independent Thinkers' and its mascot is "The Crusader."
Degree Programs
Undergraduate students are enrolled in the Constantin College of Liberal Arts or the College of Business. Graduate students enroll in the Braniff Graduate School, the School of Ministry, and the Graduate School of Management (GSM).
The University of Dallas offers thirty-one Bachelor of Arts majors and five Bachelor of Science majors. Students may earn Concentrations in a variety of disciplines (the equivalent of a Minor).
Via the Braniff Graduate School of Liberal Arts, the University of Dallas offers Master's degrees in many disciplines: American Studies, Art, Catholic School Leadership & Teaching, English, Humanities, Philosophy, Politics, Psychology, Religious Education and Theology. The Institute for Philosophic Studies offers three interdisciplinary doctorate degrees: Literature, Philosophy, and Politics.
Academics
All undergraduate students at the University of Dallas study a Core Curriculum, a series of specific courses that emphasizes the great ideas, deeds, and works of Western civilization from classical to modern times.
The core curriculum includes four classes in literary tradition (Epic Poetry, Lyrical Poetry, The Play (comedy and tragedy), and The Novel; four classes in history (two American and two Western Civilization); four philosophy (Philosophy and the Ethical Life, Philosophy of Man, Philosophy of Being and a Philosophy elective); two fine arts and one math, or one fine art and two maths. These requirements were recently reduced. Still required are: two of the same foreign language in the intermediate level or higher (modern or classical; German, French, Spanish, Italian; Latin and Greek); two theology classes (Understanding the Bible and Western Theological Tradition); one course in American politics and one course in economics.
After the core curriculum, students then go on to pursue their chosen major. Graduate studies are available in the Braniff College of Liberal Arts, the Graduate School of Management and the Institute for Religious and Pastoral Studies.
Core Values
- The University of Dallas is committed to the study and development of the western tradition of liberal education, and the Catholic intellectual tradition.
- The University of Dallas understands human nature to be spiritual and physical, rational and free. It is guided by principles of learning that acknowledge transcendent standards of truth and excellence that are themselves objects of inquiry and research.
- The University of Dallas is open to faculty and students of all faiths, and it supports their academic and religious freedom without discrimination.
- The University of Dallas seeks to maintain the dialogue of faith and reason, while assuring the proper autonomy of each of the arts, sciences, and professions.
- The University of Dallas promotes professional and graduate education that shares a common spirit with the liberal arts: reflecting critically on the ends governing the profession, fostering principled moral judgment, and providing the knowledge and skills requisite for professional excellence.
Core Curriculum
The core includes reading many of the ''Great Books'' in their entirety, which include:
- The Bible,
- Homer: ''Iliad'', ''The Odyssey''
- Aeschylus: ''Prometheus Bound'', ''The Oresteia,'' ''Agamemnon'', ''The Libation Bearers'',
''The Eumenides''
- Sophocles: ''Oedipus the King'', ''Oedipus at Colonus'', ''Antigone''
- Euripides: ''The Bacchae''
- Aristophanes: ''The Frogs''
- Thucydides: ''History of the Peloponnesian War''
- Plato: ''Republic'', ''Symposium''
- Aristotle: ''Metaphysics'', ''Nicomachean Ethics'', ''On the Soul'', ''The Poetics''
- Virgil: ''Aeneid''
- Livy: ''Ab Urbe Condita'' (''The History of Rome'') (selections)
- Pope Clement I: ''Letter to the Corinthians''
- Saint Ignatius of Antioch: ''Letters to the Ephesians'', ''Letters to the Romans''
- Saint Athanasius: ''On the Incarnation''
- Saint Irenaeus of Lyon: ''Against Heresies''
- St. Augustine: ''Confessions''
- Boethius: ''The Consolation of Philosophy''
- ''Beowulf''
- Einhard, ''Life of Charlemagne''
- St. Thomas Aquinas: ''On Essence and Existence'', ''Summa Theologiae'' (selections)
- Dante Aligheri: ''The Divine Comedy''
- ''Sir Gawain and the Green Knight''
- Thomas More: ''Utopia''
- Martin Luther: ''The Freedom of a Christian''
- John Calvin: ''Institutes of the Christian Religion''
- William Shakespeare: ''Hamlet'',
''Othello'', ''King Lear'', ''Merchant of Venice'', ''The Tempest''
- Council of Trent (selections)
- René Descartes: ''Discourse on Method'', ''Meditations on First Philosophy''
- John Milton: ''Paradise Lost''
- Immanuel Kant: ''Perpetual Peace''
- Denis Diderot: ''Encyclopedie'' (selections)
- Adam Smith: ''An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations'' (selections)
- Thomas Jefferson: ''A Summary View of the Rights of British America'' and ''The Declaration of Independence''
- United States Constitution
- Alexander Hamilton, John Jay and James Madison: ''The Federalist Papers''
- Benjamin Franklin: ''The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin''
- Edmund Burke: ''Reflections on the Revolution in France''
- Jane Austen: ''Mansfield Park''
- Alexis de Tocqueville: ''Democracy in America''
- Abraham Lincoln: ''Selected Speeches''
- Frederick Douglass: ''Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave''
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton: ''The Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions''
- Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels: ''The Communist Manifesto''
- Vatican I (selections)
- Pope Leo XIII, ''Rerum Novarum''
- Herman Melville: ''Moby Dick''
- Frederick Jackson Turner: ''The Significance of the Frontier in American History''
- Fyodor Dostoevsky: ''Crime and Punishment''
- Friedrich Nietzsche: ''Genealogy of Morals'', ''The Use and Abuse of History for Life''
- Henry Adams: ''The Education of Henry Adams''
- Martin Heidegger: ''Introduction to Metaphysics''
- George F. Kennan: ''American Diplomacy''
- William Faulkner: ''Go Down, Moses''
- Eli Wiesel: ''Night''
- Martin Luther King, Jr.: ''Letter from a Birmingham Jail''
- Vatican II: ''Lumen Gentium''
- Pope John Paul II: ''Centesimus Annus''
Presidents of the University of Dallas
★ F. Kenneth Brasted (1956-1959)
★ Robert Morris (1960-1962)
★ Dr. Donald A. Cowan (1962-1977)
★ Dr. John R. Sommerfeldt (1978-1980)
★ Dr. Svetozar Pejovich, acting president (1980-1981)
★ Dr. Robert Sasseen (July 1981-December 1995)
★ Monsignor Milam J. Joseph (October 1996-December of 2003)
★ Robert Galecke, interim president (December 2003-July 2004)
★ Dr. Francis (Frank) Lazarus (July 2004-present)
Faculty
The University of Dallas has 121 full-time faculty members and 35 part-time faculty members. 90% of the faculty hold a Ph.D. or highest degree in their field. The University has a student/faculty ratio of 12:1.
Students
The school is attended by 1,200 undergraduate students and 1,950 graduate students from 49 states and 18 countries; 71% of undergraduate students are Catholic. 56% of undergraduates are female. On campus residency is required of all students under 21 years of age who are not married, not a veteran of the military or who do not live with their parents in the DFW area. Tuition and fees for the 2006-07 academic year are $20,780 plus room and board of $7,332. In 2006 the University provided its students with $9 million in institutionally-funded scholarships and need-based grants.
Approximately 80% attend graduate school; over 85% of pre-med and over 90% of pre-law graduates are accepted by their first-choice professional school. There are over 40 clubs and organizations; varsity, club and intramural sports; lectures, films, exhibitions, concerts, plays; campus-wide annual celebrations.
Location
The 'University of Dallas' (UD) is a co-educational Roman Catholic university. The school is located on a 744 acre (3 km²) suburban campus in Irving, Texas, 12 miles (19 km) from downtown Dallas. It is just southeast of the upscale development of Las Colinas, Texas, whose canals and campanile are slightly reminiscent of Venice, which many UD students visit during their Rome semester.
The campus lies west of Texas Stadium, and is bordered on the south by Northgate Drive (and further south, state highway 183), on the northeast by state highway 114, and on the east by Braniff Drive and Loop 12. North of campus lie three Catholic religious houses: the Dominican fathers at St. Albert the Great Dominican Priory, Holy Trinity Seminary of the Catholic Diocese of Dallas, and north of highway 114, the Cistercian fathers at Our Lady of Dallas Cistercian Abbey. The Abbey runs a renowed 5-12 grade college prep school, Cistercian Preparatory School. Many of the University of Dallas faculty have been, and still are, Cistercian monks, and the prep school sends several of its graduates to UD. West of the UD campus, off Northgate Drive, is The Highlands School.
ROME PROGRAM
History
Since the 1970s, the University of Dallas has offered students, typically sophomores, the opportunity to spend a semester of study-and-travel based out of Rome, Italy. Over the years, the University has had several campuses in and around Rome (a sign of a former campus now hangs in the Irving campus cappuccino bar).
In 1990, the University purchased a villa southeast of Rome in the ''Castelli Romani'', the Alban Hills of ancient Roman history and legend. In June 1994, the newly renovated 12-acre property was inaugurated as the Eugene Constantin Rome Campus, and that fall it hosted its first students. Just south of Rome along the Via Appia, the campus includes a library, chapel, housing, a dining hall, classrooms, tennis courts, a swimming pool, an outdoor Greco-Roman theater, a ''forno'' (a traditional outdoor wood-burning oven), working vineyards and olive groves.
Mission
As part of the undergraduate education on the liberal arts, about 80% of students spend a semester (either the Fall or Spring, generally of the Sophomore year) studying in Rome. The Rome semester curriculum is carefully integrated with on-site experiences and focuses upon the history, art, and architecture of Ancient Greece, the Roman Republic and Roman Empire, the Early Christian Church, and Renaissance Italy.
Academics
Students take a full load of college courses (15 hours), taught by their University of Dallas faculty. Courses include
★ Literature (Lit Trad III: Greek and Shakespearean Tragedy and Comedy)
★ Theology (Western Theological Tradition: the Patristics, Augustine, Aquinas, Luther and Calvin)
★ Philosophy (Philosophy of Man)
★ Art and Architecture of Rome (ancient, medieval, and Renaissance)
★ Language (Italian, Greek)
★ History (Western Civilization I: ancient Egypt, Greece, Rome; medieval and Renaissance Europe)
Travel
Group Travel
To complement the Art and Architecture course, students visit and study historic sites around Rome.
The students and their professors also take two longer trips together. The first ventures to Northern Italy for 6 days; the second, to Greece for 10 days.
Campus Life
The Rome Campus is a close community, one in which students, professors, and the local Italian staff mingle collegially. There is a vibrant campus life.
Religious Life
★ 'Weekly masses' in the Aula Magna (the Main Hall)
★ 'Convocation Mass' in the campus theater
★ Masses in historic churches (St. Peter's, Assisi, etc.) during Group Travel
★ Weekend 'Silent Retreats' for Women and Men
★ 'Confession' and 'Adoration'
Artistic and Cultural Life
★ 'Faculty Lecture Series'
★ 'Guest Lectures'
★ student-directed 'Theater Productions', in the campus Greco-Roman theater (outdoor 'amphitheater')
★ end-of-semester 'Talent Show' (music, drama, sketch comedy, etc.)
Social Life
★ the semester kick-off 'Wine and Cheese Party'
★ 'Halloween' in the Fall, and 'Carnevale' (Mardi Gras) in the Spring
The Rome Semester is not just a study-abroad program; it is a life-altering experience. It deepens friendships--with both people and ideas--as it expands one's Weltanschaung.
Braniff Graduate School of Liberal Arts
A 1966 grant from the Blakley-Braniff Foundation established the Braniff Graduate School.
Students in Braniff can pursue Master of Arts degrees in Art, American Studies, English,Humanities, Philosophy, Politics, Psychology, and Theology.
The Institute for Philosophic Studies
In 1973, the Institute of Philosophic Studies, the doctoral program of the Braniff Graduate School and an outgrowth of the Kendall Politics and Literature Program, was initiated.
The Institute for Philosophic Studies (IPS) offers doctoral programs in Literature, Philosophy and Politics.
The IPS Core Curriculum
Like the undergraduate program, the IPS has a Core Curriculum:
College of Business
B.A. Business Leadership (undergraduate business)
Graduate School of Management
The Graduate School of Management (GSM) at the University of Dallas enrolls approximately 1,600 students in its programs, which are offered in the classroom (at the Irving, Tarrant County, and Plano campuses), onsite at corporate partner locations, and online. It hosts the largest MBA program in the D/FW metroplex, and was founded in 1966 to provide practical graduate management education to working adults.
The University of Dallas and its College of Business are accredited by:
★ The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS)
★ The International Assembly for Collegiate Business Education (IACBE)
★ The Association of Collegiate Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP)
Degrees granted by the Graduate School of Management include: Master of Business Administration (MBA) (21 concentrations), Master of Science (MS) (4 options), Master of Management (MM) (post-MBA) (19 options), and Graduate Certificates (34 options)
Concentrations available in the MBA Program are: Accounting, Business Management, Corporate Finance, Engineering Management, Entrepreneurship, Financial Services, Global Business, Health Services Management, Human Resource Management, Information Assurance, Information Technology, IT Service Management, Interdisciplinary, Marketing Management, Not-for-Profit Management, Organization Development, Project Management, Sports & Entertainment Management, Strategic Leadership, Supply Chain Management, and Telecommunications Management.
GSM Student Profile
★ Female students 41%
★ Male students 59%
★ Average age 34
★ 80% employed full-time
★ Average 7-10 years of experience
★ International students 20%
★ 65 countries represented
★ Undergraduate degrees 40% business/economics and 60% engineering/arts/sciences
School of Ministry
The University of Dallas School of Ministry began in 1987 as the Institute for Religious and Pastoral Studies (IRPS), offering masters degrees in theological studies (MTS) and religious education (MRE). The founders of the School of Ministry envisaged an institute dedicated to training ministers who could respond to pastoral needs in their local Church communities.
As such, the School has adopted a “practitioner” model program so as to integrate preparation for practical ministry with study of the more abstract elements of theology. IRPS was renamed the School of Ministry in April, 2007.
The University of Dallas School of Ministry is one of the only Catholic universities in the U.S. that offer a comprehensive, four-year Catholic Biblical School (CBS) certification program. This program, which covers every book of the Bible, is also offered online and in both English and Spanish. The CBS is the largest program of its kind among all Catholic universities in the U.S. based on 2007 enrollment numbers.
The School of Ministry offers the nation’s only Summer in Rome study program that is fully integrated into its master’s degree programs. Courses are taught at the University’s campus in Rome by members of the School’s faculty and other top theological scholars.
The University of Dallas’ School of Ministry is the only Catholic school in the country to offer its entire Master of Theological Studies degree program and CBS program online, as well as selected courses in its other master’s degree programs.
Graduate Programs
The School of Ministry offers a variety of Masters degrees and graduate certificates. Graduate students can pursue Masters degrees in: Theological Studies (MTS, Religious Education (MRE), Catholic School Leadership (MCSL), Catholic School Teaching (MCST), and Pastoral Ministry (MPM).
Graduate Certificates are also available in the same fields.
Masters classes are offered onsite at the University of Dallas main campus at Irving (Texas), and at Plano (Texas), Shreveport (Louisiana) as well as online. Onsite Classes are offered weekdays, weeknights and weekends. Online classes can be taken at any time during the week.
Biblical School
The School of Ministry Catholic Biblical School is a four-year program of intensive study covering the entire Bible. It is Catholic in that it follows the directives of Scripture study as given in the Vatican II document, Dei Verbum (1965), and in more recent documents by the Pontifical Biblical Commission such as The Interpretation of the Bible in the Church (1993), and The Jewish People and Their Sacred Scriptures in the Christian Bible (2002). The Biblical School is offered in both English and Spanish language. The Biblical School is taught onsite in a variety of Dallas-Fort Worth locations and online.
Online Education
Students can pursue a Masters degree or the Biblical School online. The School of Ministry is a leading innovator in online theological education. The advanced technologies used by the School of Ministry mean it is one of the very few Catholic masters degrees in theology that can be done entirely online, with no residential or on-site requirements.
Deacon Formation
The School of Ministry provides the academic component of deacon formation for the dioceses of Tyler and Dallas. Deacon formation is offered in both English and Spanish language.
Adult Faith Formation
This comprehensive program is offered over four years by the School of Ministry. The program offers college level classes for adults wanting to learn more about their faith. The program is open to people of all ages and backgrounds.
School of Ministry Student Body
The School of Ministry has about 125 graduate students, 620 Biblical School students and 130 students in Adult Faith Formation and Deacon Formation programs. Most students are part-time students. On-site students come from the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, surrounding parts of Texas. Online students come from all over the United States and around the world.
School of Ministry Faculty
The School of Ministry has nine full-time faculty and a number of part-time faculty. All full-time faculty teaching in the School of Ministry Graduate program hold a PhD.
Off-Campus Education
Students can do MBA degrees on-campus or online through the Graduate School of Management (GSM). The School of Ministry offers Masters degrees on-site and online. Both GSM and School of Ministry conduct classes in satellite campuses including Plano and North Richland Hills.
Campus Life
Social Events
Popular weekly events include:
★ 'TGIT' (Thank Goodness It's Thursday) concerts in the "Rat" (Rathskellar)
★ 'Music on the Mall' (Friday afternoons, recorded music is amplified onto the mall, and students congregate)
★ 'Weekend Rugby games'
Yearly events that attract large numbers of current students (and alumni) include:
★ 'Charity Week': 7 days of wild events in September-October organized by the current junior class (returning from their respective fall and spring semesters in Rome). The Jail is a highlight of the week: students and professors can pay to throw each other into a makeshift prison (and thus miss class). All proceeds from this student-run event (generally around $20,000) go to charities chosen by the students, such as the Low Birth Weight Development Center, in Dallas, Texas.
★ 'Oktoberfest': An outdoor festival that includes a live polka band, German food, a Beer Garden, and much polka-ing and chicken dancing
★ 'Groundhog Day': On the cusp of spring, students and faculty enjoy a concert/picnic/keg party in the woods. Formerly, the event was "undergroundhog" and was not sponsored by the college. To ensure student safety, the event has come "above-ground" and it is now policed by student life, and the Irving PD.
★ 'Mallapalooza': (a play on Lollapalooza), A day in April when bands play continuously while students listen, dance, buy commemorative tee shirts, and play on the inflatable games rented by the Office of Student Life.
Clubs and Organizations
Collegium Cantorum
Collegium Cantorum is the Latin Liturgical Choir of the University. Collegium, as the group is called, sings at Masses in the Our Lady of Dallas Cistercian Abbey Church (which borders the campus to the north), around Dallas, Texas, and around the world. Directed by Marilyn Walker, the choir has a broad repertoire of polyphonic Mass ordinaries and motets. The Schola, a subset of the group specializing in Gregorian Chant, is directed by Father Ralph March, a well-known chant scholar.
First Friday Masses, a Requiem Mass on November 2, and the Easter Triduum are Collegium traditions that draw in alumni from around the country to sing, and that overfill the Cistercian Abbey Church with listeners. Although membership ranges from 35-50 students a term, hundreds of students attend the Masses sung by Collegium in Irving and Dallas.
The University does not have a Music Major; however, the department offers a Concentration in Music.
Additional University of Dallas Facts
★ Youngest university in the 20th century to be granted a Phi Beta Kappa chapter
★ Top 10 Colleges for American Values based on the Intercollegiate Studies Institute’s (ISI) Choosing the Right College
★ The Harvard Business Review in May 2005 in an article titled, “How Business Schools Lost Their Way”, recognized the university as one of four business schools in the nation that had retained its professional focus and was an example of best practices
★ The undergraduate class of 2005 contained nine Fulbright Scholars
★ One percent of all MBAs in the world received their degree from UD
★ Recognized by the Princeton Review for being “one of the best private school bargains in the nation” and in the top 20 for having outstanding professors
★ Recognized by the Princeton Review for being one of the top 10 universities in the nation where students pray on a regular basis and students are most nostalgic for Ronald Reagan
★ UD has maintained a campus in Rome, Italy for over 35 years where virtually all of its undergraduate students attend for a semester
★ UD alumni are represented in over 150 countries around the world
★ UD freshmen have the third highest average SAT scores in Texas for incoming freshmen behind Rice and Trinity.
★ First university in America to be accredited by the American Academy of Liberal Education
★ The only Ph.D. program in the United States with a core curriculum in the great books
★ The Fiske Guide to Colleges states that the University of Dallas is without a doubt the best Catholic-affiliated school south of Washington, D.C.
★ Recognized by the Dallas Business Journal as being the number one choice for graduate management education for working adults in the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex
★ The National Review ranks the University of Dallas as one of the top 50 liberal arts schools in the nation
★ Despite having an excellent academic track record for its students, the University of Dallas has had continuous financial problems for many years.
★ One of the only Universities to offer a bachelor's degree in Political-philosophy and a Masters of Politics degree.
★ Religious life is served by the Chapel of the Incarnation. Dedicated in 1985 the chapel, the now Church of the Incarnation serves as an on campus parish that ministers to staff, faculty, administration, students and residents of Irving and surrounding communities.
★ The University of Dallas was one of three finalists (together with Baylor University and Southern Methodist University) for the site of the George W. Bush Presidential Library. The University of Dallas withdrew itself from consideration on January 22, 2007.
★ The University is located on the highest point in Dallas County and has excellent views of the Dallas skyline and the countryside.
Notable Alumni
Among UD alumni are:
★ Peter MacNicol - actor whose notable appearances include Mr. Bean, Ghostbusters II, Ally McBeal, and 24[1]
'Academia'
Among the noted scholars who have attended UD are:
(Name, Field, Institution)
★ Arthur L. Boyer, Professor of Radiation Oncology, Stanford University
★ Daniel Donaghue, Professor of English, Harvard University
★ Thomas Hibbs, Dean of the Honors College, Baylor University
★ Eileen C. Sweeney, Professor of Philosophy, Boston College
★ Brantly Womack, Professor of Government and Foreign Affairs, University of Virginia
References
1. Peter MacNicol Biography
External links
★ University of Dallas
★ "The Dallas MBA" at the University of Dallas College of Business
★ The University of Dallas School of Ministry
★ Independent Student/Alumni Forum for the University of Dallas
★ The School at a glance, from USNews.com
★ Info from collegeprofiles.com
★ Handbook of Texas brief history
★ Princeton Review
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