2011-2013 Undergraduate Catalogue 
    
    Nov 23, 2024  
2011-2013 Undergraduate Catalogue [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

The College (Brooklyn Campus)



Mission and Goals of St. Joseph’s College

The mission of St. Joseph’s College is to provide a strong academic and value-oriented education at the undergraduate and graduate levels, rooted in a liberal arts tradition that supports provision for career preparation and enhancement. The College aims in this way to prepare each student for a life characterized by integrity, intellectual and spiritual values, social responsibility, and service–a life that is worthy of the College’s motto, Esse non videri: “To be, not to seem.”

Independent and coeducational, St. Joseph’s College provides affordable private education that serves a diverse population of academically eligible students.

St. Joseph’s College affirms the dignity, freedom, and inherent value of each person. This affirmation is realized through a student-centered environment wherein the faculty’s primary commitment is to excellence in teaching. In this open, supportive atmosphere, students are challenged to develop their full potential and are encouraged to acquire a spirit of inquiry and a joy in learning.

To accomplish this mission, St. Joseph’s College has established the following goals:

  • to offer curricula that foster the knowledge and intellectual skills associated with the liberally educated person;
  • to encourage students to develop personal value systems and responsible self-direction;
  • to foster committed participation in the local and global communities;
  • to help students develop as whole persons by providing individual attention, interactive teaching, and opportunities for active participation in academic and extracurricular programs;
  • to prepare students for their careers by offering the necessary professional and pre-professional education;
  • to provide for the needs of a diversified student population with varied educational and professional experiences;
  • to foster an environment of openness to the exploration and understanding of diverse ideas, traditions and cultures;
  • to support educational programs and services that will contribute to the vitality of the communities served by the Brooklyn and Suffolk Campuses.

History

St. Joseph’s College for Women, as it was then known, was founded by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Brentwood, in response to the need for a day college for young women. The College received its provisional charter from the Regents of the University of the State of New York on February 24, 1916. From its earliest days, the College articulated its mission in terms of academic quality, value orientation, and career preparation. These values, coupled with the financial support and leadership of the Sisters of St. Joseph, brought early success and the College quickly outgrew its original facilities at 286 Washington Avenue. In 1918 the College moved to its present site at 245 Clinton Avenue, and the first baccalaureate degrees were conferred on twelve graduates on June 17, 1920. The College was accredited in 1928 by the Commission on Higher Education of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. The Regents granted St. Joseph’s College an Absolute Charter in 1929. Reverend William T. Dillon, J.D., Professor of Philosophy, who served as Dean of the College and later its President, guided its growth during the significant years that followed.

Under the visionary leadership of Msgr. Dillon, the College placed great emphasis on the holistic development of each student, encouraging personal independence and integrity. This student-centered culture has continued to characterize the College. Academically, the College pioneered in the study of child development, and in 1934 opened a laboratory pre-school, now the renowned Dillon Child Study Center.

With a reputation for strong academic programs and a faculty dedicated to excellence in teaching, the College undertook its first extensive building program during the presidency of Sr. Vincent Therese Tuohy. McEntegart Hall Library opened in 1965 and the Dillon Child Study Center in 1968.

S. George Aquin O’Connor’s presidency, 1969–1997, coincided with a period of radical change in higher education. To meet new societal needs, the College admitted men to full matriculation, developed the Suffolk Campus in Patchogue, Long Island, created the School of Professional and Graduate Studies for adult students, introduced undergraduate programs in Accounting, Business, Nursing, health professions, and a Master’s program in Child Study. In support of these academic programs, Callahan Library was constructed on the Patchogue Campus in 1988. For the enrichment of student life, the Danzi Athletic Center opened on the Suffolk Campus in 1997.

S. Elizabeth A. Hill, MA, JD, elected President in 1997, has emphasized the importance of both continuity and change. Undergraduate programs continue to grow even as the College has introduced new Master’s programs in Management, Executive MBA, Literacy, Nursing, Special Education, and Human Resource Management. Reflecting the technological world in which we live, all college classrooms are now smart classrooms, equipped with the latest technological support. All buildings are wired, and the two campuses are connected with video-conferencing, enabling a number of courses to be taught simultaneously on both campuses. The Business and Technology Center opened on the Suffolk Campus in 2001. The purchase of the St. Angela Hall property in 2001 made possible major renovations in the landmark-status buildings on the Brooklyn Campus.

At ninety-five years, the College looks back on a history of innovation and adaptability to changing circumstances and needs. The College has grown from its roots in Brooklyn, with its first graduating class of twelve students to two campuses and an enrollment of over 5400 students and thirty thousand alumni. The College looks forward to celebrating the one hundredth anniversary of its founding with renewed dedication to transforming lives, one student at a time.

Location

St. Joseph’s College has two campuses: the main campus is located in the residential Clinton Hill section of Brooklyn, and the Suffolk branch campus is located in Patchogue, Long Island.

The Main Campus: St. Joseph’s College, as an urban college with a campus, offers easy access to all transit lines, to the Long Island Expressway, to all bridges in Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Queens, as well as to the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge to Staten Island. This convenient location brings students from every part of the Greater New York Metropolitan area to the College each day, where they enjoy the freedom of campus life while profiting from the many cultural advantages of New York City. Within the space of one half hour, students leaving St. Joseph’s College may find themselves in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the 42nd Street Library, Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center, the Broadway theatre district, Madison Square Garden, or Citi Field.

The College itself stands in the center of one of the nation’s most diversified academic communities, consisting of six colleges and universities within a two-mile radius of each other. St. Joseph’s College offers its students easy access to the other colleges and such cultural facilities as the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Brooklyn Public Library, and the Brooklyn Museum of Art.

The Long Island Campus: St. Joseph’s branch campus is located in Patchogue. The thirty-two acre campus is bounded on the south by West Roe Boulevard and on the north by Sunrise Highway. It is easily accessible from the south shore locations via Southern State, Sunrise Highway (Exit 52), and from central and northern Long Island via Veterans Highway, Patchogue-Holbrook Road, Nicolls Road or Route 112.

Facilities–Brooklyn Campus

The Administration Building-Tuohy Hall

Named in memory of a late President of the College, the Administration Building contains classrooms, an auditorium, computer facilities, student government offices, student lounges, the gymnasium, fitness center, and administrative offices. The chemistry and physics laboratories, and the art studio are on the third floor.

Burns Hall

This beautiful Federal-style building contains formal parlors, a formal dining room, a chapel, the Admissions Offices, student lounge and kitchen, and the biology instructional and research laboratories.

St. Joseph’s Hall

This five story building houses the Office of Institutional Advancement, the Alumni Office, several academic department offices, and the Psychology Laboratory. The beautiful Bloodgood garden, located behind St. Joseph’s Hall, provides space for alumni reunions, student gatherings, and receptions.

Lorenzo Hall

Lorenzo Hall, located at 265 Clinton Avenue, houses the administrative offices of the School of Professional and Graduate Studies.

McEntegart Hall

McEntegart Hall, a fully air-conditioned five-level structure, houses the college library, the Academic Center, a nursing education laboratory, and a video conference room. There are also five classrooms, seven computer laboratories, a chapel, cafeteria, and faculty and student lounges.

McEntegart Hall Library has a large reading area and numerous study carrels that provide an excellent environment for research. In addition, the Library maintains the St. Joseph’s College Archives, a curriculum library (including centralized childrens’ books and textbooks and two seminar rooms) and the Library Instructional Technology Center.

The Library will be undergoing the first floor Renovation Project, which will add enclosed group study rooms, a Faculty Resource Center, and the Tech Deck (state of the art computer lab as well as a medium-sized classroom.)

The Library’s collection includes over 134,000 volumes, (including 51,000 e-books), approximately 1,800 audio-visual units, 1812 micro-forms units, and over 25,800 serial subscriptions (including periodicals, newspapers and government papers.) Patrons have access to numerous full-text electronic databases. A fully automated and integrated library system, Voyager 7.0 by ExLibris Group, ensures efficient retrieval and management of library resources. Membership in ALB (Academic Libraries of Brooklyn) and METRO (Metropolitan New York Library Council) gives students access to libraries throughout the city and provides resource sharing on a regional basis. Full membership in OCLC (Online Computer Library Center), allows limitless access to all types of resources.

The Library provides reference and instruction services to all patrons, which include instant message chat, email, and in-person reference. The Library’s website (http://mcentegart.sjcny.edu) provides constantly updated information to library patrons.

St. Angela Hall

This former elementary and high school was acquired in 2001 and contains sixteen classrooms, the ACES Center, the Office of Campus Ministry, some faculty offices, an auditorium, video conference room and lounge.

Computer Facilities

A high-speed fiber optic intra-campus network connects all offices, instructional facilities, computer laboratories and libraries on both the Brooklyn and Patchogue campuses. The network provides Internet access to all students, faculty and staff.

An integrated online library system enables students to search for and check out books at either campus. Online databases and other electronic resources are available to students from either campus, or from their home computers.

All classrooms are smart classrooms, which provide Internet access, DVD, VCR, projection systems and whiteboards. Two wireless laptop classrooms connect Brooklyn and Long Island via high-definition monitors, video cameras, Smartboards, document cameras, and computers. Additional videoconferencing facilities connect the two campuses, allowing for real-time distance learning in a small group setting.

WebAdvisor, a web interface to the College’s administrative database, is available to students. Students can register for class, pay bills, view and print their schedules and degree audit report, and view their current and prior grades.

Students are provided with Google Apps accounts for communication and collaboration. Included is over 7GB of storage, the power of GMail, Google chat, Google calendar, and Google docs.

Dillon Child Study Center

This Center, an enduring memorial to Monsignor William T. Dillon, late President of the College and founder of the Child Study Department and its Laboratory Preschool, opened in 1968.

The first floor of the Dillon Center contains the offices of the Director, the school nurse, staff offices and a conference room. The Center’s preschool inclusion class with observation room, a mixed three and four year old classroom, and a multi-purpose room are also located on the first floor. Two preschool classrooms and Kindergarten room, each with its own observation booth, are located on the second floor, as well as staff offices with additional rooms for therapy, computer and library resources. These facilities make possible increased service to the community.

The Center provides for an enrollment of approximately 100 preschool children. The Center also facilitates the growth of auxiliary programs and inter-institutional cooperation with nursing schools, colleges, and other educational agencies.

The Outdoor Theatre

Overlooking the Mall is the Molloy Memorial Outdoor Theatre.

Long Island Branch Campus, Patchogue, Long Island

For full description of Long Island Campus facilities, see Long Island Branch Campus .

Accreditation and Memberships

Accreditation

The College is accredited by the following:

  Middle States Commission on Higher Education
    3624 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
267-284-5000

The Middle States Commission on Higher Education is an institutional accrediting agency recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education and the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

The College’s Nursing programs are accredited by the National League for Nursing Accrediting Commission

  National League for Nursing Accrediting Commission
    3343 Peachtree Road NE, Suite 850
Atlanta, Georgia 30326
404-975-5000
www.nlnac.org

The College’s teacher education programs (Early Childhood, Childhood, Early Childhood: Disabilities, Childhood: Disabilities; and Adolescence Education: Biology, Chemistry, English, Mathematics, Social Studies, and Spanish) are accredited by the New York State Board of Regents (RATE).

  New York State Education Department
    5N Mezzanine, Education Building
89 Washington Avenue
Albany, New York 12234
518-474-2593

The College’s Recreation and Leisure Studies program is accredited by the Council on Accreditation of Parks, Recreation, Tourism and Related Professions (COAPRT).

  National Recreation and Parks Association
    22377 Belmont Ridge Road
Ashburn, Virginia 20148-4501
(703) 858-0784
www.nrpa.org/coa

The College’s programs are registered with the

  New York State Education Department
    Office of Higher Education and the Professions
Cultural Education Center, Room 5B28
Albany, New York 12230 - 518-474-5851

The College’s programs are approved by the New York State Education Department for the training of veterans.

Membership

The College is a member of many associations, including the following:

American Council on Education
Association of American Colleges and Universities
College Entrance Examination Board
Commission on Independent Colleges and Universities, State of New York
Council for Adult and Experiential Learning
Long Island Regional Advisory Council on Higher Education
National Association of College and University Business Officers
National League for Nursing
Servicemembers Opportunity Colleges