Showing posts with label Colleges and College Admissions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colleges and College Admissions. Show all posts

Monday, September 21, 2009

College Stuff

We're starting the college admissions process with my oldest, and there's a lot of good stuff we've been running into of late, so I thought I'd collect some of it here.

Catholic College Month: Homeschool Connections is hosting "Catholic College Month" next month with free webinars hosted by representatives of Catholic Colleges. What a great service! Check out the details at the Homeschool Connections website. I'm really looking forward to these!

Catholic College Guide: The Newman Guide to Choosing a Catholic College has just been released in its new second edition - and is available in its entirety free online (my alma mater is pictured on the front of the print book with their beautiful new chapel). Take a look at the Newman Guide website. The guide offers lots of helpful information on 21 exceptional Catholic colleges in the U.S. and a handful of overseas and online schools.

Another Excellent College Guide: I stumbled upon the Intercollegiate Studies Institute Guide to Choosing the Right College: The Whole Truth About America's Top Schools when I found a copy of their 2008-09 guide at a local thrift store this summer. I am very impressed by the thoroughness and depth of the content. The guide provides helpful and critical information (approximately 7-8 packed pages) on 134 "top" schools in the U.S. You will find the ups and downs of each school's academic quality, political makeup, student culture, safety of campus life and even recommended professors and courses to get a solid liberal arts foundation (and much more). Very honest and very eye-opening! The Intercollegiate Studies Institute is a Catholic-friendly organization dedicated to promoting solid college academics, free of political nonsense. (Their Student's Guides to the Major Disciplines are also highly recommended.) Their College Guide website is also very helpful. There's a lot of free information, including a guide to "Entry Requirements for Homeschool Students", and you can purchase an online version of their college guide for $25.

We've been navigating the waters of standardized testing for college admissions and I thought I'd share a few tidbits here in the hope that they'll be helpful to others.

ACT Test: This is one of the two most common required standardized tests and covers the following subjects: English, mathematics, reading, and science as well as an optional writing segment. I found the website quite easy to navigate and the homeschool options were very clear. Apparently this is the more common admissions test in the Midwest, while the SAT is more common elsewhere. My daughter is taking both.

SAT Test: The SAT Test covers Math, Critical Reading (including Vocabulary) and Writing. We found their website somewhat difficult to navigate. We had a very difficult time finding the "homeschool code" which we finally got from a friend. (The code is 970000). Also, if you sign up for the SAT test first, it won't show you the options for the SAT Subject test on the same day (since you can't take them on the same day), so you should probably schedule your Subject tests first - especially if you're taking a Latin or World History Subject tests which are only made available twice a year (in December and June).

SAT Subject Tests: A few colleges (a very few as I understand it) require these, particularly for homeschoolers, as an objective assessment of subjects not covered, or not covered as thoroughly, by the SAT and ACT tests themselves. SAT Subject Tests are available in five basic subjects: English (Literature), History (U.S. or World), Mathematics (Level 1 or Level 2), Science (Biology, Chemistry or Physics), and Languages (Chinese, French, German, Spanish, Hebrew, Italian, Latin, Japanese, or Korean). You can take up to three Subject tests in one day (though not on the same day as the SAT itself, and taking three on one day is the most cost-effective way to do it).

You also may want to sign up for the free SAT Question of the Day on the SAT website.
Test Preparation: Finally, Ana recommended the Princeton Review Guides for test preparation. We picked up a few of these and I'm very impressed so far. I particularly like how they have you take a test and then explain a little about all the choices (these are multiple choice tests) and why the correct answer made the most sense even if you didn't quite know what it was.

Also see on Love2learn:

Homeschooling High Schoolers Section
Homeschool-Friendly Catholic Colleges

I'm sure there are other helpful resources out there. What have you found helpful in the college admissions process for homeschool students? Please feel free to share in the comments section.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Funeral Arrangements for Dr. Dillon

from the Thomas Aquinas College website:

The Funeral Mass for Dr. Dillon will be held in Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity Chapel on Friday, April 24, 2009, at 10:00 a.m. Interment will be at Santa Paula Cemetery. Lunch will be served on the Thomas Aquinas College campus immediately after.

A Rosary is scheduled for Thursday evening, April 23, 2009 at 7:30 p.m., also in the Chapel. An all-night vigil will follow.

Please pray for the happy repose of Dr. Dillon’s soul, and for the consolation of his family.

Please note: I'm still updating the list of tributes and news articles on Dr. Dillon in this post as I find them. Thomas Aquinas College and Dr. Dillon have had an enormous impact on our thinking here at Love2learn both because of their inspiring model of educational philosophy (and several of our reviewers, including myself, are alums of Thomas Aquinas College) and their long-time generous support of our work through advertising. Anyone interested in Catholic education will find much worth "chewing" on in these links. AVH

Thursday, April 16, 2009

A Collection of Tributes to Dr. Thomas Dillon



On Wednesday, April 15, 2009, Dr. Thomas E. Dillon, the president of Thomas Aquinas College in Santa Paula, California, was killed in an automobile accident in Ireland, where he was traveling with his wife, Terri, on behalf of the college. Mrs. Dillon was only slightly injured and is hospitalized for the time being. Family members and a representative of the College are en route to Ireland to bring Mrs. Dillon back to California and to accompany Dr. Dillon’s body.

A rosary was said and Mass offered for the repose of Dr. Dillon’s soul at 3:00 p.m. today in Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity Chapel. Information concerning funeral arrangements will be posted at a later time.

Please pray for the happy repose of Dr. Dillon’s soul, and for the consolation of his family.

Last Updated 4/27
Read more about Dr. Thomas Dillon and his work:


A Conversation with the President of Thomas Aquinas College (National Catholic Register)

REMARKS BY PRESIDENT THOMAS E. DILLON, CONVOCATION DAY
THOMAS AQUINAS COLLEGE, AUGUST 22, 2005
(Scroll down to read)

Masses:

Funeral Mass:

The Funeral Mass for Dr. Dillon will be held in Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity Chapel on Friday, April 24, 2009, at 10:00 a.m. Interment will be at Santa Paula Cemetery. Lunch will be served on the Thomas Aquinas College campus immediately after.

A Rosary is scheduled for Thursday evening, April 23, 2009 at 7:30 p.m., also in the Chapel. An all-night vigil will follow.

The Dillon family has asked that any memorial donations be made to Thomas Aquinas College or, more specifically, to Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity Chapel.

Tuesday, April 21st, 7 pm

St. Francis Chapel in Lincoln, Nebraska
1145 South Street
It will be a Mass in the extraordinary form

Saturday April 25, 2009 10AM
The Dominican House of Studies, 487 Michigan Ave NE, Washington, DC 20017
to be celebrated by Fr. John Thomas Mellein (1999)

Immaculate Heart Radio will be offering the rosary aired at 8 PM for Dr. Dillon. Tune in or join via computer:http://www.ihradio.org/ This will continue fromApril 22 through May 2.

Tributes and News Stories:


Archbishop Pietro Sambi - Apostolic Nuncio

Cardinal Roger Mahony

Within the TAC Community (Tutors, Alumni, Parents, etc.):


Memorial Page on Facebook

Blessed Among Men

Carmie's Conifer Cabin

Cozy Tea-Blue House

A Faithful Rebel

Institute for Catholic Liberal Education (Dr. Andrew Seeley)

John Dunlap (father of several current students and alumni)

Life in a Nutshell

Remembering Tom Dillon by Joseph Susanka (Inside Catholic, 4/24)

Small Treasures

Studeo

Future TACers:

A Maiden's Wreath

Tributes from others in Catholic Education:

The C.S. Lewis Foundation

Cardinal Newman Society

Christendom College

Magdalen College

Thomas More College

Wyoming Catholic College
(tribute presently published on the home page)

A Life of Faith and Reason (Thomas Hibbs in National Review Online)

Other Bloggers:

Faith and Family Live Blog

Holy Innocents Catholic Church, Long Beach

In the Light of the Law Ed Peters

WDTPRS (Lovely mini-tributes in the comments)

News Reports
(some are repetitive, but there are many worthwhile comments):

Catholic Business Journal (4/22)

Catholic Community Forum

Catholic Culture (4/16)

In Memoriam: Tom Dillon, President of Thomas Aquinas College by Robert Moynihan (Catholic Exchange 4/16)

President of Thomas Aquinas College dies in car crash in Ireland (Catholic News Agency 4/16)

A Request for Prayers Joseph Susanka (Inside Catholic, 4/15)

Obituary: Thomas Dillon dies at 62; president of Thomas Aquinas College (Los Angeles Times 4/18)
Particularly interesting as it gives details on the early 1990s accreditation controversy that Dr. Dillon had a big impact on.

National Catholic Register

Leading Catholic Educator dies in Ireland by Robert Moynihan (Spero News 4/16)

Ventura County Star

Catholic Higher Education: A Bumpy Anniversary Week (Touchstone Magazine: Mere Comments)

Colleagues Praise Life of Thomas Aquinas College President
(Catholic News Agency)

Funeral Mass Set for Thomas Aquinas President
(Ventura County Star - 4/21)

Recalling "a true servant" of Thomas Aquinas College
(The Tidings - 4/23)

School President's Death Mourned at Thomas Aquinas (Ventura County Star)

Thomas Dillon's Glorious Vision
(Ventura County Star)

Tom Dillon vs. the Relativists (Ignatius Insight 4/22)

U.S. Head of College Killed in Car Crash (Herald.ie)

Obituary: Ventura County Star

Regarding the Funeral:

Thomas Aquinas College buries its President (Zenit)

Thomas Aquinas College remembers its Late Leader (Ventura County Star)

Monday, April 13, 2009

Staying Informed about Catholic Higher Education

There has been a great deal of discussion online about the invitation by Notre Dame of Barack Obama as commencement speaker and recipient of an honorary degree. Home school parents have a deep-seated interest in issues of Catholic higher education, since they want the good work they have started to continue. Although it isn’t the purpose of this blog to engage in debates about controversial issues, we do like to provide resources that help home schooling parents have informed opinions about matters directly or indirectly related to our work. For those who are interested in what the Church means by Catholic higher education, John Paul II’s Apostolic Constitution, Ex Corde Ecclesiae (1990). I think it would be difficult to form a solid opinion about these kinds of controversies without having read this document.

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

"Christmas in God's Country" CD

This is a neat CD for this Christmas, and benefits Wyoming Catholic College, a small Catholic liberal arts college.

In honor of the Advent and Christmas seasons, the Wyoming Catholic College Choir has released its inaugural recording, fittingly entitled Christmas In God’s Country, featuring beautifully rendered traditional and historical Christmas music. For a small donation, you can obtain a deluxe version of this CD, complete with plastic case and extensive liner notes. It makes a great gift idea!

Click here for more information, including samples of the music from this CD.

Cross-posted from the Rejoice in Hope blog.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Pope Benedict XVI to Meet with Catholic College and University Officials in U.S.

After years of Vatican frustration over what it views as the failure of many U.S. Catholic colleges to adhere to church teachings, school leaders are intently watching for a rebuke from Pope Benedict XVI during his Washington visit next month.

The pope requested the meeting with more than 200 top Catholic school officials from across the country. The gathering will come amid debate over teachings and campus activities that bishops have slammed as violating Catholic doctrine: a rally by pro-abortion rights Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton at St. Mary's University in San Antonio; a Georgetown University theologian's questioning whether Jesus offers the only road to salvation; and a performance of "The Vagina Monologues" at the University of Notre Dame
Read the rest here

hat-tip GodSpy

Monday, December 03, 2007

Review: A Student's Guide to Liberal Learning

A Student’s Guide to: Liberal Learning by, James V. Schall, S.J.
2000, ISI Books, 52 pages, paperback, Catholic

One thing people who homeschool worry a lot about is what college to send their children to. Many people homeschool to provide their children with the right kind of education—religious, liberal, etc. The last thing we want is for a bunch of flaky atheist, deconstructionist professors--or dorm life--to undermine our children’s assent and conformity to the natural and supernatural truths of our faith. So, do we send our children to one of those super-Catholic schools that are listed in the Cardinal Newman Society Guide? Or do we send them to one of the older, well established, but secularized to varying degrees Catholic universities and hope for a good campus ministry? Or a secular university, whether private or public? Is the Newman center okay? Will our children lose their faith? Their morals?

The answer, of course, varies with the child. All things being equal all Catholic schools should be genuinely Catholic and genuinely universities. If that were the case the decision would be a no-brainer, setting finances aside, because a genuinely Catholic university is the only real university there is. Alas, not all Catholic universities are Catholic. Not all fields are available at the Catholic schools that are. And many people can’t afford a private college or university of any sort. So, many people find it better to send their children to a state school or a Catholic school where the administration and faculty seem to have missed the memo (Ex Corde Ecclesia) about the meaning of Catholic identity.

The university, Catholic or not, has become a place where the focus is on the attainment of information that will lead to an increase of power, and the teaching of a sophistic rhetoric that will persuade others to allow you to exercise that power. Knowledge as such has become the only activity of the University, without any attention to the personal context of the cultivation of knowledge, or the practical significance of knowledge for living a good life—to the acquisition of wisdom. University students need wisdom as well as knowledge precisely at the age they are at and the university, where the student spends most of his time, needs to provide for the formation of the whole person, not just the intellect.

So, if you choose one of the schools that are not Catholic to the core can you count on losing your child to the secular humanists? Certainly not. Let us hope that our home education has given our children a good, solid foundation from which to negotiate the crazy things that are said and done out there, especially at the University.

Of course, our children can’t rest on their laurels. Neither can we. Because they will be growing exponentially as persons during their college years, they will need to continue their education as persons, not just professional training. First in importance, of course, is an active spiritual life and continued study of the faith. Also important, indeed essential, is a continued effort at a formation of the mind that corresponds to our genuine human nature and calling. And this does not merely mean studying the Catechism or encyclicals. It means learning to think like a Catholic about all things, such as politics, art, and science. It means gaining something that approximates a Catholic, liberal education.

Most universities, Catholic or otherwise, do not seem to know how to form the intellect according to the Catholic pattern, so our children will need guidance from somewhere else, especially if we ourselves did not get and have not since acquired such an education. Fortunately, that guidance is available in the person of James V. Schall, S.J., professor at Georgetown (a particularly secularized Catholic University).

In A Student’s Guide to: Liberal Learning, James V. Schall, S.J. gives some attention to the deficiencies of the contemporary university education and offers the discontent university student, or any adult serious about life, a three-pronged remedy.

Schall’s book can best be described as a 12-step program for higher education. First, we have to be aware of and acknowledge the problem in higher education and we have to admit we can’t do anything about it on our own. We are powerless before the relativistic forces of professional intellectuals. Then we have to know that a solution exists, help is available. Then we need to seek it.

The help that Schall proposes is threefold. “We need some self-discipline, our own personal library where we keep what we read, and real good guides” (p. 49). In order to remain intellectually sane in the poisonous atmosphere of many universities and the world around us, a person must take an antidote—which is a guided reading of the good books in the tradition of classical western liberal arts, whether ancient (Plato) or modern (Flannery O’Connor).

1. Self-discipline. The emphasis on reading makes the focus of the book on the intellectual life. Schall highlights, however, the role that moral disorder plays in losing sight the truth. “There is an intimate connection between our moral life and our intellectual life” (p 30). Although, as Newman held, the teaching of knowledge is the purpose of the university, that does not mean that the university is absolved from helping the student form his will so he can achieve his intellectual goals. Those for whom the formation of the intellect is the primary concern cannot neglect the moral virtues without sacrificing the intellectual ones as well. Although, Schall does not directly address the proper way to attend to the formation of the will, he does state that moral virtues are as important for the formation of the intellect as intellectual virtues. The focus is on the human mind which cannot function properly outside of a healthy will and body and affections. “If we do not have our lives in order under the rule of right reason, we will simply not see the first principles of reasoning and of living” (p. 11).

Intellectual virtues themselves are important as well: He, for instance, encourages, without naming them, the classical intellectual disciplines of the mind, the trivium of the liberal arts. The liberal arts aren’t just knowledge, but arts, distinct from the useful and fine, but arts nonetheless, directed at understanding and communicating the truth. That is why such books as Adler’s How to Read a Book, Sertillanges’ The Intellectual Life, and Schumacher’s A Guide to the Perplexed are as important as the great texts themselves, such as Augustine’s Confessions. Reading even great books without a mind trained in something like the trivium is less likely to gain true knowledge that can be communicated and put into action. We will be left with good, vague feelings about a text, but no clear understanding of how the ideas in the book relate to the whole.

2. Good books. One of the best features of this book is the lists. Not only do we find “Schall’s Unlikely List of Books to Keep Sane By” as Appendix I, but throughout the text there are short lists, serious ones, such as, “”Five Books on Thomas Aquinas,” “Five Classic Texts on Philosophy,” “Six Classic Texts never to be left unread,” “Seven Books About Universities,” and quirky and whimsical ones, such as “Three of the More than One-Hundred P.G. Wodehouse Novels” and “Four Books Once Found at a Used Book Sale.” Names of other good books not on any of the lists are sprinkled throughout the book. They are listed in the bibliography of the online version.

But, even good books aren’t all equally valuable. Being the good guide he is, Schall does not leave us without indication of what is the most essential reading. The two most important books are the Bible and Shakespeare. The seven intellectual heroes for Schall are: God (the Bible), Shakespeare, Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, Augustine and Aquinas. Honorable mention may be given to Eric Voegelin.

3. The need for guidance (authority). Schall is proposing initiation into a wisdom tradition, not just an intellectual ‘great conversation.” This implies a prior judgment of the value of given books: an authority. It is not enough, as in some Great Books programs, to be introduced into the Great Conversation about what is true or whether the truth is knowable. For young readers such an encounter can lead to confusion and cynicism. Great books don’t answer the question about what is true (p. 23), unless we already know how to tell. What is really needed is a prior judgment about those works that in fact articulate some aspect of the knowable and known truth and center our intellectual formation on them. This is done quite readily in particular disciplines, such as physics or economics. Why not in knowledge as such or knowledge as a whole? Schall has positioned himself as a master, a guide. He is pointing to the texts of intellectual sanity. This does not absolve our irreplaceable need to make our own judgment about the truth of the good books our guides suggest. Schall makes it clear that ideas need to be tested by the reader against their own experience (p. 41) and college students are at an age when they need to take responsibility to discern the truth of what they hear.

The goal of a liberal education as conceived by Schall is not just knowledge, but sanity—a mind that corresponds to the real so the person can act according to the truth and make decisions about the organization of his personal life and society that are in accord with the nature of the parts, the whole and their relationship. “Just because someone is smart does not mean he is wise” (p. 8.) The goal of the university is the cultivation of the intellect. But that intellect needs most of all to be able to address the meaning of the whole and our place in it and relation to it. Although we can “know” a truth, it isn’t actually true for us until we can and do act upon it. Our actions reveal what we believe (p. 21). Schall himself speaks on page one of “knowledge for its own sake.” He follows quickly, however, on page two with an assertion that we need not only “to know what is,” but also “to know what we ought to do” (p. 2).

The classic liberal tradition is precisely that, a wisdom tradition to be handed on. Because modern university culture has been deeply influenced by a philosophy of liberal education that believes that the critical faculty is the most important faculty of the human intellect, rather than the ability to receive and understand the accumulated wisdom of the ages, we have to cultivate the latter on our own.

Although this book is intended to be a guide for undergraduates, it may be equally useful for the many of us parents who may not have had access to a genuinely Catholic liberal education. And even those of us that did can benefit greatly from many of the books on Schall’s great lists. I personally have discovered in the past six months at least one life-changing book by reading Schall's Student's Guide.

A fuller version of the book can be found online here.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Holy Apostles College & Seminary, Cromwell, CT

I just received this information in my e-mail and thought I'd pass it along. It does sound rather intriguing...

Holy Apostles College & Seminary in Cromwell, CT, offers a rigorous undergraduate liberal arts program that leads to the Bachelor of Arts degree in four majors - philosophy, religious studies, humanities or social sciences. A 93-credit core curriculum exposes students to all four majors. Lay students also gain an unmatched perspective on the faith by studying, praying and interacting with seminarians from more than a dozen dioceses and orders who attend Connecticut's only major Roman Catholic seminary (most famous alumnus: Father John Corapi). Holy Apostles, a fully accredited co-ed commuter college, has the lowest tuition of any private college in New England: $7,800 for 2007-2008, its 50th anniversary year. "Holy Apostles is a bright light in a rather dark world ... of Catholic higher education." (Father Benedict Groeschel, CFR.)

Contact info:

Holy Apostles College
33 Prospect Hill Road
Cromwell, CT 06416
(860) 632-3063
recruitment@holyapostles.edu
www.holyapostles.edu

Thursday, May 24, 2007

High School Summer Programs at Catholic Colleges

High school summer programs at good Catholic colleges can be an excellent experience, especially for homeschooled teens, for several reasons including: motivation to attend college and valuable classroom and group-discussion experience.

Magdalen College gives young people between the ages of 14-18 a two-week experience of living on a Catholic college campus for study, prayer, sports, and recreation. Through the daily activities and close interaction with the counselors, the participants can learn and live the Catholic faith, acquire new skills in music, drama, and sports, and grow in wholesome friendships with others their age. The summer program provides an excellent opportunity for the participants to experience the spirit that animates Magdalen College.

Thomas Aquinas College offers a two-week high school summer program on their beautiful campus in Southern California. It provides an excellent opportunity to get a taste of their Catholic liberal arts program and the seminar style classes. Many summer program participants attend the college after graduation from high school.

Thomas More College of Liberal Arts For thirty-two years the Collegiate Summer Program for High-School Students has introduced participants to the same spirit of liberal arts education that animates the College. Each summer, the college offers two-week sessions that include course in literature, philosophy, the American political tradition, and apologetics. Readings include Faulkner, Flannery O'Connor, Plato, the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the Federalist Papers, Thomas Aquinas, C.S. Lewis and Guardini.

Note: This is a fairly old list from love2learn (clean-up will be going on for some time), but I did update the links. Please let me know ( in the comment box) of other programs that should be added to the list.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

Catholic Higher Education - Helpful Links and Reading

The National Catholic Register Survey of Catholic Colleges covers the mandatum, an oath of fidelity to the Church, the school's policy on co-ed dorms and several other issues.

Catholiceducation.org has some articles on the Mandatum here.

Read Pope John Paul II's related document Ex Corde Ecclesiae (On Catholic Universities) here.

The Cardinal Newman Society has an informative website.

There's an e-mail list for Catholic homeschool parents preparing their children for college, choosing a college and working through the admissions process.

Helpful Reading for Parents:

Handing on the Faith in an Age of Disbelief by Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger and others
(talks from conferences held in 1983 in France)

Another Sort of Learning: Selected Contrary Essays on How Finally to Acquire an Education While Still in College or Anywhere Else: Containing Some Belated Advice about How to Employ Your Leisure Time When Ultimate Questions Remain Perplexing in Spite of Your Highest Earned Academic Degree, Together with Sundry Book Lists Nowhere Else in Captivity to Be Found by Fr. James V. Schall (Fr. Schall also has a related website with lots of interesting reading here)

A Student's Guide to the Core Curriculum by Mark C. Henrie (and other titles in this series from the Intercollegiate Studies Institute)

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

New Catholic Liberal Arts College on the Block

This sounds interesting...

Wyoming Catholic College

All professors and teachers of theology are required to obtain a mandatum.

They have a solid advisory board (James Schall, Dominic Aquila and Mitchell Kalpakgian).

And it's designed to encourage a love of the outdoors. Freshman Orientation is a three week backpacking, wilderness expedition with experts from the nearby "National Outdoor Leadership School" (this is partly intended to provide the students with skills to safely enjoy the surrounding wilderness during their college years).

hat-tip Margaret