Colleges of the University

The University of St. Francis is organized around four colleges: The College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Business & Health Administration, the College of Education, and the Cicely and John Leach College of Nursing. Additionally, the College of Education administers the Regional Education Academy for Leadership (REAL), which provides educational programs to regional educators.

College of Arts & Sciences

The College of Arts and Sciences is at the heart of the liberal arts education that the University of St. Francis has been providing since its inception.  Comprised of many departments that form the essence of a well-rounded education, the College of Arts and Sciences offers required general education courses taken by all students graduating from any program at USF, as well as majors, minors and graduate programs in more than 30 areas.  The courses and degrees offered by the College of Arts and Sciences prepare students for careers and employment in specialized fields, equip students with valuable transferable skills, and educate students in the broad habits of mind that ensure a future as life-long learners.

Mission Statement

Embracing excellence in its diverse disciplines of study, the College of Arts and Sciences serves as the home, shepherd, and guardian of Franciscan liberal arts values for the University. It serves to inspire in its students a love of learning through continual investigation, nurturing of curiosity, exploration, discovery, and sharing that leads to the passionate life as a servant leader. The College provides a rich environment of inspiration, learning, and service to prepare its students to build their future through programs and opportunities that represent the values of our Catholic/Franciscan University mission.

Vision

To become a leader in higher education for inspiring spiritual wisdom through research, meaningful liberal learning, development of critical thinking skills, experiential learning, multidisciplinary opportunities, and civic engagement through the ethos of service learning.

College of Business & Health Administration

The College of Business and Health Administration is a team of exceptional, experienced professionals dedicated to providing a rigorous academic curriculum in a supportive compassionate learning environment.  Guided by our Catholic Franciscan values, we are committed to student success and lifelong learning.

Mission Statement

The College of Business and Health Administration prepares professionally competent and ethically responsible graduates for management and professional positions in business or health related fields. The College emphasizes excellence in teaching, close interactions with students, and a broad base of theoretical and practical knowledge. Faculty include both full-time and adjunct faculty who are professionals with expertise in the courses they teach. In addition, we are committed to continuous quality improvement, applied scholarly contribution, and assisting the business and health care communities.

Vision

With Franciscan charism and a caring environment, we welcome, challenge, and enlighten…Empowering you to change the World.

College of Education

The University of St. Francis has had a commitment to teacher education since the inception of the Congregation of the Third Order of Saint Francis of Mary Immaculate in 1865. One of the sisters' main concerns was that of preparing teachers for parochial school work. In 1920, the Sisters of St. Francis of Mary Immaculate received a charter to open "The New College" in order to provide women the opportunity to "pursue advanced study, permeated with Catholic principles, and shaped in accordance with Catholic ideals." In the course of time, "The New College" became "Assisi Junior College," and, with the inclusion of a senior college curriculum in the fall of 1930, the name of the institution was changed to the "College of St. Francis," described as a college of liberal arts and sciences. The College was formally organized in 1925; classes, including courses in education, started in the fall of 1925. In May of 1926, the State Board of Education granted approval to issue First Grade Certificates.

Since its founding, the University has continued to operate as a recognized institution with approval to entitle students for elementary certification, special education and in a number of secondary and middle level areas over the history of the program. The Education Department's record of successful preparation of teachers, together with the institution's commitment to meeting the emerging educational needs of a rapidly growing student population in the communities it serves, led to the establishment of the College of Education at the University of St. Francis on June 1, 2000. The College continues to focus on that commitment, and it also continues to examine and enhance the quality of its programs. The faculty and staff provide educational experiences that enhance the intellectual growth and abilities of the college's students. Rooted in its Catholic, Franciscan mission, the College of Education affirms its ability to prepare educators to meet the demands of contemporary society, and its readiness to build on the institution's legacy of high quality teacher education programs.

The College strives to maintain high standards as it seeks to offer undergraduate and graduate students educational opportunities that are truly distinctive. The College of Education at the University of St. Francis provides a model designed to facilitate the ongoing learning of new and experienced educators, to maintain excellence, and to continually improve as it strives to meet the needs of students and the educational community.

Mission Statement

The mission of the College of Education is to prepare competent and caring educators who understand students, serve the community and develop professionally to become ethical decision-makers and leaders.

Vision

Rooted in its Catholic, Franciscan mission, the College of Education affirms its ability to prepare educators to meet the demands of contemporary society, and its readiness to build on the institution's legacy of high quality education programs. The College of Education aspires to be a premiere education unit by offering a continuum of high quality programs and services for preservice and in-service educators.

College of Education Philosophy, Purposes, and Goals 

The unit’s philosophy is expressed in the three core tenets and corresponding goals that guide our mission and are integrated into every aspect of our programs. These tenets (Understanding Students, Serving the Community, and Finding Our Professional Selves) represent a shared vision for the implementation of the unit and institutional missions and reflect the knowledge, skills, and dispositions that are fundamental for a University of St. Francis graduate to acquire from its programs. The framework is the product of a common understanding among a cross-section of stakeholders, including faculty and administrators in professional education programs, representatives from the campus community at large, the P-12 public and private school community, and candidates. The tenets are derived from our institutional values, state and national standards, and educational research and have been developed in conjunction with the professional community.

Understanding Students  

At the core of all learning experiences is the student, and all educational experiences must begin with the individual student in mind. Thus, the unit promotes a student-centered approach to teaching and learning that affirms and values the diversity and individual differences that each child or adolescent brings to a learning experience. To that end, the unit seeks to develop teachers and administrators who educate the whole person and design developmentally appropriate learning environments that allow all students to maximize their potential. Technological resources play a central role in accessing and utilizing information in modern society, technology is seen as an essential element in providing appropriate and comprehensive learning experiences.

Serving the Community  

The university’s patron saint, Francis, stressed the theme of love and brotherhood, and reached beyond his social status to help individuals in need. Just as St. Francis turned his back on wealth and luxury to embrace poverty and dedicated himself to helping the poor and the weak, the College of Education of the University of St. Francis embraces the community and its needs. Unit programs extend to the community at large through collaborations with schools, religious institutions, social service agencies, businesses, and government. Candidates are expected to view their vocation as an educator as a calling in which the needs of students and the community take on primary importance. Service is not limited to schools but may extend to families, communities, and professional cultures. The unit believes that service, especially to the traditionally underserved, should be of central concern for educators, and it values those practices that promote systemic change and social justice for the betterment of the community.

Finding Our Professional Selves  

The unit expects its members and professional candidates to adhere to the highest professional standards. Educators have professional responsibilities to the community, to students, to colleagues, and to the profession. One manifestation of these responsibilities is expressed through professional dispositions. The principles outlined in the College of Education’s Code of Professional Conduct are intended to provide candidates with an explicit description of desirable professional dispositions, characteristics, and actions. The unit cultivates these professional attributes by immersing candidates in a professional culture that models collegiality, life-long learning, and reflective practice that leads to continual improvement.

Regional Education Academy for Leadership (REAL)

The Regional Education Academy for Leadership (REAL) at the University of St. Francis was established in 2002 as a dedicated initiative committed to develop dynamic partnerships with the educational community. At the core of each partnership, professional development opportunities are provided for educators at large, designated as Special Students who are not enrolled in an advanced degree program. Simply put, REAL was designed by educators for educators. REAL and its educational partners share a vision of teaching and learning that enables the development of innovative programs, courses, and workshops tailored to meet the evolving needs of the learning community. The ultimate goal of REAL is to enrich the learning experiences and achievement of all students by supporting the professional growth of all educators.

Leach College of Nursing

Saint Joseph School of Nursing was founded in 1920 by the Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred Heart in Joliet, Illinois. In 1987, a decision was made to discontinue the diploma program and begin a collegiate program offering the upper division nursing curriculum to students who had completed the required prerequisite courses. The last class graduated from the diploma program in 1989. The first B.S.N. class was admitted in August of 1988 and graduated in 1990. The baccalaureate nursing program received approval from the Illinois Board of Professional Regulation (1987) and the Illinois Board for Higher Education (1987), accreditation from the National League for Nursing Accrediting Commission (1994), North Central Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Institutions of Higher Education (1992) and the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (2005, 2010).

On January 1, 1997, Saint Joseph College of Nursing became a division of the College of St. Francis and took on the Allied Health programs. A year later, the move to university status was formalized and on January 1, 1998, the division was renamed College of Nursing and Allied Health. In 2000, the College began offering a Master of Science in Nursing.

In January 2001, the University started a Master of Science program in Family Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant Studies in Albuquerque, New Mexico. As part of a university reorganization in 2010, the Allied Health and Physician Assistant Programs were placed under the auspices of the College of Business and Health Administration. In November 2011, the college was renamed the Cecily and John Leach College of Nursing in honor of our long time benefactors.

Mission Statement

The Cecily and John Leach College of Nursing offers a Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree, a Master of Science in Nursing, and a Doctorate in Nursing Practice. The College’s mission is the education of individuals to be accountable practitioners of nursing who integrate the Franciscan values of respect, integrity, compassion, and service.

The program builds upon and integrates knowledge and values from general education courses in the liberal arts and sciences.

Program Goals

The Cecily and John Leach College of Nursing was established to provide an educational program which will prepare graduates to:

  • Incorporate theoretical and empirical knowledge from the physical, social, and behavioral sciences and humanities into evidence-based nursing practice.
  • Function effectively as a generalist providing culturally-sensitive nursing care across the lifespan and in a variety of settings in accordance with the current Illinois Nursing Act.
  • Promote health, prevent illness and injury and provide nursing interventions that provide effective, efficient, and equitable care.
  • Incorporate ethical/legal principles and respect for life and human dignity into nursing practice.
  • Be accountable in safe nursing practice, resource conservation, and quality of care through leadership, clinical reasoning, and utilization of the nursing process.
  • Use patient care technologies, informatics, and communication systems to facilitate safe, efficient, and effective nursing practice.
  • Facilitate communication and collaboration among individuals, groups, health team members, and/or community.
  • Act as a change agent to advance social consciousness of health care issues through political involvement and advocacy.
  • Contribute to the advancement of the profession by engaging in leadership roles and professional organizations.
  • Possess a strong knowledge base in preparation for graduate study.
  • Value learning as a lifelong process for continued personal and professional growth.