Catholic and Dominican
Providence College is a Roman Catholic, four-year, liberal arts college and the only college or university in the United States founded by and conducted under the auspices of the Dominican Friars. Formally known as the Order of Preachers, the Dominicans were founded by the Spanish priest St. Dominic de Guzman in 1216.
The 13th century was a time of rapid social change and one in which people were beset with a welter of competing ideologies that vied for their loyalty. Amidst it all, people longed for the authentic Christian message. Unfortunately, the church was ill equipped to provide what people needed. The clergy was often poorly educated, corruption was rife, and there seemed to be little authentic witness to the Gospel.
St. Dominic therefore gathered together men and women, Friars and nuns, and later sisters and laity, who would live the Gospel more authentically and preach its truth with both their words and their lives. From the beginning, he sent his Friars to the great universities of the time: Oxford, Paris, and Bologna. He wanted his Friars to be educated so that their preaching and teaching would be informed, able to answer the questions of the day, and meet people’s longing for the Gospel. Ideally, his Friars were to be men of faith, prayer, and learning who could respond to the needs of their time without fear and confident that the human mind, a mere creature, could rightly, if imperfectly, understand its Creator.
Although Providence College is relatively young, having been founded in 1917, the values and goals embodied in its mission reach back 800 years. And while the 13th century may seem distant to us, it serves as a mirror of our own age: a time of rapid social change, competing ideologies, and amidst the confusion, a yearning for what is true, good, and holy.
A Catholic and Dominican College For Our Time
In some ways, the fact that Providence College is a Catholic and Dominican college is obvious. The Friars wear their habits when teaching or ministering, St. Dominic Chapel is located in the very center of campus, and crucifixes adorn the walls of classrooms and offices. Additionally, most students, faculty, and staff are Catholic; the 10:30 Mass on Sunday nights is always standing room only; and students are required to take classes in philosophy and theology.
Other aspects of the Catholic and Dominican identity are more subtle or even unexpected. Catholic teaching guides the investment of the endowment, the enforcement of parietals in the residence halls, and the generosity extended to students and employees in need. Hundreds of students volunteer their service through Campus Ministry every year, and at all hours someone can be found praying quietly in the chapel.
By charter, Providence College was the first college or university in Rhode Island to welcome students of every faith or none, and it has a long, close, and continuing relationship with Rhode Island’s Jewish community.
Yet in some ways the Catholic and Dominican character of Providence College precisely as a college is most evident in its approach to faith and reason. For many people, faith and reason stand in opposition to one another; they are black and white, irreconcilable, and best kept apart. Not so for Dominicans. In the tradition of St. Thomas Aquinas, Dominicans assert that faith and reason are compatible, complementary, and point to a single truth.
There is no opposition between the theory of evolution and belief in divine providence, for example, because how God accomplishes His purposes is a distinct question from why, even as the answers to the two questions are intimately related. Science has every right to try and understand how the universe works—indeed, it is God’s will that the human mind probe creation in order to understand it—and theology has every right to assert that everything that takes place is in service of a loving plan. What remains true is that it is God’s creation. Moreover, while faith is a gift from God, reason supports faith. This means that faith in God is not merely the result of custom, feeling, and private choice but can be a thoughtful and reasonable response to the evidence at hand. Indeed, while intimate knowledge of God in himself—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—requires revelation, knowledge that God exists can be arrived at by reason alone.
The implications of this assertion of the compatibility of faith and reason for education are profound. Questions, debates, and challenges are welcomed, as are people of hesitant faith, different faiths, or even no faith at all. Believers cannot take refuge in the assurances of faith but must learn to provide reasons for what they believe and, when it comes to the classroom, they must pursue biology, history, or accountancy with uncompromising rigor and integrity as a biologist, historian, or accountant.
At the same time, those of questioning or absent faith will be challenged by their studies in the Development of Western Civilization, philosophy, and theology. There they will have to contend with an understanding of God that is hardly the sop of comfort that Marx and Freud asserted, and will have to reconsider whether in fact faith in God is a more exacting stance than is non-belief.
It should be evident that Providence College aims at something ambitious and critically important. It attempts to provide an education for the whole person—body, mind, and soul—that bridges the common divides between matter and spirit, God and creation, faith and reason. In doing so, it affirms the distinctively Catholic sense of sacrament and grace and, like the black and white of the Dominican habit, joins together apparent opposites in a greater unity. If successful, this means that everyone at Providence College will understand that they are made in the image and likeness of God; that their work, love, and play can be replete with God’s grace; and that they have a unique role in God’s loving plan, that is, in His providence.
Non-discrimination policy
Providence College admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin, sex, religion, disability, or age to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the College. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin, sex, religion, disability, or age in the administration of its education policies, admission policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other College-administered programs.
The Associate Vice President/Executive Director of Human Resources is designated as the College’s Affirmative Action Officer. The Assistant Vice President/Associate General Counsel is designated as the College’s Title IX Coordinator.
Accreditation statement
Providence College is accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges, Inc., through its Commission on Institutions of Higher Education.
Accreditation of an institution of higher education by the New England Association indicates that it meets or exceeds criteria for the assessment of institutional quality periodically applied through a peer review process. An accredited college or university is one which has available the necessary resources to achieve its stated purposes through appropriate educational programs, is substantially doing so, and gives reasonable evidence that it will continue to do so in the foreseeable future. Institutional integrity is also addressed through accreditation.
Accreditation by the New England Association is not partial but applies to the institution as a whole. As such, it is not a guarantee of every course or program offered, or the competence of individual graduates. Rather, it provides reasonable assurance about the quality of opportunities available to students who attend the institution. Inquiries regarding the accreditation status by the New England Association should be directed to the administrative staff of the institution. Individuals may also contact:
Commission on Institutions of Higher Education
New England Association of Schools and Colleges
209 Burlington Road
Bedford, MA 01730-1433
781.271.0022 • E-mail: cihe@neasc.org
Schools and divisions
Providence College is a primarily undergraduate, liberal arts, Catholic institution of higher education. Committed to fostering academic excellence through the sciences and humanities, the College provides a variety of opportunities for intellectual, social, moral and spiritual growth in a supportive environment.
The College’s academic organization centers around four schools: Arts & Sciences, Business, Professional Studies (all featured in another catalog) and the School of Continuing Education.
The School of Continuing Education
The School of Continuing Education (SCE) was founded in 1919 as the Extension Division of Providence College. For over 90 years, this division of Providence College has been providing an outstanding education for those men and women who might otherwise have been denied such an opportunity. The philosophy that has guided, and will continue to guide, the School of Continuing Education is set forth in Section 7 of the Act of Incorporation of Providence College: “No person shall be refused admission to said college as a student, nor shall any person be denied any of the privileges, honors or degrees of said college on account of the religious opinions he may entertain.”
Today we recognize such statements guaranteeing equal opportunity for all people in the pursuit of an education. However, this statement cited from the Act of Incorporation of Providence College was written in February 1917. In this historical context, it stands as an enlightened document which embodies the spirit and commitment of Providence College in the field of higher education. This spirit and commitment to education is the result of eight centuries of Dominican tradition.
The School of Continuing Education affords an individual the opportunity of pursuing his or her undergraduate education on a part-time or full-time basis in any one of a variety of capacities: as a degree candidate in one of 13 degree and seven certificate programs; as a nondegree candidate, taking courses to be applied to a degree candidacy at a later time or for personal enrichment; or as an auditor, attending solely for personal enjoyment. Courses are offered in 12 terms per year. Web-based distance-learning courses are also available. Semester bulletins of course listings are available from the SCE office.
School of Continuing Education Mission Statement
As an integral part of Providence College, the School of Continuing Education stresses its Catholic, Dominican, and liberal arts heritage by offering a comprehensive set of programs and services specially designed to meet the higher education needs of adult learners. The school is recognized for its quality teaching, personalized attention, and academic programs. We are committed to educating the whole person by providing values-based learning experiences which prepare women and men to lead lives of reflection while at the same time providing opportunities to develop a foundation for a career.
Our goal is to help the individual achieve personal and professional growth; we strive to make a difference in the lives of our students. We value the diversity of our student body and the rich experiences they bring to our community of lifelong learners.
The School of Continuing Education has created a teaching-learning environment that is sensitive to the complex needs of adult learners. The schedule of classes, program designs, instructional formats, and faculty and staff office hours have been established to be flexible and convenient. Through our advisors, academic support services are offered along with career development and academic counseling.
Graduate Programs
Providence College’s graduate programs develop scholars, teachers, and business leaders by providing opportunities for qualified persons to pursue advanced studies. Graduate programs lead to the degrees of master of arts in history; master of arts in biblical studies; master of arts in theology; master of theological studies; master of arts in teaching mathematics; master of business administration; and master of education in administration, counseling, special education, or literacy.
In 2001, the College inaugurated the Providence Alliance for Catholic Teachers (PACT) in partnership with the University of Notre Dame and Catholic dioceses in New England. This two-year program allows students to complete, at no cost, master’s-level teacher-preparation courses leading to the master of education degree, while at the same time making a significant contribution as a full-time faculty member of an inner-city New England diocesan elementary school, middle school (grades 5-8), or high school.
The PACT program is designed for graduates of both liberal arts and education programs. Liberal arts majors pursue master’s degree studies leading to initial certification in secondary education in a specific content area. Education majors pursue master’s degree studies leading to certification in special education or a middle-level educator certificate of endorsement.
Alumni Association
The Providence College National Alumni Association is a nonprofit organization that exists to advance the cause of higher education as represented by Providence College and to foster communication and a spirit of fellowship among the alumni of the College.
To accomplish these goals, the association sponsors an extensive program of educational service and social activities to involve alumni in the mainstream of Providence College life. Through this program, the association also works to mobilize the tremendous resources of talent among the 50,000 alumni of the College, to be used for the benefit of Providence College and its current and former students.
Scholarship events, assistance to student organizations, and career advising programs utilizing alumni volunteers are just a few of the alumni association activities that may be of interest to prospective Providence College students.
Academic Calendar
2010-2011 Fall Semester
September 2010
September 6 • Monday
Holiday: Labor Day
September 7 • Tuesday
Fall semester and Term I classes begin.
September 9 • Thursday
Rosh Hashanah; Ramadan ends.
September 18 • Saturday
Yom Kippur
October 2010
October 11 • Monday
Holiday: Columbus Day
All classes suspended.
October 12 • Tuesday
All classes resume.
MONDAY CLASS SCHEDULE TO BE FOLLOWED.
October 22 • Friday
Last day for submission of course work to instructor for all “I” and “NM” grades for Spring 2010 and Summer 2010.
October 28 • Thursday
Term I classes end
November 2010
November 1 • Monday
Term II classes begin
Solemnity of All Saints
November 2 • Tuesday
All Souls
November 24-28 • Wednesday-Sunday
Holiday: Thanksgiving Recess
All classes suspended.
November 28 • Sunday
Advent begins
November 29 • Monday
All classes resume.
December 2010
December 2 • Thursday
Hanukkah
December 8 • Wednesday
Solemnity of the Immaculate
Conception
December 20 • Monday
Last day of Fall Semester classes
December 23 • Thursday
Term II classes end
2010-2011 Spring Semester
January 2011
January 3 • Monday
Winter Session I begins
January 10 • Monday
Winter Session II begins
January 17 • Monday
Holiday: Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.
January 18 • Tuesday
Spring semester and Term III
classes begin.
January 28 • Friday
Feast of St. Thomas Aquinas
February 2011
February 21 • Monday
Holiday: Presidents’ Day
All classes suspended.
February 22 • Tuesday
All classes resume.
MONDAY CLASS SCHEDULE TO BE FOLLOWED FOR ALL COURSES.
March 2011
March 4 • Friday
Last day for submission of course work to instructor for all “I” and “NM” grades for Fall 2010 and Winter 2010.
March 9 • Wednesday
Ash Wednesday
March 10 • Thursday
Term II classes end
March 12-20 • Saturday-Sunday
Spring Recess
All classes suspended.
March 21 • Monday
All classes resume.
Term IV classes begin.
April 2011
April 19 • Tuesday
Passover begins
April 21-25 • Thursday-Monday
Holiday: Easter Recess
All classes suspended.
April 26 • Tuesday
All classes resume
April 26 • Tuesday
Passover ends
April 27 • Wednesday
MONDAY CLASS SCHEDULE TOBE FOLLOWED FOR ALL COURSES.
May 2011
May 6 • Friday
SCE Graduation Banquet
May 9 • Monday
Last day of Spring Semester classes.
May 12 • Thursday
Term IV classes end
May 14 • Saturday
Commencement Mass
May 15 • Sunday
Commencement
Dunkin Donuts Center, 11:00 a.m.
Campus and facilities
The 105-acre campus of Providence College, situated in Rhode Island’s capital city, is removed from the traffic and noise of the metropolitan area but still remains close to the many cultural and educational offerings of Providence, a city that is enjoying a lively urban renaissance. The city is located only an hour’s drive from Boston and just a few hours’ drive from New York City. Interstate bus, train, and air transportation are conveniently available.
Campus Parking
Parking is allowed only upon issue of a permit from the Office of Safety and Security, open at times convenient for School of Continuing Education students. Students must present a current student ID card, driver’s license, automobile registration, and proof of automobile insurance. All cars must be registered. Strict ticketing and driving rules are enforced.
Note: While display of a campus parking permit allows a student access to designated parking areas, the availability of a parking space is not guaranteed. Students may have to park on adjacent streets, as city parking codes allow.
Academic Facilities
Classroom and laboratory facilities are found in Accinno Hall, Albertus Magnus Hall, the Ceramics Building, the Feinstein Academic Center, Harkins Hall (also the main administration building), Hickey Hall, Howley Hall, Hunt-Cavanagh Hall, Koffler Hall, Moore Hall, Phillips Memorial Library, St. Catherine of Siena Hall, Smith Center for the Arts, Sowa Hall, and Sullivan Hall.
Technology Classrooms/Facilities
Nearly all of the College’s general use classrooms are equipped with multimedia technologies. These classrooms have the latest in audio, visual, and computer and Web connectivity to enhance the instructional environment. Most classrooms have wireless network access as well.
Technology facilities are located in buildings across the campus. Accinno Hall houses the College’s Department of Information Technology and four computer laboratories. Additional public computer labs for PC faculty, staff and students are found in Albertus Magnus Hall, Howley Hall, and Koffler Hall.
Desktop Technology
Providence College is focused on providing anytime-anywhere access to information. With CyberFriar, the main Web system that interfaces with the College’s administrative database, students can manage their personal and academic records from their desktops or laptops. They can register for courses, update address and personal information, view grades, view all financial aid and billing information on their accounts, view and request academic transcripts.
Phillips Memorial Library
The Phillips Memorial Library is at the heart of the College’s intellectual life and the main area of the library is architecturally impressive.
The library maintains a collection of approximately 375,000 volumes and 240,000 electronic books. Our electronic collections are accessible by PC patrons from anywhere in the world. Patrons have access to approximately 1,100 current periodical subscriptions and more than 38,000 full-text electronic journals. The library also offers an extensive collection of print and electronic reference materials, including 120 bibliographic and full-text electronic databases, the second-largest collection of electronic databases in Rhode Island (after Brown University). In addition, the library houses the Providence College Archives and Special Collections, several academic departments, and the Office of Academic Services.
The library is a member of the HELIN (Higher Education Library Information Network) consortium, which gives students one-day access to 6 million materials from any of 10 collegiate libraries in Rhode Island. In addition, the library’s interlibrary loan service connects students to worldwide resources.
The Phillips Memorial Library provides robust access to the College’s wireless network. In the Library Commons tradition, the library offers 85 public access computers, sophisticated digitization resources in Digital Services and Macintosh labs throughout the library, 32 PC and Macintosh laptops with Web access (for student check-out), a presentation rehearsal/recording room, and an array of productivity software, as well as an electronic classroom. The library accommodates approximately 600 students in quiet and group-study areas.
Smith Center for the Arts
This building serves as the premier teaching and performance facility for undergraduates enrolled in performing arts courses or participating in extracurricular activities involving music, theatre, and dance. The primary performance venues are the 283-seat Angell Blackfriars Theatre and the 272-seat Ryan Concert Hall. Teaching spaces include a “black box” studio theatre, the Bowab Studio Theatre; the Higgins Clark Dance Studio; a 20-keyboard piano lab; a film-screening classroom; a music library; and choral and instrumental practice rooms. The building also contains the Reilly Art Gallery, as well as offices, conference rooms, and storage areas for the Department of Theatre, Dance, and Film and the Department of Music.
Slavin Center
Slavin Center, the student union, is one of the main hubs of the Providence College campus and is home to the College’s many student organizations and clubs. It also houses a variety of offices and facilities that provide services to students, from the Office of Off-Campus Living and the Providence College Bookstore to the Office of Career Services and ’64 Hall, which serves as a theatre, cinema, ballroom, and lecture hall. Slavin is also home to PC Perk, which is open throughout the day and late night for meals, beverages, or snacks.
The Alumni Hall Food Court is accessed through the lower level of Slavin Center. Slavin Center is wireless so students may check e-mail, do homework, or surf the net from one of many seating areas.
Alumni Hall Food Court
The Alumni Hall Food Court is located in the lower level of the Slavin Center. The food court is open seven days per week during the academic year: Monday through Thursday from 7:30 a.m. until midnight; Friday from 7:30 a.m. until 1:00 a.m.; Saturday from noon until 1:00 a.m.; and Sunday from noon until midnight. Hours of operation are limited during the summer months, holidays, and other times when day school classes are not in session.
Bookstore
The bookstore is located in the lower level of the Slavin Center. Regular bookstore hours during the academic year are Monday-Wednesday from 9:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.; Thursday from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.; Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.; and Saturday from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. (excluding intersessions and holidays). Students can call the bookstore at 401.865.2181 for the extended hours at the start of each semester to accommodate School of Continuing Education students. Textbook information and online ordering is available at providence.bncollege.com.
Campus Chapels
Providence College encourages the spiritual as well as the intellectual growth of each student. St. Dominic Chapel and the Campus Ministry Center are the center of spiritual life on campus. Additional places of prayer are the Chapel of Our Lady of the Rosary in the St.Thomas Aquinas Priory-Gragnani Dominican Center, the principal Dominican residence on campus, and the oratories in Harkins and Siena halls.
Center for Catholic and Dominican Studies
The Center for Catholic and Dominican Studies is located in the former Aquinas Chapel. Administratively, the center is part of the Office of Mission and Ministry and, in collaboration with the Office of the Chaplain/Campus Ministry, it assists in coordinating the collegewide process of maintaining, enhancing, and promoting the distinctive mission of Providence College as a Catholic and Dominican college.
Believing that we are called to be transformed so that we may transform society, the center serves as a place of intellectual exploration and dialogue where students, faculty, staff, administration, and alumni can gather for study, discussion, reflection, and service.
Through a variety of events and educational opportunities for the College community, the center strives to share the richness and diversity of the Catholic and Dominican intellectual and spiritual traditions, which offer crucial perspectives for today’s challenges and concerns and invite us together to partake of and benefit from a common mission inspired by faith and enabled by grace.
Safety and Security
The Office of Safety and Security operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week, year-round. The principal objective of the office is to safeguard members of the College community and to protect private and institutional property on campus. As a service organization, the security department attempts to contribute to the smooth functioning of College community life by stressing crime prevention, the individual’s obligation to take necessary precautions, the cooperation of each member of the College community to safeguard personal and College property, and the care that must be taken to comply with fire regulations. The Annual Campus Security Report is available at the security office.
Lost and Found
The Providence College Office of Safety and Security maintains a “Lost and Found.” You can check for lost items or turn in something you have found at the office. The Information Desk in the Slavin Center also maintains a “Lost and Found.” Additionally, items may be left in the School of Continuing Education office. For further information, please call 401.865.2391.
Policy on Drug-Free Campus
Providence College, in compliance with the Drug Free Schools and Communities Act Amendment of 1989, has adopted and implemented a program to prevent the illicit use of drugs and the abuse of alcohol by students and employees of the College which includes enforcement of policies and standards of conduct with respect to behavior on College property, and behavior at any College-sponsored events. |