If we want to be inspirations and examples to those we wish to serve, we must take the time to put our own houses in order.
The Prophetic Character of Jesuit Education
Counseling Centers: The Nature of Our Work
Self-Care is Cura Personalis
Linking the Collegiate Well-Being Movement and the Jesuit Tradition
Enter Magdalena: Ignatian Spirituality and Mental Health
Celebrating the 200th Anniversary of Saint Louis University
Sports in Schools: Beyond Winning and Losing
Historical Models: Jesuit Universities as Sanctuaries
Journalism Education in the Spirit of Magis
An Avenue to Transformation: Five Attributes of Fruitful Conversation
Reaffirmation of Jesuit Mission by the 28 Jesuit Colleges and Universities in the United States – A Brief Overview
On Care for Our Common Home: A Conversation among Creatures
Ite Inflammate Omnia: Setting the World on Fire with Learning
Solving the Mystery of Decree 14: Jesuits and the Situation of Women in Church and Civil Society
Collaboration at the Heart of Mission: A Laywoman's View of Jesuit Higher Education
In the spirit of advancing conversation, this article revisits "Just Listen: The Situation of Women in Jesuit Higher Education” (Conversations 29, Spring 2006).
Sport and the Spirit of Jesuit Education
In the most recent issue of Conversations (Fall 2015, No. 48), I wrote about how the emergence of the market society in the United States was negatively impacting intercollegiate athletics because it was “crowding out non-market values worth caring about.”
Integrating Ignatian Pedagogy and Nursing Values
Preliminary to a curriculum revision, the College of Nursing at Seattle University began a process of discerning who are we, what are our foundational values as an institution and a profession, and how do we believe nursing education should commence? A hallmark of the Jesuit tradition is certainly caring for the sick, poor, and marginalized.