What type of response can we as a Jesuit institution have to the latest revelations of clergy sexual abuse? Where do collaboration and discernment fit into a productive proactive response?
As we engage our contemporary college and university context, Jennifer Tilghman-Havens challenges us to deeply ask if we still want to be Jesuit and Catholic - and if so - how we’ll do that today.
The Catholic Church is in crisis in the United States and around the world. How might our Jesuit colleges and universities remain spaces of hope and light?
As Jesuit colleges and universities across the United States, can we dare to believe that the capacity for love and peacemaking lives alongside the capacity for fear and violence in every human heart?
Counseling centers at our Jesuit colleges and universities are increasingly more utilized and crucial to our students’ success. How might Ignatian Spirituality strengthen the work of our excellent counselors?
At all our Jesuit colleges and universities, how can we use the positive components of social media to promote a genuine culture of encounter and accompaniment?
When so many of our students are struggling with issues of mental health and well-being, how can we as educators destigmatize mental illness in our classes?
As educators in Jesuit Catholic colleges and universities, how do we engage with the pain and suffering, as well as the promising potential, of LGBTQ students in ways that move beyond tolerance to a full expression of cura personalis?
As our students continue to battle multiple types of challenges including eating disorders and pornography, the NCPD Council on Mental Illness offers resources, handbooks, and tools to guide us as educators at Jesuit colleges and universities.