Coordinates:
41.923558° N 87.653542°
W
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DePaul University
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| Motto |
Viam sapientiae monstrabo tibi.
("I will show you the way of wisdom.") |
| Established |
1898 |
| Type |
Private |
| Religious affiliation |
Roman Catholic (Vincentian) |
| Academic term |
Quarter |
| Endowment |
$285.2
million |
| President |
Rev. Dennis H. Holtschneider, C.M., Ed.D. |
| Faculty |
830 full-time, 700 part-time per quarter (fall 2005 data) |
| Undergraduates |
14,741 |
| Postgraduates |
7,229 (1,179 law) |
| Location |
Chicago, Illinois, USA |
| Campus |
Metropolitan, Lincoln Park and
downtown Chicago Loop; four suburban locations |
| Colors |
Royal Blue, Scarlet and Black (athletics only) |
| Nickname |
Blue Demons |
| Mascot |
DIBS (Demon In a Blue Suit) |
| Affiliations |
Big East Conference |
| Website |
www.depaul.edu |
DePaul University[1] is a private institution of
higher education and research in Chicago, Illinois, USA. Founded by the Vincentians in 1898, the university takes its name from the 17th century French priest who valued philanthropy, Saint Vincent de Paul. The student body consists of about 24,000 students (approximately 15,000
undergraduate and 9,000 graduate). DePaul is the largest Catholic university and one of the 10
largest private universities in the USA; it is the largest private university in
Illinois.
Academics
DePaul University emphasizes a primary focus on pedagogy and has been recognized for
excellence in experiential and service-based learning. US News & World
Report has listed DePaul's service learning program at the top of the
"America's Best Colleges" rankings since 2004. The university has a strong emphasis on recruiting
first-generation university students and those from disadvantaged backgrounds while striving for academic rigor. The Princeton Review, in its 2007 survey of the best colleges and universities in the United
States, ranked DePaul #1 in the nation in the “Diverse Student Population” category. The 2005
guidebook Colleges with a conscience: 81 great schools with outstanding community involvement provides a description of
outreach activity undertaken by the university. In recent years, US News & World Report has twice ranked DePaul
University undergraduate students #1 in the USA (most recently in 2004) in terms of satisfaction with their college experience.
The university is in the third tier of the 262 "National Universities" by US
News & World Report[2] The university's
doctoral programs were ranked # 1 in the USA for small university research programs in the Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index
for the year 2005 produced by State University of New York-Stony
Brook. CIO Magazine, a leading journal for the information technology industry, named DePaul to its list of the nation's 100 most
innovative organizations in information technology.[[4]] DePaul was recognized for its creation and implementation of a series of online tools that help students
better navigate their academic careers. DePaul University has nine colleges and schools.
College of Commerce and Kellstadt Graduate School of Business at State and Jackson in the
Chicago
Loop.
DePaul's College of Commerce[5] is
located downtown in Chicago's Loop at 1 East Jackson Boulevard and is one of the ten oldest
business schools in the US. It includes the Kellstadt Graduate School of Business (KGSB). The full-time faculty of the college consists of approximately 130 members. In 2006 Princeton Review ranked
the College of Commerce's entrepreneurship program (out of 700 programs) #2 in the US
among graduate programs and #3 among undergraduate programs. Entrepreneur
magazine has consistently ranked DePaul's entrepreneurship program one of the best in
the US. In 2007, Fortune Small Business magazine named DePaul's undergraduate program one of the 25
best in the nation for entrepreneurs [6] and its graduate program one of the top 26 MBA programs with an entrepreneurial flair. [7] Its MBA consistently ranks high, garnering a # 9
ranking in the 2008 US News and World Report. The KGSB has active graduate business programs in Bahrain, the Czech Republic, New
Zealand, and Taiwan, P.R. China.
Professors include behavioral finance pioneer Werner
DeBondt, Mesirow Financial Chief
Economist Diane Swonk, and Coleman Foundation Endowed Chair for Entrepreneurship
Harold P. Welsch.
College of Law, School for New Learning, Lewis Center.
The DePaul College of Communication[8] is home to more than 1,100 students pursuing professional or traditional academic courses of study in
journalism; public relations and advertising; media studies; radio, television and film; relational, group and organizational
communication; and culture and communication. Coursework in the college's graduate and undergraduate degree programs is
supplemented by a range of comprehensive pre-employment training opportunities, including Radio DePaul, The DePaulia, and a
top-rated internship program.
The DePaul University College of Law, located in the
Loop at 25 East Jackson Boulevard, is known for its Intellectual Property and Health Law programs, which have both
garnered top 10 placements in the US News and World Report rankings in
recent years. Notable faculty include M. Cherif Bassiouni, who was nominated for a Nobel
Peace Prize in 1999 for his work on behalf of the International Criminal Court, Alberto Coll, former assistant Secretary of Defense under George H. W. Bush, and Andrea Lyon, director of the Center for Justice in Capital Cases.
School of Computer Science, Telecommunications, and Information Systems.
The DePaul
University School of Computer Science, Telecommunications and Information Systems (CTI) is also located in the
Loop and includes the largest graduate program in the United States. At the
2006 ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest, in which over 5,600 teams
representing 1,733 universities from 84 countries competed, DePaul placed 29th, one of three U.S. universities in the top 30 (MIT placed 7th, Princeton placed
28th). CTI is a recognized national leader in computer network security and
information assurance education, according to a designation bestowed by the
National Security Agency and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. DePaul was named as a National
Center of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance by the two agencies in early 2005. CTI was one of only six schools
nationwide (and the only Midwestern university) selected by Sony Pictures
Imageworks to take part in the inaugural Imageworks Professional Academic Excellence (IPAX) program. The program is a
collaboration to educate faculty and structure curricula in an effort to develop future artists, designers, animators and
engineers who will help the visual effects industry to grow. DePaul’s groundbreaking
Digital Cinema program, one of the first of its kind in the nation, combines the artistic
principles of film school programs with the technology expertise of digital graphics, visual
effects and digital storytelling.
The College of Liberal Arts & Sciences[9] is DePaul's largest college and is located in the Lincoln Park campus, which occupies 36 acres in Chicago's
Lincoln Park community. In 2006 the Department of Modern Languages inaugurated a unique and innovative Chinese studies major[10]. Notable college faculty
members include Aminah McCloud, director of the Islamic World Studies program; psychology
professor Leonard Jason; Joseph Schwieterman, director of the Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan Development [11]. The philosophy department is also
noted as a first-rate program in 20th century [continental philosophy], particularly at the graduate level, according to the
Hartman Report [12].
The department includes major Heidegger translators David
Farrell Krell and William McNeill, and feminist theorist
Tina Chanter. The graduate School of Public Service
(SPS), located in the Loop Campus, educates nonprofit and government professionals, includes an interdisciplinary faculty, and
offers a number of international programs.[13] It is the largest program of its type in the midwest. The English department offers the Oeuvre Prize to
distinguished writers semi-annually to recognize significant accomplishments in Literature. The community and clinical-community
psychology programs won the Award for Excellence in Education Programs from the Society for Community Research and Action (SCRA
Division 27 of the American Psychological Association); DePaul's
program was the first recipient of the award, given for the first time in 2007.
The School for New Learning[14] (SNL),
created in 1972, was one of the first university-wide efforts in the United States to serve adult
students through a separate college. Students partner with faculty and professional mentors to create a unique curriculum for
earning an undergraduate or graduate degree and can earn college credit for knowledge
gained through life experiences by demonstrating competence in various areas. SNL was named one of six "Best Practice"
institutions in North America by the Council for Adult and Experiential Learning,
an international non-profit organization which advocates for adult learning. The
Houston-based American Productivity and Quality Center has touted SNL for its individualized education of adult students.
Associate Professor Miriam Ben-Yoseph was named the 2006 Illinois Professor of the Year by the Carnegie Foundation for the
Advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE)[15].
The School of Education[16] is
recognized for teaching students to be effective in multicultural urban environments. It is engaged in partnerships with more
than 150 Chicago-area schools, including the Chicago Public Schools, parochial and private institutions. DePaul’s education program was among
the first to become accredited by the National Council
for Accreditation of Teacher Education in 1965 and remains accredited today. The school
offers undergraduate and graduate degree programs in early childhood, elementary and secondary education and physical education; bilingual/bicultural education; social and cultural
foundations in education; curriculum studies; educational leadership; human services
and counseling; and a program in language, literacy and specialized instruction.
DePaul's School of Music[17] is
nationally renowned, with more than two dozen members of the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra and the Lyric Opera of Chicago as faculty. The School of Music was named as one of the "Schools That Rock" in the
2005 Rolling Stone guidebook that evaluated collegiate music
schools nationally. In 2007, Fortune Small Business recognized its performing arts management major
as one of the 24 best cross-discipline programs for entrepreneurs. [18] In addition to degrees in jazz and concert performance, music
composition, music education and jazz studies, DePaul has programs in sound
recording technology and performing arts management.
DePaul's Theatre School[19] was
founded as the Goodman School of Drama in 1925 and
is the Midwest's oldest theatre training conservatory. In 2006, the school's array of theatrical
productions, playwrighting festivals, guest-lecture series and scholarship availability are featured in the book, Creative Colleges by Elaina
Loveland. In January 2003, The Education Life section of The New York Times listed DePaul's Theatre School among nine schools most mentioned by
casting directors and theatrical agents for program quality. It was the first
in the USA to offer an undergraduate degree in Dramaturgy and Dramatic Criticism.
As part of a "learning by doing" philosophy, the school presents more than 40 productions each season in a variety of venues. Ten
productions are offered to the public each season as part of The Theatre School Showcase, Chicago Playworks (the city’s oldest
continuously operating children’s theatre), New Directors Series, or New Playwrights Series. Theatre students are involved in all
aspects of the productions.
History
Originally named St. Vincent’s College, DePaul University was founded in 1898 by the
Congregation of the Mission priests and brethren, known as the Vincentians. Followers of 17th century French priest Saint Vincent
de Paul, they founded the university to serve Roman Catholic children of
immigrants, many of whom were denied admission to universities based on ethnic and religious quotas.
Student enrollment grew from 70 in 1898 to 200 in 1903 in what is
now the Lincoln Park neighborhood of Chicago. In that year,
James Quigley, archbishop
of Chicago, announced plans to create a preparatory seminary, now Archbishop Quigley Preparatory Seminary, for the archdiocese and allow
Jesuit Saint Ignatius College, now
Loyola University Chicago to move its collegiate programs to the north side,
threatening St. Vincent College’s survival. In response, the Vincentians re-chartered in 1907 as
DePaul University, expressly offering all of its courses of study to men and women of any religious background. DePaul began
admitting women in 1911 and awarded degrees to its first female graduates in 1912. It was one of the first Catholic universities to admit female students in a co-educational setting.
In 1912, DePaul established the School of Music and the College of Commerce, the latter becoming
one of the oldest business schools in the nation. In 1914, the College began offering courses in
Chicago’s Loop, the precursor of DePaul’s second primary campus. In 1915, the Illinois College of
Law completed its affiliation with the university and became the DePaul
University College of Law. Enrollment totaled more than 1,100. With the entry of the United States into World War I in 1918, DePaul formed a unit of the US Army Reserve Officer Training Corps and
converted its College Theatre into Army barracks.
DePaul University's basketball team (1908)
DePaul University's baseball team (1908)
DePaul University's football team (1916)
Although finances were rocky, the university continued to grow and build in the 1920s. In 1926,
the university was first accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Universities. When DePaul’s first sports
teams were formed in the early 1900s, the monogram "D" was selected for the uniforms. From this originated the nickname "D-men"
which evolved into "Demons." The color blue, which signifies loyalty and was chosen in 1901 by a vote of the student body, was
added to the name to create the "Blue Demons."
By 1930 more than 5,000 students were enrolled in eight colleges and schools on two campuses.
The Great Depression led to fluctuations in enrollment and tuition
as well as cutbacks, including elimination of the football team in 1939. In 1938, the Department of Elementary Education was established, reportedly
the only one in the Midwest and one of six in the United States.
DePaul mobilized for World War II, offering its facilities for war training and free
courses to train people for industry work. The G.I. Bill, which paid the tuition of veterans
enrolled in college, turned the financial tide for DePaul. Enrollment in 1945 skyrocketed to 8,857
students, twice as many as the previous year, and totaled more than 11,000 in 1948. Although a
consulting firm recommended relocating from its deteriorating Lincoln Park
neighborhood to the suburbs, trustees voted to remain and support revitalization of the neighborhood.
In 1942, DePaul named Ray Meyer as head basketball coach.
Meyer coached for DePaul until he retired in 1984, leading the 1945
team to the championship of the National Invitation Tournament and
earning numerous honors, including election to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of
Fame in 1979, the fourth active coach to be so honored.
In 1954, DePaul adopted its current armorial seal with coat of
arms and motto: "Viam sapientiae monstrabo tibi" ("I will show you the way of wisdom." Proverbs, IV, 11). In
1955, the Frank J. Lewis Foundation donated the 18-story Kimball Building, rechristened the Lewis
Center, at 25 East Jackson Boulevard, to the university. The building, still used today, was the hub of the Loop campus until
1993, when the DePaul Center opened at 1 East Jackson (at State Street).
In 1972, DePaul created the School for New Learning, one of the first colleges in the nation
dedicated to serving adult students. In 1976 and 1977, the university
acquired the land and buildings of the McCormick Theological Seminary,
which increased its presence in Lincoln Park. In 1978, DePaul acquired the 47-year-old Goodman
School of Drama from the Goodman Theatre and transformed it into The Theatre School.
Following renovations in the 1980s and expansion of academic programs to promote research and social engagement, the
university launched a six-year strategic plan in 1989. The plan included raising the national
profile, expanding enrollment from 13,500 to 18,500 and completing an extensive building campaign at the Loop and Lincoln Park
campuses. Major construction included renovation of the DePaul Center in 1993 and acquisition of
the Blackstone Theatre, rechristened the Merle Reskin, in 1992. At Lincoln Park, projects included
the John T. Richardson Library, completed in 1992, several new residence halls and the quadrangle.
In 1994 enrollment was 16,700. Under the next six-year strategic plan, the university expanded
enrollment to 23,000 students, reclaiming its status as the nation’s largest Catholic university while maintaining admission
standards, increasing diversity (currently, one third of the student population is of color) and maintaining access for
first-generation college students and those from low-income circumstances (about one-fourth of
incoming freshmen qualify for Pell grants for low-income families). Additional new facilities included the McGowan Biological and
Environmental Sciences Center in 1999, the Ray Meyer Fitness and Recreation Center in
1999, the Student Center in 2001 and the Sullivan NCAA Athletic Center in 2000. DePaul was one of
seven finalists for “College of the Year” honors given by TIME magazine and the
Princeton Review in 1998.
DePaul entered into a merger with Barat College in 2000,
from which it withdrew in 2005 after continued low enrollment and rising maintenance costs made the
campus unviable. It sold the grounds of the 100-year-old college to a condominium developer who pledged to maintain the historic
Old Main building. The remaining students, most faculty and some staff were absorbed into DePaul's other campuses.
Athletics
DePaul competes in NCAA Division
I and is a member of the Big East Conference. The school mascot is the
Blue Demon. The school is well known for its
basketball program which gained prominence under Ray Meyer who led the team to the NCAA
Division I basketball Final Four in the 1978-1979 season.
The school's only national championship came in 1945 after winning the NIT tournament.
The current men's basketball coach is Jerry Wainwright, who joined DePaul in
2005. Wainwright's first season with his young team was erratic, beating No. 16 Wake Forest 84-81 before falling to Old Dominion by a score of 87-43 (the worst defeat in the team's
history), and then beating future Big East Champion, Syracuse, 108-69 on March 2,
2006. At the start of the 2007 season, Wainwright is two wins short
of 200 and has made six post-season appearances in his previous 12 years as head coach.
DePaul's NCAA women's basketball reached the Sweet 16 for the first time in the program's history in 2006. Head Coach Doug Bruno is entering his 22nd year as head coach of the team. He recently completed a two-year
term as president of the Women's Basketball Coaches Association. [20]
The DePaul women's softball team has participated four times in the Women's
College World Series since 1999. It finished the 2006-07 season ranked sixth in the final
USA Today/NFCA Poll. [21] The
women's softball team has participated in the NCAA World Series several times in recent years. Head coach Eugene Lenti and his
staff were named National Fastpitch Coaches Association Mideast Region Staff of the Year. [22]
DePaul's perennial rivals include Marquette University, Northwestern University and the University of Notre
Dame.
Blue Demons fight song
Image:DePaulBlueDemonsSheild.gif
Blue Demon shield
We will gather
'Neath your banner,
'Neath the scarlet and the blue,
While in song we
Tell your praises
Praises for old DePaul U
Let the battle
wage and threaten
Yours the victory to claim;
As we fight beneath your standard: Proud!
Exulting in your name.
D - E - M - O - N S
(repeat first verse and conclude with "D-E-P-A-U-L")
Campuses
Completed in 1992, Richardson Library faces the Quad in the heart of DePaul University's main campus in Lincoln Park.
DePaul's two primary campuses are in the Lincoln Park neighborhood of Chicago
and the downtown Loop area. The university has suburban campuses in Naperville, Oak Forest, O'Hare and Rolling Meadows.
Lincoln Park Campus
DePaul's Lincoln Park campus is the oldest and largest of the university's six campuses. Located on 36 acres in
Chicago's historic Lincoln Park neighborhood, this campus offers a
traditional university environment. Approximately 1,700 students live on campus in DePaul's eleven residence halls.
The Lincoln Park Campus is home to the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the College
of Communication, The Theatre School, the School of Music, the School of Education, and
the John T. Richardson Library. Opened in 1992, the library features study and small-group spaces,
an automated reference center, and a high-tech Resource Center for Career
Development.
Completed in 2002, the Student Center is a central meeting place for students.
Student Center in March 2007.
The three-level Student Center, which opened in 2002, houses student services, dining
facilities, the Saint Louise de Marillac Chapel, a cyber cafe and offices for
organizations ranging from special-interest clubs to the Cultural Center. Other recent additions include the state-of-the-art
McGowan Sciences Center, and the Ray Meyer Fitness and Recreation Center. Ground was broken in 2007
for a second science building, scheduled for completion in 2008.
Loop Campus
DePaul's Loop campus is located in downtown Chicago at the intersection of Jackson Boulevard and State Street. It is close to
the stock exchanges, financial district, and the Art Institute of Chicago. The newest building on the Loop Campus is the DePaul Center (DPC), an
11-story building fully renovated in 1993 to include modern classrooms, high-tech student services
and a business library. It is home to the College of Commerce. In November of 2000, the
Urban Land Institute presented DPC with its Award for Excellence for
Rehabilitation. The College of Law and the School for New Learning are
based in the Lewis Center and O'Malley Place at the southwest corner of Wabash and Jackson. Kitty-corner across the street is the
School of Computer Science, Telecommunications and Information Systems.
DePaul partnered with Roosevelt University and Columbia College Chicago to build the University Center of Chicago, an 18-story residence hall
two blocks south of DPC housing 1,700 students, which opened in 2004 at the intersection of State
and Congress Streets. DePaul's four suburban campuses primarily serve part-time
professional students completing undergraduate and graduate degrees.
Controversies
Like other universities, DePaul has incurred multiple controversies.
- In 1967, the Black Student Union (BSU) was formed. In 1969, while in ongoing negotiations with DePaul administrators, members
of the group occupied a campus building for two days and led several related rallies. The actions helped bring concerns of
black students, and later those of Latino,
Muslim and other student groups, to the fore. The university now sponsors a wide range of student
organizations, including BSU, DePaul Irish Society, the DePaul Alliance for Latino Empowerment, United Muslims Moving Ahead, the
Asian Cultural Exchange and the Activist Student Union.
- In recent years, criticism of the student newspaper, The DePaulia, has led
to independent periodicals by black, conservative, feminist, gay/lesbian, Latino and radical student groups.
Students have been critical of disqualifications in student government elections, banning of a former student from campus, and
limitations of a "Boycott Coke" campaign.[citation needed] Students from a range of political orientations have been critical of what
they see as policies limiting freedom of expression.
- The administration attempts to maintain a position respectful of the range of student beliefs.[[23]] [[24]] On May 24,
2006, the university sponsored a forum on free speech
for students, faculty and interested community members, which featured Randall Kennedy
of Harvard Law School and Ann Franke of United Educators in Washington, DC, and included a discussion between the speakers and audience members.
- FIRE and others have criticized the university's decision to suspend without public hearing and not renew the contract of
part-time faculty member Thomas E. Klocek in September 2004 for comments made to and
behaviour towards Palestinian students concerning the conflict with Israel. The event resulted in FIRE's harsh
criticism of the university's level of support for open discussion and debate.[4] University supporters maintain that the issue was not Klocek's views, but the manner in which he
expressed them.
- The university limited fliers protesting a visit of Ward Churchill, declaring them
"propaganda."[5] Churchill's visit garnered a bomb threat
that prompted the University to limit attendance at the event.
- In June 2007, Norman Finkelstein, an outspoken
political science professor, was denied tenure. This followed a highly public and rancorous evaluation process in which Dr.
Finkelstein's nemesis Alan Dershowitz took the highly unusual and unorthodox step of
sending unsolicited letters and dossiers to Finkelstein's peers at DePaul urging them to deny him tenure. DePaul's president,
Rev. Dennis Holtschneider, denies that the outside pressure affected the
university's position, saying "This attention was unwelcome and inappropriate and had no impact on either the process or the
outcome of this case.”[6] Finkelstein's supporters claim he
was denied tenure due to his writings on the Holocaust and on the state of the
Palestinians under Israeli occupation.[7] Detractors such
as Dershowtitz challenge Finkelstein's research methods and confrontational approach. On Sept. 5, 2007, Finkelstein resigned after he and the university reached a settlement; they released a joint statement
[25].
-
Footnotes
- ^ DePaul University should not be confused with DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana, which has a similar pronunciation.
- ^ America's Best Colleges 2008 17 August 2007.
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2].
- ^ [3].
- ^ DePaul University Statement on the Tenure and Promotion Decision Concerning Professor Norman
Finkelstein 6 June 2007
- ^ Robert Jensen: The Commonplace Cowardice of Responsible Professors What the Finkelstein Tenure Fight
Tells Us About the State of Academia (CounterPunch, 25 May 2007);
Howard Friel: DePaul
Genuflects to Dershowitz (ZNet, 12 June 2007);
Associated Press: DePaul denies tenure to
controversial professor (CNN, 11 June 2007).
Notable alumni
-
See also
External links
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