Eastern Nazarene College
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Motto | Via, Veritas, Vita |
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Established | 1900 |
Type | Private |
President | Dr. Corlis McGee |
Location | Quincy, Massachusetts, USA |
Campus | Suburban |
Colors | Red and White |
Nickname | Crusaders |
Website | www.enc.edu |
Eastern Nazarene College (ENC) is a small liberal arts college south of Boston in Quincy, Massachusetts. Part of the higher education system of the Church of the Nazarene, ENC is the college for the Eastern Region of the Church of the Nazarene. It aims to offer a competitive education while offering a Christian lifestyle with campus life. Currently, ENC students have a 100% acceptance rate into law school. The school itself is just over 100 years old, and historical information is available in two books by Professor James Cameron, The First 50 Years of ENC and The Second 50 Years of ENC. ENC is a member of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities.
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[edit] Academics
Eastern Nazarene College boasts a 93% acceptance rate into medical school and a 100% acceptance into law school since 2000. [1]
[edit] Programs
For the 2006-2007 academic year, Eastern Nazarene College undergraduate education offers many majors within the following programs[2]:
- Biology
- Business
- Chemistry
- Communication Arts
- Computer Science
- Criminal Justice
- Education
- Engineering
- English
- Environmental science
- Health Sciences
- History
- Liberal Arts
- Mathematics
- Movement Arts
- Music
- Philosophy
- Physics
- Pre-Law
- Pre-Medical
- Pre-Nursing
- Psychology
- Religion
- Social Work
- Sociology
- Theology
ENC also has adult and graduate courses of study[3]:
- Associate of Arts in General Business
- Bachelor of Arts in Business Management
- Bachelor of Science in Business Administration
- Bachelor of Science in Management Information Systems
- Master of Science in Management
- Master of Science in Marriage and Family Therapy
- Master of Education and/or Teacher Licensure in:
- Administration Certification
- Middle School Education
- Early Childhood Education
- Elementary Education
- Teacher of Reading
- Educational Technology
- Secondary Education
- Special Needs Education
- Program Development
[edit] Past Presidents
- Floyd Nease (1924-?)
- Kent R. Hill (Emeritus, 1992-2001) [4]
- J. David McClung (2002-2005)
- Corliss McGee (2005-present) [5]
[edit] Student life
The small size of the student body stimulates a close community atmosphere not found in larger colleges. Positive relationships develop between students and faculty, providing both spiritual formation on campus and contacts for internship and research opportunities.
Students live in single sex dorms with visitation hours throughout the week. Each dorm houses a parlor where all students are welcome. Social events, student ministries, and study groups use these parlors extensively during the week. Students often use Munro parlor for quiet study, while "The Underground" parlor is another hub of campus life, offering tv, pool, ping-pong, and foosball tables.[6]
Students are required to attend many chapel services, and are encouraged to find a church home. There exist numerous campus oriented and community oriented ministries, facilitated through student-led ministries and ENC's Spiritual Development Program.
The school food is provided by Pioneer College Caterers, Inc. The Student Center houses "The Commons" for a sit-down meal, as well as "The Dugout" for made-to-order takeout meals.
Students are encouraged to actively participate in student government, academic clubs, student ministries, and school sports.
The student newspaper is the "Campus Camera," which has recently begun publishing online.
[edit] Lifestyle covenant
The Eastern Nazarene College application form requires the student to sign a Lifestyle Guideline, stating in part:
- each student, upon registering, voluntarily agrees to abstain from the use of illegal drugs, alcohol, and tobacco, and to avoid attendance at bars, clubs, or other activities or places of entertainment that promote themes of inappropriate sexuality, violence, profanity, pornography, or activities demeaning to human life.... All students will be asked to sign a Lifestyle Covenant.[7]
Although the application form says that students are "asked" to sign the Covenant, the 2005-2006 Undergraduate Catalog says that each student is "required" to sign it.[8] The catalog goes on to specify that "Sexual intimacy, while honorable in marriage, is inappropriate outside the bonds of marriage and must be avoided." Excessive displays of affection in public areas, bare feet outside of residence halls, "abbreviated shorts and tops (e.g., midriffs, cutaway shirts, halter and tube tops, etc.)" are prohibited, shirts must be worn in public "except by men engaging in athletic activities," sport bras and spandex shorts "should be covered by outerwear," and public sunbathing is not allowed.
Although theatergoing was on the school's list of illegal activities as recently as 1980[9], the current guideline merely notes that
- We encourage students to evaluate critically all forms of literature, music, media, and other forms of entertainment and to abstain from supporting those that promote themes of violence, profanity, pornography, or activities demeaning human life.
Individual Nazarene colleges draft their own community covenants; Eastern Nazarene's is slightly more liberal than its sister schools. Even so, in 2005 a senior mentioned to a Boston Globe reporter that he had been reprimanded for "reclining" with a female friend, while they were fully clothed, not touching, and in full view.[10]
One student, in a 2005 account published in the Globe, indicated that in his experience the covenant was largely obeyed. "Most people just don't drink or smoke or get high on campus." The last Ivy League school to require chapel attendance was Princeton, which abolished it in 1964; but at Eastern Nazarene "Going to chapel a few times a week is another school requirement.... the school keeps track of how often you go and fines you if you don't go enough." He calls his alma mater a "real curiosity" and says "My goal is usually to protect this information when people ask me about college. It's not that I'm ashamed, exactly; it's more the fact that it's really hard for anyone from a 'normal' college to understand a college with such strict rules."[11]
[edit] People Associated With Eastern Nazarene College
- Eldon C. Hall, alumni c.1950 [12]
- Karl Giberson, current faculty
- Thomas Jay Oord, former faculty
- Neil Nicoll (current President and CEO of YMCA) [13]
[edit] Trivia
One of the gravity monuments erected by Roger Babson is located at Eastern Nazarene College just outside Shrader Hall.
[edit] See also
- Church of the Nazarene
- List of Church of the Nazarene schools
- Lapham Institute (first campus of ENC)
[edit] Further reading
- James R. Cameron, Eastern Nazarene College: The first fifty years, 1900-1950, Nazarene Publishing House, 1968
- James R. Cameron, The spirit makes the difference: The history of Eastern Nazarene College, part II, 1950-2000, ENC Press, 2000
[edit] References
- ^ Eastern Nazarene College Undergraduate Program
- ^ Eastern Nazarene College Undergraduate Programs
- ^ Eastern Nazarene College areas of graduate study
- ^ USAID Bio of Kent Kill
- ^ USAMission News Release, May 2005
- ^ Eastern Nazarene residential life
- ^ Eastern Nazarene College Application for Admission, pdf (674 KB); undated, downloaded 2006-08-14
- ^ Eastern Nazarene College, 2005-2006, Undergraduate Catalog, pdf (1.4MB), downloaded 2006-08-14
- ^ Johnson, Carolyn Y. (2005) "A Calling to Educate: New Head of Christian College Aims to Train 'People of Value'", The Boston Globe, July 31, 2005, Globe South p. 1
- ^ Johnson, Carolyn (2005), "Religious focus remains as rules evolve", The Boston Globe, July 31, 2005, Globe South p. 3
- ^ Alspach, Kyle (2005), "What I Learned From Nazarene Life," The Boston Globe, July 31, 2005, Globe South p. 4
- ^ Smart Computing Encyclopedia entry for Eldon Hall
- ^ YMCA Press Release
[edit] External links
- Eastern Nazarene College
- "School's Religious Focus Remains as Rules Evolve," The Boston Globe July 31, 2005
- "What I Learned from Nazarene Life," The Boston Globe, July 31, 2005
- "College’s students extend giving hands," The Patriot-Ledger, January 9, 2006
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