Motto | "Docere Verbo et Exemplo" |
---|---|
Motto in English
|
"To teach by word and example" |
Type | Private liberal arts college |
Established | 1898 |
Affiliation |
Roman Catholic (Premonstratensian Order) |
Endowment | US $99,020,004 |
President | Thomas Kunkel |
Academic staff
|
133 full-time, 69 part-time |
Students | 2,180 |
Location | De Pere, Wisconsin, United States of America |
Campus | Suburban |
Colors | Green and Gold |
Athletics | NCAA Division III – Midwest Conference |
Nickname | Green Knights |
Affiliations |
ACCU WAICU CIC |
Website | http://www.snc.edu/ |
St. Norbert College (SNC) is a private Catholic liberal arts college in De Pere, Wisconsin. Founded in October 1898 by Abbot Bernard Pennings, a Norbertine priest and educator, the school was named after Saint Norbert of Xanten. In 1952, the college became coeducational. The school currently enrolls about 2,180 students.
St. Norbert College was established when Abbot Bernard Pennings, a Dutch immigrant priest from the Premonstratensian Berne Abbey of Heeswijk, the Netherlands, founded the college to train young men for the priesthood. Frances I. Van Dyke, a seminarian, was the first and, at the time, the only student. St. Norbert is the first and only institution of higher learning in the world sponsored by the Premonstratensian order. Abbot Pennings later started a commerce program at the college for lay students before retiring in 1955.
St. Norbert's second president, the Rev. Dennis Burke, O.Praem., expanded the college, anticipating the student population would eventually reach 2,000. Robert Christin, who became president in 1968, implemented the current course system and the academic divisional structure. In 1973, Neil Webb, a former faculty member and vice president, became president. With his strong fiscal management abilities, Webb established the first substantial permanent endowment for the school.
Serving as the college's president from 1983 to 2000, Thomas Manion brought national recognition to the institution and led the expansion of facilities and the development of additional academic programs. Under his leadership, the enrollment topped 2,000, and extensive renovations and construction activities expanded the college's physical facilities.
Thomas Kunkel, former dean of the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland, College Park, Md. became the seventh president of the college on July 1, 2008.
St. Norbert College offers undergraduate programs in more than 40 areas of study, leading to a Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Music, or Bachelor of Business Administration degree. A Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree is also offered through a joint effort with the Bellin College of Nursing. The most popular undergraduate majors are Business Administration (18%), Education (14%), and Communication (11%). In addition to its undergraduate offerings, St. Norbert College offers three masters-level graduate programs in business administration, theological studies and liberal studies. The Master of Theological Studies department hosts a branch program in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Program studies take place at the Norbertine Abbey of Santa Maria de la Vid in Albuquerque. Students on that campus can earn the full MTS degree. In the fall of 2015, the college began offering an MBA program through its new Donald J. Schneider School of Business & Economics. The Medical College of Wisconsin's Green Bay campus, which serves the northeast Wisconsin region, is located in the new Gehl-Mulva Science Center at St. Norbert.