Apr 18, 2024  
2023-2024 Academic Catalog 
    
2023-2024 Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

The College



Saint Mary’s College of California

Saint Mary’s is a comprehensive liberal arts university offering undergraduate and graduate programs that integrate liberal and professional education built upon a foundation of Catholic, Lasallian, and liberal arts traditions. A challenging curriculum, exceptional faculty, and a focus on student success prepare learners for rewarding careers, and full lives.

The core Lasallian principles of social justice, faith in the presence of God, respect for all persons, inclusive community, and quality education are reflected in every aspect of campus life and learning. Rooted in the Christian Brothers’ commitment to teaching and learning, Saint Mary’s student-centered education shapes individual lives that can transform society.

The Catholic tradition fosters a Christian understanding of the whole person and defends the goodness, dignity, and freedom of each individual in a community that values diversity of perspective, background, and culture.

The liberal arts tradition at Saint Mary’s College seeks to educate and engage the intellect in an attempt to resolve the great questions that arise from common human experience through a search that probes for fundamental principles and causes.

This approach develops the intellectual abilities of the whole person, preparing students for life beyond the knowledge and skills needed for any particular profession. It develops critical thinking, an understanding of and respect for different ways of knowing, and a desire for lifelong learning.

The College provides a welcoming environment, knowing that the best academic achievement and social and personal development are realized in an environment that is culturally, spiritually, and ethnically diverse, where every voice is heard and each student has the opportunity to grow, succeed, and serve.

Saint Mary’s faculty are deeply committed to teaching and interacting with students, while also being accomplished scholars. They are active members of a close community characterized by small classes, lively discussion, and deep relationships.

The campus, known for its great natural and architectural beauty in the Moraga Valley, is only 20 miles east of San Francisco. Surrounded by hills and woods, the white buildings with red tile roofs are designed in Mission Renaissance style, with the College Chapel as its architectural and spiritual heart.

History

Saint Mary’s College of California is one of the oldest colleges in the West. Founded in 1863 by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese as a college for men, the school was originally located in San Francisco, operating for several years under Archdiocesan direction.

In 1868, the De La Salle Christian Brothers assumed direction of the school. Theirs is the world’s largest Roman Catholic order dedicated to teaching, founded 320 years ago by St. John Baptist de La Salle, who devoted his life to the ministry of Christian education, especially for the poor. Brother Justin McMahon, FSC, was the first Christian Brother president of Saint Mary’s, who traveled to San Francisco accompanied by nine other Brothers. Under their leadership, the College’s student body quickly increased from 50 to 200 students, with the first SMC bachelor’s degrees awarded in 1872.

The Brothers added a commercial curriculum to the classical and scientific curricula when they arrived in 1868. The College was incorporated by the state of California on May 20, 1872, and the following year the first master of arts degree was conferred. Since that time the Brothers have directed the College and exercised an indispensable role in its administration, instruction, and funding, working collaboratively with distinguished clerical and lay colleagues who fill many significant administrative and faculty appointments.

In 1889, the Saint Mary’s campus moved from San Francisco to Oakland to the corner of 30th and Broadway, occupying a facility affectionately known as the “Brickpile.” The College operated there until 1928, when it was moved to its current location in Moraga. The original Moraga campus was much smaller than the current campus; 11 of the original buildings, constructed in 1928 and 1929, are still in use today. They include the Chapel, Dante Hall, and Galileo Hall.

In 1940, the Saint Mary’s hillside was graced with the addition of “La Cruz de la Victoria,” the Cross of Victory. The cross has become a familiar landmark among Saint Mary’s students, alumni, professors, and staff. Hiking up to the cross is a popular activity.

After the attack on Pearl Harbor in December of 1941, the United States Navy began using the Saint Mary’s campus for pilot training. The Navy’s presence on the campus led to significant changes, including moving the main entrance to the front of campus. This resulted in the clear view of the Chapel that greets visitors today. The Navy also built Assumption Hall (now a first-year residence hall) and the world’s largest indoor pool, which no longer exists.

Saint Mary’s has evolved and changed over the years, with location, size, and demographics completely transformed. Life for SMC’s first students in the 19th century was quite different from the student’s experience today. Tuition was $60 per academic year for day students and $250 for boarding students. A student’s day was rigidly scheduled, awakened at 6 a.m. for a day filled with an unvarying schedule of study, class, prayer, meals, and recreation, then lights out at 8:30 p.m.

Nevertheless, traces of the College’s past remain-like the ringing of the Chapel bells, the same bells that every Saint Mary’s student has heard and remembers. And the College’s commitment to service, learning, and community remains very true to its origins. As the SMC community looks to the future of Saint Mary’s, we will continue to honor the common thread that connects generations of Gaels.

Chronological History

1863
 
Saint Mary’s College on Mission Road in San Francisco dedicated on July 9 by Archbishop Joseph Sadoc Alemany.
1868
 
Arrival of the Christian Brothers, August 11, commercial curriculum established.
1872
 
Chartered by the state of California, May 20, Saint Mary’s conferred its first bachelor of arts and its first bachelor of science.
1873
 
First master of arts degree conferred.
1889
 
Saint Mary’s College moved to 30th and Broadway in Oakland; the Brickpile dedicated on August 15.
1894
 
Fire severely damaged the Brickpile; the College returned to the San Francisco campus for a year during rebuilding.
1901
 
Civil and mechanical engineering curriculum established.
1905
 
Art curriculum established at Saint Mary’s College, the first Catholic college west of the Mississippi to offer a full art curriculum.
1906
 
School of Commerce established.
1910
 
Pre-medical curriculum established.
1921
 
School of Engineering, and School of Foreign Trade established. 
1924
 
School of Education, and School of Law (evening) established.
1927
 
The College became the first Catholic men’s college to join the Northwestern Association of Schools and Colleges.
1928
 
Saint Mary’s College moved to the Moraga campus and was dedicated on September 3; School of Law remained in Oakland, and closed in 1931.
1933
 
School of Economics and Business Administration established.
1935
 
School of Arts and Letters, and School of Science (engineering, pre-medical, pre-dental and science curricula combined) established.
1941
 
World Classics Core Curriculum (now Collegiate Seminar) established.
1942-46
 
After the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Navy conducted preflight training at the College.
1946
 
School of Liberal Arts established.
1969
 
Brother Mel Anderson, FSC, became president of Saint Mary’s College; 4-1-4 calendar established for undergraduate programs.
1970
 
Women are admitted to Saint Mary’s College.
1974
 
Graduate and extended education divisions established.
1981
 
Intercollegiate baccalaureate program in nursing with Samuel Merritt College established.
1985
 
School of Education established.
1987
 
125th anniversary of the College’s founding; its 60th year in Moraga.
1997
 
Brother Mel Anderson, FSC, D. Litt., L.H.D., retired after 28 years as president of Saint Mary’s, and Brother Craig Franz, FSC, PhD, named president.
1999
 
School of Education establishes College’s first doctoral program, EdD in Educational Leadership.
2004
 
Brother Ronald Gallagher, FSC, PhD, named president of Saint Mary’s; Geissberger Observatory opens.
2007
 
Brousseau Hall christened, honoring Brother Alfred Brousseau.
2008
 
New home to the Kalmanovitz School of Education-Filippi Academic Hall-opens.
2012
 
Saint Mary’s College celebrates its sesquicentennial or 150th anniversary.
2013
 
James A. Donahue, PhD, named president of Saint Mary’s.
2021   Richard Plumb, PhD, named president of Saint Mary’s. 

Statement of Mission

Saint Mary’s College in the 21st century celebrates the three traditions that have sustained it since its earliest years and seeks its future in them: the classical tradition of liberal arts education, the intellectual and spiritual legacy of the Catholic Church, and the vision of education enunciated by Saint John Baptist de La Salle and developed by the Brothers of the Christian Schools and their colleagues in a tradition now more than 300 years old.

The Mission of Saint Mary’s College Is:

  • To probe deeply the mystery of existence by cultivating the ways of knowing and the arts of thinking.

Recognizing that the paths to knowledge are many, Saint Mary’s College offers a diverse curriculum, which includes the humanities, arts, sciences, social sciences, education, business administration, and nursing, serving traditional students and adult learners in both undergraduate and graduate programs. As an institution where the liberal arts inform and enrich all areas of learning, it places special importance on fostering the intellectual skills and habits of mind, which liberate persons to probe deeply the mystery of existence and live authentically in response to the truths they discover. This liberation is achieved as faculty and students, led by wonder about the nature of reality, look twice, ask why, seek not merely facts but fundamental principles, strive for an integration of all knowledge, and express themselves precisely and eloquently.

  • To affirm and foster the Christian understanding of the human person, which animates the educational mission of the Catholic Church.

Saint Mary’s College holds that the mystery that inspires wonder about the nature of existence is revealed in the person of Jesus Christ, giving a transcendent meaning to creation and human existence. Nourished by its Christian faith, the College understands the intellectual and spiritual journeys of the human person to be inextricably connected. It promotes the dialogue of faith and reason; it builds community among its members through the celebration of the Church’s sacramental life; it defends the goodness, dignity, and freedom of each person, and fosters sensitivity to social and ethical concerns. Recognizing that all those who sincerely quest for truth contribute to and enhance its stature as a Catholic institution of higher learning, Saint Mary’s welcomes members from its own and other traditions, inviting them to collaborate in fulfilling the spiritual mission of the College.

  • To create a student-centered educational community whose members support one another with mutual understanding and respect.

As a Lasallian college, Saint Mary’s holds that students are given to its care by God, and that teachers grow spiritually and personally when their work is motivated by faith and zeal. The College seeks students, faculty, administrators, and staff from different social, economic, and cultural backgrounds who come together to grow in knowledge, wisdom, and love. A distinctive mark of a Lasallian school is its awareness of the consequences of economic and social injustice, and its commitment to the poor. Its members learn to live “their responsibility to share their goods and their service with those who are in need, a responsibility based on the union of all men and women in the world today and on a clear understanding of the meaning of Christianity.” (From The Brothers of the Christian Schools in the World Today: A Declaration).

Faculty

The College is, in every sense, a community of scholars. Faculty members are teacher-scholars. They are selected for their dedication to and skill in teaching, and for their desire to share their passion for learning and discovery.

The small size of the College and the commitment of its faculty foster an extraordinarily close and informal relationship between faculty and students. Faculty members are available to students not only in the classroom but outside it as well, for academic advice, guidance, and mentoring. Faculty teach courses at all levels, from first-year through graduate, and faculty members make themselves available to students at all levels. Our small class size and faculty advising system foster close and frequent contact between professors and students.

The College values faculty scholarship because it enhances the intellectual vitality of the faculty and directly animates the entire campus community. Scholarly research ensures that faculty members have a thorough and up-to-date knowledge of the subjects they teach, as well as the appropriate pedagogy in those fields. As part of a community committed to shared inquiry and active learning, faculty scholar-teachers provide models from which students can learn the value and techniques of inquiry, and from which they can learn to value the life of the mind.

The College prides itself on a faculty of remarkable distinction and continually renewed commitment to scholarship and teaching.

Academic Organization

Saint Mary’s College is organized into four schools that provide the programs of study for students at the undergraduate and graduate levels.

The School of Liberal Arts offers the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 23 major fields and the Bachelor of Arts in the Integral Program; Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology, Exercise Science; Master of Arts in Kinesiology; Master of Arts in Communication; Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing and Master of Fine Arts in Dance; and a BA degree completion in the Performing Arts.

The School of Science offers the degree of Bachelor of Science in 10 major fields and the Bachelor of Arts in seven major fields; and the degree of Professional Science Masters in Biotechnology. There is a dual degree program in engineering, which requires three years at Saint Mary’s and two years at an engineering school.

The School of Economics and Business Administration offers the degree of Bachelor of Science in four major fields, as well as the Bachelor of Arts in one major field. It offers the degree of Master of Business Administration, Executive MBA, Professional MBA, Trans-Global Executive MBA; and the degree of Master of Science in Accounting, Business Analytics, Financial Analysis and Investment Management, and MS in Management.

The Kalmanovitz School of Education offers undergraduate courses in teacher education and leadership, and a BA completion program. There are seventeen programs in the School of Education including preliminary teaching credentials, pupil personnel services credentials, an administrative services credentials, and a bilingual authorization certificate in Spanish. The School of Education also offers licensure programs in marriage and family counseling and clinical counseling, as well as master’s degrees. An Educational Specialist Degree in School Psychology and a Doctorate in Educational Leadership is also offered.

Accreditation

The administration of Saint Mary’s College is vested in the Board of Trustees and the President of the College, and is empowered by the charter of 1872 granted by the state of California to confer upon students who satisfactorily complete the prescribed courses of studies in the College, such academic and/or professional degrees and/or literary honors as are usually conferred by universities and/or colleges in the United States.

Saint Mary’s College is nationally recognized as a standard four-year college and is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) Senior College and University Commission, 985 Atlantic Avenue, Suite 100, Alameda, CA 94501, (510) 748-9001. The credential programs and licensure in the School of Education are also accredited by the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing and the California Board of Behavioral Sciences. The business and accounting programs are accredited in the School of Economics and Business Administration by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB). The Saint Mary’s College Museum of Art, housing the Hearst Art Gallery, is the only art museum in Contra Costa County accredited by the American Association of Museums.