MORE THAN READY. LOYOLA READY.
Note: This datebook is designed to supplement the Graduate Catalogue as well as any materials distributed by your academic program. In cases where information conflicts, such materials take precedence.
MORE THAN READY. LOYOLA READY.
Note: This datebook is designed to supplement the Graduate Catalogue as well as any materials distributed by your academic program. In cases where information conflicts, such materials take precedence.
Welcome (or welcome back) to the Loyola community!
The Graduate Student Organization (GSO) was created to address student needs, and help graduate students feel more a part of Loyola. As a graduate student, this is not a club which you join: you are already a member of the GSO!
We know that you wear many hats in addition to being a student. This planner is our small gift to you to help you organize your day, and plan for your upcoming year. You may only have the occasion to come to one of the Loyola campuses in order to go to class, or your program may be entirely remote. Regardless, we would like to invite you to learn more about what is available to you as a graduate student, and to meet other students like yourself!
One way to do this is to become familiar with some of the services and resources in the following pages. Many students don’t realize there are free tutorial services available for many courses, or assistance in writing papers, for example
Another way is to attend GSO programs or events, which we plan with your help to be of interest to the graduate community. These ev ents might be happy hours or social occasions, or they are sometimes opportunities to provide service to the community. This year, we will particularly depend on suggestions from you for ideas. Watch for our events on Facebook (Loyola University Maryland Graduate Student Organization), in our monthly newsletters, or on our events page at www.loyola.edu/gradfriday. Even better, help us plan something new by clicking on the QR code below to make a suggestion
Please contact us at gso@loyola.edu and introduce yourself! We hope to meet you soon, and we wish you the best of luck on your graduate journey. Team
www loyola edu/gso
www.loyola.edu/gradfriday
gso@loyola.edu
Suggest an event or idea:
• Fall 2022 Enrollment: 1261
• 67 percent of us are part-time students
• About 70 percent of us are female
• 37 percent of us are students of color
• If not online, virtually all of us commute to Loyola, whether at Baltimore/Evergreen, the Clinical Centers, or Timonium
Many graduate students aren’t aware of the many graduate programs are available at Loyola, such as:
Data Science
Montessori Education
Emerging Media Psychology
Speech-Language Pathology
Theology
Finance
Emerging Leaders MBA
Kodály Music Education School Counseling
Educational Technology
Forensic Pattern Analysis
Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT)
Master of Accounting
Curriculum and Instruction for Social Justice
Teaching English Language Learners (TELL)
33%
Source: Loyola University Institutional Research Data
Directions:
- I-695 to I-83 North (Harrisburg Expressway)
- Exit 16A, Timonium Road East
- Greenspring Dr is the first right turn after leaving I-83
- The Loyola parking lot is the second right turn
Public Transportation:
- The closest Light Rail stop is Timonium, a 14 minute walk
- The MTA CityLink RED drops at Ridgely Rd. & Kurtz Ave., a 20 minute walk
- See mta maryland gov for more information.
https://www.loyola.edu/department/parking-transportation
Parking:
• For the Evergreen campus, graduate commuter students may park at 5104 York Road and the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen on Charles Street.
• The Cathedral lot is available 7 am to 10 pm, Monday through Friday, University holidays excepted, during Fall & Spring Academic semesters only.
• Cathedral Express shuttle runs 7 am to 7 pm; requests for service to the Cathedral Lot after 7pm is on-demand from any shuttle in operation during the 7pm – 10pm timeframe during the academic year
• Graduate student parking is also available at the Butler/Hammerman lot between the hours of 4 p.m. and 6 a.m. Monday through Friday, and all day Saturday and Sunday.
o Graduate students attending classes at Timonium need not pay a fee, but they must complete the parking registration form
(https://www.loyola.edu/department/financial-services/parking/registration/graduate-students)
• Hang tags issued for the Timonium Graduate Center will differ from those issued for the Evergreen campus Any graduate student attending classes at Evergreen may use that hangtag for Timonium.
• Contact Student Administrative Services in Maryland Hall 140, 410-617-5047, sas@loyola.edu for help with parking permits.
Loyola University Maryland Shuttle:
The Loyola University Shuttle offers 4 different routes on the Evergreen campus Routes reach locations such as the York Road parking lot and administrative buildings, the Cathedral parking lot, the library, Sellinger Hall, and the Ridley Athletic Center. For real time tracking of shuttles, visit loyola.doublemap.com, or download their app.
(African, Latinx, Asian & Native American)
ALANA Services is committed to providing support, services and programs that facilitate the success of all ALANA students at Loyola University Maryland. Through intentional programming and a myriad of services, we foster the academic, cultural, personal, spiritual and leadership development of ALANA students. We seek to create and maintain an environment of respect and awareness, while advocating for ALANA students and responding to their needs.
The ALANA Services office is a resource center for:
• Academic intervention and support
• Affinity and Identity development groups such as MAN2MAN and Sister to Sister
• Multicultural programming
• Meaningful dialogue and reflection about multicultural issues and diversity
• Community building and networking; the Center for Intercultural Engagement (connected to the ALANA office) is a space to study, engage with peers, and access informational resources centered around academic and multicultural interests.
Stay connected with us via Twitter and Instagram (@ALANA_Services), as well as via Facebook at www.facebook.com/ALANAServices 3rd floor Andrew White Student Center, E315 410-617-2310
alana@loyola.edu
www.loyola.edu/alana
For schedule information visit our website
www.loyolagreyhounds.com
Loyola Athletics competes at the NCAA Division I level as part of the Patriot League in 18 sports:
Men’s Soccer
Men’s Basketball
Men’s Lacrosse
Women’s Soccer
Women’s Basketball
Women’s Lacrosse
Men’s Swimming & Diving Women’s Swimming & Diving
Men’s Cross Country
Men’s Tennis
Men’s Crew
Men’s Golf
Women’s Cross Country
Women’s Tennis
Women’s Crew
Women’s Volleyball
Women’s Indoor Track & Field Women’s Outdoor Track & Field
Tickets are required for men’s and women’s soccer, basketball and lacrosse. Check the website for ticket prices and availability. Graduate students may receive one complimentary ticket to a game at the box office on weekdays or on gamedays. Box Office is located in the DeChiaro College Center.
Hours are 11 a.m. – 7 p.m. weekdays during the academic year
Soccer and lacrosse home games are at the Ridley Athletic Complex. Basketball home games are at Reitz Arena.
Season Tickets are available for soccer, basketball and lacrosse.
Check the website at www.loyolagreyhounds.com/tickets for more information.
MASSOF THE HOLYSPIRIT
THE FESTIVAL OFLESSONS ANDCAROLS
HOPE ANDRENEWAL INTERFAITHPRAYERSERVICE
Our Ignatian tradition calls us t o live a "faith that d o e s justice " Campus M i n i s t r y invites students to respond t o t h i s c a l l through our i m m e r s i o n & programs Faith & Justice Cohorts, M i n d f u l Meals, t h e Faith & Justice Lecture, Ignatian Teach-In for Justice.
September
December
February
We invite you to join t h e Koinonia f a m i l y a s a w a y o f b u i l d i n g meaningful relationships i n a supportive c o m m u n i t y of peers. There are graduate student-focused s m a l l faith sharing commuitites that m e e t w e e k l y to share conversation, activities, and prayer. Students are welcome to j o i n a group at a n y t i m e during t h e year.
CatholicMass
llam & 5pm: Alumni Chapel
7:30pm H a m m e r man H a l l Chapel
10pm: Hopkins Court Lounge
DailyMass
12:10pm: A l u m n i C h a p e l
You are encouraged to use your particular talents and gifts in service of our faith community as:
Ministers o f Hospitality
Ministers of the Word
Extraordinary Ministers of Communion
RootsofRefugeEcumenicalCommunity
M o n t h l y Sundays at 3pm: Alumni C h a p e l
Music Ministry
T h e Loyola University Chapel Choir
If you enjoy singing and playing music for othersjoin us on Thursdays at 6:30pm.
All voice types and instruments n e e d e d
No auditions for s i n g e r s
Info Sessions are held in September.
Pre-CanaMarriagePreparation
Engaged students can choose to participate in Loyola's Pre-Cana program in the Spring. While space is limited, it is a great way to begin your new life together !
Career Development at Loyola University Maryland serves all students and alumni in discovering fullling career paths, preparing to present their best selves to the world, and maximizing available resources to achieve their goals
CAREER COUNSELING AND COACHING
INTEREST/PERSONALITY ASSESSMENTS
RESUME/CV and COVER LETTER POLISHING
JOB/INTERNSHIP SEARCHING
NETWORKING
Appointments, jobs, internships: Loyola.edu/Handshake
Networking with Greyhounds: Loyola.edu/Connect
Inter view practice: Loyola.edu/BigInter view
Drop-In Hours: Rizzo Career Center, M-F, 12-3
DISCOVER
EXPLORE PURSUE PREPARE
The Counseling Center team is staffed by licensed clinicians and advanced-level trainees who strive to provide services that are affirming and inclusive. Consider us as an option for support as you embark upon your graduate school journey.
The Counseling Center is located on the Evergreen campus in Humanities Center 150. To make an appointment call (410) 617-CARE (2273), Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Online scheduling is also available for initial, non-urgent appointments on our website. 24/7 crisis support is available by calling (410) 617-5530.
Learn more about our services below:
Life as a graduate student is full of new experiences – opportunities and challenges – that can bring up a range of emotions. You aren’t alone in your feelings, and you don’t have to be alone in working through them.
Graduate school comes with a lot of responsibilities, and most graduate students are also working (part-time or full-time) and hold other identities, including but not limited to, being a parent, a partner/spouse, or a caregiver. It can feel like there is so much to do with so little time. Learning how to balance multiple responsibilities is important. When imbalance occurs, it opens the door for stress, anxiety, worry, burn-out, and sometimes depression. Below are some things to consider to support wellness:
Practice compassionate time management
Set small, balanced goals for yourself and set specific times to accomplish tasks
Find a way to write down or track your commitments and plans
Be intentional about your wellness plan (what activities calm, ground, and/or energize you?)
Incorporate one rejuvenating activity to your schedule per week (reading for leisure, listening to music, deep breathing exercises, unplugging from social media, dancing, etc.)
Plan for the week AND the weekend
Identify fun, soothing, and enjoyable activities that can be planned throughout your week
Consider the potential value of boundary setting as you reflect on your needs for the week
Get connected and reach out for support
Know that support is available, both through on-campus and community resources
Visit our website or Instagram (@loyolamd_counselingcenter) for more information
Loyola University Maryland is committed to eliminating ba rriers to ensure students with disabilities can fully access all courses, services, and activities included in our graduate programs.
If an accommodation is required to address a disability-re lated barrier, graduate students should register with the Disability Support Services (DSS) office by submitting an online application and documentation of their disability Documentation is maintained in a confidential manner. Information about the registration process, including documentation guidelines, is available under the “Register” tab on the DSS website.
Unsure of what to request or how your disability may im pact you once you enter an externship or the clinical component of your program? DSS can help you assess your needs or initiate a conversation with your program director to obtain more information about program requi rements We encourage you to reach out as early as possible, so that reasonable accommodation s can be arranged in a timely manner.
Accommodations are determined on an individualized, case-by-case basis and may include things such as extended time on exams, a less-distracting testing location, or access to assistive technology in the classroom or externship/clinical site Students who were approved for accommodations while completing an undergraduate degree at Loyola may be able to continue to receive similar accommodations but should reach out to the DSS office to confirm their needs prior to the start of their program.
DSS is located in Room 107, Newman Towers West on the Evergreen Campus. We are happy to schedule virtual appointments, or in-person appointments at a graduate ce nter upon request For more information or to schedule an appointment, please contact:
Disability Support Services
(410) 617-7380 / 2750 / 2062
dss@loyola.edu
www.loyola.edu/gradfinaid
The office of graduate financial aid administers several types of financial assistance for graduate students. Loan assistance is available through the federal government and private lenders. Assistantships are available through several academic and administrative department s. Additionally, individual departments offer a limited number of fellowships, scholarships and grants to assist students with their education expenses.
Who can apply?
Federal Direct Unsubsidized Loans are available to all graduate students who are enrolled at least half‐time in degree seeking coursework and who meet federal financial aid eligibility requirements.
When can I apply?
Application procedures are updated on the graduate financial aid web site every mid to late February. Students must reapply every academic year. The academic year begins in summer and ends with spring.
What forms must be completed?
• Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) https://studentaid.ed.gov/sa/fafsa.
• Direct Loan Program Graduate Information Sheet
• Federal Direct Loan Electronic Master Promissory Note
• Federal Direct Loan Entrance Counseling
A complete financial aid application must be submitted at least four weeks prior to registration if loan proceeds will be used for tuition and fee payments. Course registrations submitted before the completion of the loan application process must include full tuition payment.
To learn more about graduate financial aid, go to www.loyola.edu/gradfinaid. You may contact the office of graduate financial aid at gradfinancialaid@loyola.edu or 410‐617‐5020.
The Fitness and Aquatic Center (FAC) is located just one block north of the Charles Street Bridge at the Baltimore Campus. Graduate students are eligible to purchase a membership. Refer to our website for facility hours, usage policies, guest use policies and fees.
Facility Features:
• Aquatic Center: 8 lane, 25-yard swim course, shallow lane, and diving well; on-deck sauna and hot tub.
• 6,000 square foot Fitness Center: Treadmills, bikes, ellipticals, stair climbers, free weights, and more.
• Two-Court Gymnasium
• Multi-Activity Court: Features a Sport Court surface ideal for indoor soccer, volleyball and inline sports.
• Equipment Room: Available to all members with a valid Loyola ID or membership card. General recreation equipment check-out, locker and towel service.
• Indoor Rock Climbing Wall: A 30-foot-high climbing wall and bouldering area designed for all skill levels; instructional classes available.
• Locker Rooms
• Elevated Walking/Jogging Track
• Two Group Exercise Studios: Classes are available throughout the academic year.
• Outdoor Adventure Center: Offers expansive resource library, gear rental and meeting location.
• Two Racquetball and Two Squash Courts
• Outdoor Grass Field
• Functional Fitness Area: This area includes a Functional Trainer, TRX, turf and more.
• Erg (Rowing) Room: 15 machines for general usage.
Search for: Loyola FAC
Congratulations and Welcome! Our staff at Student Health Services works hard to promote Healthy Hounds. Here is our list of the top things you should know about us!
The Student Health Profile, including required immunizations, needs to be completed by all full-time graduate students. The profile can be accessed on the Patient Portal at www.Loyola.edu/PatientPortal.
Most full-time graduate programs require students to have health insurance coverage. You can enroll in the school-sponsored insurance plan, or waive it if your insurance meets our waiver criteria.
Our office is open from 8:30am-5:00pm Monday-Friday during the school year. There is a $25/visit fee for graduate students. There are also charges for any testing or medications dispensed from our in-house pharmacy.
For more information on our services take a look at our website at www.Loyola.edu/StudentHealth. And follow us on Social Media at @LoyolaMDHealth for the most up to date information.
The Flu vaccine is strongly recommended for all full time students, including graduates. It is best done in September or October to protect you through the fall and spring semesters.
Even if our office is closed, an on-call physician is always available by calling 410-583-9396.
• Loyola’s official off-campus housing website
• Search a wide variety of housing listings
• Create and search roommate profiles
• Students can post a FREE sublet or roommate listing
• Resources section with valuable off-campus living information
offcampushousing.loyola.edu
The Of ice of International Student Services (OISS) is committed to providing services and programs bene icial to a culturally diverse academic environment that enhances the international student experience. We work with our international undergraduate, graduate and exchange student community from the time of admission to graduation and beyond, working closely with campus partners to support a smooth and successful transition to Loyola. OISS provides services and programs to welcome and assist international students with their acclimation to the U.S. and Loyola, serves as a resource during their studies, and helps prepare students to succeed in a diverse, global environment Our services range from international student orientations, to advising sessions, to immigration and visa assistance, to cultural adjustment and support.
Services Provided by OISS:
• F-1 Student Visa Immigration Advising and Support
• Advocacy and Support for International Students
• International Orientation and Immigration Clearance
• SEVIS Administration
• Assistance with Academic and Personal Matters
• Visa and Immigration Documents
• Cultural Adjustment Support
• Compliance with Federal Immigration Regulations
• U.S. Tax Workshops (Non-Resident Alien Taxes)
• Advise Students on Available Resources and Logistics (U.S. Cell Phone, Bank Accounts, etc.)
• Promotion for International Education
• MD Driver’s License and MD Non-Driver IDs Assistance
• Campus Programming
• Assistance with International Student Legal Concerns
Loyola welcomes international students from all around the globe!
Countries Represented in our International Community
Australia
Bahamas
Belize
Brazil
Botswana
Canada
Chile
China
Colombia
Dominican Republic
Egypt
Ethiopia
France
Germany
Greece
Guatemala
Hong Kong
Iceland
India
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Kenya
Mexico
The Netherlands
Nepal
Nigeria
Panama
Peru
Poland
Philippines
Rwanda
Saudi Arabia
Serbia
Spain
Taiwan
Turkey
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
Venezuela
Vietnam
OISS@loyola.edu
www.LNDL.org 200 Winston Ave. Baltimore, MD 21212 (410) 617-6801
Need research help?
Visit lndl.org to chat with a librarian 24/7 or to schedule an in-person or online consultation with a research librarian.
Access to Online Resources
Over 150 databases
Online journals, magazines, and newspapers
eBooks
Research guides with discipline-specific tutorials and sources
Streaming video Dissertations and theses
Access to Print Resources
Over 10 million items are available to check out between LNDL and the sixteen other schools in our library consortium (USMAI)
Request books from our partner schools and pick them up within a few days at LNDL
Check out books for four months and renew books online
What if we don’t have the item you need?
Request books, book chapters, and articles via Interlibrary Loan – for free! Please allow delivery time of 1-2 days for articles/book chapters and 5-8 days for books.
But wait, there's more!
Access Google Scholar via the Library’s website to read articles for free
Visit the Innovation Station, a makerspace with Virtual Reality, 3-D printers, a 3-D scanner, a digital sewing and embroidery machine, a button-maker, a recording studio, a laser cutter, and more Study in a variety of workspaces on our four floors including reservable group study rooms
Use accessible technology
Get help with copyright and intellectual property at the Copyright Information Center
Explore Consult with a Librarian on a research data management plan
invites grant proposals for programs and ideas that extend learning outside the classroom.
This includes conference attendance / presentations, ideas for graduate student events, and speakers
loyola.edu/educationfor life
The R Records Office serves the University with maximum efficiency and customer satisfaction, in an atmosphere of respect and understanding. The office also serves as the custodian of all student academic records, ensuring accuracy, integrity, and security.
Access Self-Service using https://inside.loyola.edu to:
Register for Classes
Place classes on your preferred sections list
View Class Schedule
Request a Transcript
Electronic or Paper Delivery
View Final Grades Apply to Graduate
Review Degree Audit
Access you academic progress
Request an Enrollment
Verification
A free service provided by the National S tudent Clearinghouse (NSC )
For more information: The R Records Office website is located at www.loyola.edu/records o or visit the Records Office at the Baltimore campus in Maryland Hall Room MH141
www.loyola.edu/sswp
Our office provides the following services:
• Assistance for students who exhibit significant emotional distress and who seek cohesive and comprehensive support systems while they continue through school
• Collaborative wellness promotion efforts that focus on eight primary wellness areas, which include:
o Academic
o Social
o Spiritual
o Physical
o Emotional
o Multi-cultural
o Professional
o Environmental -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Loyola's Women's Center is dedicated to empowering everyone by educating the University and its surrounding community on issues of gender that are of particular interest to women. The Center supports Loyola’s mission to learn, lead, and serve in a diverse and changing world. Our core pillars are service, wellness and connection.
The Center actively works to promote an environment of equality and acceptance for all people of all religious beliefs, ethnic backgrounds, and sexual orientations. The Women’s Center offers confidential and free support and services to any student, undergraduate or graduate, who experiences sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence or stalking.
In collaboration with other offices and departments across campus, the Center provides information, offers advocacy, and plans educational programs for faculty, staff, students, and, when appropriate, the general public. The Center is a resource open to all members of the Loyola community, serving both as a haven where women’s issues may be freely discussed and as a beacon which guides the community toward genuine gender equity.
The Women’s Center welcomes graduate students’ involvement in its programs and initiatives and invites them to form groups that would benefit all students in the Loyola community.
M a k e Y o u r A p p o i n t m e n t T o d a y
§ Writing Center Mission
Students from all deg ree prog rams can collaborate with peer tutors at any point in the writing process. Face-to-face and online appointments are available.
§ Focus on the Graduate Writing Process
Our tutors will help you improve your knowledge of the g raduate writing process. We focus on promoting critical thinking and writing through non-directive dialogue that centers on your work and ideas.
§ Online Workshops
Interactive online workshops supplement instruction for specific aspects of the g raduate writing process. http://www.loyola.edu/depar tment/writing-center/online-workshops
Online Tutoring
We provide synchronous online appointments through LoyolaÕs distance lear ning platfor m to accommodate g rad students who canÕ t always get to campus. Details are available on our website
§ APA Style
Extensive APA Style resources are available online: http://www.loyola.edu/depar tment/writingcenter/resources/ apastyle
BE GINNINGS
Th e fir st J e sui t coll eg e o p en ed a t M es sin a in Sici ly in 1 5 4 8 , bu t t he roo ts o f J es uit e d uc ati o n re ac h ba c k to a n ea rlie r ev e nt . I n 1 5 21 , a yo u ng m an t rai n ing f or a ca re er at t he S p a nis h c our t w a s wo un d ed i n a m ilit ar y e ng ag e m en t w ith th e Fr e nc h. Ig na tiu s L o yol a wa s th e yo u ng est chil d i n a f a mil y o f f eu d al lo rd s i n t he B a squ e r egi on o f no rth er n S p ai n. H e r etu rn ed to his f a mil y ’ s ho m e to r e co ve r fr o m his w ou nd s . Th er e , he pa ss e d th e ti m e r ea d in g a lif e of C hri st a nd a b oo k abo ut t h e sai nt s , w hic h l ed hi m t o re fle ct d e e pl y abo ut his o w n li fe an d to ex p eri e nc e a c alli ng t o ab an d o n hi s c ar ee r at c ou rt a n d to foll o w J es us i nst ea d .
Calling himself a “pilgrim,” he traveled across Spain to the ancient monastery at Montserrat where he dedicated his sword to Mary as a symbol of his new life In the nearby town of Manresa, he spent months alone in prayer, reflection, and service of the needy, trying to learn the rudiments of the spiritual life on his own In spite of his mistakes, he slowly learned how to distinguish between what led him in a good direction and what did not He later said of this part of his life that God was teaching him the way a schoolmaster deals with a child He discovered he had a talent for helping others find the freedom to respond to God’s invitation in their lives He began to keep notes about his own spiritual experiences and his conversations with those who came to him. These became the basis for a small book he later put together for those helping others to grow spiritually, which he called Spiritual Exercises
Ignatius decided that to serve God effectively he needed an education. This quest brought him to the University of Paris, where he became the center of a group of friends. Using his spiritual exercises, he challenged them to think about how they were going to use the unique gifts and personalities God had given them. After receiving their degrees, they decided they would stay together as a group and “help people” as Jesus and his disciples did. Gradually, they came to t he decision to form a new kind of religious order. They were ordained Catholic priests and, in 1540, they received the approval of the Pope and called themselves “The Society of Jesus ” Later, critics derisively called them “Jesuits” and this is the name that has stuck
At first, no single activity defined the new religious order. The early Jesuits preached in the streets, led men and women through the Spiritual Exercises, taught theology in universities, instructed children in the catechism, and cared for plague victims and prostitutes. Others went off to work in distant parts of the world, as Francis Xavier did in India. They were discovering their mission by doing it, adapting to change, taking risks, and learning by trial and error. Nonetheless, the early companions were all graduates of the best university of Europe and they thought of themselves as specialists in “ministries of the word ” Gradua lly, they came to realize that there was one emerging activity that connected their intellectual training, their world-affirming spirituality, their pastoral experience, and their goal of helping souls. When citizens of Messina asked Ignatius to open a school for their sons, he seems to have decided that schools could be a powerful means of forming the minds and hearts of those, who, because they would be important citizens in their communities, could influence many others. When the college in Messina proved a success, requests to open schools in other cities multiplied and soon education became the characteristic activity of Jesuits.
The simple answer is that they met a need. Europe entered the modern world almost overnight in the early 16th century. The voyages of exploration to the Americas and the Indies, the Protestant revolt, and Gutenberg’s printing press changed people’s understanding of the globe, redistributed wealth, and turned Europe into a battleground of ideas A prosperous middle class wanted an education that would prepare their sons for the oppo rtunities of this new world that was unfolding around them at a dizzying pace.
When Jesuits began their schools, two models were available One was the medieval university, where students prepared for professions such as law, the clergy, and teaching by studying the sciences, mathematics, logic, philosophy, and theology. The other model was the Renaissance humanistic academy, which had a curriculum based on Greek and Latin poetry, drama, oratory, and history. The goal of the university was the training of the mind through the pursuit of speculative truth; the goal of the humanists was character formation, making students better human beings and civic leaders. Jesuit schools were unique in combining these two educational ideals.
Perhaps the most important reason for the success of the early Jesuit schools was a set of qualities that Jesuits aspired to themselves and which they consciously set out to develop in their students:
• Self-knowledge and discipline
• Attentiveness to their own experience and to others’
• Trust in God’s direction of their lives
• Respect for intellect and reason as tools for discovering truth
• Skill in discerning the right course of action
• A conviction that talents and knowledge were gifts to be used to help others
• Flexibility and pragmatism in problem solving
• Large-hearted ambition
• A desire to find God working in all things.
These qualities were the product of the distinctive spirituality that the early Jesuits had learned from Ignatius and that Ignatius had learned from his own experience. Jesuits hoped, in turn, to form their students in the same spiritual vision, so that their graduates would be prepared to live meaningful lives as leaders in government, the professions, and the Church.
How does this spiritual vision get translated into an educational vision? The early Jesuits struggled to describe what they called “our way of proceeding.” Their accounts varied but it seems that they thought of their distinctive spirituality as a three-part process It begins with paying attention to experience, moves to reflecting on its meaning, and ends in deciding how to act. Jesuit education, then, can be described in terms of three key movements:
We learn by organizing our experience and appropriating it in the increasingly complex psychological structures by which we engage and make sense of our world. From infancy, learning is an active process but in our early years it happens without our being aware of it. Once we become adolescents, though, whether we will continue to learn is largely a choice we make.
Conscious learning begins by choosing to pay attention to our experience---our experience of our own inner liv es and of the people and the world around us When we do this, we notice a mixture of light and dark, ideas and feelings, things that give us joy and things that sadden us. It is a rich tapestry and it grows more complex the more we let it register on our awareness Ignatius was convinced that God deals directly with us in our experience. This conviction rested on his profound realization that God is “working” in every thing that exists. (This is why the spirit of Jesuit education is often described as “finding God in all things”). So, our intimate thoughts and feelings, our desires and our fears, our responses to the people and things around us are not just the accidental ebb and flow of our inner lives but rather the privileged moments
through which God creates and sustains a unique relationship with each of us.
How do I pay attention? By observing, wondering, opening myself to what is new, allowing the reality of people and things to enter my consciousness on its own terms.
This is why Jesuit schools have traditionally emphasized liberal education, a core curriculum, and the arts and the humanities---studies that can enlarge our understanding of what it means to be human and make us more sympathetic to ex periences different from our own This happens outside the classroom too---for example, in service programs, when we enter into the lives of others. Referring to students engaged in working with the poor, Peter Hans Kolvenbach, the former leader of Jesuits across the world, has said “When the heart is touched by direct experience, the mind may be challenged to change.” The key movement that begins this process of learning and change is paying attention.
The outcome of paying attention to our experience may be a complex variety of images, unrelated insights, feelings that lead in contradictory directions. To connect the parts of our experience into a whole, we need to examine data, test evidence, clarify relationships, understand causes and implications, weigh options in light of their possible consequences We need, that is, to see the patterns in our experience and grasp their significance. Reflection is the way we di scover and compose the meaning of our experience.
Figuring out our experience can be an inward-looking activity---identifying our gifts and the future they point us toward or confronting the prejudices, fears, and shortcomings that prevent us from being the kind of people we want to be---but it can also mean looking outward---at the questions that philosophy and theology pose to us, at subjects like biology and finance and economics and the different ways they organize a nd interpret the world and help us understand ourselves. In either direction, the goal is the freedom that comes from knowing ourselves, understanding the world, and finding the direction that God is disclosing for our lives in and through our experience
Reflection is a kind of reality-testing. It takes time and care. Ultimately, it is the work of intelligence, which is why Jesuit education has always emphasized intellectual excellence. There is no substitute for using the minds God gave us, to understand our experience and discover its meaning.
Being attentive is largely about us and how God is working in us through our experience Being reflective moves our gaze outward, measuring our experience against the accumulated wisdom of the world. Being loving requires that we look even more closely at the world around us. It asks the question: How are we going to act in this world?
In part, this is a question about what we are going to do with the knowledge and self- understanding and freedom that we have appropriated by refle ction. How shall we act in ways that are consistent with this new self and what it knows and values?
But we can’t move very far in the direction of answering this question without discovering that it is not only a question about how our lives can be authentic. It is also a question about our relationship to the world around us and what the world needs us to do We are not solitary creatures From the womb, we live in relationships with others, grow up in cultural, social, and political institutions that others have created for us. To be human is to find our place in these relationships and these institutions, to take responsibility for them, to contribute to nurturing and improving them, to give something back.
We can understand this in quite secular terms if we choose to, but through the eyes of faith there is an even more compelling reason for thinking and living this way. Ignatius ends his Spiritual Exercises with a consideration of love. For him growing in love is the whole point of the spiritual life. He suggests two principles to help us understand love. One is that love shows itself more by deeds than by words. Action is what counts, not talk and promises. This is why Jesuit education is incomplete unless it produces men and women who will do something with their gifts.
More profoundly, Ignatius says that love consists of communication. One who loves communicates what he or she has with another. Thus, lovers desire each other’s good, give what they have to one another, share themselves
It is easy to see this communication in two people in love. For Ignatius, however, love was most dramatically evident in the relationship that God has with human beings Two examples of this are central in the Exercises First, God creates the world and gives life to everything in it. People and things come into existence because God communicates God’s own self to them. And God continues working in each person and thing in its own specific reality and at every moment God keeps wanting to be in relationship with us, even when we fail to respond. Second, surpassing even the gift of creation is the gift God has given us in the person of Jesus God’s taking on our human nature in order to heal our brokenness is the ultimate evidence of God’ s love for us. Jesus’ life and death are, for Ignatius, the model of how to love in return.
If every human being is so loved by God, then our loving relationships do not stop with the special people we choose to love, or with our families, or with the social class or ethnic group we belong to. We are potentially in love with the whole world.
So, for Jesuit education, it is not enough to live authentically in the world. We have to participate in the transformation of the world (the Hebrew phrase tikkun olam conveys the same idea, of mending or repairing the world). For more than 400 years, it has been said that Jesuit education educated “the whole person.” Today, we live with an increasingly global sense of what it means to be human A person can’t be considered “whole” without an educated solidarity with other human beings in their hopes and fears and especially in their needs. We can’t pay attention to our experience and reflect on it without realizing how our own lives are connected with the dreams of all those with whom we share the journey of human existence, and therefore with the economic, political, and social realities that support or frustrate their dreams This is why Jesuit education is so often said to produce “men and women for others.”
Je suit ed uc ati on , we ha ve sai d , i s a pro c es s th at ha s th re e ke y p a rts , bei ng a tt en tiv e , bei ng r efl e ctiv e , an d b ein g l ovi ng . It re sul ts i n th e ki nd o f go od d e c isio n- m a ki ng t h at I gn ati us c all e d “d i sc er n m en t . ” Th e goal of J e suit ed uc atio n is to pr o d uc e m e n a nd w o me n f or w ho m d isc er n m e nt is a h abi t.
We can think of discernment as the lifelong project of exploring our experience, naming its meaning, and living in a way that translates this meaning into act ion. We can also think of this process as something we focus on with special intensity at particular moments in our lives -- during the four years of college, for example, or when we have to make important decisions and want to do so freely and with a sense of what God is calling us to. At these times, we might be especially conscious of using spiritual exercises to help us negotiate the process. But we can also think of these three movements as the intertwined dynamics of daily life, the moment-by-moment activity of becoming fully human
Arguably, it is the daily exercise of discernment that grounds the other kinds of spiritual growth---the regular practice of attentiveness, reflection, and choosing through which our lives take on a meaningful direction. In fact, Ignatius thought that the most useful kind of prayer is to spend a few minutes each day deepening our awareness of how God works in the events of the day and how we respond, a practice he calle d an examen. I begin by calling to mind that God is involved in shaping the direction of my life and I ask for light about this. Then, I review the events of the day, especially those where my feelings have been most engaged, positively or negatively. I notice the patterns and the emerging insights about which experiences lead me towards God and which lead away. And I end by looking ahead to tomorrow and asking to live with a growing sense of God’s trust in my future.
For Ignatius, a key element of discerning is the exercise of imagination. In doing the examen, he suggests we use our imaginations to elicit the feelings that have pulled us one way or another during the day and to picture how we might live differently tomorrow In the Exercises, when he is advising us how to pray, he urges us to take a passage from the Gospels and imagine ourselves present in the scene, listening to the words of the people there, experiencing their feelings, and h e asks us to elicit our own feelings in response. And, in the account of his very earliest spiritual experiences, he tells us that, while he was recovering from his wounds, he used to lie on his bed by the open window of his room and contemplate the stars, lost in reveries about the great deeds he would accomplish, at first for the princess he was in love with, and then for Jesus. Even in old age, when he spent his days sitting at a desk in Rome administering the affairs of the Society, he would go to the roof of the Jesuit residence in the evening and look at the stars in order to see his life as God saw it Finding images that embody our dreams can be a lifelong form of prayer
In the practice of discerning, we grow in being able to imagine how we are going to live our lives. We discover our vocations. The novelist and theologian Frederick Buechner describes vocation as “the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.” When we arrive at this place, and understand the fit between who we are and what the world needs of us, Ignatius urges us to be unafraid to live with the consequences of this realization, to respond with generosity and magnanimity because this is the way we can love as God loves. Jesuit tradition uses the Latin word magis or “more” to sum up this ideal, a life lived in response to the question: How can I be more, do more, give more? Jesuit education is complete when its graduates embody this vision of life and work
In the United States, there are 28 Jesuit colleges and universities and 59 high schools. The first of these was Georgetown, established in 1789. Loyola University was the ninth when it was founded in 1852. Around the world, there are more than 200 Jesuit secondary schools--- including 93 in India alone and more than 130 institutions of higher education, along with numerous centers of social and cultural analysis. Jesuit education is still growing. In recent years, U.S. Jesuits and lay men and women have created 14 inner-city middle schools, along with five high schools modeled on Chicago’s Cristo Rey School.* Increasingly, all these institutions are staffed and administered by men and women who are not Jesuits and may not even be Catholic or Christian but who are animated by the vision of Jesuit education and the spirituality of Ignatius Jesuit education continues to adapt old ideals to new times and new needs. *at the time this essay was written
August 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
-nov- (new) – novel, nova, novice, novitiate, Nova Scotia, innovation, renovate
Fall semester begins for first eight-week session
Late Registration for Fall Semester for First Eight-Week Session
Did you know? Tutoring is available in a number of graduate courses through “The Study.” They also provide workshops on time management and organization coaching. See page 31 in this handbook, or www.loyola.edu/thestudy.
Late Registration for Fall Semester for First Eight-Week Session
Late Registration for Fall Semester for First Eight-Week Session
“A year from now you may wish you had started today.” - Karen Lamb
31
Thursday
Late Registration for Fall Semester for First Eight-Week Session
2
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
1 Datebookstore.com
Late Registration for Fall Semester for First Eight-Week Session
September 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
4
-punct- (point) – punctuate, punctilious, puncture, punctual, acupuncture, contrapuntal
5
Monday Tuesday
Labor Day
Wednesday
Applications due for January 2023 Graduation Fall semester begins
6 ç µ å | @datebookstore
traverse v. – go through or across. When you traverse this field, be careful not to step on the wildflowers.
Thursday
Friday
Web Registration ends for Fall Semester and Second Eight-Week Session
Saturday
Sunday
Mass of the Holy Spirit
September 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
-ject (throw) – eject, reject, conjecture, dejected, inject, subject, projection, interject
Monday
Patriot Day
Tuesday
Late Registration ends for Fall Semester and Second Eight-Week Session
Wednesday
Course Withdrawal Period begins for Fall Semester
“Be a student as long as you have something to learn, and this will mean all your life.” - Henry L. Doherty
14
Thursday
betroth v. – become engaged to marry. The announcement that they were betrothed surprised everyone. 17
15 Datebookstore.com
Friday
Rosh Hashanah begins at sundown
Join our Graduate Student Organization programming board! Sign on to help plan a grad student event, and you can attend for free! gso@loyola.edu
Did you know? Catholic Mass is celebrated daily at 12:10pm in the Alumni Memorial Chapel, and four times on weekends on the Evergreen Campus. See page 13 of this handbook for more info.
September 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
-tion (act or state) – completion, reaction, devastation, production, creation, transition
“If you hear a voice within you say, ‘you cannot paint,’ then by all means paint, and that voice will be silenced.” - Vincent van Gogh
21
Thursday
23
Friday
Saturday Sunday
First day of autumn
Free and confidential short-term individual counseling is available for full-time graduate students. Referral services, as well as group counseling, are available to all graduate students. Visit p. 16 of the handbook, or visit www.loyola.edu/counselingcenter
Yom Kippur begins at sundown
22 Datebookstore.com
September 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
-loc- (place) – locomotive, location, local, locus, relocate, dislocate, localize
Mawlid al-Nabi begins at sundown
Did you know? Tutoring is available in a number of graduate courses through “The Study.” They also provide workshops on time management and organization coaching. See page 31 in this handbook, or www.loyola.edu/thestudy.
Did you know? You have access to Microsoft Office 365. Start by logging into houndmail. loyola.edu, and then click “Office 365” in the upper left.
“Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten.” - B.F. Skinner
28
Thursday
30
Friday
Course Withdrawal Period begins for Fall Semester
Last day to withdraw from First Eight-Week Session with a grade of W
Saturday
Sunday
29 Datebookstore.com
October 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
2
3
4 ç µ å | @datebookstore
5
Thursday
impale v. – pierce. He was impaled by the spear his enemy hurled. 8
6 Datebookstore.com
Friday
The Graduate Student Organization distributes a newsletter written specifically for graduate students on a monthly basis. If you are not receiving it, check out www.loyola.edu/ gradfriday, or email gso@loyola.edu.
October 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
amphi- (both) – amphibious, amphitheater, amphibian, amphibole
Columbus Day
“If you think you are too small to make a difference, try sleeping with a mosquito.” - Dalai Lama
penchant n. – strong inclination; liking. She had a penchant for fine jewelry.
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
October 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
magn- (great) – Magna Carta, magnanimous, magnate, magnificent, magnum opus
OCTOBER 2023
Did you know? You have access to Microsoft Office 365. Start by logging into houndmail. loyola.edu, and then click “Office 365” in the upper left.
“Teach us to give and not to count the cost.” - St. Ignatius of Loyola
19
Thursday
trilogy n. – group of three works. We read the first book of the Star Wars trilogy. 22
20 Datebookstore.com
First Eight-Week Session ends
Join our Graduate Student Organization programming board! Sign on to help plan a grad student event, and you can attend for free! gso@loyola.edu
Free and confidential short-term individual counseling is available for full-time graduate students. Referral services, as well as group counseling, are available to all graduate students. Visit p. 16 of the handbook, or visit www.loyola.edu/counselingcenter
You have free access to LinkedIn Learning, a fantastic online resource for technology as well as everyday skills such as public speaking. Log in with your Loyola credentials at www. linkedin.com/learning
October 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
eu- (good) – Eucharist, euphony, eulogy, euphemism, Europe, eugenics
Second Eight-Week Session begins
Did you know? Tutoring is available in a number of graduate courses through “The Study.” They also provide workshops on time management and organization coaching. See page 31 in this handbook, or www.loyola.edu/thestudy.
“It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” - Confucius
26
Thursday
075061_8160
Friday
28
Saturday
Sunday
27 Datebookstore.com
November 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
endo- (within) – endoplasm, endocrine, endogamous, endoskeleton, endothermic
“You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.” - Wayne Gretzky
2
Thursday
4
Friday
The Graduate Student Organization distributes a newsletter written specifically for graduate students on a monthly basis. If you are not receiving it, check out www.loyola.edu/ gradfriday, or email gso@loyola.edu.
Saturday Sunday
Standard time begins
3 Datebookstore.com
November 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
-phobia (fear) – claustrophobia, acrophobia, xenophobia, agoraphobia, hydrophobia
“There are no shortcuts to any place worth going.” - Beverly Sills
Election Day
Did you know? You have access to Microsoft Office 365. Start by logging into houndmail. loyola.edu, and then click “Office 365” in the upper left.
frugality n. – thrift. We must live with frugality if we are to get ahead financially.
Thursday
Friday
Web Registration begins for Spring 2024 Semester
Saturday Sunday
Veterans Day
November 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
ortho- (straight) – orthopedics, orthodontist, orthodox, orthography, orthogonal
Did you know? Tutoring is available in a number of graduate courses through “The Study.” They also provide workshops on time management and organization coaching. See page 31 in this handbook, or www.loyola.edu/thestudy.
“There are no traffic jams along the extra mile.” - Roger Staubach
November 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
-put- (think) – reputation, putative, impute, dispute, computer, disreputable
Wednesday
Thanksgiving Break (No Classes)
“I’m a greater believer in luck, and I find the harder I work the more I have of it”
- Thomas Jefferson
23
Thursday
Thanksgiving Thanksgiving Break (University Closed)
25
Friday
Thanksgiving Break (University Closed)
Saturday Sunday
24 Datebookstore.com
Free and confidential short-term individual counseling is available for full-time graduate students. Referral services, as well as group counseling, are available to all graduate students. Visit p. 16 of the handbook, or visit www.loyola.edu/counselingcenter
Thanksgiving Break (University Closed)
Thanksgiving Break (University Closed)
November 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
-ver- (true) – verify, veracity, veritable, verdict, verisimilitude, aver, cinema verity
NOVEMBER 2023
Last day to withdraw from Second Eight-Week Session with a grade of W
Wednesday
Course Withdrawal Period ends for Fall Semester; last day to withdraw from a course with a grade of W
“If the wind will not serve, take to the oars.” - Latin Proverb
30
Thursday
2
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
1 Datebookstore.com
December 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
4
5
6 ç µ å | @datebookstore
7
Thursday
075061_8160
Friday
9
Saturday
Sunday
8 Datebookstore.com
Did you know? Catholic Mass is celebrated daily at 12:10pm in the Alumni Memorial Chapel, and four times on weekends on the Evergreen Campus. See page 13 of this handbook for more info.
December 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
Did you know? Tutoring is available in a number of graduate courses through “The Study.” They also provide workshops on time management and organization coaching. See page 31 in this handbook, or www.loyola.edu/thestudy.
“Either write something worth reading or do something worth writing.” - Benjamin Franklin
14
Thursday
goad v. – urge on. The boy was goaded by his friends until he gave in to their wishes. 17
15 Datebookstore.com
our Graduate Student Organization programming board! Sign on to help plan a grad student event, and you can attend for free! gso@loyola.edu
You have free access to LinkedIn Learning, a fantastic online resource for technology as well as everyday skills such as public speaking. Log in with your Loyola credentials at www. linkedin.com/learning
December 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
pop- (people) – popular, populist, populate, population, popularize, populous
Exams and close of Fall Semester
Exams and close of Fall Semester
Did you know? You have access to Microsoft Office 365. Start by logging into houndmail. loyola.edu, and then click “Office 365” in the upper left.
Exams and close of Fall Semester
“The only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle.” - Steve Jobs
Thursday
First day of winter Exams and close of Fall Semester Second Eight-Week Session ends
Friday
Christmas Break (University Closed)
Saturday
Christmas Break (University Closed)
Sunday
Christmas Break (University Closed)
December 2023
WEEKLY GOALS:
-sangui- (blood) – sanguinary, sanguine, consanguinity, sangria
DECEMBER 2023
Christmas Christmas Break (University Closed)
Kwanzaa begins Christmas Break (University Closed)
Christmas Break (University Closed)
“While one may encounter many defeats, one must not be defeated.” - Maya Angelou
28
Thursday
Christmas Break (University Closed)
30
Friday
Christmas Break (University Closed)
Saturday
Christmas Break (University Closed) You can find leads on housing, find a roommate, or list available housing yourself for free at offcampushousing.loyola.edu
Sunday
29 Datebookstore.com
Christmas Break (University Closed)
January 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
1
vita- (life) – vitamin, vitality, vital, revitalize, viable, vitalize
2
New Year’s Day Christmas Break (University Closed)
Wednesday
University Opens
3 ç µ å | @datebookstore
4
Thursday
6
Friday
Saturday Sunday
5 Datebookstore.com
Free and confidential short-term individual counseling is available for full-time graduate students. Referral services, as well as group counseling, are available to all graduate students. Visit p. 16 of the handbook, or visit www.loyola.edu/counselingcenter
January 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
demo- (people) – democracy, demography, undemocratic, democratize
“Winning isn’t everything, but wanting to win is.”
- Vince Lombardi
itinerary n. – plan of a trip. She left her itinerary with us in case we need to contact her.
Thursday
Friday
The Graduate Student Organization distributes a newsletter written specifically for graduate students on a monthly basis. If you are not receiving it, check out www.loyola.edu/ gradfriday, or email gso@loyola.edu.
Saturday Sunday
January 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
stereo- (solid) – stereoscope, stereophonic, stereotype, stereopticon, stereotropism
Wednesday
Martin Luther King Jr. Day
First Eight-Week Session begins
Late Registration continues for First Eight-Week Session
University Closed
Applications due for May 2024 Graduation
Late Registration continues for First Eight-Week Session
Late Registration continues for First Eight-Week Session
“I didn’t fail the test. I just found 100 ways to do it wrong.” - Benjamin Franklin
coerce 19
force. Don't try to coerce me into doing this.
Thursday 20
Late Registration continues for First Eight-Week Session
Friday
v. –18 Datebookstore.com
Late Registration continues for First Eight-Week Session
Web Registration ends for Spring Semester, including Eight-Week Sessions
Course Withdrawal Period begins for First EightWeek Session
Late Registration continues for Spring Semester, including Second Eight-Week Session
January 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
-ism (doctrine) – Marxism, capitalism, Imagism, Cubism, nihilism, pluralism
Late Registration continues for Spring Semester, including Second Eight-Week Session
“Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm.”
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
25 Join our Graduate Student Organization programming board! Sign on to help plan a grad student event, and you can attend for free! gso@loyola.edu 075061_8160
26 Datebookstore.com
27
January 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
cognosc-, -cognit- (to learn) – agnostic, incognito, cognition
Did you know? Tutoring is available in a number of graduate courses through “The Study.” They also provide workshops on time management and organization coaching. See page 31 in this handbook, or www.loyola.edu/thestudy.
Did you know? You have access to Microsoft Office 365. Start by logging into houndmail. loyola.edu, and then click “Office 365” in the upper left.
“You can’t climb the ladder of success with your hands in your pockets.” - Arnold Schwarzenegger
1
Thursday
3
Friday
Groundhog Day
The Graduate Student Organization distributes a newsletter written specifically for graduate students on a monthly basis. If you are not receiving it, check out www.loyola.edu/ gradfriday, or email gso@loyola.edu.
Saturday Sunday
2 Datebookstore.com
February 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
-graph-, -gram (writing) – epigram, telegram, stenography
“Life is 10% what happens to me and 90% of how I react.” - John Maxwell
February 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
-ile (pertaining to, capable of) – civil, ductile, puerile
Wednesday
Lincoln’s Birthday
Ash Wednesday Valentine’s Day
“The person who says it cannot be done should not interrupt the person who is doing it.” - Chinese Proverb
15
Thursday
075061_8160
Friday
17
Saturday Sunday
16 Datebookstore.com
Free and confidential short-term individual counseling is available for full-time graduate students. Referral services, as well as group counseling, are available to all graduate students. Visit p. 16 of the handbook, or visit www.loyola.edu/counselingcenter
Did you know? Catholic Mass is celebrated daily at 12:10pm in the Alumni Memorial Chapel, and four times on weekends on the Evergreen Campus. See page 13 of this handbook for more info.
February 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
“Don’t wait. The time will never be just right.” - Napoleon Hill
Monday
Presidents’ Day
-dict- (to say) – abdicate, diction, verdict
Tuesday
Wednesday
22
Thursday
Washington’s Birthday
24
Friday
Saturday Sunday
23 Datebookstore.com
You have free access to LinkedIn Learning, a fantastic online resource for technology as well as everyday skills such as public speaking. Log in with your Loyola credentials at www. linkedin.com/learning
ab-, abs- (from, away from) – abduct, abdicate, absent
Did you know? Tutoring is available in a number of graduate courses through “The Study.” They also provide workshops on time management and organization coaching. See page 31 in this handbook, or www.loyola.edu/thestudy.
Did you know? You have access to Microsoft Office 365. Start by logging into houndmail. loyola.edu, and then click “Office 365” in the upper left.
“A person who never made a mistake never tried anything new.” - Albert Einstein
29
Thursday
2
Friday
Saturday Sunday
1 Datebookstore.com
The Graduate Student Organization distributes a newsletter written specifically for graduate students on a monthly basis. If you are not receiving it, check out www.loyola.edu/ gradfriday, or email gso@loyola.edu.
WEEKLY GOALS:
“Strive not to be a success, but rather to be of value.”
- Albert Einstein
verdigris n. – a green coating on copper due to weathering. The statue became coated with verdigris.
Thursday
Spring Break
Friday
First Eight-Week Session ends Spring Break
Saturday
Spring Break
Sunday
Daylight saving time begins Ramadan begins at sundown Spring Break
March 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
“Motivation and bathing don’t last long. That’s why we recommend them daily.” - Zig Ziglar
Monday
-solv-, -solut- (to loosen, explain) – absolve, dissolute, absolute
MARCH
Classes Resume Second Eight-Week Session begins
Tuesday
Wednesday
soporific adj. – sleep-producing. Thanksgiving dinner had a soporific effect on all our guests.
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
St. Patrick’s Day
March 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
-cord- (heart) – accord, cordial, discord
First day of spring
“Believe you can and you’re halfway there.”Theodore Roosevelt
21 Palm Sunday
22 Datebookstore.com
Join our Graduate Student Organization programming board! Sign on to help plan a grad student event, and you can attend for free! gso@loyola.edu Maryland Day Celebration
23
acr- (sharp) – acrimonious, acerbity, acidulate
WEEKLY GOALS:
Did you know? Tutoring is available in a number of graduate courses through “The Study.” They also provide workshops on time management and organization coaching. See page 31 in this handbook, or www.loyola.edu/thestudy.
Did you know? You have access to Microsoft Office 365. Start by logging into houndmail. loyola.edu, and then click “Office 365” in the upper left.
“It is never too late to be what you might have been.” - George Eliot
28
Thursday
Easter Break (No Classes through 3/31)
ruddy adj. – having a healthy red color. The baby’s ruddy skin was a sign of good health. 31
Friday
Good Friday Easter Break (Offices Closed)
Easter Break (Offices Closed)
Free and confidential short-term individual counseling is available for full-time graduate students. Referral services, as well as group counseling, are available to all graduate students. Visit p. 16 of the handbook, or visit www.loyola.edu/counselingcenter
Easter Easter Break (Offices Closed)
29 Datebookstore.com
April 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
1
Monday
2
Tuesday
-ag-, -act- (to do) – act, agent, retroactive
Wednesday
April Fools’ Day Classes Resume
3 ç µ å | @datebookstore
4
Thursday
Laylat al-Qadr begins at sundown
maudlin adj. – tearfully sentimental. I am annoyed when a movie turns needlessly maudlin. 7
5 Datebookstore.com
Friday
Join our Graduate Student Organization programming board! Sign on to help plan a grad student event, and you can attend for free! gso@loyola.edu
The Graduate Student Organization distributes a newsletter written specifically for graduate students on a monthly basis. If you are not receiving it, check out www.loyola.edu/ gradfriday, or email gso@loyola.edu.
Did you know? Catholic Mass is celebrated daily at 12:10pm in the Alumni Memorial Chapel, and four times on weekends on the Evergreen Campus. See page 13 of this handbook for more info.
ad- (to, forward) – admit, adhere, advance
WEEKLY GOALS:
“All things are ready, if our minds be so.” - King Henry V
Eid al-Fitr begins at sundown
Did you know? You have access to Microsoft Office 365. Start by logging into houndmail. loyola.edu, and then click “Office 365” in the upper left.
vilify v. – make abusive and slanderous statements toward someone. The Nazi propaganda vilified the Jews.
Thursday
Friday
Web Registration begins for Summer 2024 Sessions
Saturday
Sunday
-mon-, -monit- (to warn) – admonish, premonition, monitor
WEEKLY GOALS:
Course Withdrawal Period ends for Spring Semester; last day to withdraw from a course with a grade of W
Last day to withdraw from Second Eight-Week Session with a grade of W
Wednesday
“Though no one can go back and make a brand new start, anyone can start from now and make a brand new ending.” - Carl Bard
inter v. – bury. The cemetery's sexton would inter the casket after the family left.
Thursday
Friday
Saturday Sunday
agri-, agrari- (field) – agrarian, agriculture
WEEKLY GOALS:
“Happiness can’t be traveled to, owned, earned, or worn. It is the spiritual experience of living every minute with love, grace, & gratitude.”
Monday
Earth Day
Passover begins at sundown
Tuesday
Wednesday
- Denis Waitley
25
Thursday
075061_8160
Friday
27
Saturday Sunday
26 Datebookstore.com
-ali- (another) – alias, alienate, inalienable
WEEKLY GOALS:
Did you know? Tutoring is available in a number of graduate courses through “The Study.” They also provide workshops on time management and organization coaching. See page 31 in this handbook, or www.loyola.edu/thestudy.
Exams and close of Spring Semester
Did you know? You have access to Microsoft Office 365. Start by logging into houndmail. loyola.edu, and then click “Office 365” in the upper left.
Exams and close of Spring Semester
“I would rather die of passion than of boredom.” - Vincent van Gogh
2
Thursday
4
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Cinco de Mayo
3 Datebookstore.com
WEEKLY GOALS:
alter- (other) – alternator, alteration, alter ego, alternative, altruism, altercation
“Laugh and grow strong.”
- St. Ignatius of Loyola
Wednesday
Exams and close of Spring Semester
Exams and close of Spring Semester Second Eight-Week Session ends
Mother’s Day
amat- (love) – amatory, amateur, amorous, amiable, amigo, amour
WEEKLY GOALS:
“When everything seems to be going against you, remember that the airplane takes off against the wind.” - Henry Ford
16
Thursday
18
075061_8160
Friday
Commencement: Location TBD
Saturday Sunday
17 Datebookstore.com
Free and confidential short-term individual counseling is available for full-time graduate students. Referral services, as well as group counseling, are available to all graduate students. Visit p. 16 of the handbook, or visit www.loyola.edu/counselingcenter
ambi- (both) – ambidextrous, ambiguous, ambivalent
WEEKLY GOALS:
Start where you are. Use what you have. Do what you can.
- Arthur Ashe
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
26 25 24 23
Thursday
Datebookstore.com
“If you do what you’ve always done, you’ll get what you’ve always gotten.” - Tony Robbins
30
Thursday
1
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
31 Datebookstore.com
-arch- (ruler, first) – anarchy, archeology, archbishop
WEEKLY GOALS:
3
4
Wednesday
“Explore, Dream, Discover.”
5 ç µ å | @datebookstore
6
Thursday
075061_8160
Friday
8
Saturday
Sunday
7 Datebookstore.com
June 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
-anim- (mind, soul) – animadvert, unanimous, magnanimity
“I learned the value of hard work by working hard.” - Margaret Mead
13
Thursday
15
Friday
Flag Day
Saturday Sunday
Eid al-Adha begins at sundown
Father’s Day
14 Datebookstore.com
Did you know? Catholic Mass is celebrated daily at 12:10pm in the Alumni Memorial Chapel, and four times on weekends on the Evergreen Campus. See page 13 of this handbook for more info.
June 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
17
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
JUNE 2024
-annu- (year) – annuity, biennial, perennial
Juneteenth
Did you know? You have access to Microsoft Office 365. Start by logging into houndmail. loyola.edu, and then click “Office 365” in the upper left.
“With the new day comes new strength and new thoughts.”
- Eleanor Roosevelt
levity n. – lightness. The boy’s levity toward the serious situation was bothersome.
Thursday
First day of summer
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
-ity (state of being) – annuity, credulity, sagacity
WEEKLY GOALS:
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
“Either you run the day, or the day runs you.” - Jim Rohn
27
Thursday
29
Friday
Saturday Sunday
28 Datebookstore.com
July 2024
WEEKLY GOALS:
deb-, -debit- (to owe) – debt, indebtedness, debenture
“Love is shown more in deeds than in words.” - St. Ignatius of Loyola
4
Thursday
Independence Day
6
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Muharram begins at sundown
5 Datebookstore.com
dec- (ten) – decade, deciliter, decimal, decagon, decathlon
WEEKLY GOALS:
Did you know? You have access to Microsoft Office 365. Start by logging into houndmail. loyola.edu, and then click “Office 365” in the upper left.
“Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you take your eyes off the goal.” - Henry Ford
lachrymose adj. – tearful. The friends of the deceased became lachrymose during the touching eulogy.
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
-cad-, -cas- (to fall) – decadent, cadence, accident, cascade
WEEKLY GOALS:
“Whether you think you can or you think you can’t, you’re right.” - Henry Ford
itinerant adj. – traveling from place to place. The itinerant circus will make its next stop in my town.