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MISSION SPOTLIGHT

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STUDENT SPOTLIGHT

STUDENT SPOTLIGHT

Applying Business to Education

Joe McColgan ’84 CLAS, ’08 EMBA has always been committed to serving others, whether it be his country, his city or his community.

McColgan attended Villanova on an ROTC Scholarship as an undergraduate and then served in the Navy for four years. Following his passion for politics that began as a child, he ran for U.S. Congress twice and Philadelphia City Council. “People would ask me, why would you run for Congress at such a young age? And the answer is that I believed I could do some good, and I still feel that way today,” McColgan explains.

After working in financial services for several years, McColgan returned to Villanova in 2008 to obtain his Executive MBA. In 2017, he became president of Saints Neumann Goretti High School in South Philadelphia. Although many fellow Catholic high school presidents come from an academic background, McColgan feels his business background and the skills he gained in the EMBA program have served him well. “Education is a business, after all” he says. Education had been a cornerstone of his political campaigns and McColgan strongly feels that “you can’t solve the problems in Philadelphia until you solve the problems of education in Philadelphia.”

When McColgan arrived at Neumann Goretti, the school had declining enrollment and a $1.1 million deficit. Enrollment has since rebounded, academic outcomes have improved significantly and the budget is projected to surplus next year. McColgan credits this success to his strong team at the school and the systems-thinking mindset he learned at Villanova. “Almost every day I am using the skills I learned from Villanova. The EMBA program really opened my eyes to effective problem-solving, asking the right questions and finding solutions.”

Neumann Goretti has a long tradition in its neighborhood. McColgan recognizes the importance of maintaining the school’s strong ties in the community, and he works to cultivate relationships with local businesses and community organizations. At an open house event earlier this year, McColgan overheard a parent telling prospective families how her daughter comes home happy every day, sharing how great the people are and how the teachers are always willing to help. McColgan later introduced himself to the parent and thanked her. “I told her she just validated everything we are trying to do here. And it made me feel good that we are on the right path, knowing that we are doing good things not only for the community, but for Catholic education in the city.”

Family Ties

After McColgan had been at the school for over a year, someone sent him a photograph of a dedication ceremony for a statue of St. Maria Goretti that is located at the school entrance.

In the photo were his great grandmother, grandmother and uncles. McColgan had walked by the statue countless times, never knowing that his great-grandmother had dedicated it to the school in 1958.

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