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Barry University

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Barry University

Established: 1940
Type: Private
Religious affiliation: Roman Catholic, Archdiocese of Miami
Endowment: $28,959,692
President: Sister Linda Bevilacqua, OP, PhD
Faculty: 871
Students: 9,300
Undergraduates: 5,916
Postgraduates: 3,408
Location: Miami Shores, Florida, USA
Campus: Urban 122 acres (0.49 km2) main campus (3.5 km²)
Colors: Red, black, and silver             
Nickname: Buccaneers
Mascot: Bucky the Parrot
Website: www.barry.edu

Barry University is a private Catholic university, which was founded in 1940 in Miami Shores, Florida, a suburb northeast of Downtown Miami. It is part of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Miami. Barry offers business, nursing, health sciences, teacher education, and liberal arts programs. It currently has more than 9,300 students, a faculty of 871, a campus of 54 buildings,[1] and 39,922 alumni. Student to faculty ratio is 14:1.[2]

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Beginnings

Initially, Barry was a women's Catholic college. The construction of what was then the Barry College for Women began in 1940, in what had previously been "a tract of tropical vegetation."[3] The empty lot was soon transformed into the main campus, in Miami Shores, FL. The original campus consisted of five buildings. The college was named for Patrick Barry, Bishop of St. Augustine, and brother of the first president of the school.[1]

Barry College became Barry University on November 13, 1981.

The university has had five Adrian Dominican Sisters serve as president since its inception: Mother M. Gerald Barry[4], 1940-1961; Mother M. Genevieve Weber,1962-1963; Sister M. Dorothy Browne,1963- 1974; Sister M. Trinita Flood, 1974-1981; Sister Jeanne O'Laughlin, 1981 to 2004; and Sister Linda Bevilacqua, OP, PhD, 2004-present".The main campus for the sisters is located in Adrian Michigan, several miles from Lake Erie. The Weber retreat center is also located in the Adrian Sisters campus. This center is known worldwide as a spiritual retreat with special theology and personal development programs.[5]

[edit] Cor Jesu Chapel

The Cor Jesu Chapel is "the spiritual and physical heart of the campus."[6]

The Cor Jesu Chapel was financed with the generous aid of Margaret Brady Farrell, a parishioner of St. Patrick's Church in Miami Beach.

The story behind the construction of the Cor Jesu Chapel speaks of the generosity of the local community and of the spirit of the Catholic faith. Soon after discovering that the construction of the Cor Jesu was postponed due to insufficient funds, Mrs. Farrel donated all the funds need for completion the chapel's construction. Thanks to Margaret Brady Farrell's generosity, the construction of the Cor Jesu resumed as scheduled.

The Cor Jesu holds a chalice decorated with Margaret Brady Farrell's personal jewels. The chalice was given to Barry University shortly after Mrs. Farrell's death. In honor of Mrs. Farrell, the Division of Business and Finance building was dedicated in her name as "Farrel House."[7]

"As the Miami Herald described the new college on Sunday, September 15, 1940, 'Forming the central motif for the campus is the chapel, named Cor Jesu (Heart of Jesus),...Topped by an 80-foot (24 m) tower holding carillon chimes, the chapel will seat 500 persons and will be equipped with a pipe organ and marble altar...Arranged around the double royal palm fringed driveway which leads to the chapel from the entrance on Second Avenue, the college buildings are airy and spacious, marked by a liberal use of glass'."[8]

Traces of Romanesque architecture can be seen in the inside of the chapel which "was built in choir style with wood wainscoting and a canopy over the altar."[9] A stained glass window of amber color, containing the image of a Celtic cross, is visible from the main entrance of the campus.

The Cor Jesu Chapel is widely recognized by the local community as a symbol for Barry University.

[edit] Facilities


Barry University's main campus is located in Miami Shores, Florida. While the main campus is in Miami Shores, Barry University offers several continuing adult education classes at other locations. Barry University has a campus in Orlando, FL which houses the Dwayne O. Andreas School of Law and a campus in Saint Petersburg, FL which houses the second branch of its Physician Assistant Program.

The Miami Shores campus houses an array of over forty buildings and continues to expand. These buildings house state of the art technology, "as well as indoor and outdoor sporting facilities."[10] "The tropical beauty of the campus, its excellent educational facilities, and the ideal South Florida climate combine to create an atmosphere conducive to learning and to continued personal development."[11]

While the Cor Jesu Chapel is the spiritual and physical center of Barry University, the intellectual heart of Barry is the Monsignor William Barry Memorial Library. "The mission of the Monsignor William Barry Memorial Library is to provide services and resources to Barry students, faculty, staff and administrators in support of quality education within a caring environment."[12]

"The library includes more than 710,000 items, including 2,600 periodical titles, 5,000 audiovisual items, and 150 electronic databases. A significant strength is the excellent Catholic American collection".[13]

The Monsignor William Barry Memorial Library also contains a collection of documents pertaining to Operation Pedro Pan.[14]

[edit] Expansion

While Barry University is recognized as primarily a liberal arts college, the university has expanded its programs of study to include specialized programs in nursing, teacher education, medical technology, and social work.

"The needs of the local community led Barry to begin graduate programs for men and women in 1954, a continuing education program in 1974, a school of business in 1976, a division of biological and biomedical sciences in 1983, and a school of podiatric medicine in the Fall of 1985."[15]

In 1999, the Barry University School of Law was established in Orlando, Florida.

[edit] Academics

Ethnic enrollment, 2006 Percentage Total
number
Asian American 2% 203
Black (non-Hispanic) 22% 1,971
Hispanic 27% 2,418
Native American 1% 24
White (non-Hispanic) 32% 2,834
International, Other 16% 1,432
Total 100% 8,882


Barry University "offers more than 60 traditional undergraduate programs, accelerated bachelor's programs designed specifically for working adults, and more than 50 graduate programs (many of these with evening/weekend classes)"[16]in 9 schools. Student to faculty ratio is 14:1.[17]

  • School of Adult and Continuing Education
  • School of Arts and Sciences
  • School of Business
  • School of Education
  • School of Human Performance and Leisure Sciences
  • School of Law (Dwayne O. Andreas)
  • School of Natural and Health Sciences
  • School of Nursing
  • School of Podiatric Medicine
  • School of Social Work

[edit] Barry University's mission

Barry's mission is as follows:[18]

  • Quality Education
  • Religious Dimension
  • Community Service
  • Caring Environment

Students are expected to:

  • "Embrace the intellectual life through study, research and reflection as a means to contribute to the advancement of knowledge and to the refinement of the human spirit."[19]
  • "Understand the value of seeking a personal response to the presence of God in their lives."[20]
  • "Reflect on the fundamental questions of human experience and study the responses to these questions proposed by the liberal arts and sciences."[21]/Default.htm]
  • "Pursue continued spiritual, intellectual, physical, and professional growth and development."[22]
  • "Demonstrate concern for all individuals in an atmosphere where Gospel values prevail, where people care for and about one another, where diversity is embraced, where individuals are nourished."[23]
  • "Assume responsibility in religious, social, economic, environmental, and political affairs as a means of effecting needed change in the Dominican tradition of activist justice."[24]

[edit] Athletics

Barry University became a member of the Sunshine State Conference (SSC) in June 1988.

"The SSC sponsors championships in 14 sports for men and women: baseball, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s cross country, men’s and women's golf, rowing, men’s and women's soccer, softball, men’s and women’s tennis, and volleyball."[25]

"Sunshine State Conference teams have won NCAA Division II national championships in baseball, men’s basketball, men’s and women’s golf, men’s and women’s soccer, softball, volleyball, and men’s and women’s tennis. SSC teams are also nationally recognized in rowing."[26]

Furthermore the athletics department at Barry University follows the university's mission in "acknowledges the presence of God through wholesome and clean competition, comradeship among participants, good sportsmanship, and equality of opportunity exclusive of one's sex, race, or religious affiliation. A caring environment is provided by assuring the academic, physical, and emotional well-being of our student-athletes through the leadership provided by a well-qualified teaching/professional staff, academic support services, comprehensive health care and coverage, and safe playing and practice conditions."[27]

[edit] Activities

Barry has many student organizations, fraternities and sororities, and honor societies, including student government.

The Barry Buccaneer is the student newspaper, ranging from 8-16 pages and published at the first of every month starting in September and ending in May. The Buccaneer serves as a laboratory for the journalism minors. All work, including writing, editing, advertising and design, is completed by students."[28]

WBRY is Barry University's student run campus radio station and is broadcast on 1640 AM. Student DJs play "all kinds of music, from hip hop to classic rock, Classical music to inner city blues."[29] Other programming includes sports shows, talk shows, and daily news.[30]

[edit] Recognition

"In its 2005 Edition of America's Best Colleges, U.S. News & World Report ranked the academic quality of Barry University as one of the strongest in South Florida. Barry maintained its position in the second tier of master’s-granting universities in the South."[31]

"For the sixth year in a row, U.S. News and World Report 2006 Best Colleges Edition ranked Barry as number one for campus diversity among schools of our size in the South. Students are drawn from 49 states and 80 countries."[32]

[edit] Alumni

Alumni Notability
Clint Curtis[citation needed] 2006 Congressional candidate
Amy Diaz Miss Rhode Island USA 2008
Felipe de Jesús Estévez Auxiliary Bishop of Miami
Flo Rida American rapper
Carlos A. Gimenez Miami-Dade County Commissioner
Matt Hudson Member of the Florida House of Representatives[citation needed]
David M. Kopp Organizational Learning expert
Alen Marcina Professional Soccer player for the Minnesota Thunder
Henry Owens Major League Baseball Pitcher for the Florida Marlins
Jorge Reyes Cuban-American author
Priscilla Taylor Member of the Florida House of Representatives
Gui Valente Brazilian Gracie Jiu-Jitsu practitioner
Marco Vélez Current Professional Soccer player for the Toronto FC

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Ground is broken for Florida's fist Catholic college. Florida Catholic. January 2-15, 2009. 
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ [2]
  4. ^ Prioress- General, Adrian Dominican Sisters
  5. ^ [3]
  6. ^ [4]
  7. ^ [5]
  8. ^ [6]
  9. ^ [7]
  10. ^ [8]
  11. ^ [9]
  12. ^ [10]
  13. ^ [11]
  14. ^ [12]
  15. ^ [13]
  16. ^ [14]
  17. ^ [15]
  18. ^ [16]
  19. ^ [17]
  20. ^ [18]
  21. ^ [http://barry.edu/aboutbarry/mission
  22. ^ [19]
  23. ^ [20]
  24. ^ [21]
  25. ^ [22]
  26. ^ [23]
  27. ^ [24]
  28. ^ [25]
  29. ^ [26]
  30. ^ [27]
  31. ^ [28]
  32. ^ [29]

[edit] External links

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