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Senior Show - Merch Design
This Senior Capstone Project serves as the culmination of my undergraduate journey, highlighting the skills I have acquired and demonstrating my ability to apply them in real-world professional settings such as merch design. Through this project, I expanded my expertise beyond artistry, embracing design as a complementary skillset that enhances my creative and problem-solving abilities.https://digitalcommons.snc.edu/artportfolios/1105/thumbnail.jp
Storied Formation: Effective Frontline Formation in a Diverse World
Formation of frontline Catholic health care colleagues is challenging due to the diversity of colleague backgrounds, scheduling constraints, and staffing turnover. However, frontline colleagues are the face of the organization to patients and guests, so formation of these employees is a critical component in maintaining a Catholic identity. This paper uses story as the delivery mechanism for communicating culture, values, and identity in one forty-five-minute session to nurse residents
Evolution, Science and Faith: Grandeur in an Evolutionary View of Life
In this lecture, St. Norbert College welcomed Brown University\u27s Kenneth R. Miller to campus for the Spring 2025 Dr. Benjamin T. Chu Distinguished Lecture, “Evolution, Science and Faith: Grandeur in an Evolutionary View of Life .
Miller—renowned biologist, author and advocate for the dialogue between science and religion—shared powerful insights on evolution, human purpose and the intersection of reason and belief
Sarah Pohjola, Senior Art Exhibition Portfolio, Earth\u27s Destruction
This work was created for the Senior Art Exhibition Portfolio 2024. This work includes graphic design and illustration focused on environmental conservation.https://digitalcommons.snc.edu/artportfolios/1086/thumbnail.jp
The Ebb and Flow of Feminine Flourishing in the Arts: Patterns of Recognition and Obscurity
The notion that no woman can be a great artist has been reinforced in the fields of art and art history by the long-standing, accepted white Western male perspective. Nevertheless, history is replete with women who created exceptional art in their own time before fading into relative obscurity. By examining the obstacles that prevented many women from pursuing careers in the arts, how some of them overcame those obstacles to thrive in their time, what led to their subsequent disappearance, and what circumstances led to their rediscovery, this thesis reveals patterns of recognition and obscurity women artists experienced throughout history. The patterns of gender bias revealed in this analysis help explain why female artists have disappeared. Recognizing these patterns and their implications will ensure that women do not slip into obscurity again
The Papacy from John XXIII to Francis: Ancient Roots and Modern Branches
Dr. Massimo Faggioli, professor in the department of theology and religious studies at Villanova University, received his Ph.D. in Religious History from the University of Turin in 2002 with a thesis on the history of the appointment of bishops after the Council of Trent. He later continued his studies on the Second Vatican Council at the renowned institute of “Giovanni XXIII for Religious Studies in Bologna, Italy. From Italy he traveled first to Boston where he was visiting fellow at the Jesuit Institute at Boston College from 2008-2009 before moving to the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota in 2009 where he remained teaching until 2016.
Massimo\u27s books and articles have been widely published in eight languages. His latest books in English are Catholicism and Citizenship: Political Cultures of the Church in the Twenty-First Century (Liturgical Press 2017), The Liminal Papacy of Pope Francis. Moving Toward Global Catholicity (Orbis Books, 2020), and Joe Biden and Catholicism in the United States (Bayard 2021). With Catherine Clifford he is the co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Vatican II (Oxford University Press, 2023) and he is under contract with Oxford University Press for a book on the history of the Roman Curia.
Massimo Faggioli is a young, bright, articulate, theologian of the new generation of Catholic intellectuals who is making a very significant contribution to theology, ecclesiology and church history in the contemporary Church.
About the Lecture
Dr. Faggioli, in the third and final offering of this series, explored the many parallels in the ways St. John XXIII and Pope Francis have changed and updated the papacy, but also interesting differences. This lecture explored their common roots, but also focused on how the unfolding of Pope Francis’ pontificate casts a new light on the one of St. John XXIII
Science Across Borders
“Science Across Borders,” a Great Decisions lecture with professors from St. Norbert College and UW-Green Bay
Mideast Realignment
“Mideast Realignment,” a Great Decisions lecture by Robert S. Kramer, professor of history at St. Norbert College
April 2024
In this issue: Chan’s ‘Jeopardy!’ Journey Ends with Second-Place Finish President Joyner Joins Alum’s Higher Ed Podcast to Talk SNC Strengths A Dozen New Academic Programs Build More Career Pathways Business Students Spend J-Term in Mexic
St. Norbert College Parish History
St. Norbert College Parish traces its roots to a chapel built in 1676, evolving into a vibrant Norbertine ministry and the National Shrine of St. Joseph. Over centuries, it has remained a spiritual center for both the college and local community, with its historic church now serving as the parish and campus ministry hub