Each year at Commencement, it is customary for the president of the
university to offer a few reflections on the state of Trinity and
the larger state of the academy and our world.
I am pleased to tell you that the State of Trinity is quite well, as
you can see from these magnificent graduates assembled here today.
This year at Trinity, we had many notable accomplishments including
these:
* With the leadership of Dr. Sharon Mailey, the Trinity Nursing
Program is now a reality, with the RN-to-BSN program well on its way
to accreditation, and the full BSN program approved by the D.C.
Board of Nursing and ready to launch this fall.
* Dr. Raul Tovares, associate professor of Communication, has
received a Fulbright Fellowship to teach journalism at the Ivan
Franko National University in Ukraine.
* Webmaster Timothy Russell received the CASE silver award for his
outstanding work on Trinity�s website.
* Campus Minister Barbara Humphrey McCrabb accepted an award from
the Catholic Campus Ministry Program recognizing the Seton Cunneen
Fellowship Program as one of seven exemplary Campus Ministry
programs nationwide.
* A member of this senior class, Leah Martin, student government
president, an Intelligence Community Scholar, has won a prestigious
State Department Rangel Fellowship to support her studies that will
lead to a career in the Foreign Service.
* Three Trinity students --- Annie Osorio-Perez, Christine Palmer
and Natasha Ray --- were selected for the highly competitive and
prestigious Young People For Fellowships recognizing campus leaders
and progressive activists.
* No fewer than three Trinity coaches received �Coach of the Year�
accolades from the Atlantic Women�s College Conference, including
Coach and Athletic Director Kristine Manning for Lacrosse, Coach
Gary Blake for Basketball, and Coach Elizabeth Schreiner in
Volleyball.
* Trinity Alumna Barbara York, Class of 1972, vice president for
industry affairs at the National Cable Television Association, has
been named Cable Television Executive of the Year and inducted into
the Cable Television Hall of Fame.
* Trinity Alumna Kathleen Gilligan Sebelius, Class of 1970, Governor
of the State of Kansas, was elected as the first woman to chair of
Democratic Governors Association.
* Last, certainly not least, Trinity Alumna Nancy Pelosi, Class of
1962, became the first woman Speaker of the House in January.
These are just a few among so many achievements of Trinity students
and alumnae, faculty and staff.
While the state of Trinity is well, the state of the Academy is not
so good. Higher education is an embattled industry these days, some
of it troubles of our own making, some of it political ills foisted
upon us by an intrusive federal bureaucracy, some of it the result
of events outside of our control that have a grave impact on our
lives.
We think of our friends and colleagues at Virginia Tech, a beautiful
community of high achievers brought to such great sorrow by the act
of a madman. We pray for the dead, wounded and all those who are
suffering greatly as a result of this terrible act, and even more,
we pray for an end to the scandal of gun violence in this nation.
Some universities this year have brought new troubles to our
industry by indulging clearly unethical practices in doing deals
with the student loan industry. This scandal is a true shame for all
of higher education, and we must clean it up quickly.
On another front, the United States Department of Education is
attempting to usurp the academic community�s own voluntary
regulatory processes in accreditation. The Department is now
crafting new rules that would significantly undermine the right and
responsibility of faculties to determine what students should learn
and how well students meet the academic standards that the faculty
set. The proposals would replace faculty judgment with the judgment
of the federal bureaucracy, a form of �No Child Left Behind� for
university students, imposing on colleges through their accreditors
a one-size-fits-all model of teaching and learning.
As a private university founded as a women�s college and in the
Catholic tradition, as a university that serves a majority of
African American, Latina, Asian and immigrant students from many
communities historically underserved by traditional education,
Trinity cannot stand by while the Department of Education regulates
our unique mission into some kind of bland low-level sameness with
every other college in the nation. We are as different from
Georgetown or George Mason as we are from Montgomery College or the
Virginia Military Institute. That difference is our strength, and
our strength is a gift to American higher education and the students
we serve. And so, too, can every other college and university make
that case for its own mission.
The federal government�s plan to manipulate accreditation is a thin
veil over an effort to control curricula and the intellectual life
of the academic community. This is not just an academic dispute.
Free and open universities are the places where freedom of thought
and speech are replenished daily in this free society. The
collegiate classroom can never become a place where a governmental
agenda replaces the agenda of free thought and free speech.
American higher education is the envy of the world, particularly
because we are free from governmental regulation of our curricula.
Contrary to the report of the Spellings Commission on Higher
Education, this nation�s colleges and universities are not failing.
That report, itself, is a product of a narrow, bureaucratic view of
the aims of education, written to satisfy political, not academic,
ends. The American Council on Education refused to sign the report.
No less a group than the Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society has said that
the Spellings Commission report is ��seriously flawed by omission of
the role of the liberal arts and sciences in sustaining the
excellence of American higher education.� Nevertheless, the
Spellings Commission report is now the driver for the Department of
Education�s agenda to take over accreditation and replace
independent faculty judgment with governmental standards for
learning.
The efforts of the federal government to dictate the intellectual
products of higher education distract us from a more urgent focus on
those social conditions we should be addressing more vigorously.
Higher education should be a more powerful, passionate voice on the
crises of this dangerous age in civilization�s continuum.
Let�s not let history reveal that we remained silent while the very
health of this planet deteriorated to the point of catastrophic
global climate change. We need the research talent and clear voices
of our scientists and public policy scholars, strong and unafraid,
in the forefront of the current environmental debate.
Let�s not let history reveal that we wasted our precious time and
talent in defensive skirmishes over arcane regulatory debates while
a misguided war raged on, devastating millions of lives and draining
precious resources away from our domestic needs. We must not shrink
from moral advocacy for peaceful solutions to the grave security
threats of our time. Terrorism is certainly a real threat, but war
is not the answer.
Let�s not let history reveal that we walked away from public
engagement with the still-unfinished agenda of equal opportunity in
this nation, most particularly, equal educational opportunity for
all children, all women, all men, not just those people of privilege
who can afford to buy the best education in private schools. This is
a profound issue of racial and economic justice for the United
States, for the Washington region, and for the District of Columbia.
As a private school leader in the city, let me be very clear that
there can be no substitute in our city for excellent public
education. I am very proud of what Trinity has been able to do to
meet the higher education needs of so many citizens of the District.
But from all of the work we do with our city I know that the needs
are vast and Trinity is small. Our experience magnifies the simple
fact that there is no substitute for an effective public system of
education at all levels, from preschool through university.
Let me also note here that governance reform alone cannot improve
public education. Education takes place in the classroom, not the
board room. Educational reform in the District of Columbia must
focus on helping teachers and principals to be more effective,
starting with giving them appropriate learning environments in
school buildings, timely delivery of textbooks and supplies, and
rewards for excellence in teaching and administration.
Each of us has significant responsibilities in responding to these
challenges.
Today, I call upon the faculty of Trinity to redouble your advocacy
on behalf of the academic freedom that protects the intellectual
vibrancy of this free society.
Today I call upon the alumnae and alumni of Trinity to redouble your
resolve to be exemplars of our highest values of intellectual
excellence, personal honor, and advocates for justice and peace in
all of the many communities you serve each day.
Today I call upon the graduates of the Class of 2007 to pledge your
lifelong commitment to uphold these same values of Trinity in the
lives and work you will pursue from this day forward.
To those of you who will be business executives: you will be the
stewards of the economic engines of our city and region and nation.
Do so with a profound sense of public purpose for the critical role
of corporate productivity in shaping the good society. Do not forget
to share your profits broadly with those who do not have as much as
you.
To those of you who will be great communicators as journalists,
lawyers and advocates and writers and poets and artists and civic
activists: honor the truth in all communications, leaven our days
with tales from your imagination and soul, help the citizens
understand what is important so that they can make good choices each
day, raise your voices on behalf of those who cannot be heard.
To those of you who will be health care professionals or scientists:
renew your pledges each day to alleviate suffering, to improve the
conditions of life for your patients, to discover the causes of
chronic illness and develop new and better treatments for the
improvement of human life.
To those of you who will be teachers, principals, guidance
counselors: you will do the most precious work imaginable next to
parenting, you will shape the minds and hearts and souls of the
young who are our future. Do so with imagination, integrity and
intellectual rigor each day.
In all of these great challenges, through all of the days you will
count beyond this day, may you always know the power of Trinity�s
knowledge, remembering the lessons you first acquired here; may you
grow through the embrace of Trinity�s wisdom, learning to
distinguish the important from the urgent, what is true over the
deceptive, what is lasting over the expedient. May the light and
love of Trinity�s great Spirit go with you, shining down all your
days, illuminating the paths you will travel through the journeys of
your lives.
Trinity is accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education.
School of Education programs are accredited by NCATE and meet DC Certification requirements.