Bethel University (Minnesota)
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| Bethel University | |
|---|---|
| Established | 1871 |
| Type: | Private |
| President: | George Brushaber M.Div., Ph.D. |
| Staff: | 370 |
| Undergraduates: | 2,900 |
| Postgraduates: | 2,696 |
| Location | Arden Hills, Minnesota, USA |
| Campus: | Suburban |
| Athletics: | 18 Varsity Teams |
| Mascot: | Royals |
| Website: | www.bethel.edu |
Bethel University is a Christian higher education institution with approximately 6,000 students from 36 countries enrolled in undergraduate, graduate, seminary, and adult education programs. The main campus is located in Arden Hills, Minnesota, and the school has satellite seminary locations on both coasts.
The university has a performing arts program, including Benson Great Hall, a concert hall, and The Bethel Choir, the university's 75-voice concert choir which has performed throughout Europe and Scandinavia.
Fully accredited by the Higher Learning Commission--North Central Association of Colleges and Schools, the university is also a member of the Christian College Consortium.
Bethel University is affiliated with and supported by the congregations of the Baptist General Conference.
Contents |
[edit] History
Bethel University began in Chicago, Illinois, in 1871 as a seminary for Baptist immigrants from Sweden. The seminary merged with Bethel Academy in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1914. In 1931 the Academy became Bethel Junior College. The addition of a four-year liberal arts college program created Bethel College and Seminary in 1947. Beginning in 2004, the institution amended its name to Bethel University, better reflecting the broad scope of its academic programs.
[edit] Schools of Bethel University
Bethel University is divided into five different schools, each focusing on a different area:
[edit] College of Arts & Sciences
The College of Arts & Sciences offers 66 majors (78 including emphases within majors) and 41 minors (42 including emphases within minors).
[edit] College of Adult & Professional Studies
[edit] Graduate School
[edit] School for Executive Leadership
[edit] Bethel Seminary
[edit] Facilities - Main Arden Hills, MN Campus
[edit] Main Education Buildings
There are five main education buildings located on Bethel University's main campus in Arden Hills, MN. They run Southwest/Northeast and are centrally located within the campus. They are all connected through weather-protected skyways and tunnels.
Starting from the Southwest and running to the Northeast the buildings are as follows (with abbreviations in parentheses): Benson Great Hall and Lundquist Community Life Center (CLC), Academic Center (AC), Clauson Fine Arts Center (CC), Hagstrom Student Services Center (HC), and Robertson Physical Education Center (RC).
[edit] Campus Housing
There are four freshman residence halls located on-campus. Three of them are on a hill known as Freshman Hill; they are Bodien Hall, Getsch Hall, and Edgren Hall. The other freshman dorm is Nelson Hall, and it is located a short distance away from Freshman Hill. Nelson Hall is the oldest building on Bethel University's current campus in Arden Hills.
There are three residence halls that house mainly sophomores located on-campus: Arden Village West, Arden Village East, and Lissner Hall. Lissner Hall is the newest building on campus; it was completed in the Summer of 2005.
Two residence complexes, North Village and Fountain Terrace, house mostly juniors. Fountain Terrace is a renovated apartment complex located about two miles from the main campus. These two complexes are the only campus housing that offers a full kitchen in every suite. A shuttle service runs regularly between Fountain Terrace and the campus. North Village (a housing compound comprising five small residence halls) is located on the campus within walking distance of the academic buildings, but a shuttle also services these residences due to the occasionally extreme Minnesota climate.
Heritage Hall is the primary senior residence on campus, but also houses some juniors.
Many upperclassmen live off-campus.
[edit] New University Commons Building
Bethel University started construction on a 30 million dollar University Commons project. Construction began on May 19th 2007, and is scheduled to be completed in the spring of 2009.[1]
[edit] Academics
Bethel University offers a wide range of undergraduate and graduate programs. It regularly achieves the top ranks in the US News and World Reports. Undergraduates leave Bethel for positions in industry, social service, community organizations, and many other fields. Graduates have gone to excel at top graduate schools in the United States, including Yale, Princeton, the University of Chicago and many others.
In the last ten years there has been a strong emphasis on study abroad, and Bethel offers programs on every continent and highly encourages its students to study for a semester or, at least, a January term in some other part of the world.
[edit] The Covenant
All full-time students in the College of Arts and Sciences are expected to abide by a Covenant for Life Together. This lifestyle agreement focuses on living a Christian life of personal morality, which includes a respect for all persons and ethnic traditions, refraining from extra-marital sex, gambling, and the use of alcohol, illegal drugs, and tobacco in any form. It also states Bethel students should live a biblical lifestyle, which would mean staying away from gossip and gluttony. The goal of the Covenant is to build a community of faith and learning centered around common values. The lifestyle agreement's restrictions on the use of alcohol and tobacco do not apply to students enrolled in the College of Adult and Professional Studies.
Historically, this lifestyle agreement has also applied to full-time faculty and employees. Recently, however, it was decided that the expectation of abstinence from alcohol and tobacco for employees and faculty of the University is to be lifted. The Bethel University Human Resource department sent out a detailed survey to all employees in the Fall of 2007 to find out what their thoughts were on the use of alcohol, the results were never released. The announcement is to go public in the near future, pending the preparation of appropriate changes in printed and online material to reflect properly the change in this aspect of the University's culture.
[edit] Reconciliation
In the last four years Bethel University has embraced a call to Biblical Reconciliation. The ministry of reconciliation is one that brings people together across social divisions that exist. In the case of Bethel this specifically means the idea of racial reconciliation. The push towards reconciliation arose out of outwardly racist events that happened in the 2002-2003 school year. Since that time Bethel University has made great strides towards reconciliation. Some of these things include creating a department of reconciliation, offering major and minors in the study of reconciliation, going through the Minnesota Collaborative Anti-Racism Initiative(MCARI), has created the Bethel Anti racism and Reconciliation Commission (BAARC), and has added as their seventh core value the following statement: "We are reconcilers—honoring the worth and dignity of people from all races and purposely seeking to create a community that reflects the diversity of the Body of Christ."
[edit] Student Publications
Bethel University has three student publications, The Clarion, the Coeval, and the Bethel Table Tent.
- The Clarion is a biweekly newspaper run by paid students. During the 2006-2007 School Year, the Clarion was a weekly publication, but went back to the biweekly schedule for the 2007-2008 school year.
- The Coeval is Bethel's bi-annual fine arts journal, publishing fiction, non-fiction, poetry, and other forms of text, such as geometrical proofs, political persuasion, and business plans--if they're interesting. Coeval prints artworks as well.
- The Bethel Table Tent is a weekly publication placed on the tables in Bethel's Dining Center and Market Square. It usually contains upcoming Bethel Student Association events, random facts, polls, quotes, and satirical articles. After a two year absence, The Table Tent resumed in October 2007.
[edit] Sports
- Men and Women's Cross Country
- Men and Women's Track and Field
- Men's Baseball
- Women's Softball
- Men and Women's Basketball
- Men and Women's Hockey
- Men and Women's Soccer
- Men and Women's Tennis
- Men's Football
- Women's Volleyball
- Men's Rugby
- Men and Women's Lacrosse
- Men's and Women's Golf
[edit] On-Campus Activities
- Sand Volleyball
- Disc Golf
- Ice Fishing
- Snowboarding
- Ultimate Frisbee
- Flag Football
- Intramural Sports (Broomball, basketball, etc.)
[edit] Notable Alumni
- Joel Hodgson, creator of (and main character in) Mystery Science Theatre 3000.
- Mary Pawlenty, former District Court Judge and wife of Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty.
- Ron Tschetter, Director of the Peace Corps.
- Jay Johnson, featured in the movie Licensed To Kill
[edit] External links
[edit] References
Christian College Consortium |
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| Asbury • Bethel • George Fox • Gordon • Greenville • Houghton Malone • Messiah • Seattle Pacific • Taylor • Trinity International • Westmont • Wheaton |

