THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

What is Fort Lewis College's Mission?

What is Fort Lewis College's Mission?

Story by Travis Good Photo by Jarred Green

Author: Bodine, James/Friday, October 14, 2016/Categories: Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

Fort Lewis College’s Current Mission Statement

“Fort Lewis College offers accessible, high quality, baccalaureate liberal arts education to a diverse student population, preparing citizens for the common good in an increasingly complex world.”

 

Proposed Mission Statement

"Fort Lewis College offers accessible, quality higher education to a diverse student population, preparing them to contribute to the advancements of the community they serve."

 

The Fort Lewis College mission statement is undergoing changes. Most concerns revolve around the school attempting to remove the term Liberal Arts.

 

“The main difference of the new proposed mission statement is the removal of the words ‘liberal arts,’”Connor Cafferty, President of the Associated Students of Fort Lewis College said.

 

This has brought up some controversy around campus.

 

“The removal of the Liberal Arts did create a lot of discussion amongst the students and faculty,” David Blake, Faculty Senate president, said. “I thought that was a good thing to really make us think, are we a liberal arts institution? And, is that our only driving mission?”

 

Jordyn Abrams, senator & chair of Public Relations for the ASFLC adds that she feels the proposed mission statement seems very generic.

 

Why is the mission statement important?

“The mission statement can help steer the attitude and direction of our campus community.” Cafferty said.

 

Blake said that the mission statement is present to help determine where the college is going to move towards in the future.

 

“I believe the mission statement is important because it is something for the school to stand by,” Abrams said.

 

Why Is the Mission Statement Being Revised?

“The mission statement is being revised for a number of reasons,” Cafferty said. “I feel it's been proposed liberal arts be removed because there is question about whether FLC is truly a liberal arts college.”

 

The committee wanted to create a broader mission statement that still embodies what FLC is about while eliminating areas that are not necessarily what the college is about currently, Blake said.

 

“We are not just necessary baccalaureate granting institution anymore,” he said.

 

Student Input on the Mission Statement

“I would say a great deal of what is being considered is the student’s opinion on this, which is what I represent. Therefore, I have a good amount of input,” Cafferty said.

 

Cafferty believes that the FLC mission statement needs to be distinct and embody the culture which FLC has, Cafferty said.

 

Personal reactions

Blake is not a huge fan of the proposed mission statement, Blake said. It is too simplistic for representing FLC, Blake said.

 

“Our mission statement could be a mission statement for any higher education institution,” Blake said, “It doesn’t matter if it was for Fort Lewis college in Durango or some other college in the middle of Ohio.”

 

FLC is more than just any college, Blake said, FLC is unique and that should reflect in our mission statement.

 

“We still are a liberal arts college with a diverse student population,” Blake said. “I’d be very surprised if we stuck with this mission statement after the response that we got.”

 
 
Print

Number of views (5883)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Fort Lewis College Leaning Clock Tower

By: Mia MCCormick Indy Staff Writer

The Fort Lewis College clock tower has stood tall and sturdy since the turn of the century, never faltering, never swaying, until this year, when it began to lean.  The clock tower is a staple of FLC, it marks the campus quad, chimes relentlessly every hour and is anything but camera shy.  Recently though, our poor clock tower, like some of us, has started to feel the effects...

Standing on 150 million years: Dino discovery in our backyard

By: Mia McCormick Indy Staff Writer

A discovery on a hiking trail leads to a glimpse into Durango's past. 

A dinosaur died on Animas City Mountain in Durango about 150 million years ago, and in December of 2021, a local fossil hunter found its bones.    Tom Eskew, a certified arborist and amateur fossil hunter, said he had walked over them hundreds of times until one day, he looked down and realized there were fossils in his path.    “The most valuable finds in...

Gerald Shorty: Indigenizing Psychology

By Alx Lee Indy Staff Writer

FLC welcomes Shiprock local who aims to help Indigenous students succeed.

The Counseling Center added a new staff member, Gerald Shorty, assistant director of diversity and Outreach Initiatives, this semester.   Born in Shiprock, Shorty attended Nenahnezad boarding school in his childhood, he said. It was an adjustment coming from that academic setting to Shiprock High School, and later, college.  Shorty focused his studies in criminology at San...

Bound Together by Train

By Mia McCormick

The simple bliss of riding with strangers. 

It’s 9 a.m. on March 27 and there’s a train full of people heading to the halfway point between Durango and Silverton, Cascade Canyon. They may be lovers, friends, family or strangers who each have their own lives in different places, and yet for the next five hours, passengers find themselves at an intersection heading down the same train track.  What connects humans? More...

The Bigfoot Question

By Alx Lee Indy Staff Writer

Competing perspectives on the existence of sasquatch within the Navajo Culture

A predominant figure in the Four Corners, with merchandise and tales centered around its mysterious figure behind the brush, Sasquatch not only holds a place in the communities surrounding the region but also the Indigenous tribes spanning across the United States.  Sasquatch, also referred to as Bigfoot, walks the line between cultural beliefs and community phenomenon. This is ever so...

First7891012141516Last