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Campus
Mission
Expressed in its still-relevant
motto Urbi et Orbi, the mission of Long Island University
since 1926 has been to open the doors of the city and the world
to men and women of all ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds who
wish to achieve the satisfaction of the educated life and to serve
the public good. Its mission is to awaken, enlighten and expand
the minds of its students.
Generation after generation,
the students who have enrolled in the Brooklyn Campus of Long Island
University have come from varied, primarily urban backgrounds.
Like their predecessors, many of today's students are new to America
and new to the English language or are the first in their families
to seek a university education. At the Brooklyn Campus, all students
find an academic community where cultural, ethnic, religious, racial,
sexual, and individual differences are respected and where commonalities
are affirmed. This requires the Campus to be open and welcoming,
even as it maintains respect for intellectual, cultural and academic
traditions.
Nationally recruited,
the faculty has a strong commitment to teaching, to personal advisement
of students, to the fullest range of scholarship, and to faculty
development and service.
The Brooklyn Campus recognizes
both the faculty's training and experience and the character of
its diverse student body as two of its greatest strengths and challenges.
No matter what their background or generation, students come to
the Brooklyn Campus to build the educational and intellectual foundations
for successful personal lives and careers. The Campus faculty and
administration believe that a liberal education, along with careful
preparation for a fulfilling career, is the best way to achieve
this end.
To carry
out its mission, the Brooklyn Campus offers comprehensive undergraduate
curricula,
supported by advanced courses for specialized knowledge and graduate
programs in those areas in which it has developed strength or has
a unique contribution to make. In addition, the Campus has designed
programs to permit students to acquire essential literacies, intellectual
curiosity, analytic and reasoning skills, and effective communication
skills. In this way, the Campus serves as a conservator of knowledge,
a source and promulgator of new knowledge, and a resource for the
community it serves.
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