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==Academics and rankings== | ==Academics and rankings== | ||
'']'' ranked Liberty University in the 4th tier of Southern Master's Universities. The magazine ranked its selectivity as "Less Selective." With tuition and annual fees of over $13,000, excluding room and board, it is the most expensive university in its class, costing over twice the average of other universities in its ranking. Liberty |
'']'' ranked Liberty University in the 4th tier of Southern Master's Universities. The magazine ranked its selectivity as "Less Selective." With tuition and annual fees of over $13,000, excluding room and board, it is the most expensive university in its class, costing over twice the average of other universities in its ranking. Liberty Univeristy started a law program in the academic year of 2005, and received provisional acredidation in early 2006. | ||
Liberty made news in 2006 when students from "Equality Ride" visited the university and spoke informally with Liberty students. But according to organizers, they were turned away from the library when they tried to donate books about gay people. The organizers were also unable to turn over to Rev. Jerry Falwell, the founder and chancellor of the university, anonymous letters from current students at Liberty who are gay. | |||
Don Egle, director of public relations at Liberty, said “we don’t feel that this situation warrants a comment.” Asked about the university’s policies toward gay students, he said only “we follow Scripture.” Local television stations reported that Falwell told students at their morning convocation, “This is not gay day.” Jake Reitan, director of youth programs for Soul Force, said that the requests the group wanted to make of Liberty were minimal: Accepting books that could be added to the library “that students could decide to read or not,” and designating some place on campus where students could talk about being gay without fear of being expelled or having their parents informed. | |||
==Extracurricular activities== | ==Extracurricular activities== | ||
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==Debate== | ==Debate== | ||
Liberty's ] program, led by Brett O'Donnell, was ranked number one overall in the National Debate Tournament in the fall of 2005. | Liberty's ] program, led by Brett O'Donnell, was ranked number one overall in the National Debate Tournament in the fall of 2005. The touting of this by Liberty has lead to some controversy, as the overall ranking included results for novice and junior varsity debates. In varsity rankings, Liberty was twentieth. Excessive media recognition of "the best debate team in the nation" has sparked anger in other debate leagues, including the two parliamentary leagues. | ||
Critics have alleged that the Liberty Debate team accumulates points by sending lots of teams to small tournaments while avoiding known debate champions like Michigan State, Berkeley, Dartmouth and Harvard, instead favoring lesser ranked opponents like Kings College, Army and Richmond. | |||
===Mock trial=== | ===Mock trial=== |
Revision as of 01:41, 4 April 2006
Liberty University is a Christian liberal arts university in Lynchburg, Virginia. It was founded as Lynchburg Baptist College in 1971 by conservative Christian Jerry Falwell, who is also the Senior Pastor of Thomas Road Baptist Church.
Religious foundation
Rev. Falwell's vision is to build a university as large as Notre Dame and Brigham Young University, with 25,000 students on campus and another 25,000 in Distance Learning Program. The institution has faced a series of financial crises over the years, but total enrollment has increased by 8000 students (undergraduate, graduate, and distance learning) in the past 5 years — a 74% increase. With approximately 9,000 students on campus and 10,000 in the Distance Learning Program, Liberty has found alternative ways to balance its budget. In 2005, Liberty University finally put the financial woes of the 1980s and 90s behind them, and, according to a recent IRS 990 filing, now pulls in $12 million of surplus revenue annually. In 1992, Liberty University had over $83 million dollars of debt, which has been reduced by the combined efforts of Jimmy Thomas and Dan Reber, businessmen from Forest, Virginia, and insurance tycoon Art Williams, who forgave around 50 million dollars of Liberty’s debt. A number of other benefactors reduced the debt an additional 10 million. The remaining debt was whittled away through the installment of a financial management team, the reduction of in-house scholarships, and an increase in tuition. In the past five years, residential student tuition has increased by $5,000.
Campus life
Students who live on campus attend convocation three times per week where they learn from speakers in all walks of professional life. Past speakers have included Leonard Davidson, Sam Donaldson, George H. W. Bush, John R. Rice, Ronald Reagan, Oliver North, Jesse Jackson, Skip Erickson, Freddie Gage, Adrian Rogers, Billy Graham and Sean Hannity.
Liberty University continues to invest, with 19 new dormitory buildings and a tunnel connecting the east and west ends of the campus completed for the fall semester of 2004. Other projects include the completion of the new LaHaye Student Center, the moving of Thomas Road Church and Lynchburg Christian Academy (now Liberty Christian Academy) to a property adjacent to the Main Campus, the expansion of student activity facilities, and a new Law School and Library, and a brand new ice hockey rink which was donated by Drs. Tim and Beverly LaHaye. The University has official ties with Thomas Road Baptist Church, the church that founded the University. Rev. Falwell has repeatedly emphasized the important partnership between the two institutions.
Behavior
The university has a strict code of student behavior, documented in "The Liberty Way", including possible reprimands (and with the accumulation of reprimands, fines) for attending dances, viewing R-rated movies, kissing, drinking, and participating in unauthorized petitions. On several occasions Falwell has described it as 'Bible Boot Camp.' He still exhorts Liberty's students to burn it down if it 'ever turns liberal'. In the summer of 2005, the university announced that it was slightly relaxing its class dress code to allow flip-flops, capri pants, jeans, and other casual articles of clothing (but not shorts) to be worn in the classroom. Faculty members work under a contract requiring them to abide by similar behavioral codes.
Faculty
Utilizing 'non-tenured teaching faculty' is a matter of pride to Falwell , as it allows the Administration to keep a firm grip on the behavior of the academic community. As Falwell once stated, 'When we ask a faculty member be dismissed when he's teaching something wrong, our president understands and it's good to do that - because your paycheck may not be coming along next week if you don't' (sic).
Accreditation
When Liberty University applied for accreditation in 1991, the Transnational Association of Christian Colleges and Schools (TRACS), gave "immediate accreditation" to the university. Consequently, two years later in 1993, Steve Levicoff published a book "commending" the questionable practices of (TRACS). Soon after "a federal review was instituted in 1995, which gave TRACS eighteen months to improve or be removed from the list of official accreditors," today TRACS remains recognized.
When Liberty was founded it was approved by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools accrediting body. However, the school received approval with TRACS and soon after lost its "accreditation with the Southern Association of Christian Colleges and Schools" Currently, the university is accredited by SACS and TRACS.
Academics and rankings
U.S. News & World Report ranked Liberty University in the 4th tier of Southern Master's Universities. The magazine ranked its selectivity as "Less Selective." With tuition and annual fees of over $13,000, excluding room and board, it is the most expensive university in its class, costing over twice the average of other universities in its ranking. Liberty Univeristy started a law program in the academic year of 2005, and received provisional acredidation in early 2006.
Liberty made news in 2006 when students from "Equality Ride" visited the university and spoke informally with Liberty students. But according to organizers, they were turned away from the library when they tried to donate books about gay people. The organizers were also unable to turn over to Rev. Jerry Falwell, the founder and chancellor of the university, anonymous letters from current students at Liberty who are gay.
Don Egle, director of public relations at Liberty, said “we don’t feel that this situation warrants a comment.” Asked about the university’s policies toward gay students, he said only “we follow Scripture.” Local television stations reported that Falwell told students at their morning convocation, “This is not gay day.” Jake Reitan, director of youth programs for Soul Force, said that the requests the group wanted to make of Liberty were minimal: Accepting books that could be added to the library “that students could decide to read or not,” and designating some place on campus where students could talk about being gay without fear of being expelled or having their parents informed.
Extracurricular activities
Sports
The University is a member of the NCAA Division I level Big South Conference for 17 sports. The other eight members include Birmingham Southern College and Winthrop University. The University regularly competes for the Sasser Cup which is the Big South's trophy for the university which has the best sports program among the member institutions. Liberty has won the Sasser Cup five times, second only to Coastal Carolina, which has won it seven times.
The University gained some media attention in the winter of 2005 when their women's basketball team, the Lady Flames, made the NCAA Sweet Sixteen and were labelled a "Cinderella Team", led by Katie Feenstra. After defeating fourth-seeded Penn State University and fifth-seeded DePaul University, the Flames' winning streak was halted by top-seeded Louisiana State University. Feenstra was later drafted by the San Antonio Silver Stars of the Women's National Basketball Association, a professional league.
Debate
Liberty's Inter-Collegiate policy debate program, led by Brett O'Donnell, was ranked number one overall in the National Debate Tournament in the fall of 2005. The touting of this by Liberty has lead to some controversy, as the overall ranking included results for novice and junior varsity debates. In varsity rankings, Liberty was twentieth. Excessive media recognition of "the best debate team in the nation" has sparked anger in other debate leagues, including the two parliamentary leagues.
Critics have alleged that the Liberty Debate team accumulates points by sending lots of teams to small tournaments while avoiding known debate champions like Michigan State, Berkeley, Dartmouth and Harvard, instead favoring lesser ranked opponents like Kings College, Army and Richmond.
Mock trial
Liberty University recently went 3-1 in the American College Mock Trial Competition in Gettysburg, PA, after going 0-4 the year before. Turned around in part by their new coach Grant Rost, they also won the AMTA integrity award, losing both ballots only to the Ivy-League Cornell university.
Quiz bowl
Liberty has also recently begun to participate in the Big South Conference Quiz Bowl competition. In their first tournament at VMI in February of 2006, the Liberty team swept the tournament, and won the competition 8-0 against the other major schools in the Big South Conference. The Liberty team was made up of students from the large Honors Program.
Notable Alumni and Associates
- Sid Bream - former MLB player
- Katie Feenstra - current WNBA player
- Samkon Gado - current NFL player
- Eric Green - former NFL player
- Ken Ham, (honorary Doctor of Literature, in 2004) author, creationist, lecturer, and president of Answers in Genesis
- Jason Jones - 2004 New York Yankees draft pick
- Barry Minkow - Former zzzz Best fraudster
- Toby McKeehan, Michael Tait, and Kevin Max, the members of dc Talk, a Christian rock band.
- Mark Lowry - Christian comedian and vocalist
External links
- Liberty University Official Website
- U.S. News & World Report rankings
- Center for Global Ministries Official Website - Liberty University
- FlameFans - Liberty Sports Message Boards