Diocese Gives Grant to Wheeling Jesuit University

Diocese Gives Grant to Wheeling Jesuit University
Grant will assist with Recruitment in the Diocese’s Catholic High Schools, Facilitate Growth in WJU’s Health Sciences
 
By Colleen Rowan, The Catholic Spirit
 
WHEELING—Bishop Michael J. Bransfield announced a $1.2 million grant from the diocese to Wheeling Jesuit University to assist with student recruitment in the diocese’s seven Catholic high schools and to help facilitate growth in the university’s Health Sciences program.
“Today we gather to celebrate the continued relationship of the Catholic diocese here in West Virginia and the only Catholic institution of higher education in the state, Wheeling Jesuit University,” Bishop Bransfield said at a Sept. 19 press conference. “The funds will be used to support students from our seven Catholic high schools as they aspire to attend Wheeling Jesuit and to also assist with planned growth in the Health Science disciplines at Wheeling Jesuit.”
Bishop Bransfield said that both are very important initiatives to him as bishop because they relate so closely to the work started decades ago in the diocese, but most recently emphasized since his installation as bishop in 2005.
 
Richard Allen Beyer, president of WJU, thanked Bishop Bransfield for the grant and for his wisdom and guidance.
“It truly is a special day for Wheeling Jesuit,” Beyer said. “We are just honored to receive the $1.2 million grant from the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston and Bishop Bransfield. ... As the bishop mentioned, Catholic higher education and health care in the state of West Virginia are important, and most important to Wheeling Jesuit University. We are grateful for the funds that the bishop has granted to our institution.”
Beyer noted the three main themes for uses of the funds, which are significant progress in health science academics quality, execution and growth; marketing and enrollment push for health sciences; and enhancement of health science/research sciences, noting that the university’s HEALTHeWV project has 38 EHR clinics in the state and has ongoing research projects on diabetes and obesity. He also said the funds will bring future opportunities to collaborate on research in the university’s partnership with Wheeling Hospital.
 
Wheeling Jesuit’s Health Sciences program includes nursing, respiratory therapy and nuclear medicine, among others. Beyer said the grant will allow the university to enhance the program and help lead more students from the diocese’s Catholic high schools to WJU for degrees in this field.
“We need to take our institution to the next level of excellence,” Beyer said, “particularly the investment in academic support and student support as well as in enrollment growth in health sciences and to attract students—particularly students from the seven Catholic high schools in West Virginia—into the field of health sciences.”
Beyer said that Jesuit education has consistently sought to educate “the whole person”—intellectually, professionally, psychologically, morally and spiritually. The idea of helping others was the original goal of St. Ignatius Loyola, founder of the Society of Jesus, and the early Jesuits. Beyer also noted Bishop Bransfield’s 2006 pastoral letter “A Church That Heals” on health and well-being in West Virginia, which challenged all educational institutions to help overcome the challenges to the state’s health and health care delivery.
 
“Catholic education and Catholic health care have been a part of diocesan life in West Virginia for more than a century,” Bishop Bransfield said. “It is encouraging for me to see that Wheeling Jesuit University has embraced the opportunity to work with our seven high schools, to provide more opportunities for our families to attend WJU, as well as answering the challenges I set forth in two of my pastoral letters that discuss health in West Virginia.”
 
Bishop Bransfield noted that in “A Church That Heals,” he wrote: “the road to this place of health and well-being requires that we develop a healthy, vigorous and just environment of networks and mutual relationships that supports the health and well-being of all of us.”
 
One of the diocese’s mutual relationships in West Virginia is with WJU, Bishop Bransfield said, and it is important for the diocese and the university to work together.
“Among other shared goals,” Bishop Bransfield said, “is the importance of providing students from our seven diocesan high schools access to the quality educational programs that Wheeling Jesuit offers. So many parents, both Catholic and non-Catholic alike, look to our Catholic school system for outstanding instruction, quality curriculum and a faith-based environment from preschool though high school. It is important for these and all families in West Virginia to have continued access to the world-class opportunities that Wheeling Jesuit provides at the undergraduate and graduate levels, all offered in our finest Catholic tradition.”
 
Bishop Bransfield also said that he has been impressed with the new leadership team at Wheeling Jesuit and as the community prepares to celebrate the formal installation of Beyer as president of WJU later this month, he wanted to acknowledge the significant progress that Beyer, Jesuit Father James J. Fleming, chief officer for mission and identity at WJU, and the university administration has made.
 
“Wheeling Jesuit University is poised for dramatic growth in the years ahead,” Bishop Bransfield said, “and as bishop of the diocese, I applaud their efforts.”