To enhance the human condition, expand the human imagination, and make the world more just—that’s the mission driving the work of our faculty and students. We put our mission into action through teaching, research, and service—informing policy, improving practice, and preparing students to serve diverse populations in a variety of roles.
We recognize that people develop and flourish across many interrelated dimensions: cognitively, emotionally, morally, socially, and spiritually. We prepare our students to transform others’ lives across each of these dimensions and at their intersections.
By providing us with new paradigms and new information, universities have the capacity to spur people to think differently, expanding our approaches to problems and potential solutions. Through education, we progress beyond conventional ways for understanding the world and discover unexpected patterns.
As a community of scholars and practitioners, we have an obligation to help people realize their aspirations, increase access to societal opportunities, and lift up those who have fewer advantages. We engage in individuals’ lives and build social contexts that promote justice, equality, and a sense of community.
We define education expansively—as an opportunity to shape the future of humanity and our society. Toward that end, the Lynch School employs the Jesuit, Catholic holistic approach to student formation: educating our students as whole people so they, in turn, can empower others to prosper and lead full lives.
#23
Among graduate schools of education nationwide
U.S. News & World Report
68
Full-time faculty
#1
Student Counseling, Elementary Education, and Secondary Education programs in New England
U.S. News & World Report
As teachers, scholars, practitioners, and learners, Lynch School faculty and students apply their research in local, national, and international school and community improvement efforts.
Tight-knit, welcoming, and supportive, our community encourages students to make an enduring difference in the world.
Our curriculum combines practical experiences with rigorous classroom inquiry, priming students to thrive as transformative educators and professionals.
“Education understood broadly, not narrowly just as schooling, is perhaps the most important thing that society does. And it means more than just passing on knowledge or skills—we are also forming students as human beings and preparing young people to carry on our most cherished values and practices after we are gone.”