Dominican University of California


Dominican University of California is a private university in San Rafael, California. It was founded in 1890 as Dominican College by the Dominican Sisters of San Rafael. It is one of the oldest universities in California.
Dominican is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. More than 45 undergraduate and graduate degree programs are offered with an average class size of 16. In 2019–2020, total enrollment was 1,783 students. Ninety-one percent of students are from California, 6% are from other states and 3% from other nations. In Fall 2019, 100% of incoming first-year students received financial aid, 68% came from ethnically diverse backgrounds and 23% are the first in their family to attend college. In 2019, Dominican University of California introduced a Test-Optional Policy, allowing first-year students applying for admission to have the option to submit SAT or ACT scores, beginning with the fall 2020 cohort.
The university is a member of NCAA Division II and competes in the Pacific West Conference.

History

Early history

The history of Dominican University of California can be traced back to 1850. It was in this year that Joseph Sadoc Alemany was appointed Bishop of Monterey. At the time of this appointment, he was in Italy attending a meeting of the Dominican Order, a Roman Catholic religious order founded by Saint Dominic de Guzmán in France in 1216.
As Bishop Alemany was returning to his new post in California, he stopped in Paris at the Dominican Monastery of the Cross and expressed his desire to have a few Dominican Sisters join him to teach the children of the Forty-niners. A Belgian novice, Sister Mary of the Cross Goemaere volunteered to accompany the new bishop and to begin a school in his new diocese. Within three years, nine women joined Sister Mary to form the Congregation of the Most Holy Name. In 1854, the Dominicans moved to Benicia.
Following the leadership of Mother Mary Goemaere, Mother Louis O'Donnell moved the motherhouse, a school and novitiate from Benicia to San Rafael in 1889.
In 1890 the Congregation of the Most Holy Name, under the auspices of Mother O'Donnell, filed Articles of Incorporation with the Secretary of State of California. With the encouragement of faculty of the University of California in Berkeley, a junior college was opened in 1915, and in 1917 a four-year college, Dominican College, was formed. At that point Dominican College became the first Catholic college in California to grant the bachelor's degree to women. Originally a female-only institution, Dominican College became coeducational in 1971.

Academic timeline

Dominican occupies approximately in central Marin County in the City of San Rafael. It is situated in a residential neighborhood at the base of San Pedro Mountain. The gardens of the University are a combination of four former family estates and contain over 100 species of trees. A seasonal creek flows east to west through the middle of campus.

Residence halls

Almost 90% of freshmen live on-campus. Freshmen are automatically guaranteed a residency on campus while sophomores, juniors and seniors receive on-campus housing through a lottery. All residence halls are co-ed with gender specific bathrooms. Each hall has a "resident advisor" who oversees the students.

Points of interest

Ansel Adams Collection

In the 1980s, an alumna remembered that she had her picture taken when she was a student at the college in the 1950s. She went in search of the print. While she didn't find her photograph, nearly 100 original Ansel Adams photographs were discovered scattered across campus. These photographs, taken by the not-yet-famous Adams between 1932 and 1952, are part of the Dominican private collection.

Della Robia Collection

Enameled terra-cotta sculptures grace the entryways to Meadowlands Hall, Guzman Hall, Archbishop Alemany Library and Caleruega Hall. These terra-cotta sculptures have been made for centuries by the Della Robia family, a famous Florentine family of sculptors and ceramicists which started with Luca della Robbia.

Forest Meadows Amphitheater

Forest Meadows Amphitheater is an amphitheater on Dominican's Campus. While it used to hold the University's Commencement ceremonies, the amphitheater is now used by the Marin Shakespeare Company during the Shakespeare Festival in the fall. The company has been using the amphitheater since 1967.

Academics

Dominican focuses on interdisciplinary studies. In the sciences, the University involves undergraduates in sophisticated research projects, and encourages students to present at national academic conferences and publish in peer-reviewed journals. In the humanities, students can combine dance and musical performance with the study of philosophy, literature, world cultures, and religion. Dominican also offers undergraduate and graduate programs in business, education, counseling psychology, occupational therapy and nursing. It follows a semester system: Fall and Spring. Classes are also offered in the summer.

The Dominican Experience

The Dominican Experience is a unique and innovative educational model designed around four evidence-based, high-impact practices. High-impact practices are ways of teaching and supporting students that "have been widely tested and shown to be beneficial for college students from many backgrounds," though these practices especially improve gains for students from groups historically underserved in higher education. Always with student success as top priority, Dominican also looked to national graduate outcomes and employer data. National surveys confirm students are more likely to be engaged at work if they enjoyed quality mentorship in college and employers value applicants' engagement with hands-on learning such as community-based projects, applied learning projects like capstones, and digital portfolios. This in mind, and inspired by the institution's strengths and mission, the four practices—or components—at the heart of the Dominican Experience are: integrative coaching, signature work, community engagement, and digital portfolios.
Preliminary design of the Dominican Experience commenced in 2014. Since that time, Dominican has refined those components and provided faculty and staff with professional development while structural capacities were built to sustain the delivery of the Dominican Experience for all students.

Partnership with Make School

In 2018, Dominican University of California and San Francisco-based submitted an application to the WASC Senior College and University Commission to enter an incubation relationship. The partnership enabled Dominican to offer a minor in Computer Science and Make School to offer an accelerated bachelor's degree in Applied Computer Science under Dominican's oversight.

Schools/departments

The University is organized into three schools with the following departments:
School of Liberal Arts and Education
Barowsky School of Business
School of Health and Natural Sciences
Dominican is a non-profit organization, governed by a privately appointed Board of Trustees, along with the University President, Provost, Vice-Presidents and Deans. The Board currently has 30 voting members who serve three 3-year terms and meet four times annually. The Trustees elect a President to serve as the general manager and chief executive of the university. Mary B. Marcy was appointed the 9th President of the University in July 2011.

Student government

The Associated Students of Dominican University is the student government for Dominican and helps students plan and provide campus activities, distribute activity funds, initiate changes in policy, and represent themselves to the University's administration and the broader community. This group of elected student representatives serves both as the student activities association and the student government board. The members of the ASDU Senate are composed of representatives from all four class levels of regular day program students.

Student life

Athletics

The Dominican Penguins are the athletics teams for Dominican University of California. Since 2005, the Penguins have competed in the NCAA Division II, Pacific West Conference. The university currently fields 11 teams: Men's Basketball, Cross Country, Golf, and Soccer; Women's Basketball, Cross Country, Golf, Soccer, Softball, Tennis, and Volleyball. Dominican also supports Men's Lacrosse, which competes in MCLA Division I.

Traditions

Shield Ceremony

Each fall, the university holds a Shield Ceremony, a tradition that started in the 12th century when Saint Dominic Guzman created the Dominican order. It now continues every fall during Convocation, when the Dominican seniors officially greet the incoming freshmen with a special gift: an illustration of a shield that reflects an inspirational motto. The motto, written by the seniors, is intended to help guide the freshmen throughout their college years and beyond. Four years later at Commencement, a hand-crafted wood carving of the illustrated shield is presented to the graduating class. All of Dominican's shields, dating back to the early 1920s, are displayed on campus in the Meadowlands Residence Hall, Guzman Lecture Hall and the Shield Room.

Convocation/Family Weekend (formerly Spirit Week)

Once a year, Dominican invites all students and their families for a three-day celebration of the University and its students. It opens on Friday night with Convocation, a celebration of the academic achievements of Dominican students. Throughout the weekend, all are invited to explore the campus, attend special classes, meet with the President and faculty and cheer on the Dominican Penguins at competitive games. Family Weekend concludes on Sunday with an athletic scrimmage and tailgate party.

Senior thesis

Most academic departments at Dominican require a senior thesis/project, a one-year culminating experience that offers evidence of accomplishment in a discipline or area of inquiry. Like a master's thesis, the senior thesis gives students an opportunity as undergraduates, to explore in- depth issues that interest them. The major determines the nature of the thesis/project, which can take many forms: a research document, a novel, a business plan, a portfolio of poetry, or original works of art.

Baccalaureate Mass, Hood Ceremony, Commencement

Held the day prior to Commencement, Baccalaureate Mass is a unique tradition that reflects Dominican's Catholic heritage. The Mass, planned and led by members of the graduating classes, is held at St. Raphael's Church in downtown San Rafael. Students and their families, faculty, staff and friends of the University are invited to attend.
On the eve of Commencement, Dominican honors the academic achievement of graduating students with The Hood Ceremony. Each graduating senior and graduate student receives a hood, which is a colorful, historic symbol of scholastic excellence. This ceremony is a time-honored tradition in which the students and faculty wear their academic regalia. Conferral of the hood symbolizes that students have joined the community of educated people.
On a Saturday morning in May, the campus community joins graduating students, their families and friends for Commencement. The Dominican tradition includes a procession led by a bagpiper.

Clubs and organizations

There are more than forty student clubs and organizations at Dominican with categories including Athletics, Campus Diversity, Religious, Social and Major-Related.

Notable people