Last Word - Report of Appreciation 2007
A Breathtaking Year
“Breathtaking” is how I describe our 2006-07 fund-raising and
overall University advancement year. Following on the heels of 2005-06,
when the generosity of spirit throughout the St. Lawrence family of alumni,
parents, friends, foundations and corporations produced an all-time high
cash gift total from private sources of $22.6 million—20% more than
our best year in history—you set a new all-time record: $22.9 million! There
were several gifts of $1 million or more, and these and other large gifts
and grants were combined with literally thousands of smaller gifts of just
about any size to make up this total.
All gifts, large and small, were important; all exemplify the thoughtfulness
and generosity that is so deeply characteristic of the St. Lawrence community. Our
remarkable students are the beneficiaries of the transforming work of our
faculty and staff made possible by your philanthropy. Thank you, most
warmly.
We use
your gifts to accomplish teaching and learning of a very special kind, and
to keep St. Lawrence accessible to students from the full range of family
financial backgrounds. We seek for our students an education that takes
them deep into disciplinary knowledge while at the same time they come to
understand that solving real-world problems requires multidisciplinary and
interdisciplinary approaches.
An education for the 21st century must also be about analysis, synthesis,
teamwork and problem-solving, high-level written and communication skills,
critical and creative thinking, intercultural knowledge and competence, quantitative
literacy and information literacy, and it must inspire students to become
lifelong learners. This kind of education requires student engagement
and commitment. You can’t just go to college and buy it; you
have to work for it in an academically demanding environment where faculty
have high expectations with regard to both learning outcomes and level of
student effort.
On the
University’s side of this equation there must be a rich array of opportunities
for student learning, both academic and co-curricular, and a faculty and
staff prepared to engage students where they are and take them forward. That
too requires commitment, the special commitment of the teacher-scholar—faculty
who themselves are lifelong learners and who bring students into the life
of the mind—and the commitment of staff who support faculty work and
who themselves contribute to student development directly.
With
regard to student outcomes, the evidence is clear—there is no form
of higher education in America more effective than an academically demanding,
student- development focused, selective residential liberal arts college. It
is, of course, also expensive if you’re going to do it right, and we
could not do it right without your abiding generosity.
Your
generosity also enables us to be sure that, despite the overall expense,
large numbers of students of low and very modest means can afford to attend
St. Lawrence. I am so very proud of that; I hope you are too.
As I
write this we are getting to know another new class—the Class of 2011,
selected from the largest applicant pool by far in the University’s
history. It is evident that the wider world is noticing what your gifts
to St. Lawrence enable us to do. Demand for St. Lawrence is at an all-time
high. Ultimately, it is our students who are the beneficiaries of your
support. We are so deeply grateful that you help make all of this
happen. Thank you!
Alexander
W. Astin, “How the Liberal Arts College Affects Students,” in
Steven Koblik and Stephen R. Graubard (eds), Distinctively American: The
Residential Liberal Arts Colleges (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction
Publishers, 2000), 77.