Knowledge is Everywhere, for Everyone. Ashford University comes to you with effective learning. Whether you bring Ashford into your home or pursue your degree on campus in Clinton, Iowa, you'll find the same tradition of academic excellence.
In 1918, the Sisters of St. Francis, Clinton, Iowa, founded Mount St.Clare College as a junior college for women.
The Ashford Mission
The mission of Ashford University is to provide accessible, affordable,
innovative, high-quality learning opportunities and degree programs that meet the diverse needs of individuals pursuing integrity in their lives, professions, and communities.
In addition to this mission, the faculty and staff have identified several purposes that guide and direct the University's efforts.
Purposes:
To foster a vigorous, diverse learning environment shaped by contemporary awareness, intellectual inquiry, and a shared search for truth in which students gain knowledge and build skills and values useful in their personal and career development.
To cultivate student-centered learning at all levels, supported by technological resources and led by qualified faculty and staff who are guided by contemporary scholarship and professional practice.
To promote the development of foundation values relevant to leadership in the 21st century: self-worth, creativity, interdependence, service, integrity, and effectiveness.
To foster intellectual and personal growth, sensitivity to diversity and human dignity, effective and responsible leadership, environmental responsibility, and lifelong learning.
Ashford University campus was established in 1893 as the Mount St. Clare Academy, a boarding and day school for girls. The idea for this school formed when Father James A. Murray invited the Sisters of St. Francis to help teach in Clinton, Iowa. The new Mount St. Clare building was erected for this school in 1910 and remains in use today.
Seeing a need for higher education in Clinton County and the surrounding area, the sisters founded Mount St. Clare College in 1918. This liberal arts institution was also an approved teacher education college from 1932 to 1954. In 1942, 60% of the rural teachers in Clinton County and 62% of the teachers in the city of Clinton school system had received all their training from Mount St. Clare College.
In 1950, the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools first accredited Mount St. Clare College. The college then began to expand quickly, and acquired a convent building, new library, new gymnasium, the Science Building, and Durham Residence Hall. The college eventually became coeducational in 1967.
For the 1979–1980 school year, the college received approval for its first four-year degree, a bachelor’s program in business administration. During the same year, Mount St. Clare Academy merged with St. Mary’s High School in Clinton, forming Mater Dei High School (now known as Prince of Peace Preparatory). With the space freed by the academy’s merger, the school began to offer additional four-year programs. In 1997, the sisters moved off campus into their new mother house, The Canticle. In 1998, the Durgin Educational Center was opened, which included new athletic facilities, including Kehl arena.
Seeing a need for higher education in Clinton County and the surrounding area, the sisters founded Mount St. Clare College in 1918. This liberal arts institution was also an approved teacher education college from 1932 to 1954. In 1942, 60% of the rural teachers in Clinton County and 62% of the teachers in the city of Clinton school system had received all their training from Mount St. Clare College.
In 1950, the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools first accredited Mount St. Clare College. The college then began to expand quickly, and acquired a convent building, new library, new gymnasium, the Science Building, and Durham Residence Hall. The college eventually became coeducational in 1967.
For the 1979–1980 school year, the college received approval for its first four-year degree, a bachelor’s program in business administration. During the same year, Mount St. Clare Academy merged with St. Mary’s High School in Clinton, forming Mater Dei High School (now known as Prince of Peace Preparatory). With the space freed by the academy’s merger, the school began to offer additional four-year programs. In 1997, the sisters moved off campus into their new mother house, The Canticle. In 1998, the Durgin Educational Center was opened, which included new athletic facilities, including Kehl arena.
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