UST chapel and lawnThe Office of Academic Affairs, in partnership with the Office of Institutional Assessment and Effectiveness, is responsible for maintaining the quality education for which the University of St. Thomas is known. UST offers a wide range of majors and minors and an important core curriculum provided by various schools and programs.

Our core curriculum is one of the most substantial cores in the country, embodying the dialogue of faith and reason and anchored by philosophy and theology. Our education is rooted in the Catholic intellectual tradition and open to continual exploration, dialogue and improvement.

The Office of Academic Affairs objectives include the following:

  • Oversight of the planning, organization and administration of all academic programs in the University
  • Promotion of UST identity and mission in academic affairs
  • Promotion of high academic standards, teaching effectiveness and assessment of educational outcomes throughout the University
  • Recruitment, development and evaluation of faculty
  • Recruitment, engagement and retention of students

The Office of Institutional Assessment and Effectiveness supports the University’s mission, values, and strategic initiatives by providing research, support and coordination in the areas of accreditation and assessment.

The mission will be achieved through:

  • Collecting, analyzing, and distributing relevant research.
  • Supporting the campus through survey research, both national or campus-wide, (NSSE, Campus and Student Satisfaction Surveys and ad hoc surveys) as well as managing the course evaluation process.
  • Coordinating a comprehensive system of Institutional Effectiveness Plans that contribute to the mission and strategic initiatives of the University.
  • Providing guidance and research support for the University assessment cycle, individual departmental outcomes, and learning outcomes.
  • Consulting with departments, programs, and schools from start to finish on research projects to ensure validity and value of data.
  • Guiding and facilitating the process of reaffirmation of accreditation and obtaining new program approval from SACSCOC.
  • Closing the assessment loop by facilitating the use of research to make informed decisions and change.
  • Overseeing the director of the QEP and ensuring its successful implementation and continuous assessment.

Contact Us
If you have any questions, please contact us at assessment@stthom.edu.

University of St. Thomas Public Disclosure

The University of St. Thomas is in compliance with the Policy Statement: Institutional Obligations for Public Disclosure issued by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC). The policy statement obliges the university, “to provide to its students, constituents, and the public information about itself that is complete, accurate, timely, accessible, clear and sufficient.”

UST is further required to provide, “statements of its goals for student achievement and the success of students in achieving those goals. Information on student success may include reliable information in retention, graduation, course completion, licensure examinations, and job placement rates and other measures of student success appropriate to institutional mission.”

The following reports support the SACSCOC policy statement on institutional obligations for public disclosure:

  1. Offsite instructional locations at which the university is approved to offer academic instruction
  2. Active academic programs with the CIP codes
  3. Student achievement data

Contact Us

If you have any questions, please contact us at assessment@stthom.edu.

The following online programs lead to licensure by the Region 4 Education Service Center:

  1. Educational Leadership
  2. School Counselor

While many states reciprocate, not all states recognize Texas certification. The School of Education and Human Services houses information that assists in completing documentation particular to the acquisition of certification beyond the state of Texas. 

SACSCOC Accreditation Statement

The University of St. Thomas is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC) to award associate, baccalaureate, masters, and doctoral degrees. The University of St. Thomas also may offer credentials such as certificates and diplomas at approved degree levels. Questions about the accreditation of the University of St. Thomas may be directed in writing to the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, GA 30033-4097, by calling (404) 679-4500, or by using information available on SACSCOC’s website (www.sacscoc.org).

All SACSCOC-accredited universities must apply for reaffirmation of accreditation every ten years.

The following programs at UST are accredited:

School of Arts & Sciences

  • BS in Biochemistry and Chemistry: American Chemical Society (ACS)
  • BS in Cell and Molecular Biology: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB)

Cameron School of Business

  • All Business Programs: Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB)

School of Education and Human Services

  • MS in Clinical Mental Health Counseling: Council for the Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP)

Peavy School of Nursing

  • BSN, MSN, and DNP: Approved by the Texas Board of Nursing and accredited by Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE)

Address: 

Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education
655 K Street, NW, Suite 750
Washington, DC 20001
(202) 887-6791

The University of St. Thomas is a member in good standing of the following organizations and agencies:

  • American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education.
  • American Association of Colleges of Nursing.
  • Association of American Colleges and Universities.
  • Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities.
  • Association of Graduate Liberal Studies Programs.
  • Catholic Higher Education Research Cooperative College Board.
  • Council for Higher Education Accreditation.
  • Council of Independent Colleges.
  • Council on Undergraduate Research.
  • EDUCAUSE
  • Excelencia in Education.
  • Greater Houston Partnership Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities.
  • Independent Colleges and Universities of Texas.
  • International Council of Universities of St. Thomas Aquinas
  • National Association of College and University Attorneys.
  • National Association of College and University Business Officers.
  • National Association of Financial Aid Administrators.
  • National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities.
  • National Collegiate Athletic Association Division III.
  • School of Education and Human Services Region 4 Educational Service Center.
  • Texas Campus Compact.
  • Texas Medical Center.
  • Texas State Board of Examiners of Professional Counselors.

Contact Us

If you have any questions, please contact us at assessment@stthom.edu.

UST's overall mission is to educate leaders of faith and character.  To that end, it is essential that these leaders are able to communicate effectively both within and across their respective disciplines.  Our QEP mission is to improve students' writing skills across the curriculum, which we believe will foster critical thinking, effective communication, and professional success.

UST Quality Enhancement Plan (QEP)

The UST Quality Enhancement Plan (QEP), “Toward a Culture of Writing,” will advance the University Mission by improving students’ writing skills so that they are able to

  • communicate effectively within and across disciplines
  • think critically  
  • achieve professional success  

Working from clearly articulated educational values for writing, and through a careful analysis of available data in Core subjects, the UST community will

  • evaluate existing practices, resources, strategies, and outcomes to determine their effectiveness
  • identify and address our weaknesses
  • build on our strengths and our unique identity as the Catholic liberal arts university in the heart of Houston
  • educate better writers and thinkers in all disciplines.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a QEP?

A QEP is a Quality Enhancement Plan. Our regional accrediting body, SACSCOC, requires that we develop and implement such a plan within the next five years. According to SACS, “the QEP describes a carefully designed course of action that addresses a well-defined and focused topic or issue related to enhancing student learning.”  This well-defined and focused topic must be derived from an analysis of comprehensive data, i.e. it must address a known area that needs improvement at UST, and its goals and outcomes must be measurable over the entire life cycle of the QEP.  Finally, the university must have both the financial and administrative where withal to execute the QEP they choose.

What is the UST QEP topic?

“Write Well, Think Well: Toward A Culture of Writing”

The University of St. Thomas QEP focuses on improving student writing and creating a culture of writing at the University of St. Thomas.  In short, we want our students to:

  • Use writing to explore, reflect, and develop sound arguments using logic, persuasive rhetoric and sound grammar.
  • Produce writing suitable for academic purposes in all disciplines such as the Humanities, Sciences and the Arts.
  • Receive, where applicable, assistance in developing sound writing skills which are in keeping with current best practices in regard to remediation.
  • Become more engaged in the creative process of writing through the student writing group, The Aquinas Writing Scholars, which will expose student writers to the world of professional writing in the disciplines. 

How will the UST QEP improve student writing?

(In other words, what’s new about this program?)

The QEP proposes actions in four areas:

  1. Initiating a new student group, the Aquinas Writing Scholars, which will help those students who wish for a more immersive writing experience through monthly writing seminars, service learning projects and participation in the annual UST Writers Workshop where they will work alongside a professional author.  Members of the AWS may also eventually serve as peer tutors beginning in their third year at UST.
  2. Annually assessing student performance relative to both newly established university wide writing outcomes as well as departmental writing outcomes within designated core classes as well as in all majors.  We will also experiment with the coordination of writing outcomes among the core courses of English, Philosophy and Theology.
  3. Standardize precisely what is meant by an intensive writing course at the University of St. Thomas. 
  4. Insure that selection of students for writing remediation be done in a systematic fashion utilizing recognized standards for remediation that are in place nationally as well in the State of Texas in keeping with best practices.

The Director of the Quality Enhancement Plan will serve as the liaison between the administration, staff and students and integrate the various aspects of the QEP.  In addition the director of the QEP will assist in the continuous cycle of writing assessment for all undergraduate students at the University of St. Thomas working closely with the Office of Institutional Assessment.

When will all this happen?

Starting in the late spring of 2015, the University of St. Thomas will begin recruiting for the first cohort of Aquinas Writing Scholars.  The Aquinas Writing Scholars (henceforth AWS) student group will be open to all entering first year students.  Students who elect to join the Aquinas Writing Scholars and who are required to take either ENLG 1310 or ENGL1341 will receive a $1000 scholarship toward their tuition at UST and will be eligible for a $2000 scholarship upon graduation if they remain an Aquinas Writing Scholar throughout their time at UST.  Throughout the course of the 2015-2016 academic year, writing outcomes will be assessed in all Core classes through the annual Core Goal Assessment.  In addition, all departments will create departmental standards for Writing Intensive (WI) classes in line with established university standards.

Also in the fall of 2015, the core courses of English, Philosophy and Theology (approximately 78% of each entering class) will officially begin coordinating the writing outcomes of the nine (9) classes which make up their core.  Students will experience this coordination whenever they take these courses in their academic career at UST.   In addition, in the fall of 2015 the AWS will begin planning the first annual Young Writers Workshop which will take place in the spring of 2016.  In all subsequent years of the QEP out to 2020, the process outlined above will take place.

 

An interim QEP director will be appointed in early summer of 2015 to coordinate all aspects of the QEP writing program (annual assessment, faculty development, the Aquinas Writing Scholars student Group, the annual Young Writers Workshop, etc.).  A national search for the permanent director of the QEP will begin in the fall of 2015.

Is this only about freshman writing?

No.  Although UST’s QEP exerts a lot of effort in establishing the Aquinas Writing Scholars and the coordination of writing outcomes in the core,  the establishment of university wide and departmental writing outcomes will enable UST to monitor and assess student writing throughout their time at the University of St. Thomas.  This information will be used to improve writing performance for all students, wherever they may be in their college career.  From a student’s first class to the last capstone course in their major before they graduate, the QEP (“Write Well, Think Well”) will be there.  Additionally, the AWS student group will, by definition, be in place throughout a student’s entire time at UST with the ability to become a peer writing tutor in their third and or fourth year at UST.

Why this topic and not another for our QEP?

The Topic Selection Task Force and other committees worked for more than two years to decide upon and develop the QEP topic. Why did these faculty, staff and students choose to focus on improving writing in UST’s QEP?

  • Was the No. 1 response in the faculty and staff survey conducted in 2013
  • Was the No. 1 response in regard to proposal submissions when ranked by the QEP steering committee in terms of SACSCOC requirements
  • NSSE/FSSE data from 2006-2012 indicated that UST was slightly below peer institutions in both faculty and student desired outcomes in     terms of writing
  • Dominated discussions of the QEP Steering Committee, Faculty Listening Sessions, Dean and Director meetings, etc.
  • Is integral in educating leaders of faith and character
  • Is essential to students in all disciplines
  • Is valued by alumni, employers and graduate schools
  • Is deeply connected to our institutional history and mission

Who Developed UST’s QEP?

Over the course of the last two years over a hundred faculty, staff and students contributed to the current QEP either through serving on the numerous committees and sub-committees which spearheaded the project or by participating in campus listening sessions and surveys.  After eleven distinct proposals from multiple disciplines were reviewed by the QEP steering committee in April of 2013, Student Writing Portfolio and Assignment Coordination (renamed with the far catchier Write Well, Think Well: Toward A Culture of Writing) was unanimously selected.

 

How will UST’s QEP be judged?

The SACS team of evaluators will judge our QEP using a fairly elaborate set of criteria. These criteria are sometimes framed as “guiding questions,” and they include the following:

  • Has the institution provided a comprehensive and clear analysis of the crucial importance of the QEP for improving the learning     environment?
  • Has the institution demonstrated that various institutional constituencies have been involved in the identification of the topic for the QEP?
  • Has the institution identified a significant issue related to student learning and justified its use for the Quality Enhancement Plan?
  • Does the QEP provide evidence of careful analysis of the institutional context in which the goals will be implemented and of consideration of best practices related to the topic?
  • Has the institution provided evidence of sufficient financial, physical and human resources to implement sustain and complete the QEP?

Perhaps most importantly, the QEP must center on clearly defined student learning outcomes that are achievable and measurable.  Simply put, we need to be able to do what we set out to do and prove that we have indeed done it.

Contact Us

If you have any questions, please contact us at stribys@stthom.edu.