PUBLISHED BY THE BOSTON COLLEGE OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS
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Catholic Fundamentalism
Welcome Sight
BC Global
Fr. Massa to discuss his new book on the U.S. fundamentalist Catholic movement.
Senior Receptionist Linda Reams is first contact for many BC students.
Burns Scholar has a different research perspective on the Irish Revolution.
PUBLISHED BY THE BOSTON COLLEGE OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS
MARCH 27, 2025 VOL. 32 NO. 14
BC Launching a New Degree in Nurse-Midwifery BY KATHLEEN SULLIVAN STAFF WRITER
The Connell School of Nursing has launched a new master of science degree program in nurse-midwifery, the only such program in Eastern Massachusetts. The program will produce nurse-midwives capable of responding to the nationwide shortage of obstetric care providers and addressing the maternal mortality crisis in the United States. Certified nurse-midwives are advanced practice clinicians with expertise of care during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period. They care for patients from adolescence throughout the lifespan as well as for newborns during the first month of life.
“I can’t think of a better profession than being a nurse-midwife,” said CSON Associate Professor of the Practice Katharine Hutchinson, director of BC’s nursemidwifery program. “You get to be present with people at some of their most vulnerable moments and ensure that they are getting the most respectful, clinically excellent, evidence-based, and personalized care that everyone deserves, regardless of their background.” Nurse-midwives also support vulnerable communities through health education, health promotion, and risk assessment and management. According to Hutchinson, nurse-midwives fill gaps in access to care that most directly impact populations with poor health outcomes.
Certified Nurse-Midwife Julia Dickinson of Mount Auburn Hospital, a preceptor in the Connell School of Nursing’s new nurse-midwifery master’s degree program, tends to a patient and newborn. photo by caitlin cunningham
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Above the Clouds
University Admits Class of 2029
For BC contingent, building community was at the heart of pilgrimage to Spain
BY JACK DUNN ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT FOR UNIVERSITY COMMUNICATIONS
BY ELLEN SEAWARD SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
Over spring break, 21 Boston College seniors traveled to Spain to retrace the journey of St. Ignatius, the founder of the Society of Jesus, as part of a new leadership Capstone course titled The Discerning Pilgrim. What had these BC pilgrims—interviewed following their return to campus— been looking forward to the most about the experience? Community, they answered. Over and over and over again. “I left for Spain yearning to better know my peers and connect with them through
Boston College seniors viewed the mountains and monastery of Santa Maria de Montserrat Abbe during their visit to Spain, as part of the new leadership Capstone course The Discerning Pilgrim.
shared experiences,” said Maija O’Hara. “The way everyone showed up in full each day in Spain far surpassed my expectations. I did not know how much I stood to learn from those individuals around me.” Johany Jeune found the experience hard to put into words.
“We all opted into this class, whatever it looked like,” Jeune said. “We all leaned into the unknown. I describe it as ‘I walked into a class full of strangers at the beginning of the semester, but I’m leaving it bonded to people in a way I could not
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Boston College has admitted its strongest and most selective class in University history, extending approximately 5,000 offers of admission from a pool of 39,681 applicants for an acceptance rate of 12.6 percent. The admitted students come from all 50 states, Washington, D.C., five United States territories, and 77 countries. Twelve percent will be the first in their families to attend college and nine percent are international citizens. Forty-eight percent are male and 52 percent are female. Academically, 95 percent of the admitted students rank within the top 10 percent of their graduating classes and their
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