Introductory Overview

St. John's University is one of America's leading Catholic universities—recognized for its outstanding academic programs, rich student life, vibrant diversity and Big East vitality. Founded in 1870 by the Vincentian Community, St. John's has distinguished itself by helping students gain the knowledge and skills they need to serve others and achieve lasting success—personally, professionally and spiritually.

St. John’s was founded with a very specific mission—provide access to a high quality education for the underserved regardless of race, gender, ethnicity, religion or economic status. Starting with serving the children of the immigrant population in the 1800s to providing the Jewish community with a place to study law, to presenting the 2003 incoming freshmen with a state of the art technology structure, St. John’s continues to provide people with the necessary tools to get a leading education and better themselves.

St. John’s is driven by a passion for academic excellence and guided by a simple truth: higher education is about more than getting a job; it’s about learning to make a difference in the world. A St. John’s education is grounded by a comprehensive core of critical thinking and skill building enhanced by technology and linked to contemporary social challenges. What’s more, students are actively involved in volunteering, mentoring and academic service-learning programs that extend across the entire St. John’s campus network and around the world.

In 2003, in keeping with its mission, St. John’s University launched the Academic Computing Initiative (ACI), a broad-reaching program to put leading-edge technology ubiquitously into the hands of students and the faculty that teaches them. The ACI’s primary goal is to give all students, irrespective of their background and prior experience with computers, equal opportunity to use leading edge technology in their everyday activities. In addition, the ACI enhances the academic experience, both by providing additional teaching options in and out of the classroom and by allowing students working anywhere to have access to the extensive options of the web and the University’s on-line resources.

The 2003 St. John’s Academic Computing Initiative program consists of:

  • A laptop computer
    Every incoming freshman (approximately 3,000 in 2003) received an IBM ThinkPad computer powered by Intel Centrino technology, running Microsoft XP Professional and Office XP. The laptop remains University property until the student graduates, at which point the student keeps the machine and software. High-end laptops were selected to ensure that they would continue to be useful over the student’s four-year career at the University. About 400 faculty members also received laptops at full-day "Faculty Institute" seminars in which ideas were shared about how to use technology to further enhance the academic experience of the students in/outside the classroom.
  • A wireless network
    St. John’s installed a Cisco Aironet wireless network on three of its five campuses — Queens, Staten Island, and Manhattan. (In 2004, the University will extend wireless to their other two locations -- Oakdale, NY and Rome, Italy.) The network is designed to cover all areas of the campuses including lounges, cafeterias, public spaces, libraries and academic buildings as well as remote areas like parking lots and garages to support Public Safety initiatives. All University-issued laptops can use the network. In addition, upperclassmen who have their own laptops or who purchased laptops through St. John’s are encouraged to register their machines on the network.
  • St. John’s Central
    St. John’s Central is the University’s implementation of SCT’s Campus Pipeline portal. Every student can use this student/faculty portal, which provides web-based access to a wide array of academic and administrative services, as well as personal tools like e-mail and calendaring. The portal enables students to use resources at any time from any Internet location. This enhances the student experience, but also improves back-office efficiency by making transactions, such as course registration, self-service. The portal also opens ongoing, real-time communication between students and faculty with e-mail and chat groups. As Dr. Jay Zimmerman, Associate Professor of Biological Sciences says, "If the answers are easier to obtain, students tend to ask more questions."
  • A Comprehensive Training Program
    Training and ongoing support are critical to unifying all components of the St. John’s ACI. Every user received training sessions covering issues ranging from powering on to backing up data. Each laptop was loaded with a customized version of "Access IBM", a tool that provides on-board help about the laptop and University systems. St. John’s also opened support centers on two of its five locations, to which users can bring their laptops for support or warranty repair.

Many freshmen enter colleges already equipped and familiar with all the latest technology. Never the less, a significant "digital divide" remains between those students who have experience with computer equipment and those with limited or no experience with current computer technology. With the Academic Computing Initiative, St. John’s University is "leveling the technological playing field" to ensure that students are fully prepared for the future.

Reverend Donald J. Harrington, C.M., President of St. John’s University states, "I speak of education as a sacred trust, meaning that when students commit themselves to St. John’s, they trust that we’re going to provide them with the education they need to go out and live and work in the world and shape the world. Year after year, St. John’s has been sensitive to that responsibility. This has been manifested by our reading the signs of the times—What’s next? What’s needed for the future? We help people realize their potential, to work hard, and to be good citizens."