Virtues & Vocations is a national forum for scholars and practitioners across disciplines to consider how best to cultivate character in pre-professional and professional education. Virtues & Vocations hosts faculty workshops, an annual conference, and monthly webinars, and engages issues of character, professional identity, and moral purpose through our publications.

UPCOMING

2024 -2025 Virtues & Vocations Webinar Series 
We hope you will join us each month for our lunchtime webinar series, Conversations on Character & the Common Good. There is always time for audience questions.

Deondra Rose

Black Excellence, HBCUs & American Democracy

with Deondra Rose, associate professor of public policy, political science, and history at Duke University

Monday, March 31, 2025, noon – 1pm

We will discuss Deondra Rose’s recent book The Power of Black Excellence: HBCUs and the Fight for American Democracy, and lessons we can learn from HBCUs about cultivating character for the common good.

Dayna Cunningham & Jed Atkins

Civility, Courage & Conviction

with Dayna L. Cunningham, Pierre and Pamela Omidyar Dean of Tufts University’s Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life

and Jed Atkins, director and dean of the School of Civic Life and Leadership at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Monday, April 21, 2025, noon – 1pm

Cunningham & Atkins are authors from the spring 2025 issue of Virtues & Vocations: Higher Education for Human Flourishing. We will discuss the issue, including issues around civic discourse.

Daniel Porter

Why Mindset Matters

with Daniel Porterfield, president and CEO of the Aspen Institute

Monday, May 12, 2025, noon – 1pm

Daniel Porterfield is the president and CEO of the Aspen Institute, a former college president, and the author of Mindset Matters: The Power of College to Activate Lifelong Growth.

Virtues & Vocations Annual Conference

2025 Conference

2025 Virtues & Vocations Conference on Higher Education and Human Flourishing

We will host our second annual conference May 20-22, 2025 at the University of Notre Dame. Registration will open in early March. This conference will be a cross-disciplinary, cross-professional convening on cultivating character in the classroom and on campus, with a particular focus on professional education.

The conference will include keynotes by Michael Norton, Harvard Business School professor and bestselling author, The Ritual Effect and Happy Money and Katy Milkman, Wharton Professor and author of How to Change. We will also present the first Virtues & Vocations New Book Award to Norman Wirzba for Love’s Braided Dance and host a fireside chat with him about the book and hope in the professions.

There will be plenaries, breakout sessions, and workshops on pedagogy, formative frameworks, assessment, professional identity formation, new scholarship, and more.

2024 Conference

We hosted a conference on Higher Education & Human Flourishing from June 3-5, 2024 at the University of Notre Dame. For those who were unable to attend or who would like to revisit the conversation, we are pleased to offer the following resources:

Cover artwork: “Candyland” by Charlotte Wensley

Greg Lukianoff

Courage in a conviction that holds up to scrutiny is noble. On the other hand, we generally don’t give a lot of credit (and rightfully so) to people who might show courage in the face of opposition when their convictions are fundamentally im­moral and repugnant.

Black Thought, Civic Virtue, and the Courage to Transform Democracy

Dayna L. Cunningham

Achieving high-minded civic ideals is never easy, not least among those who have faced what Rogers Smith calls ongoing “civic estrangement.”

When we talk about cultivating civil disagreement and courage of convictions on and off campus what are signs of hope? What are challenges to overcome? We asked campus and cultural leaders to respond to these questions and share their perspectives on the current climate. Here’s what they said.

Civic Virtue Among Engineers

Erhardt Graeff

I believe the next chapter of engineering education requires making good on the promise of a liberal education and recommitting to a holistic definition of higher education’s public purpose. Engineers may run experiments in a vacuum, but their work does not exist in one.

This Month's Newsletters

In this essay, James Arthur, the former Director of the Jubilee Centre for Character and Virtues, reflects on civic virtues and higher education. He writes, "The value of higher education should surely be seen in the lives of university students—not only in what they do or which professions they go into, but in what they contribute to society and who they become."

The recent publication, Virtue in Virtual Spaces (2024),  makes a bold proposition. Authors Louisa Conwill, Megan Levis and Walter Scheirer argue that Catholic Social Tradition offers a road map for reimagining the internet as a force for good in the world. Focusing on social technologies (the internet) and dedicated to the patron saints of the Internet (the late Blessed Carla Acutis and Marshall McLuhan), this concise read turns much of what we assume about the internet on its head. But it also serves as an intuitive primer for anyone puzzling through how to enact Catholic Social Tradition (CST) in our daily lives and institutions.

How do you cultivate ethical values and commitments within nursing at a large public university where the students often differ in religious, ethnic, political and socio-economic backgrounds?

Leanne Burke, Associate Clinical Professor and Pre-Licensure Program Director at the University of California, Irvine (UCI), faced this challenge head-on when she arrived on campus. Engaging a diverse student body in conversations about complex moral dilemmas in nursing practice proved difficult.

She struggled to find the right approach.

"Without the baseline understanding that you might have with students from a similar faith tradition or in a small school, I had to learn how to have complex conversations about maternal healthcare, fetal development, loss of life, racial disparities in the healthcare system, and how our beliefs affect where we work," said Burke. "I knew these conversations were vital, but I didn’t want to cause harm."

Then she discovered the Anteater Virtues, a campus-wide initiative designed to integrate intellectual character into the university’s culture.

Contact Us

Erin Collazo Miller
Project Director
emille28@nd.edu