Sattler College | |
Established: | 2016 |
Type: | Private |
Faculty: | 15 in 2023 |
Dean: | Hans Leaman |
Head Label: | President |
Head: | Zack Johnson |
Students: | 93 in 2023 |
State: | MA 02114 |
Country: | U.S. |
Campus: | Urban office building 29,000+ ft2 |
Religious Affiliation: | Nondenominational[1] |
Website: | www.sattler.edu |
Address: | 100 Cambridge Street 17th Floor |
Coor: | 42.3605°N -71.0623°W |
Sattler College is a private college in the US that associates itself with "the historic Christian faith."
The college aims to "equip Jesus’ peaceful revolution" through relational discipleship and academic excellence.[2] The school was founded (and funded) by Dr. Finny Kuruvilla (former research fellow at the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT).
It welcomed its first class in the fall of 2018, received national accreditation in 2021, and graduated its first class in May of 2022. Projected external funding for the school is $30 million over the course of 25 years.[3] Its campus is in a high-rise office building in downtown Boston, overlooking the Charles River and Massachusetts State House.
In 2015, Dr. Finny Kuruvilla presented his idea of a college with "a comprehensive curriculum and beautiful campus overlooking the Boston Harbor... no traditional campus would offer a first-class education for only $9,000 each year."[4] He brought together a board of 6 people including 2 with PhDs from Ivy League schools and 2 with law degrees.[5] In December 2016, the Massachusetts Board of Higher Education allowed the college to begin granting undergraduate degrees and exist as an autonomous institution.[6] Sattler College's first application opened in October 2017 and it began its first semester with students in the fall of 2018.[7]
On October 26, 2017, the college announced that it had secured the 17th floor of the Leverett Saltonstall Building for its first campus.[8] It is located in downtown Boston in Beacon Hill. The college says that it had no plans for building science labs. Instead, they plan "to have students take laboratory courses through the Harvard University Extension School, Northeastern University’s College of Professional Studies, or elsewhere and transfer credits back to Sattler."[9] The college does plan to lease out apartment space to its students to provide housing options.[10]
Classes are mostly discussion-based, with briefer lectures and greater student involvement.
Instead of having a library of their own, Sattler utilizes the Boston Public Library for its students. Sattler also provides electronic library resources by subscribing to the eBook services provided by two leading digital library service providers: Proquest (ebrary) and EBSCO."[9]
In its December 2016 decision, the Massachusetts Board of Higher Education granted Sattler College the ability to grant the following degrees:[9] [11]
The college has announced that, "within ten years [by 2028], we plan to seek authorization to also offer programs in Civil Engineering, English, Education, Journalism, Mathematics, Physics, and Social Sciences."[9]
The college is named after Michael Sattler, a sixteenth-century Anabaptist Christian martyr.[12] Though the school is aligned with the theology of Conservative Anabaptism and is very closely connected to and associated with the local Followers of The Way (FOTW) church body, it is not affiliated with a particular denomination. Sattler College espouses principles from the early church and looks to the example of persecuted Christians.[13] Michael Sattler believed in the power of redemptive love and emulated the early church and Anabaptist groups by following Jesus's instruction to love one's enemies.[3]
One of Sattler College's self-proclaimed distinctives is its focus on "The Three C's": Core, Christian Character, and Cost.[14] [15]
In setting the curriculum, Kuruvilla looked to the first US colleges such as Harvard and Yale, where the first students there had to show proficiency in Bible literature and languages.[16] In this spirit, students are required to take religion courses on Christianity. These courses include learning Old Testament Hebrew and New Testament Greek, church history, and studying the basics of Christianity.[17]
Sattler also requires students to complete an extensive core curriculum based on the liberal arts, including writing, history, biology, and math, as well as their major subjects. The college also focuses on students' Christian development through "wise study, mentoring, and discipleship."