Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Crandall University

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Motto
  
Cristus Praeeminens

Type
  
Baptist, private

Chancellor
  
Mr. Donald Simmonds

Phone
  
+1 506-858-8970

Province
  
New Brunswick

Motto in English
  
Christ First

Established
  
1949

President
  
Dr. Bruce G. Fawcett

Number of students
  
685

Address
  
333 Gorge Rd, Moncton, NB E1G 3H9, Canada

Undergraduate tuition and fees
  
7,537.5 CAD (2012), International tuition: 8,537.5 CAD (2012)

Similar
  
Mount Allison University, Acadia Divinity College, Kingswood University, St Thomas University, St Stephen's University

Profiles

Crandall university who we are


Crandall University is a small Christian Liberal Arts university located in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. Crandall is operated by the Convention of Atlantic Baptist Churches.

Contents

Crandall university take charge


Charity

Crandall University 106736150RR0001 was registered as a charitable organization in Canada on January 1, 1967. The primary areas in which the charity is now carrying on programs to achieve its charitable purposes, ranked according to the percentage of time and resources devoted to each program area follow:

  • Universities and colleges 100%
  • The charity carried on charitable programs to further its charitable purpose(s) (as defined in its governing documents) this fiscal period:

  • provides bachelor's degrees in Arts, Business Administration, Science and Education.
  • provides certificate programs in Arts and Education
  • Library and archives

    Crandall University houses the Baptist Heritage Center whose 300 artifacts preserve the material history of Atlantic Baptists, the Convention of Atlantic Baptist Churches, and its predecessor organizations. The collection and archives includes objects used in worship services, furniture, musical instruments, church building architecture pictures and printed material.

    History

    The school was founded in 1949 under the name United Baptist Bible Training School (UBBTS), and served as both a secondary school and a Bible school. Over two decades, the focus of the school gradually shifted toward post-secondary programs. In 1968, UBBTS became a Bible and junior Christian liberal arts college, and in 1970 the name was changed to Atlantic Baptist College (ABC). A sustained campaign to expand the school's faculty and improve the level of education resulted in ABC being able to grant full Bachelor of Arts degrees in 1983. Its campus at this time was located along the Salisbury Road, west of Moncton's central business district.

    The institution moved to a new campus constructed on the Gorge Road, north of the central business district, in 1996. The name was also changed to Atlantic Baptist University, a reflection of expanded student enrollment and academic accreditation. In 2003, the ABU sports teams adopted the name The Blue Tide. The institution was the first, and thus far only, English university in Moncton. The Atlantic Baptist University Act was passed by the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick in 2008.

    On August 21, 2009 it was announced that the institution had changed its name to Crandall University in honour of Rev. Joseph Crandall, a pioneering Baptist minister in the maritime region. In conjunction with the University name change, Crandall Athletics took on a new identity as "The Crandall Chargers."

    In 2012, Crandall University came under public scrutiny for receiving municipal funds regardless of having an anti-gay hiring policy.

    Programs

  • Bachelor of Business Administration
  • Bachelor of Education
  • Technical Education
  • Bachelor of Arts
  • Biblical Studies
  • Communications
  • English
  • History
  • Interdisciplinary Studies
  • Modern Languages
  • French
  • Organizational Management
  • Psychology
  • Religious Studies
  • Sociology
  • Bachelor of Science
  • Biology
  • Master of Education
  • Master of Organizational Management
  • Controversy

    The University has been criticized for accepting public money (municipal, provincial and federal) to fund programs and expansions to the campus but maintaining a hiring policy which would prohibit gay faculty. A year after the controversy erupted, the University opted to not apply for $150,000 in public funding that it had received annually in order to avoid changing its hiring policy.

    References

    Crandall University Wikipedia