Graduate Programs

In his book, The Idea of the University: A Reexamination, Jaroslav Pelikan suggests that institutions of higher learning play a critical role in precipitating social change. More specifically, he believes that an institution’s professional programs may be particularly useful in this regard.
We agree. As a result, we have developed seven master’s programs that are intended to equip professionals for principled and wise Christian service in numerous settings—schools, businesses, colleges and universities, for-profit and not-for-profit organizations and offices, and social service agencies, and the like. Master’s education clearly affords its recipients access to more particular knowledge and skills; earning a master’s credential also ostensibly provides opportunities for greater mobility, earning power, and professional status. While these outcomes are certainly in view in Geneva’s graduate programs, our primary goal is to challenge graduate students to consider the resources and power of the Christian faith for understanding and shaping the demands and opportunities of professional life.
Taken as a whole, Geneva’s graduate programs are offered in a variety of formats and locations. For more complete information on each program, please click on the links to the left.