Notre Dame de Namur University Update
Dear Community:
Notre Dame de Namur University (NDNU) is at the vanguard of changing how to deliver and offer graduate degree and continuing education programs at universities in our nation.
The higher education landscape has changed dramatically in recent years. On the one hand, demand for undergraduate education has dropped, while dozens of public and private universities in the Bay Area now offer bachelor’s degrees; there are fewer students with more undergraduate education options than ever before. On the other, demand for advanced degrees has skyrocketed due to regional labor shortages in critical professions like teaching and mental health care.
That’s why we have entered an option to purchase agreement (OPA) for our campus lands with Stanford University to meet these changing needs of students and to ensure the future of our university’s mission and vision. The potential land sale does not mean we’re going away from Belmont and the peninsula. Just the opposite: it means we are fundamentally changing how we operate to improve the core educational services we provide to students and to this region.
NDNU reached a pivotal moment that is facing many colleges similar to ours. Our university is responding to external forces by leaning into its strengths, narrowing its academic focus to advanced degree offerings, adult education, and undergraduate degree completion. To secure its near-term financial future, NDNU entered into the option to purchase agreement with Stanford University, where, after the Stanford purchase, NDNU may lease back parts of the land on a year-to-year basis.
These changes put NDNU and its community of students and faculty on the road to long-term success. The university has carved out an important niche in the Bay Area’s higher education landscape so it can more effectively meet community needs. NDNU will now be a place where educators, mental health counselors, business leaders, and community members can secure the skills and credentialing they need to help the Bay Area thrive. Notably, NDNU is the only institution in San Mateo County to offer a teacher credentialing program.
NDNU is poised to be stronger than ever. The university is about to embark on a process to drive enrollment in its newly refined programs. NDNU will continue to offer an affordable education to those seeking to advance their careers and use their talents to better our community and world.
Since its founding in 1851, NDNU has delivered high-quality education to the Peninsula community. The third-oldest university in California, NDNU was the first in California authorized to offer bachelor’s degrees to women. In its 170 years of operation, NDNU opened career pathways through higher education for generations of students from across the Bay Area and the world. As a Catholic university, NDNU is driven by the mission of the Sisters of Notre Dame to advance the core principles of social justice and global peace. Next year, 2023, will mark 100 years of the Sisters pursuing their educational mission in Belmont.
NDNU is excited about its new direction and invites the community to learn and grow together.
Welcome to the New NDNU.
—President Beth Martin