02/13/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 02/13/2026 11:09
As the largest Catholic institution in the State of Texas and the fourth largest private university in Texas, the University of the Incarnate Word's (UIW) is "committed to educational excellence in a context of faith in Jesus Christ, the Incarnate Word of God" (uiw.edu). On Monday, Feb. 9, UIW's College of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences (CHASS) hosted the annual Bernadette O'Connor Lecture on Catholic Intellectual Traditions (CIT), with this year's presentation exploring the positive impact that a Catholic education can have within the lives of its students.
Since 2017, this lecture, named after former Dean of CHASS and Professor of Philosophy Bernadette O'Connor, has sought to engage some facet of the CIT, most broadly understood as the dynamic and mutually illuminating conversation between the Catholic faith and human culture. O'Connor herself joined for the evening's lecture, featuring this year's guest speaker, Jason King, PhD, Beirne chair & director of the Center for Catholic Studies at St. Mary's University, as he shared his presentation titled "Does Catholic Education Make a Difference?"
This year's lecture was extra special, as it marked the 10th anniversary of the lecture series. UIW students, faculty, staff and Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word gathered in the Grossman International Conference Center for the lecture, and were joined by UIW leadership, including Vice President of Mission and Ministry Sr. Walter Maher, CCVI, UIW Provost Eva Fernandez, PhD and UIW President Thomas M. Evans, PhD.
"Today, Dr. King is addressing questions vital for all universities, concerning the value of education that can be offered to students today," opened Director of the UIW Pastoral Institute and CHASS Associate Professor Michael Romero, PhD. "I think that his research also allows faculty and administrators space to consider questions concerning the meaning of their own work in Catholic institutions. His unique contribution is based on his study of graduates of both Catholic institutions and graduates of non-faith-based institutions, who were asked about things like life, meaning and fulfillment."
King was met with bright smiles and booming applause as he entered the room and took the podium. He opened by noting how there has been a growing consideration about the value of higher education, including the subset Catholic higher education. Often, this concern is tied to the financial costs to attend and economic outputs that come with said education. He recalled that as an educator in Catholic higher education, he found that attending students were just as concerned, with many of them experiencing anxiety about making the "right" choice in their majors and stressing over the cost to attend a Catholic college/university.
King consulted his colleagues and was eventually encouraged to do a study on the value of a Catholic education. It was apparent that articles at the time were only discussing the economic value of a Catholic education, but none explored beyond that. Curious about what other benefits can be had through a Catholic education, King and his colleague developed a study that sought to reveal more.
"When we did the 2024 study, and then we repeated in 2025, we asked non-financial questions to graduates about their college experience," noted King. "We surveyed 2,000 people, 1,000 graduates from secular institutions and 1,000 graduates from Catholic institutions. We asked a whole bunch of demographic questions about age, gender, ethnicity, geography, voting patterns and religion. All of these pieces were to try to attend to the population and to make sure that the people that we were serving were representative of college graduates, and so that the comparisons we have would be reliable."
King found that there were three major findings concerning the benefits of Catholic education:
King took these findings and added more questions during his 2025 study. Some questions looked further beyond college, as he recognized that the impact an education has doesn't simply stop after graduation, but it influences beyond as students grow and experience multiple aspects of life. His additional findings included:
"I see these as kind of applications of that bigger view of the world, meaningful life, community engagement, ethical decision making," recounted King during his presentation. "If this is the education that you're providing, it has these kinds of impacts on these particular issues. It (Catholic education) helps you to have a sense of your job, not just as money, but as a purpose. Your sense of who you are, not just as an isolated individual trying to live up to some external standards, but as a person who belongs to a community that has a strong sense of self. A sense of your own faith commitments, but not one that closes you off to exploration or that causes you to disrespect others around you. Even when new technologies emerge that are threatening to many of us, it helps you by giving you the confidence of how to approach these things intelligently, responsibly and think through them in a mature fashion."