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Azusa Pacific University
Azusa Pacific University
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Azusa Pacific University (APU) is a private evangelical research university in Azusa, California, United States. The university was founded in 1899 in Whittier, California, with classes first held on March 3, 1900, and degrees offered in 1939. The university's seminary, the Graduate School of Theology, holds to a Wesleyan-Arminian doctrinal theology.[1] APU offers more than 100 associate, bachelor's, master's, and doctoral programs on campus, online, and at seven regional locations across Southern California.

Key Information

Azusa Pacific University is organized into three colleges and seven schools. The academics programs are available from the Honors College, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, College of Music and the Arts, Leung School of Accounting, University College, School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, School of Business and Management, School of Education, School of Nursing, and School of Theology.[2] APU is accredited by the WASC Senior College and University Commission.[3]

History

[edit]
History
Training School for Christian Workers Established 1899
Pacific Bible College Renamed 1939
Azusa College Renamed 1956
Azusa Pacific College and
Arlington College
Merged 1968
Azusa Pacific University Renamed 1981

Azusa Pacific University was established on March 3, 1899, in Whittier, California.[4] Under the name Training School for Christian Workers, it was the first Bible college on the West Coast. Led by president Mary A. Hill, the school initially had a total enrollment of 12 students.[5]

Early years saw the school relocate and change leadership several times. In 1939, Cornelius P. Haggard became the school's 13th president. In response to low enrollment and a lack of donations, Haggard launched a variety of fundraising efforts. Haggard served for the next 36 years.[5]

Following mergers with three Southern California colleges, the university relocated in 1946 to the city of Azusa, where it resides today. In 1939 the Training School became Pacific Bible College, and four-year degrees were offered. In 1956, the name was changed to Azusa College. By 1965, Azusa College had become Azusa-Pacific College (APC), and three years later, APC merged with Arlington College.[5] Upon its achievement of university status in 1981, the college changed its name to Azusa Pacific University.[5]

After Haggard's death, Paul E. Sago became president, serving until 1989. Sago encouraged the development and growth of off-site educational regional campuses throughout Southern California, and presided over the addition of master's degree programs and the development of schools within the university.[5]

Richard E. Felix, became president in 1990, and initiated the university's first doctoral programs. He also introduced the university's "Four Cornerstones," Christ, Scholarship, Community, and Service, and oversaw the construction of seven new buildings, a doubling of student enrollment, and a quadrupling of graduate programs.[5]

When nearby institution, Ambassador College closed in 1997, the Worldwide Church of God and Azusa Pacific University jointly established the Ambassador Center at Azusa Pacific University for the continuation of classes for former Ambassador College students.

In November 2000, then-Executive Vice President Jon R. Wallace, DBA, became president.[6] In April 2018, Wallace announced his plan to retire and accepted his new role as president emeritus.[7]

In 2017, a new independent economic study found that APU generates $1.25 billion in economic impact within California each year. Of that, APU contributes $37 million in state taxes each year and supports 7,260 jobs statewide. The report also found approximately 47,500 APU alumni reside within California, increasing the state's productivity and earning power. Of those, 10,600 APU alumni and 600 APU employees live in the San Gabriel Valley.[8]

In 2018, two university board members resigned from the university, citing concerns over financial mismanagement and "theological drift."[9] As of 2018, the credit rating agency Moody's had downgraded its credit rating of APU's bonds to BA1, just above junk status.[10]

On April 10, 2019, APU named Paul W. Ferguson as its 17th president. He began his new role on June 3, 2019.[7]

Religious affiliations

[edit]

A small group of Quakers (also known as Friends) and a Methodist evangelist laid the foundation for the Training School for Christian Workers in 1899.[4]

As faculty members began to embrace Evangelicalism and reject a growing liberal trend in the California Yearly Meeting of Friends, a campus church was established in 1933. This shift moved the "school church" from the local Huntington Park Friends Church to the on-campus worship gathering. The new campus church planted eight "tabernacles" throughout California which collectively became known as the Evangel Church denomination.

The series of college mergers and campus re-locations which followed helped to solidify the school's identity as an Evangelical institution.[5]

Presidents

[edit]

The university has had a total of 18 presidents since its founding.[11]

Academics

[edit]
Academic rankings
National
Forbes[12]276
U.S. News & World Report[13]266 (Best National Universities)
Washington Monthly[14]209

Azusa Pacific University academic resources include the Writing Center, Accessibility Services, Testing Services, Tutoring Services, university libraries, Math Center, Academic Success Center, and the Graduate and Professional Registrar. Special programs include the Friends Center, Honors College, Sigma Theta Tau (Iota Sigma), and the Western Conservancy of Nursing History.[15]

University libraries and special collections

[edit]

The APU libraries include the William V. Marshburn Library (East Campus), the Hugh and Hazel Darling Library (West Campus), the Stamps Theological Library (West Campus), and off-campus libraries supporting academic programs at the APU High Desert, Inland Empire, Los Angeles, Orange County, San Diego, and Murrieta locations.[16]

A unified catalog identifies the more than 240,000 books, media items, and 1,900 periodical titles in the libraries' print collections. More than 703,000 microforms include the Library of American Civilization, Library of American Literature, The New York Times, and Educational Resources Information Center collections. The university network also provides access to more than 140 online databases, which include more than 46,000 electronic journals.[16]

In the fall of 2009, Azusa Pacific University acquired a collection of antiquities, including five fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls and five first-edition prints of the King James Bible.[17] These new acquisitions were displayed in an exhibit, Treasures of the Bible: The Dead Sea Scrolls and Beyond, in summer 2010.[18][19]

Special collections of Azusa Pacific University are housed in the Thomas F. Andrews Room of the Hugh and Hazel Darling Library, located on APU's West Campus. The special collections consist of over 6,500 holdings ranging from presidential signatures to historical citrus crate labels.[20]

Research

[edit]

Azusa Pacific University is classified among "R2: Doctoral Universities – High research activity".[21][22] APU conducts its research through eight university research centers:[23]

  • Center for Academic Service-Learning and Research
  • Center for Research on Ethics and Values (CREV)
  • Center for Research in Science (CRIS)
  • El Centro Teológico Hispano
  • Friends Center
  • Center for Vocational Ministry (Undergraduate)
  • Office of Faith Integration
  • Noel Academy for Strengths-Based Leadership and Education

APU's Office of Institutional Research and Assessment provides resources, training, and consultations designed to help academic and student life departments successfully assess their educational effectiveness. The office also coordinates and facilitates the academic program review process.[24]

Honors College

[edit]

APU's Honors College was launched in 2013, with David L. Weeks as dean.[25][26] An Oxford-style, writing-intensive program, the Honors College grants graduates a second major or minor in Honors Humanities and an honors scholar diploma designation. The program content replaces all general education courses. The Honors College describes its purpose as "liberally educat[ing] the next generation of intellectually-gifted Christian leaders."[27] Students study classic literature including works by Aristotle, Shakespeare, and C.S. Lewis, and are given publication and regional/national presentation opportunities.[28]

Campus

[edit]

Azusa Pacific University's Azusa campus is situated in the San Gabriel Valley, located 26 miles (42 km) northeast of Los Angeles.[29]

The university also maintains a Los Angeles Regional Site, a Monrovia Regional Site, and five additional off-site regional centers in Southern California:

Athletics

[edit]
Azusa Pacific athletics logo

The Azusa Pacific athletic teams are called the Cougars. The university is a member of the Division II level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), primarily competing in the Pacific West Conference (PacWest) for most of its sports since the 2012–13 academic year; while its women's swimming & diving team competes in the Pacific Collegiate Swim and Dive Conference (PCSC) and its women's water polo team competes in the Golden Coast Conference (GCC). The Cougars previously competed in the Golden State Athletic Conference (GSAC) of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) from 1986–87 to 2011–12. On July 11, 2011 Azusa Pacific began the three-year transition process to becoming a member of the NCAA.[30] Azusa Pacific University decided to end its football program in December 2020 due to financial restructuring.[31]

Azusa Pacific competes in 16 intercollegiate varsity sports: Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, soccer, tennis and track & field; while women's sports include acrobatics and tumbling, basketball, cross country, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field, volleyball, water polo.

Azusa Pacific Athletics achieved eight consecutive wins of the Directors’ Cup from 2005 to 2012, with a total of 108 GSAC Championships and 36 NAIA National Championships.[32] Since joining NCAA Division II, the program has added 31 PacWest Conference Championships and four GNAC championships in football.

Achievements and alumni

[edit]

A past eight-time winner of the NAIA's Directors' Cup, APU finished 17th for the second consecutive year in the 2015–16 NCAA Division II Directors' Cup standings. A total of 14 APU athletes have competed in the Olympics, including 2008 decathlon gold medalist Bryan Clay '03, and 50 other alumni have been drafted into other professional sports, including Christian Okoye '87, former Kansas City Chiefs fullback; Stephen Vogt '07, former MLB player and current Cleveland Guardians manager; Kirk Nieuwenhuis '08, Long Island Ducks outfielder; and Terrell Watson '15, San Diego Fleet running back.[33] Several graduates have gone onto serve as leaders in higher education including J. David Carlson, Jeff Siemers, and Jacob Amundson.[34]

Student body

[edit]
Ethnic enrollment,
Fall 2018[35]
Under-
graduates
International 3%
Hispanic/Latino American 27%
Black or African American 5%
White 40%
American Indian or Alaska Native <1%
Asian American 9%
Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander 1%
Multiracial American 13%
Unknown 2%

Azusa Pacific University's 2018–19 enrollment consisted of 10,095 students, of whom 5,021 are at the undergraduate and 5,074 at the graduate and professional levels. As of 2018, 58 countries, 57 states (and US territories), and 56 Christian denominations are represented by the student population.[33] Approximately 68% of students are female and 32% are male.[36]

In the 2018–2019 academic year, the freshman retention rate was 84%.[35]

The university's most popular programs are in following categories:[35]

  1. Health Professions and Related Programs (31%)
  2. Business, Management, Marketing, and Related Support Services (14%)
  3. Psychology (12%)
  4. Visual and Performing Arts (8%)
  5. Education (6%)

Student life

[edit]

APU features 20 music ensembles, 11 intramural sports, and about 40 clubs and organizations, including ethnic organizations, performing arts clubs, social clubs, service clubs, academic clubs, athletic clubs, and honors societies, as well as a Student Government Association.[37][38][39][40] The university also hosts military and veteran services, including active duty military and veteran benefits, scholarships, and programs.[41]

Music ensembles

[edit]

Music ensemble offerings include choral ensembles, vocal groups, large ensembles, chamber ensembles, commercial ensembles, and orchestral groups. Music groups require an audition, and perform at local churches as well as state and national orchestral and symphonic events.[37] In addition to these ensembles, the Artist Certificate program offers a conservatory style experience to the School of Music's highest performing musicians.[42]

Student Government Association

[edit]

APU's Student Government Association (SGA) is composed of 28 students. The SGA has served APU since 1945 by meeting with offices on campus and conducting surveys that analyze the needs of the APU student body. The SGA's governing structure, listed from highest position to lowest, is composed of a president, five executives, two commissioners, nine senators, and nine representatives.[40]

Military and veteran services

[edit]

APU is a Yellow Ribbon University recognized by Military Friendly as a military-friendly college, and is an approved degree-granting institution recognized by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.[41][43] APU was also named as one of 130 "Best for Vets Colleges 2017" in the 4-year schools category by Military Times.[44]

The university provides an ROTC program which includes scholarships and tuition assistance.[45]

APU also offers a Veterans Club intended to create a network for veterans transitioning into academic life. The club hosts regular meetings and community service opportunities.[46]

Diversity

[edit]

In 2016, APU was recognized by Diverse Issues in Higher Education as one of the nation's top schools in awarding degrees to minority students. The university ranked among the top 100 in 11 baccalaureate categories, and ranked 5th for awarding Hispanic master's degrees in the "business/commerce, general" category, and 55th for total minority master's degrees awarded across all disciplines.[47][48] APU is recognized by the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities as one of 104 Hispanic-Serving Institutions in California.[49]

Human Sexuality

[edit]

The university has cited its Christian faith in its beliefs about human sexuality."[50] The policy has been lifted and reinstated a number of times[51] and has been the target of student protests.[52]

As of 2022, University policy states that "God-given sexuality" is to take place in the context of a marriage covenant between a man and a woman.[53][54]

The Center for Reconciliation and Diversity

[edit]

The Student Center for Reconciliation and Diversity administers scholarship programs and provides information on internship and scholarship opportunities offered by local community organizations. SCRD also advises campus ethnic organizations, including the Armenian Student Association, Asian Pacific American Student Organization, Black Student Association, Latin American Student Association, Indigenous Peoples Circle, and the Pacific Islander Organization. In addition, SCRD coordinates a Multi-Ethnic Leadership Scholarship Program.[49][55]

Center for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusive Excellence

[edit]

The Center for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusive Excellence hosts initiatives including staff and faculty diversity network luncheons, diversity ambassador training, and diversity workshops. The center also facilitates a diversity plan based on a 2016 UCLA Climate Study conducted by the Higher Education Research Institute assessing APU's social climate. The center collaborates with the Council of Christian Colleges & Universities on national diversity-related projects.[56]

Office of Service & Discipleship

[edit]

For eight consecutive years, Azusa Pacific has been named to the President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll for exemplary leadership in civic engagement, service-learning, and building community partnerships.[57] Azusa Pacific University, as one of 115 U.S. institutions named to the Carnegie Foundation's 2010 Community Engagement Classification, is recognized for its commitment to community service and service-learning.[58] Through APU's Center for Student Action, undergraduates perform more than 165,000 hours of service each year locally and globally.[33]

Local service

[edit]

Local service is conducted by the City Links program, where students aid the city of Azusa and greater Los Angeles area. Services include assisting food banks and providing after school tutoring and mentoring. In addition to these weekly service opportunities, students can spend a semester living and learning in Los Angeles through L.A. Term.[59]

Mexico Outreach

[edit]

APU students serve in Mexico through the Mexico Outreach Program, which continues a more-than-40-year relationship with churches, refugee shelters, prisons, and rehabilitation centers. Several opportunities exist throughout the year for students to serve the Mexicali community. APU also maintains a site in Ensenada–Rancho El Refugio–that is available throughout the year for students to stay at while conducting outreach in the area.[60]

Global relief

[edit]

The Center for Student Action sends more than 250 students, faculty, staff, and alumni around the world to partner with long-term and national workers. Programs include but are not limited to: educational development, orphan work, conversational English teaching, prayer ministry, mobile medical care clinics, and anti-human and anti-sex trafficking.[61] The following are relief efforts that the Center for Student Action has worked toward mobilizing aid and volunteers:[62]

Notable alumni

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Azusa Pacific University is a private evangelical Christian university located in , approximately 26 miles northeast of . Founded in 1899 as a in , it is the oldest such institution on the West Coast and has grown into a comprehensive university offering 59 bachelor's degrees, 34 master's degrees, 7 doctoral programs, and various certificates and credentials, all integrated with its foundational Four Cornerstones of Christ, Scholarship, Community, and Service. As of 2024, the university enrolls approximately 6,272 students across its main campus and regional sites, with a focus on Christ-centered education and . Azusa Pacific holds accreditation from the WASC Senior College and University Commission, recently reaffirmed following resolutions to prior compliance concerns. The university has achieved recognition as the top-ranked Christian institution in and #62 nationally in the Wall Street Journal's 2026 Best Colleges rankings, reflecting strong outcomes in value and student success. In athletics, competing primarily in NAIA and transitioning toward , Azusa Pacific has secured 37 national championships and eight consecutive Directors' Cups from 2005 to 2012, underscoring its competitive prowess. Defining controversies include a 2018 episode where administrators briefly suspended a longstanding policy prohibiting romanticized same-sex relationships—consistent with evangelical interpretations of biblical —prompting student protests and a , before reinstating it amid donor and opposition, which led to some faculty departures but affirmed the institution's doctrinal commitments. This episode highlighted tensions between traditional Christian orthodoxy and progressive cultural pressures within higher education, where sources sympathetic to the latter often frame such policies as discriminatory despite their basis in the university's founding religious principles.

History

Founding and Early Years (1899–1940s)

Azusa Pacific University traces its origins to March 3, 1899, when a group of spiritual leaders from various denominations established the Training School for Christian Workers in , as the first on the West Coast dedicated to preparing students for ministry and missionary service. The institution began in a modest home, reflecting its grassroots evangelical roots amid the era's influences. The first class convened on March 3, 1900, under the of Mary A. Hill, the inaugural president, who oversaw an initial enrollment of 12 students focused on practical Christian training rather than liberal arts curricula. Early operations emphasized biblical instruction and , with the school navigating financial constraints and leadership transitions; subsequent presidents included Anna Draper (1901–1903), Bertha Pinkham Dixon (1903–1904), and Matilda Atkinson (1904–1909), each guiding modest expansions in student body and course offerings. Relocations marked this period's instability, including a move to Huntington Park in 1907 to accommodate growth and secure facilities. By 1919, the Training School federated with Los Angeles Pacific College and College to form the University of , aligning under the Wesleyan Holiness tradition to broaden its scope while retaining evangelical priorities. This collaboration aimed to pool resources amid post-World War I economic pressures, though the entity retained its Bible college focus. Leadership continued to evolve, with presidents such as William P. Pinkham (1909–1919), Eli Reece (1919–1923), and later figures like David H. Scott (1931–1936) steering through the , emphasizing frugality and faith-based resilience. In 1939, the institution rebranded as Pacific Bible College and introduced four-year degree programs, a pivotal shift toward formal and academic legitimacy under new president Cornelius P. Haggard, who served until 1975 and prioritized institutional stability. Enrollment grew modestly, supported by Haggard's administrative acumen, as the college weathered the era's challenges, including wartime disruptions in the early 1940s. By 1946, Pacific Bible College relocated to a 12-acre campus in , where classes commenced, marking a consolidation of its foothill presence. followed in 1947 from the American Association of Bible Colleges, affirming its evangelical standards.

Institutional Growth and Mergers (1950s–1990s)

In the 1950s, under President Cornelius P. Haggard, Azusa Pacific's predecessor institution, then known as Pacific Bible College, emphasized fundraising innovations such as annual Dinner Rallies to support campus development and adherence to its evangelical mission of training disciples and scholars. By 1957, the college was renamed Azusa College in recognition of its established presence in , following earlier relocations. Accreditation by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) was achieved in 1964, marking a milestone in academic legitimacy and enabling further expansion. A pivotal merger occurred in 1965 when Azusa College combined with Pacific College (LAPC), a four-year liberal arts institution affiliated with the , forming Azusa Pacific College (APC). Pre-merger enrollment stood at approximately 240 students at Azusa College and 150 at LAPC; the unified institution saw rapid growth to 600 students in its inaugural year, bolstered by integrated academic, athletic (adopting the Cougars mascot), and extracurricular programs. In 1968, APC reportedly absorbed Arlington College, a smaller , further consolidating resources though details on its scale remain limited in primary records. APC joined the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and the National Christian College Athletic Association (NCCAA) in 1965, enhancing its competitive profile despite challenges like campus fires and floods in 1968–1969. The 1970s brought infrastructural and programmatic growth under continued leadership, with completion of Multimedia I and II buildings and Shire Mods (providing 100 apartments) between 1971 and 1972 to accommodate rising student numbers. Enrollment reached 1,000 students across multiple sites by 1973, coinciding with APC's admission to the Western Association of Graduate Schools and the accreditation of its programs by the Board of Registered (1975) and National League for (1977). During Paul E. Sago's presidency (1976–1989), the institution expanded off-site regional campuses throughout , introduced master's degrees, and established specialized schools, significantly increasing academic offerings and overall enrollment. In 1981, Azusa Pacific College attained university status, becoming Azusa Pacific (APU), with accreditation extended to its program by the Council on Social Work Education in 1982. Under Richard E. Felix's presidency beginning in 1990, APU launched its first doctoral programs, adopted the Four Cornerstones framework (Christ, Scholarship, Community, Service), doubled undergraduate and graduate enrollment, quadrupled graduate offerings, and constructed seven new buildings to support expansion. The Graduate School of Theology received accreditation from the Association of Theological Schools in 1990, and the graduate program from the National League for Nursing in 1991, solidifying APU's trajectory as a comprehensive evangelical .

Contemporary Developments and Challenges (2000s–Present)

In the 2000s, Azusa Pacific University expanded its academic offerings and infrastructure, adding graduate programs and regional campuses to accommodate growing demand for flexible . By the mid-2010s, the institution had developed over 150 degree options, including doctoral programs, and established six regional locations in alongside online delivery through its affiliated Los Angeles Pacific University, launched to focus on adult learners. This shift reflected broader trends in Christian higher education, with APU transitioning from a primarily traditional undergraduate model to one where approximately two-thirds of students were non-traditional by the 2020s, driven by declining high school enrollments nationwide due to falling birth rates since the mid-2000s. Enrollment grew in the early but began declining sharply after peaking around 10,000 students in the , dropping to about 7,120 by 2023, with undergraduates comprising roughly 45% of the total. The university maintained its evangelical identity through requirements like attendance and a statement of faith affirming and traditional marriage, while integrating faith into curricula across disciplines. Significant challenges emerged in the late , including financial pressures that prompted faculty cuts in amid a reported crunch, with the administration considering but ultimately preserving multiyear contracts for some professors. Former board members attributed these issues to administrative mismanagement and "theological drift," citing decisions that they viewed as compromising core doctrines. A major controversy arose in 2018 over policies, when APU initially removed language from its prohibiting romantic same-sex relationships, allowing public LGBTQ+ displays while retaining a broader ban on sexual intimacy outside heterosexual ; this change, effective fall 2018, sparked rallies and a from a gay employee alleging . The administration reversed course within weeks, reinstating the ban, but removed it again in March 2019, prompting from evangelical groups for undermining the university's biblical . These flip-flops highlighted tensions between maintaining doctrinal fidelity and accommodating cultural shifts, with observers noting internal divisions exacerbated by activist pressures on campus dating back to at least 2013. Accreditation faced scrutiny in the 2020s, with the WASC Senior College and University Commission (WSCUC) placing APU on warning status by 2023 due to concerns over governance and financial stability, though the university remained accredited pending a progress review in March 2024. Credit ratings agencies like Fitch affirmed a 'BBB-' outlook in 2024, citing ongoing enrollment declines and operational adjustments as risks but noting stable liquidity.

Christian Mission and Identity

Statement of Faith and Evangelical Foundations

Azusa Pacific University, founded in as the Training School for Christian Workers in , by a group of and a Methodist evangelist, established its initial doctrinal commitments early, introducing a Statement of Faith in 1900 that emphasized and Christian discipleship. This foundation reflected the institution's origins in evangelical piety and practical ministry training, with a of "God First" adopted in the early to prioritize amid academic pursuits. Over time, mergers with institutions like the Missionary Training Institute (1920s) and Los Angeles Pacific College (1960s) reinforced this heritage, integrating Wesleyan Holiness emphases on personal sanctification and social holiness. The university's evangelical identity was explicitly formalized in the under President C.P. Haggard, who served for 39 years and adapted the ' Statement of Faith to include Wesleyan traditions, such as ongoing sanctification through the . This revision, further updated in 1956, positioned APU as an "evangelical Christian community of disciples and scholars," committed to advancing 's work through scholarship infused with a . The Statement of Faith declares the as the inspired, infallible, and authoritative Word of ; affirms one eternally existent in three persons—Father, Son, and ; and upholds the deity of Christ, including his virgin birth, sinless life, atoning death, bodily , ascension, and future return. It further articulates humanity's fallen state and moral depravity, necessitating regeneration by the , followed by progressive sanctification for holy living and service; the bodily of believers to eternal life and unbelievers to ; and the spiritual unity of all true believers in Christ. Complementing these doctrines, APU's Daily Living Expectations outline practical applications, mandating for God and others, Christlike unity, submission to God's will, and active witness for Christ, which align with evangelical priorities of personal conversion, , and discipleship empowered by the . This framework draws from a Wesleyan Holiness , integrating Scripture's primacy with reason, , and while upholding sola Scriptura as the final authority in faith and practice. The 2006 Position Statement on Evangelical Commitment further clarifies distinctives like the sanctity of life, traditional marriage as a covenant between one man and one woman, stewardship of creation, and pursuit of rooted in reconciliation through Christ, distinguishing APU from broader by its emphasis on grace-enabled holiness and global mission. These elements collectively underpin the university's mission to foster intellectual rigor alongside spiritual vitality, ensuring that evangelical convictions permeate curriculum, community life, and institutional governance.

Integration of Faith into Academics and Campus Life

Azusa Pacific University emphasizes the integration of into academic disciplines by exploring inherent connections between biblical principles and scholarly inquiry, rather than artificially imposing them. This approach, pursued at the level of specific fields such as , , and , manifests in faculty-led , , and that incorporate Christian perspectives to challenge the secular-sacred divide. For instance, faculty in modern languages link Christian virtues to employability skills, while those in draw on early to inform pedagogical practices. To support this integration across all curricula, the university established an Office of Faith Integration in 2024, which provides resources, training, and encouragement to faculty, department chairs, and deans. A dedicated Faith Integration Faculty Guidebook serves as a comprehensive tool to aid educators in embedding faith-informed critical thinking into course design and classroom discussions. This institutional commitment ensures that academic excellence aligns with a Christ-centered worldview, equipping students to apply faith in professional contexts. In campus life, faith integration occurs through mandatory spiritual formation activities that promote discipleship and community. Full-time undergraduate students enrolled in 12 or more units per semester are required to attend 2-3 chapel services weekly (offered Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at 10:30 a.m., plus Thursday evenings), with 10 flexible absences permitted per semester and attendance tracked via the iAttended app or QR codes. The university hosts 102 chapel services annually, featuring worship, creative arts, and teachings to foster spiritual growth and intercultural engagement. Complementing chapel, students must complete service credits—120 for freshmen, 90 for sophomores, 60 for juniors, and 30 for seniors—earned through unpaid, off-campus, non-family-related activities, with up to 60 credits allowable per year. Residence halls enforce biblical standards for behavior, while discipleship groups and programs like SoulQuest encourage personal calling discovery and transformation. These elements collectively embed faith into daily routines, residence, and extracurriculars, aligning with evangelical values of service and mutual respect.

Spiritual Formation Requirements

Undergraduate students at Azusa Pacific University are required to fulfill co-curricular spiritual life requirements, including chapel attendance and service credits, as conditions for graduation. These mandates, administered by the Office of Chapel and Pastoral Care, aim to promote spiritual growth, worship, and community engagement in alignment with the university's evangelical Christian identity. Chapel attendance is mandatory, typically involving 2–3 sessions per week: , , and at 10:30 a.m., plus evenings at 8:00 p.m. Students receive 10 flexible absences per semester, with tracked via the iAttended app or QR codes; late arrivals beyond a 10-minute do not count. Exemptions may be granted for documented through and Resources or for accommodations related to work or , provided requests are submitted by early deadlines such as 8. Failure to meet attendance thresholds can delay degree clearance, as verified by the registrar. Service credits constitute another core requirement, totaling 120 for incoming freshmen, 90 for sophomores, 60 for juniors, and 30 for seniors across their degree program, with a maximum of 30 credits per semester. Each credit corresponds to 1–2 hours of unpaid, off-campus service at nonprofits, mission trips, or similar venues; students may fulfill portions through clinical hours. Credits are submitted via an online Service Credit Report Form, emphasizing practical discipleship and . Seniors must complete all outstanding credits and obtain clearance before participating in commencement. Curricular elements of are embedded within the APU Core general education framework, including an 18-unit minor comprising biblical, theological, and applied faith courses that integrate principles across disciplines. These requirements, combined with co-curricular elements, ensure systematic exposure to spiritual disciplines, though graduate and professional programs have adapted, less stringent mandates focused on voluntary participation.

Academics

Degree Programs and Schools

Azusa Pacific University structures its academic offerings through three primary colleges encompassing multiple schools, which deliver associate, bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees in fields such as , sciences, , , , and sciences. The institution confers over 135 degrees, emphasizing professional preparation integrated with evangelical Christian principles, with programs available on campus, online, and at regional locations. Undergraduate bachelor's degrees number in the dozens across disciplines like , cinematic , , and , while graduate options include 48 master's programs in areas such as , , and applied statistics. Doctoral offerings total nine, predominantly in and , alongside two associate degrees and specialized credentials. The College of Education and Behavioral Sciences, under Dean Stacy Kula, houses the School of Education and School of Behavioral Sciences, providing degrees in educational counseling (MAEd with embedded credentials), , and clinical counseling, alongside undergraduate majors in liberal studies and behavioral science fields. These programs prepare students for , counseling, and roles, with options for teaching credentials and master's-level specializations in school psychology. The College of Nursing and Health Sciences, led by Dean Renee Pozza, includes the School of Nursing and School of Health Sciences, offering rigorous health-related degrees such as the BSN, , and BSN-to-DNP pathways, as well as allied health majors at the undergraduate level. Nursing programs emphasize clinical training and , with doctoral options focusing on advanced practice and leadership; the college also supports and prerequisites. The College of , Humanities, Sciences, and , directed by Dean Bill McCoy, encompasses the School of the Arts, School of and Sciences, and School of , delivering bachelor's degrees in , biological sciences, and , and , alongside graduate programs like the . majors include and physics, while offerings cover art and interdisciplinary studies; degrees integrate doctrinal training with ministerial preparation. Additionally, the School of Business and Management operates programs in , , and MBA degrees, focusing on ethical practices and , available in traditional and online formats. All degrees require general cores that incorporate and , ensuring alignment with the university's faith-based mission across 203 total programs including certificates.

Rankings, Accreditation, and Research Output

Azusa Pacific University is accredited by the WASC Senior College and University Commission (WSCUC), the regional accrediting body for institutions in , , and the western U.S. Its current accreditation status is "Accredited with Notice of Concern," indicating that the university meets WSCUC standards overall but faces identified issues—such as governance, financial stability, or programmatic effectiveness—requiring a progress report and monitoring, with the most recent evaluation occurring in March 2024 and an update expected by mid-2024. Beyond regional accreditation, APU holds 13 discipline-specific approvals from bodies including the Accreditation Council for Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP) for business programs, the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE) for , and the Council for Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP) for . These accreditations affirm compliance in specialized fields but do not mitigate the broader institutional concerns noted by WSCUC. In U.S. News & World Report's 2025-2026 Best Colleges rankings, Azusa Pacific University is classified as a and ranks #283 out of 436 institutions, reflecting performance in factors like graduation rates, faculty resources, and student selectivity. ' 2026 America's Top Colleges list ranks it #262 overall, #145 among private colleges, and #169 in its research universities category, with methodology emphasizing alumni outcomes, debt levels, and over peer assessments. It has also received niche recognitions, such as Gold status in the 2025-2026 Friendly Schools designation (top 10% of institutions for support) and prior placements as a top Christian university in by . These rankings position APU as a mid-tier option among regional private universities, particularly for students prioritizing faith-based education, though it trails larger secular peers in metrics like research funding and selectivity. Azusa Pacific University's research output remains modest, aligning with its primary focus on undergraduate teaching, professional programs, and faith integration rather than high-volume scholarship. Cumulative faculty publications number around 1,327 across 792 authors, garnering 21,576 citations, though these aggregates lack precise temporal or per-capita breakdowns and pale in comparison to research-intensive universities. The institution supports research through centers like the Center for Research in Behavioral Sciences but does not report significant federal grant expenditures or high rankings, consistent with its Carnegie status as a doctoral/professional university emphasizing applied and interdisciplinary work over basic discovery. Research activity is often tied to programmatic needs, such as in or , rather than driving institutional prestige.

Libraries and Special Collections

The University Libraries at Azusa Pacific University comprise multiple facilities designed to support academic research, , and across the institution's campuses. These include the Hugh and Hazel Darling Library on the West Campus, the William V. Marshburn Memorial Library on the East Campus, the Stamps Theological Library, and libraries at regional campuses. The Hugh and Hazel Darling Library serves as the primary research hub, offering extensive print and digital collections, study spaces, and research assistance for undergraduate and graduate programs. It houses the bulk of the university's general collections, including over 300,000 volumes, periodicals, and electronic resources accessible via interlibrary loans and online databases. The William V. Marshburn Memorial , located on the East Campus, focuses on collections supporting liberal arts, sciences, , and disciplines, with specialized resources such as and periodicals tailored to those fields. The Stamps Theological provides targeted materials for and , including theological journals, commentaries, and historical religious texts to aid in ministerial training. Regional campus libraries supplement these with localized access to core resources, primarily through digital platforms and shared catalogs. Special Collections, maintained within the Thomas F. Andrews Room of the Hugh and Hazel Darling Library, preserve over 6,500 unique holdings that document regional history, evangelical heritage, and rare artifacts. These encompass the university's Archive Collection, which includes institutional records such as yearbooks, catalogs, newsletters, and audio recordings from Azusa Pacific's founding institutions. Notable subsets feature the Inklings Collection of works related to and associates, rare dating back centuries, and the Clock Collection of 19th- and 20th-century timepieces from , , , and the . Additional materials cover presidential signatures, historical citrus crate labels reflecting Southern California's agricultural past, and illuminated exhibited in events like the 2022 "Advent Voices" display, which showcased items from as early as 1380 AD. Access to these collections supports scholarly inquiry into Christian history and local culture, though physical viewing has been restricted periodically for preservation.

Campus and Facilities

Main Campus in Azusa

The main campus of Azusa Pacific University is located at 901 E. Alosta Avenue in , approximately 26 miles northeast of in the . Spanning over 100 acres, it consists of two distinct sections—East Campus and West Campus—separated by residential neighborhoods, which together support academic programs, student housing, administrative functions, and recreational facilities for more than 6,600 students across over 80 degree offerings. East Campus covers 52 acres at the corners of and Alosta avenues and has served as the university's original site since 1947, when it operated as prior to mergers forming APU. It primarily accommodates administrative offices, classrooms, residence halls, the university library, a student center, and a gymnasium, fostering a centralized hub for daily operations and undergraduate community life. West Campus encompasses 53 acres and hosts specialized academic facilities, including the School of Nursing, School of Behavioral and Applied Sciences, , and School of Theology, along with two additional libraries, numerous classrooms, and faculty offices. Key structures include the Richard and Vivian Felix Event Center for athletics and events, the John and Marilyn Duke Academic Complex, the Barbara and Jack Lee Place of Prayer, and the Segerstrom Science Center, completed in 2009 to advance science and health sciences programs. Recent developments emphasize state-of-the-art infrastructure to support expanded research and instruction in these fields.

Additional Locations and Resources

Azusa Pacific University maintains six regional campuses and sites across beyond its primary Azusa campus, primarily serving graduate, professional, and adult learners through flexible program delivery. These facilities enable localized instruction in fields such as , , and , often tailored to working professionals. The High Desert Regional Campus, located at 15283 Pahute Avenue in Victorville, California, provides undergraduate and graduate programs including nursing and , emphasizing accessibility for residents in the area. The Inland Empire Regional Campus, situated at 375 W. Hospitality Lane in San Bernardino, offers similar conveniences with degrees in areas like and . Additional sites include the Orange County Regional Campus in Orange, which hosts programs in health sciences and education; the Regional Site in the historic Old Town Monrovia neighborhood of the , focusing on graduate-level offerings; and centers in and for specialized instruction. Complementing these physical locations, APU provides extensive online resources, including fully online bachelor's, master's, and certificate programs accessible via its platform, supported by dedicated such as virtual advising and course development tools. These online options extend APU's evangelical Christian education model to a broader audience, with enrollment data indicating significant participation in distance learning formats as of recent academic catalogs.

Student Body and Life

Demographics and Enrollment

As of the most recent available data, Azusa Pacific University has a total enrollment of 6,272 students, including approximately 2,567 undergraduates (1,995 traditional and 572 professional) and 2,429 graduate students. Undergraduate enrollment specifically totaled 2,759 in fall 2024. The university has experienced a decline in overall enrollment in recent years, from an average of around 8,900 students over the prior decade to current levels near 6,500. The student body exhibits a significant gender imbalance, with females comprising 66.6% and males 31.9% of undergraduates; a small portion (1.5%) identifies as another . This distribution aligns with broader patterns at many private Christian institutions emphasizing programs in , , and . Racial and ethnic composition underscores the university's status as a designated Hispanic-Serving Institution and Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander-Serving Institution. According to 2022–2023 IPEDS data, Hispanic or Latino students represent 37.6% of enrollees, students 25.7%, Asian students 14.3%, Black or African American students 7%, and the remainder including multiracial, international, and other categories.
Racial/Ethnic GroupPercentage of Enrollment (2022–2023)
Hispanic/Latino37.6%
25.7%
Asian14.3%
Black/African American7%
Other (including multiracial, unknown, international)15.4%
The university also serves over 340 military-connected students and families, reflecting targeted outreach to and active-duty populations.

Campus Organizations and Activities

The Student Government Association (SGA), founded in 1945, serves as the official governing body for Azusa Pacific University's approximately 2,500 undergraduate students, advocating for their needs through committees, events, and initiatives to enhance campus cohesion and communication. SGA organizes activities such as the university's first in September 2025 and maintains resources like meeting minutes and student petitions to promote transparency and positive change aligned with the institution's . Azusa Pacific University supports over 30 student-managed clubs and organizations through the Office of Campus Life, spanning academic, , cultural, service, recreational, and special interest categories. Academic clubs include the Pre-Law Society, Psychology Club, , and Student Nurses of Azusa Pacific (SNAP); performing arts groups feature the Azusa Pacific Dance Team, Zukeepers , and Variety for One; service-oriented clubs encompass Free the Captives and Sustainability Club; while recreational options offer E-Sports, Men's and Women's Club , and Outdoor Adventures. Students can join via semesterly Clubs and Organizations Fairs or direct contact, and new clubs require at least seven undergraduate members, a faculty advisor, an aligned mission, and an approved constitution submitted to [email protected]. The university's Campus Events team facilitates student-led activities, including Welcome Weekend for incoming students, Fall Fest concerts, competitions, and year-end Last Bash carnivals, alongside recurring events like tournaments, themed dances, and Campus Life Markets with DIY crafts and vendors. Recreation provides intramural sports such as , , soccer, sand volleyball, and across seasons, utilizing facilities including the Fitness Center, Dome, and Felix Event Center courts to foster and in line with Gospel values. The Center for Reconciliation and Diversity advises ethnic organizations, such as the Pacific Islanders Organization, and coordinates annual cultural events, workshops, and retreats to promote dialogue and awareness among students from over 18 countries.

Service, Missions, and Discipleship Programs

of Service and Discipleship (OSD) at Azusa Pacific University oversees programs designed to equip students for relational discipleship and hands-on service, emphasizing the evangelical imperative to follow through transformative engagement with local and global communities. These initiatives form one of the university's Four Cornerstones, integrating biblical principles with practical to foster lifelong commitment to faith and service. Full-time undergraduate students must fulfill a University Service Requirement, accumulating credits based on verified hours of off-campus, unpaid, non-familial service: freshmen need 120 credits total (with up to 30 per semester for 30+ hours), scaling down for upperclassmen and transfers. Discipleship efforts center on small-group formats known as D-Groups, which convene weekly for 10 weeks during fall and spring semesters, tailored by class standing, focus area, or schedule to promote personal spiritual growth and accountability. These groups complement mandatory chapel attendance—requiring 2–3 sessions weekly for full-time undergraduates, drawn from approximately 160 annual services that emphasize , biblical , and formation. Optional retreats and further support discipleship, aligning with APU's evangelical foundation rooted in Scripture and the Holy Spirit's work. Service programs encompass local during academic terms, where students participate in semester-based community projects, and global opportunities via national or international trips during breaks, each awarding 30 service credits upon completion. Summer missions, a longstanding upheld as recently as , involve short-term deployments coordinated by OSD and the Center for Student Action, focusing on in underserved areas. Post-graduation options include G.A.P. Years, a two-year overseas commitment with Christ-centered organizations. The Center for Community-Engaged Learning (CCEL) integrates these efforts with academic , pairing coursework with to apply disciplinary knowledge in real-world contexts while addressing diversity and dimensions; APU earned the 2020 Carnegie Community Engagement Classification for such programs. This approach extends to study-away experiences and federal work-study partnerships, ensuring service aligns with the university's Christ-centered values of scholarship, community, and love.

Athletics

Teams, Conferences, and Facilities

The athletic teams of Azusa Pacific University are known as the Cougars. The university sponsors intercollegiate varsity teams in 17 sports as of 2025, competing primarily at the NCAA Division II level through the 2025–26 academic year. Men's teams include baseball, basketball, cross country, soccer, tennis, track and field, with football set to return in fall 2026 after a five-year hiatus. Women's teams consist of acrobatics and tumbling, basketball, cross country, soccer, softball, tennis, track and field, and volleyball. In March 2025, Azusa Pacific announced its transition to , with competition in the (SCIAC) schedules beginning in the 2026–27 academic year and full membership effective for the 2028–29 season. Prior to this shift, the Cougars competed in the (PacWest) for most varsity sports. Certain programs, such as swimming and diving, affiliate with other conferences like the Pacific Collegiate Swim Conference. Key athletic facilities include the Felix Event Center, which hosts , , and other indoor events with a capacity of approximately 3,500. Outdoor venues encompass the Athletic Stadium for and soccer, the Cougar Baseball Complex, Cougar Softball Complex, and Munson & Bavougian Tennis Complex. The Soccer Complex supports soccer competitions, while the campus Fitness Center and Weight Room serve training needs for student-athletes and recreation.

Notable Achievements and Alumni Athletes

Azusa Pacific University's athletic programs, known as the Cougars, have secured 52 national championships across various sports, including transitions from NAIA to NCAA Division II competition. The university claimed its first NCAA national title in 2021 with the women's outdoor track and field team winning the Division II championship, featuring three individual national champions and 13 All-Americans. In NAIA eras, notable successes include the 1998 football and women's soccer national titles, contributing to seven championships in the 1990s, as well as the 2011 women's basketball crown after advancing to the finals. Football has two claimed national titles, one NAIA and one NCCAA. The programs have also amassed 154 conference titles. The Cougars achieved sustained excellence by winning five consecutive NAIA Directors' Cups in the late 2000s, joining an elite group of institutions with such streaks, and earlier securing the first five of eight straight awards. In 2025, the swim and dive team recorded its highest NCAA Championships finish at 16th place. Prominent alumni athletes include decathlete , who earned a at the 2004 Olympics and gold in while competing for APU. NFL running back , known as "The Nigerian Nightmare," played for the after his time at APU, accumulating significant professional yardage. In baseball, alumni such as Paul Moskau, who pitched in from 1977 to 1989 including for the , and John Littlefield, active in the late 1970s, advanced to professional levels post-APU. Shot putter Vivian Chukwuemeka represented in the 2006 and Olympics after her collegiate career at the university.

Controversies and Criticisms

Human Sexuality Policy Reversal (2018–2019)

In September 2018, Azusa Pacific University (APU), an evangelical Christian institution, revised its Statement on by removing a from the conduct that had prohibited "romanticized same-sex relationships," such as public hand-holding or displays between of the same sex. The updated policy, effective for the fall 2018 semester, maintained prohibitions on sexual activity outside heterosexual and but permitted non-sexual romantic expressions, aiming to foster a more inclusive environment while affirming traditional biblical views on sexuality and as between one man and one woman. This change also coincided with the formal recognition of a previously unofficial LGBTQ group, reflecting administrative efforts to address concerns amid broader cultural pressures on Christian campuses. The revision sparked immediate backlash from conservative alumni, donors, faculty, and external evangelical leaders, who argued it compromised APU's doctrinal commitments and diluted biblical standards on . On September 30, 2018, the university's Board of Trustees intervened, reinstating the original clause banning such relationships just weeks after its removal, effectively reversing the administrative decision. The board emphasized adherence to scriptural authority, stating that the policy aligned with APU's foundational evangelical identity and mission. This reinstatement led to protests by some students and further internal division, with critics on accusing the leadership of inconsistency. Tensions persisted into late 2018, culminating in the of two Board of Trustees members in December amid ongoing debates over the policy's implications for campus culture and recruitment. On March 19, 2019, APU's administration updated the student handbook once more, again excising the ban on romanticized same-sex relationships, marking a second reversal from the board's prior directive. The university framed this as a clarification to focus enforcement on sexual activity rather than romantic behaviors, though it drew renewed criticism from observers who viewed the flip-flops as symptomatic of theological ambiguity under external cultural influences. No further policy alterations on this issue have been documented since 2019.

Financial Mismanagement and Faculty Reductions (2010s)

In 2018, Azusa Pacific confronted a severe , entering the 2018–19 academic year with a $17 million spending deficit amid projections of overshooting its $240 million approved by an additional $20 million overall. leaders, including President Jon Wallace, expressed surprise in faculty communications about previously unrecognized debt obligations totaling $17 million from the prior year, contributing to weak operating performance and a $9.9 million operating deficit for 2018. Critics, including two resigning board members in December 2018, attributed the shortfall to administrative mismanagement under Wallace, pointing to unchecked hiring from liberal institutions and failure to enforce fiscal controls over preceding years. This perspective aligned with broader concerns over expense growth outpacing revenue, exacerbated by debt covenant violations and inadequate monitoring. responded by downgrading APU's bond credit rating to Ba1 (junk status) in September 2018, citing ongoing risks of further deterioration due to persistent deficits and liquidity strains. To address the crisis, APU implemented an 8% across-the-board expense reduction totaling $16.3 million, including freezes on wages and retirement contributions, cuts to travel and meals, and reallocation of departmental budgets. Administrators shifted to a flexible financial model for 2019–20 rather than a fixed budget, incorporating input from faculty and staff for a revised strategic plan reviewed by the board in May 2019. These measures aimed to satisfy external stakeholders like bondholders and banks, with university spokespersons projecting stabilization in fiscal year 2019. Faculty reductions formed a core component of the austerity efforts, with approximately 6% of full-time-equivalent teaching positions eliminated in early 2019 through voluntary retirements, attrition of vacancies, and non-renewals of contracts among roughly 520 full- and part-time faculty. Cuts targeted fiscal viability rather than individual performance, as determined by external consultants like the Austen Group, and preserved existing term tenure policies—maintaining three- and five-year contracts for about half the faculty while avoiding a broader shift to annual renewals. The reductions extended to program eliminations, including the closure of the major and study-away initiatives such as the High Sierra semester, though specific departmental impacts remained undisclosed. No immediate cuts were reported to core areas like athletics or dining services, but ongoing reviews signaled potential further adjustments to align with enrollment trends and revenue constraints.

Accusations of Theological Drift

In November 2018, two longtime board members, Raleigh Washington and Dave Dias, resigned from Azusa Pacific University's board of trustees, publicly accusing the institution of drifting from evangelical and its founding biblical principles. Washington, who had served over 15 years, claimed to have observed for six years a pattern of administrative and faculty practices that opposed the university's statement of faith and scriptural authority, including the promotion of progressive ideologies. Dias, a member since , described the campus culture as "toxic," marked by "compromise" and "mediocrity," and stated that "APU has left me" in terms of adherence to core Christian values. Critics pointed to specific indicators of this alleged drift, such as the hiring of theology professors from institutions perceived as theologically liberal, including and , beginning around 2014. In March 2018, the university's coordinator, Christine Guzman, publicly affirmed claims in a way that conflicted with biblical views on sex and gender, exacerbating concerns among conservative stakeholders. Faculty member Barbara Nicolosi Harrington, a professor, publicly called for the resignation of then-President Jon Wallace in September 2018, arguing that the university was losing its "God First" commitment by tolerating errant ideological trends that alienated students from orthodox faith. Student-led surveys reflected ongoing unease about the university's theological direction. A 2021 poll by APU's student newspaper, Zu News, found that only 13 percent of respondents agreed the university was strengthening its Christian identity, while 43 percent disagreed; additionally, 19.4 percent were undecided on whether professors were teaching content outside the bounds of Christian orthodoxy. Observers like those in Crisis Magazine characterized APU's "big tent" approach to Christian expressions as lacking sufficient boundaries, potentially enabling the erosion of doctrinal fidelity in favor of social justice emphases and leftist ideologies such as critical race theory. University leadership responded by affirming adherence to biblical values but faced for inadequate accountability. Board chair David Poole stated in 2019 that APU remained "firmly committed to upholding the biblical values" central to its mission, amid the appointment of as president to foster unity while preserving foundational principles. However, following the 2018 policy controversies, no disciplinary actions were reported against administrators involved, and resigning trustees argued the board failed to enforce effectively.

Notable Individuals

Alumni Achievements

Bryan Clay, who competed in track and field at Azusa Pacific University from 1999 to 2002, achieved Olympic gold in the at the 2008 Games with 8,800 points and silver at the 2004 Olympics with 8,609 points; he also secured gold at the 2005 World Championships in . Christian Okoye, a 1986 Azusa Pacific alumnus in football and track, earned 17 NAIA All-American honors in field events including shot put, discus, and hammer throw, leading the Cougars to four consecutive NAIA national track titles from 1983 to 1986; in the with the from 1987 to 1992, he rushed for 1,225 yards and 12 touchdowns in 1989, earning selection and the nickname "Nigerian Nightmare." Julie Ertel (née Swail), who obtained a in physical education from Azusa Pacific, captained the U.S. women's team to a at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, the event's debut, and competed in at the 2008 Olympics. In entertainment, , a 2008 graduate with a degree in vocal performance, created the character , amassing over 8 million subscribers by 2018 and starring in the series from 2016 to 2017; her channel has garnered billions of views. , holder of a from Azusa Pacific, authored over 30 books on leadership including The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership (1998), which sold millions, and founded The John Maxwell Company, training more than 6 million leaders globally by 2023 through certifications and events.

Faculty and Leadership Contributions

University presidents have played pivotal roles in expanding academic offerings and infrastructure. Richard E. Felix, serving from 1990 to 2000, initiated APU's first doctoral programs, formalized the Four Cornerstones framework emphasizing Christ, scholarship, community, and service, doubled overall enrollment, quadrupled graduate programs, and oversaw construction of seven new buildings. Jon R. Wallace, president from 2000 to 2019, further broadened graduate education, established international study-away programs including a campus in , and led the development of the $54 million Segerstrom Science Center. Paul W. Ferguson, who held the position from 2019 to 2021, implemented a comprehensive seven-year strategic plan called Renewal and managed the transition to remote learning during the , facilitating a safe return to in-person instruction by fall 2021. Current president Adam J. Morris, appointed in 2022, has prioritized advancing the university's God First mission through strategic leadership focused on Christ-centered education. Faculty members demonstrate contributions across , , and creative endeavors, supported by internal mechanisms like the Faculty Research Council, which allocates $160,000 annually for projects. APU recognizes excellence through awards such as the Chase A. Sawtell Inspirational Faculty Award for Christian influence and service, and the Teaching Excellence Award for classroom impact; recent recipients include Greg Bellinder (, 2025 Sawtell) and Kirsten Humer (Theater Arts, 2025 Excellence). Scholarly Achievement Awards honor dissemination, with 2025 winners H. Iris Li (, graduate level) and Jihye Oh (Business and Management, undergraduate level). Notable scholarly outputs include publications on theology, economics, and education: Don Thorsen authored I Am Who I Am (Aldersgate Press, 2025), examining biblical ; Daniel Park co-authored a study on air pollution's effects on South Korea's (Annals of Financial Economics, October 2025); and Julia M. Johnson and Alice Tomasini published Case Studies in Educational Justice (Myers Education Press, October 2025), addressing multi-tiered systems of support. Diana Pavlac Glyer, professor in the Honors College, has contributed to Inklings scholarship, including analyses of collaborative dynamics among , , and their circle. External accolades include Evelyn Shimazu Yee's Outstanding Chapter Member award from Delta Kappa Gamma (February 2025) and Joseph Bentz's Mentor of the Year from the West Coast Christian Writers (November 2024). Faculty also secure Fulbright U.S. Scholar fellowships, enabling international and exchanges.

References

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