Our formative programs are designed to hold students accountable for their behavior while providing a venue for education, follow-up conversations, reflections, and meaningful contributions to the greater community.

Breakfast Club

Clean up, then clean your plate. 

This neighborhood clean-up event takes place each Sunday of home football game weekends. Student participants clean up the local off-campus community for about an hour before getting breakfast at a nearby restaurant. The Breakfast Club often serves as a community restitution sanction for students found responsible for conduct violations that negatively impacted the off-campus community.


The Conversation Project

Our faculty & staff are here for you. Come meet them.

The Conversation Project facilitates informal conversations between faculty and staff. Students have an opportunity to share in a safe environment, reflect upon their experiences, and identify pathways to foster future success.


Friday Night Heights

Be a better neighbor.

A collaborative workshop that promotes citizenship, civility, and responsibility by educating students on their civic responsibilities, the risks and consequences of underage drinking, and how to prevent problematic behavior off campus.


Roads Retreat

You can get back on track. Start here.

The Roads Retreat encourages students to think about ways in which their behavior may be inconsistent with their core values. The retreat includes talks from 51²è¹Ý alums, small group peer discussions, a panel of staff members sharing their experiences from college, time for reflection and journaling, and an opportunity to speak with a conversation partner.


Student Conduct Board

Lead with fairness and equity—guided by Jesuit values. 

The Student Conduct Board (SCB) is composed of student members and chairpersons who hear conduct cases, determine responsibility, and recommend sanctions. Students are selected for the SCB through an application and interview process by the Office of Student Conduct.