Medaille College

Medaille was founded in 1875 by the Sisters of Saint Joseph to prepare its members for teaching in diocesan schools. Later, in 1937 the institute was chartered by New York State to grant baccalaureate degrees in education; the college was renamed in honor of Father John Peter Medaille, and the rest is history.
Since its founding, Medaille has grown into a well-known, private, four-year college with their main campus located in the historic Olmsted Crescent in the heart of Buffalo, New York. Medaille is committed to serving the higher education needs of their students by adhering to one simple mission. "Our mission is to be known as the leader in preparing learners for career success and a lifelong commitment to a civic and sustainable future in Buffalo, the region, and the world,” according to Gregory P. Florczak Vice President for Enrollment Management and Undergraduate Admissions.
Medaille is best known for their veterinary technology and education programs. In addition to the popularity of their signature programs, they are constantly strengthening other areas of interest in highly enrolled programs such as media/communication, business administration, and sports management.
Medaille attracts students interested in their areas of expertise through their approach, which involves getting learners on track early in their college careers. "At Medaille, undergraduate students that have decided on a particular major begin taking classes in that respective major within their first semester. And students can begin interning within their freshmen and sophomore years, in positions related to their specific field for college credit,” Florczak said. "This allows students to make sure they have chosen the right major early on, while the internships also allow students to graduate from Medaille with a large amount of invaluable resume and work-related experience."
Another quality of Medaille that sells students and parents are the small classes taught by professors, not graduate students. The current average class holds 15 students, and the maximum never exceeds 30 students. Last year's student population totaled 2,929.
“By offering small class sizes, students at Medaille have a unique opportunity to be part of classroom discussions and have more individualized hands-on learning provided throughout their education,” Florczak explained. "Smaller class sizes allow Medaille students to learn more about their academic program of interest, ask questions of professionals from their field of interest and build professional relationships that will help support them in their future careers.”
Medaille’s small classes also follow a flexible schedule. They offer associate and bachelor degree programs primarily in their day program at their campus in Buffalo. Grown to Amherst and Rochester campuses, they offer an accelerated learning program, and a number of bachelor and master's degree programs, with classes available in the evening. The undergraduate opportunities offered at Medaille come with a price tag of $9,115 per semester, not including room and board.
Tuition costs at the graduate level are based on the program, and are very competitive in Western New York. “Medaille’s tuition cost includes student fees, while a number of competitors publicize their tuition costs without including those fees. "Our cost of tuition allows us to stay on the cutting edge with technology and updated and improved facilities,” Florczak said.
Additionally, students who graduate from Medaille also feel the cost of tuition is worth it. "The majority of Medaille graduates find employment or continue on to graduate school within three to six months after graduating. A fair percentage of Medaille graduates also find positions related to their fields based on the internships they completed while at Medaille,” Florczak said. Producing successful graduates is a top priority of Medaille’s, but so are their sports teams. Their outstanding NCAA division three athletic program is yet another exceptional aspect of Medaille.
"This year alone our women's softball team, men's and women's basketball teams, men's soccer team, men's volleyball team, women's bowling team, and golf team either won their respective conference and/or received a bid to the division three NCAA tournament,” Florczak said. Constantly coming up with new ways to improve their campus, Florczak said, “Currently, construction is underway at McCarthy Park in partnership with the City of Buffalo and Erie County to provide an outdoor athletic complex for Medaille’s baseball, softball, lacrosse, and soccer teams.
A new state-of-the-art television studio incorporating an HDTV system is under construction. A campus-wide technology and equipment upgrade is underway, and there is a proposed addition/renovation project to the Sullivan Center, which serves as a student center, dinning hall and athletic facility at Medaille."
Medaille’s busy schedule of improving their campus and Buffalo is just part of their mission of "A lifelong commitment to a civic and sustainable future in Buffalo".

As we mentioned in our previous post, we’re in the process of changing the Buffalo Rising site. We’re almost there as we expect to launch the new site on Friday, December 19th.
In the meantime, posting will be light as we log new stories in the new publishing system which will only be viewable when we launch on Friday.
As always, we appreciate our users’ patience as we make this transition but we promise it will be well worth it. With faster load times, a comment view …
Caroline Kennedy was in town for a visit with our mayor yesterday. A possible choice to succeed US Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, Kennedy's name has been mentioned along with that of Attorney General Andrew Cuomo (son of former New York Governor Mario Cuomo) and our own Byron Brown, among others.
Certainly, Kennedy has "been around politics" all of her life, which is to say she was born into a family of politicos and lived in the White House--neither of which would necessarily f …
Free light rail rides on downtown's above ground section could be derailed thanks to the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority's budget mess. That is the news coming out of a Buffalo Place meeting this morning. Facing a budget shortfall and reduced State operating assistance, the NFTA is scrambling for new revenue sources and is contemplating charging for rides along the lengthy downtown pedestrian mall.
Well it is Christmas time in the city and the NFTA helped put people and especially children into the mood in a very festive and fun way. One of my favorite memories of childhood was taking the train downtown with my grandfather. I would gaze out the windows and watch the tunnel speed by. It always felt like we were going a million miles an hour.
Then there was the ability to stand up and walk around during the ride without the need to be strapped down. It was always a fun time … 




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buffaloweiner
Canisius is landlocked...unless sisters hospital closes and gets added to the campus or Medaille relocates and allows its campus to get added to Canisius.
Longterm....Medaille cant remain at the campus. Where could it or should it go?
2 colleges offering degrees in education: Medaille & Buffalo State, so obviously not every graduate is going to get a job locally
This is the perfect example for how colleges could partner together, share resources and offer different specializations within education so that the degrees arent duplicitive locally and fill in knowledge gaps that arent being served.
This gets back to my point about duplicitive degrees that nearly all colleges offer in liberal arts and business and the typical generic undergraduate and graduate.
Buffalo would be much better served if local colleges and universities could talk together and plan as a regional group as well as for their individual college.
The results could be partnering on the sharing of resources. Heck South Campus UB, Canisius, Medaille, UB downtown and ECC could all partner on dormatory projects because their light rail connected. Dormatories are but one example.
The results could be more attention being paid knowledge gaps, vocational and degree programs which our region has needs but no means of local education plus it would mean that local companies which have to hire knowledge/skills from outside our region would have the opportunity to hire locally....thus giving graduates internships and offering them local employment after graduation.
Conversely, less resources spent on degree programs which are generic, to much competition because they are offered at to many colleges, and turn out more graduates than the region can absorb.
I hate to bring up Rochester again but MCC, RIT, UofR, St John Fisher, Nazareth all communicate with one another and the business community to find out what skills, knowledge, work experience local companies are hiring from outside the local area. They do this to see what degree programs they could expand so that local companies have the opportunity to hire locally. ONE THING ABOUT BUFFALOS COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES...THEY DO NO (WILL NOT) TALK TO ONE ANOTHER.
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heathersmiles
WEINER - There is room to expand Canisius along Main Street, towards ArtSpace and Downtown. The buildings and lots near 1599 Main (former home of the New Pink Flamingo) could be demolished or reused if needed, the area along Masten behind this building. They could also do something with the Millard Filmore hospital building on Gates Circle, this is an easy walk to Canisius and may help to solidify the neighborhoods between Gates and Main Street (Linwood, Oxford, Horton, Harvard).
You may not know about the consortium between the Buffalo colleges. They meet and discuss relevant issues, enrollment, tuition, etc. This is very similar to the work you cite in Rochester, actually most major cities have discussions of this type. The meetings are typically open to the public, or at least they used to be.
I have already posted about the differences in mission, vision, and purpose of the various schools. I won't bother to repeat myself.
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pegger
BW doesn't get it. Colleges talking together? Why would they do that? You can get a degree in education from either Medaille or Buffalo State. They are essentially the same as they must meet state guidelines for teacher education. But, they serve two distinct populations. At one, you pay nearly $20,000 in tuition. At the other, you pay a small fraction thereof.
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buffaloweiner
Well heather, we may have different perspective but Im glad that there are areas in loyalty and devotion to a better Buffalo and a better region which we can share.
That being said, if Buffalo does have such a consortium then why are they so silent on so many issues facing Buffalo and its educational community. As an example heather did you know that over a billion dollars a year transits Buffalo Niagara. Yet there are no vocations or degree programs in areas such as logistics, supply chain management, international trade, customs, inspections, etc. This is for all intensive purposes an industry that built Buffalo since it was founded and is practically invisable within the educational community.
There is utter silence on the abundance of identical generic degrees to which our economy cannot afford and the complete ambivalence towards vocations and degrees that arent represented at all....and need to be.
Thats just one example.
Private developers are building dormatories, where is the college consortium on sharing is another.
Heck if UB can be out there asking for a light rail extension to Amherst Campus then why cant Buffalo State be asking for the reactivation of an existing already built BELTWAY to serve its students?
Medaille is starting degrees in IT. Wonderful! Imagine the potential of small business incubator facilities if partnered with Medaille, Canisius and Buffalo State.
I harp on light rail because it really is integral to Buffalos development. If the day comes when Medaille does need to seek out a new campus to replace its existing land locked campus...one thing is for sure....the option for light rail accessibility is going to be on the criteria which limits locations to Beltway, south buffalo or airport corridors
If you have any association with such a consortium, will you please relay to them that they are engines of growth in our local economy and they have a responsibility to be public advocates for what our city and region lacks and what it needs.
Involving the public would facilitate more confidence and postivity for our city and region, as well as, turn of some really innovative ideas that arent suited to being discussed individually but as a group.
Higher education...for many tenured faculty tend to look only withing their campus as a business BUT HIGHER EDUCATION (whether private or public) IS AN INDUSTRY!
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heathersmiles
WEINER - Are you familiar with Niagara Univerisities Center for Supply Chain Excellence? Is this close enough to the logistics COE that you frenquently state is needed but not available in the area?
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