Aequitas Fellows Program in Urban Leadership

Wheaton College Students at DuSable Museum of African-American History

Aequitas Fellows Program in Urban Leadership Requirements

The Aequitas Fellows Program in Urban Leadership is a four-year cohort program that forms students to promote just, sustainable, and flourishing urban communities through academic study, immersive and experiential learning, and Christian service. By the end of the program, fellows will be able to apply theological and social reasoning to urban issues such as poverty, food insecurity, race and ethnicity, housing, public health, education, art, environmental sustainability, employment, and economic development, all within the context of Wheaton’s evangelical commitments.

Program Courses and Experiences (20-24 credit hours)

Year One

  • AQTS 111 Introduction to Urban Leadership (Fall, 2 credits)
  • AQTS 112 Aequitas Urban Leadership Summer Experience (Summer, 0 credits)
  • Fellows are encouraged to begin the economics sequence:
    • ECON 211 Principles of Microeconomics (4 credits; SI tag)
    • ECON 212 Principles of Macroeconomics (2 credits)

Year Two

  • Wheaton in Chicago (Fall or Spring)
    • Including URBN 233 Chicago (4 credits; DUS and SI tags)
    • Including AQTS 496 Aequitas Urban Leadership Internship (4, 6, or 8 credits)

Year Three

  • AQTS 375 Christian Ethics and the City (2 credits)
  • Participate in mentoring program for first-year cohort
  • Finish economics sequence, if not yet completed

Year Four

  • AQTS 411 Aequitas Urban Leadership Final Project 1 (Fall, 2 credits)
  • AQTS 412 Aequitas Urban Leadership Final Project 2 (Spring, 0 credits)
  • Present final project at senior symposium (Spring)

 

Urban Leadership Theme Coordinator

Gregory LeeDr. Gregory Lee serves as the Urban Leadership Theme Coordinator for the Aequitas Fellows Program. He is Associate Professor of Theology and Urban Studies at Wheaton College, where he has been on faculty since 2011. He lives with his wife and two children in the Lawndale neighborhood of Chicago. Dr. Lee’s work integrates social analysis with Christian theology and ethics, concentrating on the thought of Augustine. His current book project is titled Christians among the Corrupt: Augustine, Race, and the Challenge of Immoral Communities. Dr. Lee teaches regularly for Wheaton in Chicago, he is Senior Fellow for The Wheaton Center for Early Christian Studies, and he is Theologian in Residence at Lawndale Christian Community Church. He received his A.B. from Princeton University, M.Div. from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, and Ph.D. from Duke University.