Saint Louis University's Billiken Teacher Corps Adds New Pathway to Meet Growing Demand
Saint Louis University’s Billiken Teacher Corps, in an effort to meet the demand for Catholic school educators throughout St. Louis, will add a new pathway for the 2024-25 school year for participants to earn their Master of Arts in Teaching with Certification. The program, the Billiken Teacher Corps: MAT Magis, will join the Billiken Teacher Corps: Cura Community as an option to earn an MAT while also dedicating themselves to education and deepening their faith.

Since the Billiken Teacher Corps began in 2015, more than 53 teachers have graduated from the program and gone to work in Catholic schools. With this new MAT Magis program, Billiken Teacher Corps will be able to reach even more schools and even more teachers. File photo.
“Bringing this new avenue for teachers to get their masters under the Billiken Teacher Corps umbrella was an easy decision for us,” said Angela Moret, Ed.D., Billiken Teacher Corps Director. “If educators, those already working as teachers, paraprofessionals or classroom aides in Catholic schools, would like to take the next step in their career, we can support them through that. If career changers are passionate about teaching kids, a content area, and sharing their faith, we can help them bridge that transition to the classroom.”
Billiken Teacher Corps: MAT Magis is a flexible two-year option for individuals who are already teaching in Catholic schools or those seeking those positions.
MAT Magis is also open to part-time teachers and elementary classroom aides with bachelor’s degrees who would like to attain additional credentials. Applicants to the MAT Magis program earn an automatic tuition discount when employed by a Catholic school at the start of coursework and through the program.
MAT Magis students can begin coursework in the summer, fall, or spring semesters. For this two-year program, classes are taken over the course of two summers and one evening each week during the school year.
“The MAT Magis program opens up a lot of flexibility, for both our students and local schools,” Moret said. “The nature of the Billiken Teacher Corps is to serve those that are underserved, and all Catholic schools and all students deserve excellent teachers. MAT Magis brings a new pipeline of teachers into the field when there's a teacher shortage and we need high-quality teachers, and that’s the real benefit.”
The Billiken Teacher Corps: Cura Community, the original BTC model, is a program for recent college graduates that focuses on holistic support for participants as they begin their careers teaching in Jesuit or underserved Catholic schools. The program offers a unique opportunity for participants to live out the Jesuit mission as men and women for and with others, making a transformative impact in their communities.
Cura Community members gain two years of full-time teaching experience while earning their Master of Arts in Teaching with full tuition remission. Monthly stipends and low-cost housing are provided as part of this fellowship. Participants live in a supportive, faith-based community with other program members and participate in regular, intentional opportunities for spiritual nourishment such as retreats and community events. Cura Community members collaborate with mentors and a University supervisor to receive real-time feedback and support around instructional strategies and classroom management.
Unlike Cura Community, MAT Magis is not a residential program. Optional opportunities for spiritual development and community building are available to students in this pathway.
Since 2015, the Billiken Teacher Corps at Saint Louis University has been educating teachers in the Catholic, Jesuit tradition. The BTC mission is to form the next generation of Catholic school educators through an academically excellent, spiritually-guided, service-learning community. The program has partnered with more than 20 Catholic schools in the St. Louis region. As of the Spring 2024 commencement, 53 teachers will have graduated from the program.
“Billiken Teacher Corps is so aligned with SLU’s mission as a Jesuit institution and a Catholic, higher-ed institution,” Moret said. “It’s important for programs such as the Billiken Teacher Corps within the School of Education to engage in the community by forming new teachers that we know are of such high quality.”
Over the past year, requests from principals for BTC teachers have increased, and Moret said there has been an increase in inquiries from prospective students interested in the Master of Arts in Teaching degree. Creating the new program was an opportunity to include more educators.
“While the Billiken Teacher Corps in its original model continues thriving, we are excited to serve more teachers and more schools,” Moret said. “We hope more individuals who want to make an impact in Catholic education will join us!”
Latest Newslink
- Two Companies Led By Saint Louis University Alumni Awarded 2025 Arch GrantsTwo firms led by Saint Louis University alumni received 2025 Arch Grant awards. GenAssist, led by Gabe Haas (SSE ’20) and co-founder Joe Beggs, and Decodable Reads, led by Paul Heinemann (A&S ’18) and Joe de Lorimier (CSB ’19), are part of a cohort of 19 new businesses receiving Arch Grants funding this year. GenAssist was one of four companies in SLU’s inaugural New Venture Accelerator (NVA) cohort in 2024.
- SLU Students Commemorate Legacy of Gift Body Donors at Memorial ServiceStudents from Saint Louis University’s School of Medicine Class of 2029, along with graduate students from the SOM's Master of Anatomy program and the Doisy College of Health Sciences, recently gathered for an interfaith memorial service to honor 355 individuals who generously donated their bodies to SLU’s Gift Body Program.
- SLU's Flying Billikens Secure Spot in 2026 National Intercollegiate Flying CompetitionA team of aviation science students from Saint Louis University’s School of Science and Engineering placed high enough this weekend to secure a spot in the 2026 National Intercollegiate Flying Association (NIFA) Competition. This is the third straight year the team has qualified for the national competition.
- Frequent Heartburn May Signal Risk for Alcohol Use Disorder, SLU Study FindsA new study from Saint Louis University reveals that individuals with frequent heartburn—clinically known as gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)—have a higher chance of being diagnosed with alcohol use disorder within two years. Researchers are urging primary care providers to screen GERD patients for alcohol misuse during routine visits.
- St. Louis Literary Award Events to Kick Off with Screening of “The Namesake,” Talk with Director Mira NairSaint Louis University will welcome Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jhumpa Lahiri to campus in 2026 to receive the St. Louis Literary Award. Literary Award programming kicks off the week of Oct. 27 with a showing of the film "The Namesake" and a discussion with director Mira Nair.
- SLU Hispanic Studies Professor Named Distinguished Visiting Professor in the Humanities at East Carolina UniversityAmy E. Wright, Ph.D., professor of Hispanic Studies at Saint Louis University, has been named the David Julian and Virginia Suther Whichard Distinguished Professor in the Humanities at East Carolina University. She will hold the visiting Whichard professorship in ECU’s Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences for two years before returning to SLU.









