Templeton award for science-and-religion education. The undergraduate curriculum at Eastern Nazarene was developed in 1919 by the first dean of the college, Bertha Munro, and originally modeled after the curricula at Radcliffe College and Boston University. Graduates on average had a 94 percent acceptance rate into medical school as well as a 100 percent acceptance rate into law school.
=== Graduate Division and LEAD ===
In addition to traditional undergraduate education, the college offered continuing education for working adults through the Leadership Education for Adults Division (LEAD), including bachelor's degree completion (Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees) and associate degrees (the associate of arts degree) as well as certificates in paralegal studies (CPS) and human resource management (CHRM).
Graduate offerings from the Graduate Division were primarily master's degrees (Master of Science and Master of Education). Eastern Nazarene first offered graduate work in theology in 1938, then …