Fresno City College

Fresno City College
Type Public Junior College
Established 1910
Chancellor Dr. Bill F. Stewart (Interim)
President Dr. Cynthia Azari (Interim)
Students 20,452[1]
Location Fresno, California, USA
Campus Urban
Colors Red and White
Mascot Rams
Website Fresno City College
Reference no. 803
The Old Administration Building is the oldest structure on the FCC campus.
Library
Administration Building

Fresno City College (FCC or "Fresno City") is a community college in Fresno, California. Fresno City College is a part of the State Center Community College District (SCCCD), within the California Community Colleges system, and fully accredited by the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. The school offers Associate's Degrees, and students can earn a Certificate of Completion, or transfer to a 4-year university of their choice.

Fresno City operates on a semester schedule. The school's sister colleges are Reedley College, located in Reedley, California, and Clovis Community College (formerly known as the Willow International Center) in northeastern Fresno. Additional campuses in the district include the Oakhurst Center (serving the foothill communities) and the Madera Center (across the San Joaquin River, in the town of Madera).

History

Fresno City College was established by Charles L. McLane, then-superintendent of Fresno Schools. It was McLane’s vision to bring higher education to the Central Valley. After a failed attempt to start a normal school, he turned his attention to establishing the state’s first junior college. McLane utilized the 1907 Upward Extension Law that gave local high schools permission to provide the first two years of university instruction. The new junior college became an extension of Fresno High School, which at the time was located at Stanislaus and O streets in downtown Fresno.

In the spring of 1910, McLane sent a circular to the community to find out what kind of interest existed in establishing a junior college. He surveyed patrons of Fresno High School and local principals. He received over 200 responses which were all favorable. He didn’t receive even one objection. With these results in hand, he then reported to the Board of Education the need to have a junior college in Fresno to serve the Central Valley.

McLane explained that the nearest universities, the University of California and Stanford University, were 200 miles away and it was too much of a hardship for those who couldn’t afford to attend a college that far away from home. He wanted to ensure that Fresno students had access to a college education close to home. He pointed out that these students were only seventeen or eighteen years of age and their parents were hesitant to send them so far away from their families. Having the junior college in Fresno would allow these students to take classes through the first two years of college while still being able to live at home.

McLane received welcomed endorsements from the authorities at the University of California and Stanford University. In fact, Stanford president, David S. Jordan, is credited with originating the term “junior college.” Both universities were consulted and both offered assistance in helping plan classes and hiring instructors. McLane received commitments from the universities that any work done by the students in Fresno would be accepted and recognized by the universities. In Fresno, students studied mathematics, English, Latin, modern languages, history, economics and technical work. After completing their freshman and sophomore years, students could earn a “junior certificate” and transfer to the University of California or Stanford.

The new junior college would also provide vocational training in areas such as agriculture, the industries, commerce, applied civics and domestic science that the neither the high school nor the four-year universities could adequately offer.

On May 8, 1910, the Board of Education adopted the report and authorized the opening of Fresno Junior College in September of that year. McLane made sure the new junior college had its own faculty and its own student body separate from the high school “to impress upon students and the public at large the fact that serious work of distinctive college standards is being undertaken,” he noted.

The college opened with 20 students and three new faculty members. Five other faculty members from the high school brought the total number of instructors to eight. One of the newly hired was Fresno High School principal Frederick Liddeke, who also was put in charge of the new junior college. Liddeke was hired to replace A. C. Olney who had left to become principal of Santa Barbara High School where he opened the state’s second community college in 1911. Another new hire, George W. Huntting, who taught English and Latin, was named Dean of the Junior College. By the end of the third year, the enrollment at Fresno Junior College had doubled.

For those who graduated from Fresno High School, there was no charge to attend. All others were charged a tuition of $4 a month to cover expenses. The cost of running the junior college was the sole responsibility of the high school. The Upward Extension Law only permitted the establishment of the junior college but provided no funding. It wasn’t until 1917 that a new law provided funding for junior college courses.

In 1911, McLane founded the Fresno Normal School, the forerunner to California State University, Fresno. McLane oversaw both the Fresno Normal School and Fresno Junior College which were both housed at Fresno High School. Within a couple of years, the Fresno Normal School moved to its own campus on University Avenue. From 1921 to 1948, Fresno Junior College was also located at the University Avenue location where the two schools shared staff and facilities.

In 1948, Fresno Junior College returned to its original site at Stanislaus and O Street, which was now Fresno Technical High School. Fresno Technical High School closed in 1950 and Fresno Junior College remained at that location until earthquake damage forced the junior college to find a new home in the late fifties. The Normal School, which was now called Fresno State College, was being relocated to a new campus in northeast Fresno. By 1959 Fresno Junior College completed its move to 1101 E. University Avenue, where it is located today.

In 1958, the Board of Education approved a name change to Fresno City College.

Campus

The campus is near the Tower District in Fresno. Additional campuses in the district include Clovis Community College, the Oakhurst Center (serving the foothill communities), and the Madera Center (across the San Joaquin River, in the town of Madera). The school's sister college is Reedley College, located in Reedley, California.

Organization and administration

Fresno City College is a part of the California Community Colleges system, within the State Center Community College District (SCCCD). Dr. Cynthia E. Azari is the interim president of Fresno City College, and the Interim Chancellor of the SCCCD is Dr. Bill F. Stewart. Fresno City operates on a semester schedule.

Academic profile

The college is fully accredited by the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.[2] The school offers Associate's Degrees, and students can earn a Certificate of Completion, or transfer to a 4-year university of their choice.

Student life

Media

Sport

The college athletic teams are nicknamed the Rams.

Notable people

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, February 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.