Front Range Community College

Front Range Community College

FRCC logo
Former names
North Campus of the Community College of Denver; Larimer County Voc-Tech Center
Type Community college[1]
Established 1968
President Andrew Dorsey
Academic staff
235 (full time), 921 (part time)[2]
Administrative staff
393
Students 31,052[2]
Location Westminster, Colorado, United States
39°53′59″N 105°02′17″W / 39.899681°N 105.038071°W / 39.899681; -105.038071
Mascot Wolves
Affiliations Colorado Community College System
Website http://www.frontrange.edu/

Front Range Community College (FRCC) is a two-year institution of higher learning with campuses in Westminster, Colorado; Longmont, Colorado; Fort Collins, Colorado; and Brighton, Colorado. It is the largest community college in Colorado[3] and the most popular transfer institution for the University of Colorado-Boulder, Colorado State University and Metropolitan State University of Denver. FRCC traces its heritage to the founding of the State Board for Community Colleges and Occupational Education in 1967, which in 1968 established the North Campus of the Community College of Denver as its first new creation.[4] In 1984 the North Campus was renamed as Front Range Community College and spun off as an independent institution in 1985. In 1988, the Larimer County Voc-Tech Center was incorporated as the Larimer Campus of FRCC.[4] The college was accredited by The Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools in 1975 and received continued accreditation in 2008.[5]

Aerial view of the Westminster Campus

From 1968 to 1977, the college was located in facilities at East 62nd Avenue and Downing Street in Denver. In 1977, the college inaugurated a new building on 112th Avenue in Westminster, Colorado. When it opened, the Westminster Campus building was heated with an innovative solar system of over 4000 flat-plate solar thermal panels making it the largest solar-heated educational building in the world. The solar system operated until the solar panels were removed during a major building remodel in 1996, and now the facilities are heated with conventional methods. [6] [7] Today FRCC maintains campuses at Fort Collins, Longmont, and Brighton in addition to the original Westminster campus and a highly developed online learning program.

During its first decades, the college offered career, vocational and technical training, with certificates and two-year associate degrees such as accounting, architectural technology, automotive repair, business, dental assisting, electronics, healthcare, machine drafting, machining, nursing, and welding. During this time, general education courses principally supported career, vocational and technical training. In 1997, FRCC transferred and began offering its machining program at the Rocky Mountain Manufacturing Academy, which was part of the now defunct Higher Education and Advanced Technology (HEAT) Center at the decommissioned Lowry Air Force Base in Aurora, Colorado. In the last few decades, many career, vocational and technical training programs have been closed or significantly reduced. The college, particularly the Westminster campus, has moved increasingly toward offering general academic and transfer courses. [8] However, it still offers some career and technical degrees in fields like computer-aided drafting & design, dental assisting and multimedia technology.

FRCC manages the Stargazer Observatory in Stargazer Village as part of its astronomy program at the Larimer Campus, which also has an on-campus observatory as part of the new Sunlight Peak science building. The Westminster and Boulder County campuses have on-campus observatories as well.[9]

In 2012, the college awarded 1,466 associate degrees and a further 1,722 certificates. The student body is 58% female and 42% male, with most students studying part-time and pursuing programs in liberal arts and sciences or career/technical fields.[2]

References

  1. "Carnegie Classification". Carnegie Foundation. 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
  2. 1 2 3 "2012 Fact Book". FRCC. 2013-01-17. Retrieved 2013-01-17.
  3. Wong, Clarence (2003-04-25). "Largest Lease in Longmont". CoStar Group. CoStar Realty Information. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
  4. 1 2 "A Short History of FRCC...". FRCC. 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
  5. "Higher learning commission". Retrieved 2009-03-24.
  6. FRCC’s Rich History, 2013, FRCC website/
  7. J. Wujek, Professor, Architectural Engineering Technology, FRCC, 1983-2013
  8. J. Wujek, Professor, Architectural Engineering Technology, FRCC, 1983-2013; Chair, Advanced Technologies Department, FRCC, 1995-2000
  9. Miller, Nate A. (2003-08-27). "Close encounter". The Tribune. Retrieved 2009-03-24.

External links

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