Goodwin College of Professional Studies

Richard C. Goodwin College of Professional Studies
Established 1892
Dean William F. Lynch
Administrative staff
50 full-time faculty
400+ adjunct faculty
46 full-time staff
Students 272 full-time
1,694 part-time
Location Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
Campus University City Campus
Affiliations Drexel University
Website www.drexel.edu/goodwin/

The Richard C. Goodwin College of Professional Studies is a higher education college at Drexel University, Philadelphia.

By offering delivery modes that incluse day, part-time evening, accelerated Saturday classes, online, off-campus, and at corporate sites, Goodwin’s programs aim to fulfill A. J. Drexel's vision in making a "school for the study of design and for vocational training in the most general and best sense."[1]

History

Established shortly after the founding of Drexel as the Department of Lectures and Evening Classes, the College of Professional Studies has been a part of the school since 1892 under nine names. In 1896, the Department of Lectures and Evening Classes was renamed as the Department of Evening Courses. In 1918, during Hollis Godfrey's internal reorganization,[2] it was renamed the Evening School. When degrees were offered through the school in 1924, it was renamed once again to the Evening Diploma School, from then it became known as the Evening College and Diploma School (1950–1965), and the Evening College (1965–1987). In 1987, it was renamed University College and remained that until it was merged with the Drexel University College of Arts and Sciences in 1993.[3] In 1997, the college was brought back as the College of Evening and Professional Studies and underwent its last name change to the Goodwin College of Professional Studies in 2001 in honor of alumnus Richard C. Goodwin.

Goodwin’s provides programs and services to part-time adult undergraduate, graduate, and lifelong learning individual and corporate consumers as well as traditional full-time undergraduates including credit and non-credit courses and programs and academically related services for the Philadelphia region, Northern California.

In fall 2008, Goodwin College merged with Drexel’s School of Education. In conjunction with this merge, a new school was formed within Goodwin called the School of Technology & Professional Studies, which includes the academic programs previously housed within Goodwin College prior the merge.

Included in this merge was The Math Forum, a web-based center for mathematics and mathematics education, which moved to Drexel in 2002 under the leadership of former university president Constantine Papadakis (1946–2009). The Math Forum’s mission is to provide resources, materials, activities, person-to-person interactions, and educational products and services. It is composed of teachers, mathematicians, researchers, students, and parents. They offer problems and puzzles; online mentoring; research; team problem-solving; collaborations; and professional development.

Shortly thereafter, the Center for the Prevention of School-Aged Violence and Drexel-Torrance Center for Creativity became part of Goodwin.

Academic programs

Undergraduate (Bachelor of Science) programs:

Saturday scholars Degree-completion programs:

Part-time/evening undergraduate Degree programs

Graduate (Master of Science) programs:

Doctoral programs:

Professional/Certificate programs:

Academic Bistro

The Academic Bistro is Drexel University's student-run restaurant and lounge, located on the sixth floor of the Academic Building (33rd and Arch Streets, Philadelphia). The space includes commercial kitchens, dining room, conference room, and lounge.

The Hospitality Management, Culinary Science, and Culinary Arts programs run the Academic Bistro, which is intended to give students hands-on experience. The Bistro is open to the public for lunch or dinner on select weekdays during the academic year and is also available for private events, by reservation.

References

  1. McDonald, Edward D.; Edward M. Hinton (1942). Drexel Institute of Technology 1891–1941. Haddon Craftsmen, Inc. p. 35. ISBN 1-4067-6374-8.
  2. McDonald, Edward D.; Edward M. Hinton (1942). Drexel Institute of Technology 1891–1941. Haddon Craftsmen, Inc. pp. 54–69. ISBN 1-4067-6374-8.
  3. "Drexel's colleges and schools, 1891–present". Drexel University. Retrieved 2008-02-23.

External links

Coordinates: 39°57′19″N 75°11′05″W / 39.95521°N 75.18468°W / 39.95521; -75.18468

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 23, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.