Western Carolina University

Western Carolina University
Type Public
Established 1889
Endowment $64 million[1]
Chancellor David O. Belcher
Provost Alison Morrison-Shetlar[2]
Academic staff
639[3]
Administrative staff
967[3]
Undergraduates 8,787[4]
Postgraduates 1,595[4]
Location Cullowhee, North Carolina, United States
35°18′35″N 83°11′00″W / 35.30972°N 83.18333°W / 35.30972; -83.18333Coordinates: 35°18′35″N 83°11′00″W / 35.30972°N 83.18333°W / 35.30972; -83.18333
Campus Rural/Valley
589 acres (2.38 km2)
Colors Purple and Gold[5]
         
Athletics NCAA Division I FCS
16 varsity teams
Nickname Catamounts
Affiliations SoCon, University of North Carolina system
Website www.wcu.edu

Western Carolina University (WCU) is a coeducational public university located in Cullowhee, North Carolina, United States. The university is a constituent campus of the University of North Carolina system.[6]

The fifth oldest institution[7] of the sixteen four-year universities in the UNC system, WCU was founded to educate the people of the western North Carolina mountains.[8] WCU now serves more than 10,000 full-time undergraduate and post graduate students, providing an education to students from 48 states and 35 countries.[9] Enrollment for the Fall 2014 semester was 10,382 students.[10]

Location

Map of North Carolina highlighting Jackson County, NC

Western Carolina University is located in Jackson County, in the unincorporated village of Cullowhee, North Carolina. The university operates learning centers in both Asheville and Cherokee with programs offered online and at various community colleges.[11][12][13][14] The main campus is located in a valley of the Tuckasegee River, between the Blue Ridge and Great Smoky Mountains, 52 miles (84 km) west of Asheville, North Carolina and 5 miles south of Sylva, NC. The university lies close to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the Blue Ridge Parkway, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Reservation (officially known as the Qualla Boundary), and some of the nation's most beautiful national forest lands. At an elevation of 2,100 feet (640 m), but located in a thermal valley, the campus enjoys the best of all four seasons but is shielded from most extreme temperatures by surrounding peaks. Cullowhee typically enjoys a rather mild winter season. In fact, Cullowhee can go some winters with little to no snowfall.[15]

While winters in the valley are generally mild, snow is not unusual in the higher elevations of Jackson County around Cashiers or Balsam. In nearby Sapphire Valley, snowmaking machines maintain prime snow skiing conditions from mid-December through February. Locations in Jackson County are also within reasonable driving distance to ski slopes at Maggie Valley. The Blue Ridge Parkway is usually closed during winter weather, and has become popular with cross-country skiers during those times.[16]

The many rivers, streams and forests surrounding Cullowhee, combined with the mild climate of Southern Appalachia, offer many opportunities for outdoor activities. Climbing, hiking, biking, rafting, kayaking, and camping are a few of the outdoor activities nearby.[17] Cities within a three-hour drive of campus include Atlanta, Georgia;[18] Charlotte, North Carolina;[19] Knoxville, Tennessee;[20] and Greenville, South Carolina.[21]

History

The Joyner Building served as a combination classroom, auditorium, and administration facility from its completion in 1913 until the 1930s, when other buildings relieved pressure from Joyner. It was destroyed by fire in 1981, at which time it was the oldest building on campus.
Alternative text
McKee Training School & Hoey Auditorium, two of many buildings on Campus built with help from the Works Progress Administration during the late 1930s and early 1940s. McKee Hall, as it has since been rechristened, was named for Gertrude Dills McKee, who was a great supporter of the University throughout her public life.

In 1888, the residents of Cullowhee desired a better school for the community than was offered in public schools of that day,[22] organized a board of trustees and established a community school that came to be known as Cullowhee Academy.[23] Founded in August 1889 as a semi-public secondary school and chartered as Cullowhee High School in 1891 (also called Cullowhee Academy), it served the Cullowhee community and boarding students from neighboring counties and other states.[24] The founder, Robert Lee Madison, wanted to provide an education for the young people in the region and train teachers to spread education throughout the western part of the state.[25][26] In 1893, through the efforts of Walter E. Moore, representative from Jackson County, the North Carolina Legislature authorized an appropriation for the establishment of a normal department at the school "for the purpose of training teachers".[23] This designation became the first publicly funded normal school in North Carolina.[27]

In 1905, the state assumed title to the school’s buildings and property and made it a state institution. That same year, the school’s name was changed to Cullowhee Normal & Industrial School. In 1925, the school’s name was changed to Cullowhee State Normal School. During its years as Cullowhee Normal, the stated purpose of the school was to train teachers for the North Carolina public schools. A coeducational institution, Cullowhee Normal trained over two thousand teachers by the mid-1920s.[28]

Over the next forty years, the school expanded its curriculum and evolved into a junior college, and in 1929 it was chartered by the Legislature as a four-year institution under the name Western Carolina Teachers College. Called "the Cullowhee experiment", Madison’s idea became a model for the other regional colleges in the state.[27]

The demand for both liberal arts and other programs led to an expansion of the school's offerings.[27] Postgraduate studies and the Master of Arts in Education degree were added to the curriculum in 1951. In 1953, the name "Western Carolina College" was adopted.

In 1967, the institution was designated a regional university by the North Carolina General Assembly and given its current title, "Western Carolina University."[29] On July 1, 1972, WCU became a member of the University of North Carolina system.[30]

Precis of the university's history

Year – Name and Levels[31]

  1. 1889 Semi-private school
  2. 1891 Cullowhee High School
  3. 1893 First state appropriation; Normal Department established; First graduating class
  4. 1905 Cullowhee Normal and Industrial School
  5. 1912 Junior College rank established; Secondary school discontinued
  6. 1913 First college-level (one-year) degree awarded
  7. 1925 Cullowhee State Normal School
  8. 1929 Western Carolina Teachers College; Senior College rank established
  9. 1931 First Baccalaureate degree awarded
  10. 1951 Graduate degree established
  11. 1952 First master's degree awarded
  12. 1953 Western Carolina College
  13. 1967 Western Carolina University
  14. 1972 A constituent institution of the University of North Carolina

Administration

Robert Lee Madison, founder and first president

The university is led by Chancellor David O. Belcher, the chief administrative officer, along with Provost Alison Morrison-Shetlar and several advisory groups.[32][33] The institution operates under the guidance and policies of the Board of Trustees of Western Carolina University.[34] WCU also falls under the administration of University of North Carolina system president Thomas W. Ross. The university moved to a provost and senior vice chancellor model in 2004.

Presidents

  • 1889–1912 Robert Lee Madison
  • 1912–1920 Alonzo Carlton Reynolds
  • 1920–1923 Robert Lee Madison
  • 1923–1947 Hiram Tyram Hunter
  • 1947–1949 William Ernest Bird
  • 1949–1956 Paul Apperson Reid
  • 1956–1957 William Ernest Bird
  • 1957–1968 Paul Apperson Reid
  • 1968–1972 Alexander Simpson Pow
  • 1972 Frank Hamilton Brown, Jr. (Acting)

Chancellors

  • 1972–1973 Jack Kenneth Carlton
  • 1973-1973 William Hugh McEniry (Acting)
  • 1974–1974 Frank Hamilton Brown, Jr. (Acting)
  • 1974–1984 H. F. Robinson
  • 1984–1994 Myron L. Coulter
  • 1994–1995 John H. Wakeley (Interim)
  • 1995–2011 John W. Bardo
  • 2011–present David O. Belcher

Vice-Chancellors for Academic Affairs

  • 1996–2004 Richard J. Collings
  • 2004 Robert Vartabedian

Provosts

  • 2004–2010 Kyle R. Carter
  • 2010–2011 Linda Stanford (Interim)
  • 2011–2012 Beth Tyson-Lofquist (Interim)
  • 2012–2013 Angela Laird Brenton;
  • 2013–2014 Beth Tyson-Lofquist (Interim)
  • 2014–present Alison Morrison-Shetlar

Academics

Academic structure

The university's academic structure is composed of five undergraduate colleges plus the Kimmel School (also undergraduate), the Honors College and Graduate School, and offers several interdisciplinary programs:[35]

  • College of Health and Human Sciences
    • Communication Sciences and Disorders
    • School of Health Sciences
      • Emergency Medical Care
    • School of Nursing
    • Physical Therapy
    • Social Work
  • College of Arts and Sciences
    • Anthropology and Sociology
    • Biology
    • Chemistry and Physics
    • Communication
    • Criminology and Criminal Justice
    • English
    • Geosciences and Natural Resources
    • History
    • Mathematics and Computer Science
    • Modern Foreign Languages
    • Philosophy and Religion
    • Political Science and Public Affairs
  • College of Fine and Performing Arts
    • Department of Stage and Screen
    • School of Art and Design
    • School of Music
  • College of Business
    • Accounting, Finance, Information Systems and Economics
    • Business Administration and Law and Sport Management
    • Entrepreneurship, Sales and Marketing, and Hospitality and Tourism
      • Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation
      • Center for Professional Selling and Marketing
    • Global Management and Strategy
    • Sales and Marketing
      • Center for Professional Selling and Marketing
  • College of Education and Allied Professions
    • School of Teaching and Learning
    • Human Services
    • Psychology
  • The Kimmel School of Construction Management and Technology
    • Construction Management
    • Engineering and Technology
  • The Honors College
  • The Graduate School
  • "Interdisciplinary Programs:" Science Education, Social Sciences Education, Environmental Sciences, Forensic Science, and International Studies.

Academic programs

With its main campus located on the site of an ancient Cherokee Indian village[36] and adjacent to the Great Smoky and Blue Ridge Mountains, Western Carolina has a commitment to the rich traditions of both the Appalachian and Cherokee cultures. The university's Mountain Heritage Center;[37] Cherokee Center;[38] Craft Revival Project;[39] Cherokee Studies Program[40] and WCU's partnership to preserve the Cherokee language[41] all reflect that influence – and provide educational resources for the region.[42]

Western is classified by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching as a comprehensive master's degree granting institution (Masters/L)[43] in the elective "community engagement" category.[44] WCU is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to award degrees at the bachelor, masters, intermediate, and doctoral levels. The university holds 21 program accreditations and is a member of more than 30 state and national associations and organizations to which its professional programs are related. In 2009, the Corporation for National and Community Service recognized WCU by awarding the President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll with Distinction for "exemplary commitment to service and civic engagement" on WCU’s campus and beyond.[45]

As the sixth-largest producer of teachers in North Carolina, the College of Education and Allied Professions was the national winner of the Association of Teacher Educators' Distinguished Program in Teacher Education Award[46] in 2006. The college is also the 2007 co-winner of the Christa McAuliffe Excellence in Teacher Education Award[47] presented by the American Association of State Colleges and Universities. The Christa McAuliffe Award nationally recognizes outstanding programs in teacher education at AASCU member institutions.

Western Carolina's Forensic Research Facility (commonly referred to as the "Body Farm") is just the second facility of its kind nationally.[48] The decomposition research station is an extremely valuable resource for researchers and forensic anthropology students to study natural decomposition.

The residential Honors College was first of its kind in North Carolina.[49] Newly accepted students are invited to live in one of two exclusive residence halls on campus. The Honors College is one of a few in the state to offer a residential option and among a few nationwide to award graduates with a special honors diploma. The college began in 1998 with 77 students and has grown to approximately 1,400. For entering freshman, the Honor's College average weighted GPA is over 4.00 and the average SAT score is 1380. The College is a member of the National Collegiate Honors Council.[50] In August 2009, Balsam Hall, the first part of a $50.2 million Honors College residential community located at the center of campus opened, housing 426 students. Set to open for the Fall 2010 semester, Blue Ridge Hall will complete the community and add an additional 400 beds for Honors College students and Teaching Fellows.[51]

In the spring of 2000, WCU was officially designated a National Merit sponsoring university, just the fourth institution of higher education in North Carolina, public or private, to receive that distinction[52] The university grants scholarships to students who qualify as National Merit Finalists. The Western Meritorious Award for Finalists provides a four-year scholarship, which covers the equivalent amount of in-state tuition, fees, room, and board, to National Merit Finalists, who also receive a computer.

The 2012 edition of the U.S. News & World Report guide to "America’s Best Colleges" ranks Western Carolina University 14th[53] among public universities in the South that offer master's degrees.

Centers, institutes, and affiliates

Community focus, scholarly research, business development, preservation of the Cherokee & Appalachian Mountain cultures, and the advancement of technology & public policy are the guiding foci of Western Carolina's Centers, Institutes & Affiliates.[54]

  • Center for Rapid Product Realization[55]
    • Carolinas MicroOptics Triangle
    • Carolinas Photonics Consortium
  • Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation[56]
  • Center of Professional Selling and Marketing[57]
  • Center for Math/Science Education[58]
  • Cherokee Studies[59]
    • Projects and Initiatives from Cherokee Studies
    • Cherokee Studies Academic Programs
    • Cherokee Center
    • Revitalization of Traditional Cherokee Artisan Resources
  • John W. Bardo Fine & Performing Arts Center[60]
  • Center for the Support of Beginning Teachers[61]
  • Mountain Heritage Center[37]
  • The Public Policy Institute[62]
  • Ramsey Regional Activities Center[63]
  • Small Business & Technology Development Center[64] partner
  • Writing and Learning Commons[65]
  • Program for the Study of Developed Shorelines[66]
  • Speech and Hearing Clinic[67]
  • Myron L. Coulter Faculty Commons for Excellence in Teaching and Learning[68]
  • Southern Appalachian Biodiversity and Ecology Center[69]
  • Center for Service Learning[70]
  • Local Government Training Program[71]

Campus

Main campus

Western Carolina University in 2007

The main campus in Cullowhee offers most of the amenities of a small town, including thirteen residence halls,[72] one full-service cafeteria, two food courts with fast-food outlets, health services, counseling, a bookstore, library, two indoor swimming pools, tennis courts, movie theater, jogging trail and quarter-mile track, and intramural fields.

The campus center is the A.K. Hinds University Center.[73] The UC contains the university post office, a movie theater, video and commuter lounges, student organization HQs including the Student Government Association and Last Minute Productions, meeting rooms and office spaces. Outside of the UC is the "Alumni Tower", built in 1989, on the 100th birthday of the university.[74]

The campus residence buildings include one for graduate students and one for married students. Special residence accommodations include honors residence halls and The Village, home to residential Greek organizations. Three new residence facilities were recently completed from a $50.2 million residence hall project. The two newest residence halls on campus are Balsam Residence Hall and Blue Ridge Residence Hall.[75] The $18 million 53,000-square-foot (4,900 m2) campus dining facility was opened in stages beginning in July 2009.[76] Other newly constructed facilities include the Center for Applied Technology (which houses new engineering laboratories); an expanded student life center; new athletic facilities; and a new student support center. A $13.5 million 73,000-square-foot (6,800 m2) Student Recreation Center, was completed over the summer of 2008.[77] Harrill Residence Hall was renovated to add 6,000 square feet (557 m2) and bring the 1971 building to LEED standards of environmental friendliness and energy efficiency, and re-opened in fall 2012.

The new $46.2 million Health and Human Sciences Building opened for use at the start of the 2012–13 academic year, also built to LEED standards. This facility is the first project on the Millennial Initiative property and houses WCU’s educational and outreach programs in the College of Health and Human Sciences. The four-story facility is home to the undergraduate and graduate programs in social work and communication sciences and disorders; graduate programs in physical therapy and health sciences; and undergraduate programs in athletic training, emergency medical care, environmental health, nutrition and dietetics, nursing and recreational therapy.[78]

Asheville

WCU’s educational facilities in Asheville are located at Biltmore Park, 28 Schenck Pkwy, Ste 300[79] and the graduate programs are affiliated with the Asheville Graduate Center.

Cherokee

The Western Carolina University Center in Cherokee, North Carolina was established in 1975[80] in cooperation with the tribal government of the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians. The center serves Cherokee and the surrounding communities and is available to all of the people of the region.

WCU student media

Housed in the Student Media Center (Old Student Union) on the hill area of campus are WCU's Student Media Organizations, which are open to all students and are produced by students.[81] The following organizations are a part of WCU Student Media:

University media

The university produces the following publications and broadcasts:

WCU students, faculty and staff also contribute to:

Greek life

WCU is home to a wide range of Greek fraternities and sororities, as well as several councils and societies.[90] The Greek community offers many social opportunities to enrich college life. Greeks get personal guidance in planning their curriculum and choosing classes and instructors, and assistance with registration and financial aid. Chapter study sessions, educational programs, tutoring, and study partners and teams offer support for developing and maintaining study skills. Greeks are recognized for their academic successes through Greek scholarship and awards programs and honor societies such as the Order of Omega. According to 2011–12 figures from U.S. News & World Report, 3.4% of WCU's male undergraduate students are in fraternities, while 3.6% of female undergraduate students are in sororities.[91]

Sororities

Greek Councils & Societies
Interfraternity Council
Order of Omega

Fraternities

Historically Black Fraternities

Historically Black Sororities

Professional Fraternity Association

No Council Affiliation

Athletics

Catamount Athletic Logo
Ramsey Center basketball and volleyball arena "THE LAIR"

As a member of the Southern Conference, Western Carolina University participates in NCAA Division I athletics. Intercollegiate athletics include football, men and women's basketball, baseball, softball, women's soccer, men and women's golf, men and women's track and field (Indoor and Outdoor), cross country running, women's volleyball and tennis. Catamount football is a member of Division I FCS and plays at Whitmire Stadium. The Ramsey Center is home to men's and women's basketball, and women's volleyball. Baseball is played at Hennon Stadium, softball is played at the Catamount Softball Complex, and the Catamount Athletic Complex is home to women's soccer, tennis, and track and field.

On November 29, 1980, Western Carolina's Ronnie Carr made the first intercollegiate three-point field goal[93] in college basketball history versus Middle Tennessee State University, a game WCU won 77–70. The ball he used is on display at the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass. The shot was made from the left corner with 16:09 left in the first half (7:06 pm).

Western Carolina and Appalachian State have a football rivalry in which they Battle for the Old Mountain Jug on an annual basis.[94] The Catamounts football team were runners-up in the Division I-AA National Football Championship Game in 1983.[95]

Current NCAA sports at WCU include:

In addition to NCAA athletics, Western Carolina University is also home to many different club sports and intramurals.[96] The club sports include:

Music

Concerts and recitals

The Schools of Music and Fine and Performing Arts offer a variety of events featuring students, faculty, and outside performers. These cultural opportunities are typically relatively cheap, and students can often attend them free of charge.[97]

Pride of the Mountains

Catamount Marching Band Logo

The Pride of the Mountains is the largest college marching band in the Carolinas and Tennessee. As of Fall 2014, the marching band includes just over 500 members, making it one of the largest marching bands in the United States. The band is open to all Western Carolina students regardless of class or major, with approximately 60% of its members non-music majors.

The Pride of the Mountains Marching Band was the special guest at the Bands of America Grand National Championships in Indianapolis in 2003, 2008 and 2012, an honor given to only 1 college band in the United States each year. In addition, the band was also a special guest at the Bands of America Regional’s held in Atlanta in 1995, 2006, 2010, and 2011. In 2009, the "Pride of the Mountains" marching band was selected as one of the five best collegiate marching bands in the nation by the College Band Directors National Association and featured in the book "Marching Bands and Drumlines: Secrets of Success from the Best of the Best" by Paul Buyer.

The band is the 2009 recipient of the Sudler Trophy awarded by the John Philip Sousa Foundation.[98] They participated in the 2011 Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, California, and won the most votes in a "best band" in the parade poll hosted by KTLA-TV.[99] The band also performed at a Carolina Panthers halftime show in 2011,[100] and performed during the 2014 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.[101]

Notable alumni

Notable faculty

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External links

Preceded by
Indiana University
Sudler Trophy Recipient
2009
Succeeded by
University of Notre Dame
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