(Redirected from College of Wooster)
'The College of Wooster' is a private
liberal arts college primarily known for its "Independent Study" program (see below). It has roughly 1,800 students and is located in
Wooster,
Wayne County,
Ohio (approximately 60 miles south of
Cleveland). Founded in
1866 by the
Presbyterian church as the University of Wooster, it was from its creation a
co-educational institution. The school is a member of The
Five Colleges of Ohio and the
Great Lakes Colleges Association. As of
January 2006, Wooster's endowment stood at approximately $228 million.
The current president of the college is
Grant H. Cornwell, who previously served as Vice-President and Dean of Academic Affairs at
St. Lawrence University in
Canton, New York. He was selected by the Board of Trustees to replace
R. Stanton Hales, who announced his intention to retire effective
June 30,
2007. He comes to Wooster with a background in
philosophy and strong experience in liberal arts advocacy and administration.
[1]
Distinguished faculty have included
Dijana Plestina, former first lady of
Croatia.
This college is one of forty named in
Loren Pope's influential book ''
Colleges That Change Lives''.
[2]
|
| History |
| Academics |
★ 'Majors:' Africana Studies, Anthropology, Archaeology, Art History, Art (Studio), Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Biology, Business Economics, Chemical Physics, Chemistry, Classical Studies, Communication Sciences and Disorders, Communication Studies, Comparative Literature, Computer Science, Cultural Area Studies, Dance, Economics, English, French, Geology, German, History, International Relations, Mathematics, Music, Music Education, Music History and Literature, Music Performance, Music Theory (Composition), Music Therapy, Philosophy, Physics, Political Science, Psychology, Religious Studies, Russian Studies, Sociology, Spanish, Theater, Urban Studies, Women's Studies
★ 'Additional minors:' Chinese, Education (with teaching licensure in early childhood, adolescent/young adult, and multi-age), Film Studies, International Business, Physical Education
★ 'Pre-professional programs:' Pre-Architecture, Pre-Engineering, Forestry and Environmental Studies, Dentistry, Nursing, Pre-Social Work, Pre-Business, Pre-Medicine, Pre-Veterinary Medicine, Pre-Law, Pre-Seminary Studies, Dual-Degree Programs |
| Student Life |
| Athletics |
| Performing Arts |
| Student activities and clubs |
| Pictures |
| Notable alumni |
| External links |
| Notes |
History
The 'University of Wooster' was founded in 1866 by
Presbyterians who wanted to do their part in the education of young people, and in 1870 opened its doors with a faculty of five and a student body of thirty men and four women. Wooster citizen Ephraim Quimby donated the first 22 acres, a large oak grove situated on a hilltop overlooking the town. By the early
20th century, there were eight divisions, including a medical school whose faculty outnumbered those in the college of arts and sciences. However, the university had gradually begun to define itself as a liberal arts institution and, in 1915, after a bitter dispute between the faculty and the Trustees, chose to become The College of Wooster in order to devote itself entirely to the education of undergraduate students. The College's 240 acre campus boasts of an unusual tree endowment, established in 1987, which supports a tree conservation, maintenance and replacement program.
Academics
Students entering Wooster are provided with a liberal arts education, a learning approach that encourages students to experience different fields of study and once majors are chosen, to bring those varied experiences to their selected fields of study. Upon completion of typically 32 courses, students may earn a Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Music, or Bachelor of Music Education degree.
In addition to the programs listed below, students may design their own major with approval from the
registrar. Some of the pre-professional programs listed below are cooperative programs, in which students spend a certain period of time at the College of Wooster before transferring to accelerated courses at other colleges and universities.
===
Academic Programs
★ 'Majors:' Africana Studies, Anthropology, Archaeology, Art History, Art (Studio), Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Biology, Business Economics, Chemical Physics, Chemistry, Classical Studies, Communication Sciences and Disorders, Communication Studies, Comparative Literature, Computer Science, Cultural Area Studies, Dance, Economics, English, French, Geology, German, History, International Relations, Mathematics, Music, Music Education, Music History and Literature, Music Performance, Music Theory (Composition), Music Therapy, Philosophy, Physics, Political Science, Psychology, Religious Studies, Russian Studies, Sociology, Spanish, Theater, Urban Studies, Women's Studies
★ 'Additional minors:' Chinese, Education (with teaching licensure in early childhood, adolescent/young adult, and multi-age), Film Studies, International Business, Physical Education
★ 'Pre-professional programs:' Pre-Architecture, Pre-Engineering, Forestry and Environmental Studies, Dentistry, Nursing, Pre-Social Work, Pre-Business, Pre-Medicine, Pre-Veterinary Medicine, Pre-Law, Pre-Seminary Studies, Dual-Degree Programs
Independent Study program===
The College of Wooster is especially noteworthy for its
Independent Study program, under which all students work one-on-one with a faculty advisor to complete a written
thesis or other significant project during the course of their senior year. The student also presents an oral defense of the thesis before a faculty committee. The program, begun in 1947 by Howard Lowry (the College's 7th President), has received considerable attention from other colleges and universities, and a number of other institutions have modeled programs after it. In 2003, the IS program was recognized by ''
US News and World Report'' as the second best "senior capstone experience" in the US, behind only
Princeton University. This unique approach to education has long kept Wooster competitive against more well-known colleges. As evidence of this fact, Wooster ranks 14th in the United States among independent colleges whose graduates earned Ph.D.'s between 1920 and 1995 (according to the
Baccalaureate Origins of Doctorate Recipients,1998).
Special traditions have been developed surrounding Independent Study. Upon completion, a student will receive a
yellow button that says "I did it!" as well as the highly coveted
Tootsie Roll. The tradition developed when the registrar at the time, Lee Culp, decided to give out candy along with the buttons one year; the Tootsie Roll itself was chosen simply because they were cheap in bulk. The "due date," or the last day that students can turn in their completed Independent Study project, is the first Monday after spring break. On I.S. Monday, the
pipe band begins a drone and, with the Dean of the Faculty leading the way, the seniors travel through
Kauke Arch in a jubilant parade ending at Kittredge dining hall, where a celebratory dinner with their advisors and college administrators follows.
A
database exists on the College of Wooster website which allows people to browse the myriad Independent Study topics from every class year since the late 1940s.
Student Life
Wooster has long emphasized international education. An unusually high percentage of its early graduates went overseas as missionaries, and soon not only their sons and daughters, but also the students from their schools, were enrolling at Wooster as students. This international presence affected the entire campus, establishing a tradition which continues to influence the College. Today, approximately seven percent of the student body is international in origin, representing more than 40 different countries. Majors in Cultural Area Studies and International Relations, instruction in seven foreign languages, twenty overseas programs, and the popularity of Babcock Hall International Program, despite the dorm's recurrent cockroach infestation and many plumbing problems, attest to a global awareness that is a vital part of the educational fabric of the College. The majority of Wooster's international students currently come from
South Asia (
India and
Pakistan), and
West Africa (many from
Ghana).
Athletics
Wooster is a member of the
NCAA Div-III North Coast Athletic Conference (NCAC). Its school colors are black and old gold, and its mascot is the "Fighting
Scot."
Scottish culture is an important part of the school's heritage; its
football games feature a Scottish
pipe band with Highland dancers in addition to a traditional marching band, with all three groups clad in the yellow and black
MacLeod tartan.
In recent years, the athletic teams at Wooster have had considerable success. Among other achievements, the
baseball team has made three appearances in the NCAA Division III World Series and nine NCAC championships (a league record). The men's
basketball team has nine NCAC regular season championships, nine NCAC Tournament titles, and twelve appearances in the Div-III NCAA Tournament. In
2003, the team earned third place at the
NCAA Div-III National Basketball Tournament, compiled its best ever record (30-3), and Wooster center Brian Nelson was named Div-III Men's Basketball Player of the Year. In
2004, the
football team went undefeated in the regular season, won its first outright NCAC conference championship, and won its first NCAA tournament game.
Performing Arts
Besides a well-respected music department, Wooster is the home of the
Ohio Light Opera, an endeavor founded by the college in
1979. It is the only professional company in the
United States entirely devoted to
operetta. OLO performs the entire
Gilbert & Sullivan repertoire, but also regularly revives rarely performed continental works of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Over the years, the Company has produced eighty different operettas.
Student activities and clubs
The College of Wooster has over one hundred student organizations, from the Jenny Investment Club, which allows students to invest real money for the College as they learn about the stock market, to Common Grounds, a student-run coffee shop and house program offering chemical-free alternatives to the College community.
There are currently nine active
Greek groups at the College of Wooster, five sororities and four fraternities. Called ''clubs'' and ''sections'', these groups are not affiliated with national Greek organizations, and approximately fifteen percent of the student body participates.
The college has a wide variety of student-run media.
''The Wooster Voice'' is the weekly student newspaper, and has been published continuously since 1886 (see
list of college newspapers), while
WCWS (WOO 91) is the college radio station. ''The Goliard'' is the annual literary magazine. Each year, English professor Daniel Bourne also publishes an international literary magazine called
Dodge''. Additionally, the English Department has classes every two years on journalism and magazine writing; these students create and publish a newspaper and a magazine respectively.
The college is also one of a few colleges in America to have an active on-campus pipe band. Officially called the College of Wooster Pipe Band, members perform at many official on-campus events such as commencement, sports games (football, basketball, swim meets, and sometimes lacrosse games), and many spontaneous student-run events. During the spring season they perform and compete at a grade 3 level, having won prizes at the Scots wi' Shotts event in Cleveland hosted by the local Lochaber Pipe Band.
Pictures
 Kauke walkway |  Athletic fields |
| 'Kauke Hall' | 'Athletic Fields' | |
Notable alumni
| Student | Achievements | Year graduated | Major (when known) | IS topic |
|---|
| Karl Taylor Compton | President of MIT, National Academy of Sciences Member, Founder of American Research and Development (ARD) with Georges Doriot and others -- first American public VC group. | 1908, cum laude | Philosophy | Attended before the IS program existed Master's thesis ''A study of the Wehnelt electrolytic interrupter'' published in Physical Review in 1909 |
| Arthur Holly Compton | Chancellor Washington University, National Academy of Sciences (NAS) Member, NAS Chairman overseeing the Manhattan Project -- Won the 1927 Nobel Prize in Physics for discovery of Compton scattering. | 1913 | - | Attended before the IS program existed |
| George W. Thorn | Chief of Medicine Bringham & Woman's Hospital Harvard University, NAS Public Welfare Medal Winner, Chairman Emeritus Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) -- With Howard Hughes, founder of the HHMI. | 1927 | Biology | Attended before the IS program existed |
| James V. Neel | Distinguished Professor of Human Genetics University of Michigan, Albert Lasker Award Winner, National Medal of Science Winner, National Academy of Sciences Member -- "Father of Modern Human Genetics." | 1935 | Biology | Attended before the IS program existed |
| Stanley Gault | Former CEO of Rubbermaid and Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company | 1948 | Geology | Attended before the IS program existed |
| E. W. "Bud" Wendell | Former President and CEO of Opryland USA, member Country Music Hall of Fame | 1950 | Economics | Attended before the IS program existed |
| Mary F. Crow | Poet Laureate, State of Colorado | 1955 | English | ''Study of Some Elizabethan Sonnetiers - Sidney, Daniel, Drayton'' |
| Norman Morrison | pacifist, Vietnam War protester | 1956 | Religion | ''The Christian Approach to Pacifism, 1900-1950'' |
| John Dean | White House Counsel (1970-1973) to President Richard M. Nixon | 1961 | Political Science | ''The Social Responsibilities of the Political Novelist'' |
| James S. Toedtman | Editor, AARP Bulletin | 1963 | Physics | ''An Analysis of the 1962 Congressional Campaign in the 13th District of Ohio'' |
| Donald Kohn | Vice Chairman of the Board of Governors of the United States Federal Reserve | 1964 | Economics | ''Flexible Exchange Rates as a Means to Stable International Markets - Theory, Practice, and Evaluation'' |
| Timothy Smucker | CEO of The J.M. Smucker Co. | 1967 | Economics | ''PERT and Plant Location'' |
| Stephen R. Donaldson | ''New York Times'' bestselling science fiction author | 1968 | English | ''A Creative Writing Project'' |
| Susan Stranahan | Pulitzer-prize winning journalist (former reporter for ''The Philadelphia Inquirer'') | 1968 | History | ''The Mining Camp'' |
| Mark Stephens (aka Robert X. Cringely) | Technology journalist for Public Broadcasting Service | 1975 | History | ''The Battle Of Britain: A Strategic Reassessment'' |
| Vince Cellini | Current host on ''The Golf Channel'' and former anchor for ''CNN Sports'' | 1981 | Speech | ''Communication Theory: Its Use in the Formation of Public Opinion'' |
| Mary Neagoy | Former Senior Vice President of Communications for Nickelodeon | 1983 | English | ''Narrative Authority and Female Characters in the Novels of William Faulkner'' |
| Duncan Jones | Television/film director (inc. fcuk's "Fashion vs Style"); son of David Bowie | 1995 | Philosophy | ''How to Kill Your Computer Friend: An Investigation of the Mind/Body Problem and How It Relates to the Hypothetical Creation of a Thinking Machine'' | |
External links
★
Official website
★
Colleges That Change Lives: The College of Wooster
★
Search the Independent Study database
Notes
1. The College of Wooster News Services. "Grant H. Cornwell named president of The College of Wooster". December 11, 2006. (http://www.wooster.edu/news/0607/news/CornwellNamed.php ).
2. Loren Pope. Colleges that Change Lives ( http://www.ctcl.com/colleges/wooster/index.htm )