Kent State University at Stark

Kent State University at Stark
Type Public
Established 1946
Dean Denise A. Seachrist
Academic staff
293
Students 4,919[1]
Location Jackson Township, Ohio, United States
40°52′00″N 81°26′15″W / 40.8668°N 81.4374°W / 40.8668; -81.4374Coordinates: 40°52′00″N 81°26′15″W / 40.8668°N 81.4374°W / 40.8668; -81.4374
Campus Suburban
200 acres (80.9 ha)
Website http://www.kent.edu/stark

Kent State University at Stark, often referred to as Kent State University Stark and Kent State Stark,[2] is a public liberal arts university and the largest regional campus of Kent State University. Kent State Stark promotes environmental[3][4][5] and social responsibility and was recognized on the President's Service Learning Honor Roll for 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009.[6] Ninety percent of graduates in 2008 took the "Graduation Pledge"[7] to consider the environmental and social consequences of any job they consider.[8]

Kent State Stark is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission (of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools) and is an active member of AASCU (American Association of State Colleges and Universities)[9] and participant in the Voluntary System of Accountability.

Kent State University at Stark is sometimes confused with the Stark State College of Technology which leases space from and shares parts of the Kent Stark campus.

Degrees and programs are additionally accredited by:

and others.

Location

Aerial view of Kent State University at Stark

The campus is located on 200 acres in Jackson Township and North Canton, Ohio, an area with a population over 380,000. The campus itself includes:

Enrollment and graduation

Kent State Stark serves over 11,000 students annually: 6,400 students in academic programs and courses and over 5,000 in executive and professional education. Over 200 high school students take advantage of pre-college programs (Dual Enrollment and Post-Secondary Enrollment) each semester. Over 500 students graduate from Kent State University at Stark annually. A Fall Commencement was added in December 2008 to accommodate student growth.

Academic programs

Kent State Stark offers baccalaureate, masters and associate degrees.

Master's Degrees

Bachelor's Degrees

Kent State Stark also offers several minors.

Associate Degrees

Faculty

Kent State Stark faculty are committed to student success. Ninety percent of full-time faculty hold a Ph.D. or an equivalent terminal degree in their field. Every student is taught by one of the 293 qualified faculty and Kent State Stark does not use graduate assistants and uses very few adjunct faculty to teach classes. Faculty have earned doctorates from twenty U.S. states and ten foreign universities. All instructors hold at least a master's degree in their teaching field. Small class sizes are designated in the campus strategic plan as a "campus value." Classes average only eighteen students per section and 85% of undergraduate classes have fewer than thirty students.

Governance

Part of the University System of Ohio,[11] Kent State University at Stark has a local advisory board representing business, industry, education, arts and elected officials. Board members are elected for renewable three-year terms and confirmed by the Kent Board of Trustees and led by a chair and vice-chair.

History

Although no facilities had been constructed for the Kent State Normal School in Kent, Ohio, in 1912 Kent's first president, John McGilvery, established extension centers, including one in the Canton area that would serve the area for several decades.[12]

Kent State Canton

Main Hall Patio

To accommodate the postwar surge of students utilizing the new G.I. Bill, in 1946 Kent State created the Canton Division, known as Kent State University Canton (KSUC), in Canton McKinley High School on Market Street. KSUC grew rapidly, with a student newspaper, a small student union in a nearby house, a band, chorus and radio station. Kent State Canton closed in Spring 1950 when Ohio cut funding. Community members campaigned to establish a municipal university, but a levy to finance that plan failed in February 1950.[12]

Kent State continued to provide extension programs, mostly in business and teacher education. The demand for elementary teachers in the 1950s inspired the "Cadet" program, placing teachers in the classroom faster than typical four-year programs. As the extension program grew to 400 students and became an Academic Center, it moved to Timken High School in 1959.[13]

Stark Campus

Kent State University at Stark Fine Arts Building

In 1965, the Ohio State legislature authorized a permanent campus, and appropriated over $2 million for construction. A citizens' site selection and financial support committee, selected an accessible location near the newly completed Interstate 77 in Jackson Township in March 1965. Most of the land was owned by Leo A. Frank and John Wyles, who had farmed it with their families for many years. Once the sale was approved, committee raised over $600,000. Groundbreaking and construction began on January 7, 1966 with the first facility, Main Hall, opening in the fall of 1967.[14]

Expansion of the Stark Campus included seven major buildings, a pond and nature trail, The Campus Center (student center) and The University Center (Professional Education and Conference Center) which provides businesses and community partners with workforce development opportunities. Today it is commonly referred to as Kent State University Stark.

The Corporate University

Since 1990, The Corporate University at Kent State Stark[15] has offered professional development courses, customized employee training, organization development consulting, research and assessment projects and business counseling and training to over 5,000 employees annually.

The federally funded Small Business Development Center (SBDC) and Senior Core of Retired Executives (SCORE) programs provide free or low cost counseling to an additional 700 small businesses annually. In 2006 the Kent State Stark SBDC created or retained 1,800 Stark County jobs with an annual payroll of $70 million and an economic impact of $218 million.[16]

Conference Center

Conference Center

The Conference Center is a technologically advanced facility that serves 65,000 clients each year.[17] It is one of only four facilities in Ohio accredited by IACC. The Conference Center provides business and community partners with meeting, training and conference rooms, a full-service dining room and the Timken Great Hall that can seat 600 guests.

Student life

Kent State Stark has an Honors Program and over 30 active student organizations ranging from academic to social and service clubs. Kent State Stark received presidential recognition for its Service Learning program and has a strong Leadership Academy to develop student capabilities and talents.

The Office of Student Life celebrates the beginning of the fall semester with "Smart Start Saturday" for students and their families and FWOF (First Weeks of Fall) activities and concludes the spring semester with Kentiki celebration activities. These week-long events encourage students to meet one another and to enjoy a host of student sponsored activities.

Students enjoy club sports and the physical education facility offers open gym hours, a basketball and volleyball court, weight room, dance studio, Nautilus equipment, treadmills, stair climbers, elliptical walkers, stationary bikes and a full-service locker room for men and women. The campus sponsors several wellness initiatives each year and participates in many community service projects.

Senior Guest Program

Kent State University Stark's Senior Guest Program supports adults ages 60 and up (or aged 55 and retired). Designed to encourage Ohio's Senior Citizens to broaden their knowledge and skills, or revisit areas of interest that they may not have pursued as a traditional college student. Senior Guests audit and attend regular credit classes on a space-available basis. Courses taken through the Senior Guest Program are free, however, some classes have variable costs such as books or special course fees. History, art, philosophy and physical education are some of the most popular subjects. Participants usually participate in all class activities, but may elect not to take exams. Classes are not taken for credit or a grade.

Featured speaker series

Each year distinguished speakers come to campus as part of the Featured Speaker Series. This program is offered to the community at no cost and is designed to stimulate thought and discussion on current and sometimes controversial issues.

Some featured speakers include Mike Brown, Jack Hanna, Michelle Norris, Rob Corddry, Tim Robbins, John Dau and Christopher Quinn, Jean-Michel, Celine and Fabian Cousteau, Dave Barry, F W de Klerk, Jeff Corwin, Christopher Gardner, Spencer Wells, Lisa Ling, Ben Stein, Jonathan Kozol, Anderson Cooper, Neil Degrasse Tyson, Christine Todd Whitman, Brannon Braga, Campbell Brown, Spike Lee, Scott Turow, Benazir Bhutto, George J. Mitchell, David McCullough, Jehana Sadat, David Gergen, Ellis Marsalis, Dr. Robert M. Gates, Jane Bryant Quinn, George Stephanopoulos, Al Roker, Helen Thomas, John Berendt, William F. Buckley, Jr., Sarah Weddington, Yolanda King, Mary Higgins Clark, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., David Broder, Olympia Dukakis, Jesse Jackson, Beverly Sills, Tom Wolfe, Naomi Wolf, Benjamin Hooks, John Updike, Frank Sesno, Pierre Salinger, Robert Kennedy, Edward James Olmos, Linda Ellerbee, Irving R. Levine, Joyce Carol Oates, Ralph Nader, Dr. Ernest Boyer, Shirley Chisholm, Edward Albee & Kurt Vonnegut Jr.

Events

Kent State Stark balloon at the 2008 Pro Football Hall of Fame Festival Balloon Classic Invitational

Canton, Ohio is home to the NFL's Pro Football Hall of Fame. Each summer eleven days of inaugural events begin at the Pro Football Hall of Fame Festival Balloon Classic Invitational and the Jackson-Belden Food Festival held on the Kent State Stark campus. The campus welcomes 150,000 guests for two and one-half days with eighty hot air balloons participating in five launches and various competitions and races.[18]

Alumni

The Stark County Alumni Chapter serves the 30,000 Kent State University graduates in Stark County. The chapter was established in 1995 to promote the involvement of former students and support the academic programs, current students, faculty and staff of Kent State University. The chapter is governed by a board of directors. The chapter’s annual fundraiser, the Reverse Raffle and Auction, supports student scholarships, student-life programming, a faculty luncheon, distinguished alumni awards program and alumni networking events.

Notable alumni

References

  1. "Fifteenth Day Enrollment Statistics" (PDF). Kent.edu/RPIE. Kent State University. September 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011. Numbers use concurrent enrollment statistics
  2. McEwen, Colin (Oct 19, 2009). "KSU changes regional campus IDs: Officials: Move recognizes growth, focus on local education". Retrieved 2009-10-19.
  3. "College and University Presidents Climate Commitment".
  4. "Earth Day Flag".
  5. "One Water Preview". Reuters. 2008-04-08.
  6. "President's Service Learning Honor Roll" (PDF).
  7. "Reuters Graduation Pledge story". 2008-05-08.
  8. "Earth Day".
  9. "AASCU Home Page".
  10. "Kent State University Stark Campus". University System of Ohio University System: Regional Campuses. University System of Ohio. Retrieved 2009-01-23.
  11. 1 2 "1946-1950 Origins: Kent State Canton". Kent State Stark History. Kent State University. 4 August 2006. Retrieved 2009-01-23.
  12. "1950-1959 Rebirth: The Cadet Program". Kent State Stark History. Kent State University. 16 January 2009. Retrieved 2009-01-23.
  13. "1960-1969 In Search of a Home". Kent State Stark History. Kent State University. 16 January 2009. Retrieved 2009-01-23.
  14. "Office of Corporate and Community Services".
  15. "Smart Business Magazine feature on business services".
  16. "Kent State Conference Center". Kent State University Stark Campus. Kent State University. 2008-06-09. Retrieved 2008-07-05.
  17. "Pro Football Hall of Fame Balloon Classic Invitational".

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.