Art Museum and Gallery Studies Arcata California Humboldt State University

Public university in Arcata, California

California State Polytechnic Academy, Humboldt
Cal Poly Humboldt seal.svg

Former names

Humboldt Country Normal College (1913–35)
Humboldt State College (1935–72)
California Land University, Humboldt (1972–74)
Humboldt State University (1974–2022)
Motto Discere Faciendo (Latin)

Motto in English language

Learn by Doing
Type Public
Established June 16, 1913; 108 years agone  (June 16, 1913)

Academic affiliations

California Land University
Endowment $32.1 million (2020)[one]
Upkeep $220.viii 1000000 (2018)[2]
President Tom Jackson Jr.
Provost Jenn Capps

Bookish staff

574[three]
Students 6,431 (Autumn 2020)[4]
Undergraduates 5,869 (Fall 2020)[iv]
Postgraduates 562 (Autumn 2020)[4]
Location

Arcata, California

,

U.South.

Campus Rural, 144 acres (58 ha) principal campus and virtually 591 acres (239 ha) of additional property[5] Full: 733 acres
Colors Green and gold[half-dozen]
Nickname Lumberjacks

Sporting affiliations

NCAA Division II – California Collegiate Able-bodied
Mascot Lucky Logger[7]
Website world wide web.humboldt.edu
Humboldt State University wordmark.svg

California Country Polytechnic Academy, Humboldt also known as Cal Poly Humboldt or Cal Poly (formerly Humboldt Country University, HSU, Humboldt Country,[8] or Humboldt) is a public university in Arcata, California. It is one of iii polytechnic universities in the California Land University system. Information technology is the northernmost campus of the 23-school California State University (CSU) arrangement. The principal campus, situated hillside at the edge of a coast redwood forest, has commanding views overlooking Arcata, much of Humboldt Bay, and the Pacific Ocean. The college town setting on the California N Coast, 8 miles (13 km) north of Eureka, 279 miles (449 km) north of San Francisco, and 654 miles (1052.51 km) n of Los Angeles is notable for its natural beauty. It is the nearly westerly four-year university in the contiguous United States.

The university is divided into three colleges: the Higher of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences; the College of Natural Resources and Sciences; and the College of Professional person Studies.[ix] It offers 48 types of bachelor'southward degrees, 12 different chief's degrees, 61 minors, and 13 credential programs.[3] Cal Poly Humboldt does not offer doctoral degrees.

In addition to the main campus, Cal Poly Humboldt has multiple off-campus facilities and education-related properties, including an body of water-side marine biology research middle,[ten] a wild fauna care facility,[11] a public natural history museum,[12] a public art gallery,[13] a bay-side aquatics facility,[14] a mountain-top astronomy observatory,[15] an body of water-going marine inquiry and teaching vessel (Coral Ocean),[16] and a demonstration forest (Arcata Community Forest).[17]

History [edit]

Humboldt State Normal School was established as a teacher's college on June sixteen, 1913, by then-California Governor, Hiram Johnson.[xviii] It was named after the famous German scientist Alexander von Humboldt. The cities of Arcata and Eureka (and to a lesser extent Fortuna[19]) competed with one another to host the new campus. Arcata somewhen won the university when William Preston, and the Matrimony Water company, donated 55-acres.[eighteen] It opened on April 6, 1914, in the former Arcata Grammer School edifice with 78 students and 5 kinesthesia. On May 26, 1915, the first commencement of the first graduating class occurred, a grade of 15 women.[20] The starting time graduate awarded their degree in 1915 was local historian Susie Baker Fountain, who went on to catalog much of Humboldt County history from 1850 to 1966. Bakery was a columnist for the Blue Lake Advocate and her extraordinary, lifelong collection of paper clippings and images are available for viewing in HSU Special Collections.[21]

View from high point of Humboldt State Normal campus, 1915

The school was put under the jurisdiction of the California Department of Education, renamed Humboldt Country Teacher's Higher and Junior College, and moved to its current location in 1921. In 1924, during the presidency of Ralph Waldo Swetman, the Associated Students and the Alumni Clan were organized and The Foghorn, the offset student newspaper, was published. Bachelor's degrees began being offered in 1927. The school was renamed Humboldt State Higher in 1935 and the side by side year the Lumberjack was adopted equally its mascot. In 1937, the students opened a cooperative bookstore and soda fountain, which would be for the adjacent forty years every bit the heart of student life.

During World State of war II, Arcata's city defense council suggested camouflaging Founder'south Hall, which is visible from the Pacific Ocean, so it would not be a target for Japanese submarines. The council made its asking in 1942, but Founder'due south Hall was not painted until the spring of 1944. The building remained camouflage green until 1948.[22] During WWII, President Arthur Gist corresponded back and forth with the hundreds of students who left Humboldt State College to serve in the war. Available for viewing in the Arthur Gist Letters at HSU Special Collections, there are over 1,000 letters from 365 servicemen and women writing to Gist for the duration of the state of war.[23]

Graduate programs began being offered in 1947. Nether President Siemens in 1952, HSU continued expanding by accepting students from abroad, including some from Yugoslavia, Frg, the Near East too as US territories such as Samoa, Guam and Hawaii. KHSC, afterwards KHSU, the beginning land college radio station in California, was established. In 1960, the higher joined the newly formed California Land College system. The inferior college program, terminated at HSU in 1962, was re-established in 1964 at Higher of the Redwoods (CR) located at the southern edge of Eureka. CR is located only seventeen miles south of HSU, and the two institutions maintain a shut working human relationship, with many students transferring to HSU following graduation from CR.

Educatee activism on campus rose through the 1960s and early 1970s, peaking in a protest against the Vietnam War with virtually 800 students (out of 3,600) participating in demonstrations on October fifteen, 1969. This was followed by some other protest with nearly 3,000 students who planned a strike after the Cambodian Incursion. With similar events across the country, Governor Reagan shut downward the CSC system in May 1970 for 5 days. The 1970s also saw the rising of feminist, cultural, and LGBT groups, and though the Women's Center would be the only ane to survive through the 1980s, most groups would reappear by the mid-1990s.[22] The campus currently hosts a United Students Confronting Sweatshops grouping that is active in lobbying for ethical products and services on campus.

David Philips (HSU alum) established the Humboldt Film Festival in 1967. Information technology is at present one of the oldest student-run festival in the world.[22] In 1996 the annual Explorations in Afro-Cuban Dance and Drum workshop began being held on the campus every July. The workshop is the largest assemblage of Afro-Cuban folkloric masters in the United States, drawing students from beyond the country and around the world.

In 1972, the college was renamed California State University, Humboldt. However, it still continued to exist popularly called "Humboldt State." Reflecting this, its name was simplified to Humboldt State University in 1974.[xviii] Enrollment first reached seven,500 in 1974, and though it has increased to virtually 8,000 in years since, the university remains one of the smallest in the CSU organisation. Through the 1980s, mature students became a large part of Humboldt Land's student body, and in 1986 40% of the students were over the historic period of 25.[24] The number has since decreased to xxx%.[25]

In 1987 students and activists founded the optional Graduation Pledge of Social and Environmental Responsibility. The purpose of the Pledge is to encourage graduating students to be mindful of the social and environmental impacts of their employment as they enter the workforce or proceed their education. Today over one hundred Universities and colleges worldwide use the Pledge to some extent.[26]

On January 26, 2022, the university was officially renamed from Humboldt Country University to California State Polytechnic Academy, Humboldt, becoming the third polytechnic university in the state. The modify is backed by a $458 million investment from the state of California.[27] [28]

Academics [edit]

Fall Freshman Statistics[29] [30] [31] [32]
2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009
Applicants 11,912 11,261 9,976 ix,417 9,207 9,418
Admits ix,119 eight,514 8,050 8,768 seven,278 7,135
% Admitted 76.55 76.06 eighty.69 93.10 79.04 75.75
Avg GPA 3.xx 3.21 3.fifteen 3.xiii 3.xvi 3.16

The academy is divided into three colleges: the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences; the College of Natural Resources and Sciences; and the Higher of Professional Studies. In that location are 48 undergraduate majors and 69 minors.[33] The 2 largest majors are biological science and art, both with over xx faculty members and extensive facilities on- and off-campus. This CSU campus offers a wildlife undergraduate degree. In that location are several credential programs and twelve master'due south programs, of which natural resources and social work are the largest. The new Free energy, Environment, and Society graduate programme is unique to the CSU, and provides graduates with interdisciplinary training in technology, economics, and climate policy.

The University Library supports students and kinesthesia from all iii academic colleges. Beginning in 2015, the Library launched HSU Press to showcase research and scholarship across the campus.[34] It likewise houses the Humboldt State University Press, which publishes theses, textbooks and merchandise books of interest to Cal Poly Humboldt and the surrounding area. On campus, a popular major is forestry. The Forestry department building's walls are completely paneled with different species of woods. The edifice was rebuilt in October 1980 afterwards the original building was burned downwardly. The original building stood for 17 years before an arsonist, whose identity is even so unknown today, set the building on burn down in 1979.[35]

Cal Poly Humboldt is ane of only two universities in California to offer a major in botany; the other is California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. Its botany program is the nation's largest undergraduate program. Cal Poly Humboldt is the but university in California to offer a degree in rangeland resources and wildland soil science.[36] The Native American Studies major and the Oceanography major are also unique to the California State University system. The academy offers unique minors including multicultural queer studies, scientific diving, and appropriate technology.[33]

The university's location on the Due north Coast provides admission to the Pacific Ocean, lagoons, marshes, estuaries, and the Fred Telonicher Marine Laboratory, which provides opportunities for "easily-on" experiences and research for the sciences. The Marine Lab was opened in 1966, the lab is open during the academic schoolhouse twelvemonth (mid August-mid May).[35]

Cal Poly Humboldt'south fire scientific discipline plan teaches modern techniques for managing wildfire, and an avant-garde grooming program is offered for Forest Service employees and similar professionals.[37]

As of 2012[update], Cal Poly Humboldt has an international student population that has quadrupled in the last five years. The International English Language Institute has worked alongside HSU for 22 years to help international students proceeds academic English language skills to further their bookish pursuits and business concern careers.

The college of eLearning, & Extended Ed (CEEE) is a self-supporting outreach section of Cal Poly Humboldt that provides a variety of academic, professional development and personal enrichment opportunities. While the CEEE programs are open to well-nigh everyone, there is an accent on providing admission to those community members who are non matriculated students at the academy. Non-matriculated students may have some regular academy courses through the CEEE Open Academy program. Loftier schoolhouse students may take regular university courses through the CEEE High School Concurrent Enrollment Program. Also, those anile 60 and over may take regular classes through the Over 60 Program. There are also a multifariousness of online degree programs offered through the college. The CEEE also offers a broad range of diverse and eclectic programs. Examples include music and art programs for children, the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute for those aged 50 and over, foreign language classes, travel-report programs, continuing teaching for teachers, MFT/LCSW, nurses, and police enforcement. In 1998 Humboldt Land University opened the HSU First Street Gallery in Erstwhile Town Eureka, expanding community access to the university'southward cultural and fine arts programs. In 2007, the university farther expanded its presence in Eureka with the opening of the HSU Humboldt Bay Aquatic Centre, a $4.5 one thousand thousand aquatic facility on the bay in Old Town Eureka. Future plans include a new HSU Bay and Estuarine Studies Center. This new facility will exist closer to the Coral Sea (in 2012 docked at Woodley Island, Eureka), the only vessel in a U.Due south. educational institution solely dedicated to undergraduate research. The new facility would be considerably larger than the other existing facility, the Fred Telonicher Marine Laboratory in Trinidad, 20 miles (32 km) north.[38]

Cal Poly Humboldt Professor Steve Sillett has conducted groundbreaking inquiry on redwood forest canopies and was featured in a 2009 encompass story in National Geographic. He holds the Kenneth L. Fisher Chair in Redwood Woods Environmental, the only endowed chair in the world dedicated to a single tree species.[37]

Statistics [edit]

Fall All levels, freshman through graduate
*Demographics of student body 2021 [39] 2020 [39] 2018 [twoscore]
Hispanic/Latino Americans 32% 33% Null
Mexican American/Chicano Null Null 26.0%
Other Latino American Zero Null 8.one%
White 48% 45% 43.2%
Asian American 3% 3% 2.iii%
Filipino American Zip Aught 0.5%
Pacific Islander 0% 0% 0.3%
Black 3% 3% 3.five%
Native American/American Indian 1% 1% 1.2%
Multiracial Americans 6% 6% 6.5%
Non-resident alien i% 1% 1.v%
Unknown 5% half dozen% 6.8%
Woman 59% 59% Null
Men 41% 41% Null
  • Boilerplate High Schoolhouse GPA: 3.2 (Fall 2015 Freshmen)[41]
  • SAT Middle 50%: 440–560 Reading, 430–550 Math (Fall 2013 Freshmen)[41]
  • ACT Composite Middle 50%: eighteen–24 (Fall 2013 Freshmen)[41]
  • Average Undergraduate Course Size: 25[25]
  • Average Graduate Grade Size: 8[25]
  • Student to Faculty Ratio: 21.ane[3]

Student demographics [edit]

As of fall 2018 Cal Poly Humboldt had the largest enrollment percentage of Native Americans and the tertiary largest enrollment pct of multiracial individuals in the Cal Country system.[xl]

  • Number of enrolled students: 5,739
  • Gender:[3]
    • 59.0% Female
    • 41.0% Male
  • Average Historic period 24[3]

Rankings [edit]

  • Cal Poly Humboldt is one of the colleges profiled in The Princeton Review 's volume, Colleges with a Conscience: 81 Great Schools with Outstanding Community Involvement. The school was selected considering of its record of having excellent service-learning programs and its blending of academics with community work.[48]
  • U.S. News & Earth Report ranked Cal Poly Humboldt tied for 37th out of 127 schools in the Regional Universities (Westward) category for 2021, and in the aforementioned category too ranked it 17th best public school, 22nd best for veterans, 33rd for best value, and tied for 34th best for social mobility.[49]

Student life [edit]

Primary HSU campus entrance on LK Wood Blvd (southward side, adjacent to US-101)

The Humboldt Energy Independence Fund (HEIF) is unique to the CSU, and uses student fee coin to fund renewable energy and energy efficiency projects on campus. HEIF provides a rare opportunity for students, kinesthesia, and found operations staff to work together collaboratively towards a goal of a lower-carbon and free energy-independent hereafter. Compost and recycling bins are more common on campus than trash cans and many events are encouraged to be zippo waste product, all coordinated through the student-run Waste Reduction and Resource Sensation Program (WRRAP).[50] The Associated Students fund WRRAP, the Campus Center for Appropriate Technology, and the Sustainable Living Arts and Music Festival (SLAM fest).

Cal Poly Humboldt built the first building in the CSU system to exist LEED-gold certified for its eco-friendly features. The Behavioral and Social Sciences Building has rainwater collection, sustainably harvested forest native-plant landscaping, and more.[37]

The university'due south location affords students the potential for outside activities in local parks and public lands, which include miles of accessible, undeveloped coastline. Rivers and streams, forests, and extraordinary terrain are only outside the classroom door.

In that location are over 200 clubs on campus that students can join. Clubs on campus include a variety of options that range from social interests, academic, Greek life and sports.[51]

Student media [edit]

The university has multiple publications. The Lumberjack is the university's only pupil-run weekly newspaper. [52]

The university also has a monthly pupil-run newspaper, El Leñador, which is bilingual and produced by students with minority backgrounds. It is a newspaper committed to promoting diversity in local media. El Leñador was named top non-weekly paper in the state. El Leñador received starting time place in competing against other monthly and bi-weekly papers from iv- and two-year colleges and universities across California.[53]

Osprey is the university'southward student-run magazine, published twice annually. It has won first-place awards in major regional competitions, including the Society of Professional Journalists' "Marking of Excellence" Awards and the California Intercollegiate Printing Clan awards.[54]

Cal Poly Humboldt is also the only university in the CSU organisation to have a academy press. The Press at Cal Poly Humboldt publishes high-quality scholarly, intellectual, and creative works by or in support of our campus community.[55]

Greek life [edit]

  • Chi Phi fraternity-Epsilon Zeta Chapter
  • Delta Phi Epsilon
  • Gamma Alpha Omega Sorority- Pi Chapter
  • Kappa Sigma fraternity – Tau Beta Chapter
  • Lambda Theta Blastoff Sorority – Epsilon Iota Chapter
  • Lambda Theta Phi Fraternity- Beta Omega Chapter

Athletics [edit]

The Lumberjacks' programme is affiliated with the NCAA on the Partitioning II level and is a fellow member of the California Collegiate Athletic Association. Cal Poly Humboldt currently sponsors 12 intercollegiate sports programs — men's and women'due south soccer, basketball, cross country, track and field, women'south volleyball, softball, rowing, and, formerly, football game (in which information technology competed in the Dandy Northwest Athletic Conference).

In addition to NCAA sanctioned athletics, Cal Poly Humboldt also supports gild sports including, archery, baseball, cheer, climbing, cycling, disc golf, fencing, logging sports, men's and women'southward lacrosse, men'south and women's rugby, men'south and women's ultimate Frisbee, men'southward coiffure, and men'due south volleyball.

Cal Poly Humboldt's softball team has qualified for the NCAA post-season eighteen times between 1990 and 2008, capturing the NCAA Segmentation II Softball Championship in 1999 and in 2008.

  • Women's (2)
    • Softball (2): 1990, 2008

On-campus housing [edit]

On-Campus Housing consists of half-dozen living areas; The Hill, Cypress, Canyon, Creekview, College Creek and Campus Apartments. The northward side of campus is consists of The Hill, Cypress, The Canyon, and Creekview, which are considered primarily for first twelvemonth traditional residents. The southside of campus, College Creek and Campus Apartments are placed for 2nd year students, and non-traditional residents. College Creek consists of four 3-level housing complexes separate.[56]

Klamath Connection Plan [edit]

The Klamath River is the focus of the Klamath Connexion, which is designed to help freshmen larn of import skills for time to come science careers.[57]

Y.Due east.S. Business firm [edit]

The Y.E.Southward. House (Youth Educational Services) is programs created by students and led by students volunteer programs. The Y.Due east.S. Firm serves the communities needs. There are currently running 17 programs.[58] Students can volunteer for these programs and besides take the ability to become directors as well.

Centers and institutes [edit]

Centers and institutes at the university include:

  • The California Center for Rural Policy at Cal Poly Humboldt is a research center to assist policy development. community building community, and promoting the health of rural people and their environments.[59]
  • The mission of the Humboldt Science and Mathematics Center is to enhance scientific discipline and mathematics teaching. It was chartered in 2005, and offers programs and professional support for teachers and for students preparing for the professionals. The eye is formally affiliated with a number of university programs.[60]
  • The Humboldt Institute for Interdisciplinary Marijuana Research (HIIMR) seeks to improve the economic, social, physical, and environmental health of individuals and communities through the interdisciplinary scientific written report of marijuana. HIIMR designs, conducts, analyzes, and disseminates inquiry; provides practical expertise to policy makers, researchers, health professionals, businesses, and the media; and archives and provides access to source materials (raw data, media).[61] [62] [63]
  • Affiliated with the Department of Geography and its Kosmos Lab for teaching cartography, the Institute for Cartographic Design provides cartography students with an opportunity to engage in applied map blueprint earlier graduation, provides a centralized cartographic design service on campus, in all formats from newspaper to web to blitheness.[64]
  • The Institute of Health and Human Operation supports the local customs in activities for wellness promotion. It supports inquiry and training for faculty and students in health, human performance, affliction prevention, physical activity and diet.[65]
  • The Plant for Entrepreneurship Education is designed to reach other academic departments on campus every bit well as the Redwood Coast business community. It is oriented around interdisciplinary study, with a focus on social entrepreneurship and an ethic of social responsibility.[66]
  • The Institute for Spatial analysis (ISA) is devoted to the expansion of spatial analysis methodologies in multiple disciplines and the real globe issues. It works with both public and private sector entities.[67]
  • The Schatz Energy Inquiry Center (SERC) works to institute clean energy technology. Information technology specializes in renewable energy, energy efficiency, and hydrogen free energy systems, especially increasing the efficiency of fuel cells. Its work involves research and evolution, engineering demonstration, project development, energy systems analysis, and education and grooming.[68]
  • Museum & Gallery Practices Certification Program[69]

Notable people [edit]

Alumni [edit]

  • Taylor Boggs, old professional American football player[seventy]
  • Melissa Braden, sculptor and ceramic artist[71]
  • Dean L. Bresciani, President of North Dakota State Academy[72]
  • Ellie Cachette, American engineering executive, activist and author; start recipient of school's Contempo Distinguished Alumni Laurels[73]
  • Alex Cappa, current professional American football player for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers[74]
  • Raymond Carver, American short story writer and poet[75]
  • Marking Conover, winner of 1988 Olympic Marathon trials[76]
  • Michael Crooke, man of affairs, sometime CEO of Patagonia, Inc.[77]
  • Dan Curry, Emmy Award winner for piece of work on Star Trek [78]
  • Chris Dixon, former professional indoor American football histrion and coach[79]
  • Trevor Dunn, bassist for Mr. Boggle and Fantomas[80]
  • Jack Fimple, former Major League Baseball catcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers[81]
  • Ken Fisher, billionaire CEO of Fisher Investments, long-time Forbes columnist, and author of books on investing[82]
  • Harrell Fletcher, creative person[83]
  • David Gelbaum, businessman, greenish engineering investor and ecology philanthropist[84]
  • Dave Harper, former NFL linebacker[85]
  • Wendell Hayes, former NFL running back[86]
  • Danny Herrera, quondam powerlifter[87]
  • Stephen Hillenburg, creator of Nickelodeon's SpongeBob SquarePants [88]
  • John Kiffmeyer, former drummer for the stone band Green Mean solar day[89]
  • Ian "Vaush" Kochinski, political YouTube livestreamer
  • Jeffrey D. Levine, former The states Administrator to Estonia[90]
  • Clinton McKinnon, Mr. Bungle musician[91]
  • Kassandra McQuillen, attorney and contestant on Survivor: Cagayan and Survivor: Cambodia
  • Michael Moore, fellow member of the Instant Composers Pool[92]
  • Mike Patton, musician, notable for his work with Faith No More, Mr. Bungle, and film scoring
  • Steve Selva, botanist and Professor Emeritus at the University of Maine[93]
  • Monroe Spaght, inquiry chemist, president and chairman of the Vanquish Oil Company[94]
  • Marla Spivak, entomologist and professor at the University of Minnesota[95]
  • Trey Spruance, Mr. Bungle and Secret Chiefs 3 musician[96]
  • Josh Suggs, current Major League Soccer Defender; Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC[97]
  • Micah Truthful, ultrarunner and founder of the Ultramaraton Caballo Blanco[98]
  • Martin Wong, American painter and ceramist[99]

Faculty [edit]

  • Don Gregorio Antón, Creative person/Educator (Emeritus Professor)
  • Marcy Burstiner, journalist
  • Jim Dodge, novelist and poet
  • Stephen Fox (emeritus), historian, author, and educator
  • Robert A. Gearheart (emeritus), ecology engineer[100]
  • Victor Golla, (emeritus), linguist
  • Steven C. Hackett, economist[100]
  • Eric Rofes, gay activist, feminist, educator, and author
  • Stephen C. Sillett, botanist[100]

See besides [edit]

  • List of forestry universities and colleges
  • Campus Heart for Appropriate Technology (CCAT)
  • Humboldt Institute for Interdisciplinary Marijuana Enquiry (HIIMR)
  • Humboldt State Academy Natural History Museum

References [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Humboldt State Athletics website

Coordinates: 40°52′34″N 124°04′44″W  /  40.876°N 124.079°W  / 40.876; -124.079

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSU%2C_Arcata

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