New College of Florida
Latin: Novum Collegium Floridense | |
Former names | New College (1960–1975) New College of the University of South Florida (1975–2001) |
---|---|
Type | Public liberal arts college |
Established | October 11, 1960[1] |
Parent institution | State University System of Florida |
Accreditation | SACS |
Academic affiliations | COPLAC |
Endowment | $43 million (2019)[2] |
President | Richard Corcoran |
Academic staff | 97 full time, 26 part time (fall 2022) |
Students | 689 (Fall 2022)[3] |
Undergraduates | 669 |
Postgraduates | 20 |
Location | , , United States |
Campus | Small city[4], 144 acres (0.6 km2) |
Newspaper | Catalyst |
Colors | Blue and white |
Nickname | Mighty Banyans[5] |
Sporting affiliations | NAIA - Sun (effective July 1, 2024)[6] |
Mascot | The Mighty Banyan |
Website | www |
New College of Florida is a public liberal arts college in Sarasota, Florida. The college is a member of the Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges. In 2023, the state government of Florida overhauled its board of trustees in an attempt to transform the school into a conservative institution.[7][8] Since then, nearly 40% of faculty have resigned.[9] New College has the smallest student population in the State University System of Florida with 669 students (2022).[10]
History[edit]
New College was founded in 1960 as a private college for academically talented students. Financial assistance was provided by the United Church of Christ.[11] George F. Baughman served as the first president from 1961 to 1965.[12]
Open to students of all races, genders, and religious affiliations, New College opened its doors in 1964 to a premier class of 101 students.[13][14] Faculty members included the historian and philosopher Arnold J. Toynbee, who left retirement to join the charter faculty.
The school offered a liberal arts education valuing freedom of inquiry, where individual students were responsible for their own education, implemented through a unique academic program.[15]
By 1972, more than 500 students studied at New College. As the 1970s progressed, inflation threatened to undermine the economic viability of the institution. By 1975, the college was $3.9 million in debt and on the brink of insolvency. At that time, the University of South Florida (USF) expressed interest in buying the land and facilities of the college to establish a branch campus there.[14][16] The school merged with University of South Florida as a separate "upper division campus" within the public university.[17]
In an unusual agreement, the New College board of trustees agreed to hand over the school's campus and other assets to the state, at the time valued at $8.5 million, in exchange for the state paying off its debts and agreeing to continue to operate the school as a separate unit within the USF system. The agreement stated that New College was to receive the same funding, per-student, as other programs at USF. The former New College board of trustees became the New College Foundation, and was required to raise money privately to supplement the state funds to reach the total necessary to run New College, at the time about a third of New College's $2-million-a-year operating budget. Under that agreement, New College was renamed the "New College of the University of South Florida". USF started a Sarasota branch program that shared the bayfront campus, and the schools began an uneasy relationship that would last for the next twenty-five years, with New College and the University of South Florida through its Sarasota branch program sharing the campus.[14][16]
In 2001 it became an autonomous college, the eleventh independent school of the State University System of Florida as the honors college for the state system.[18][19] As part of a major reorganization of Florida's public education system in 2001, New College severed its ties with USF, became the eleventh independent school in the State University System of Florida, and adopted its current name, New College of Florida.[20] The Florida legislature officially designated New College as the honors college for the state of Florida.[21] The school's unusual academic system was also encoded in statute: "To provide programs of study that allow students to design their educational experience as much as possible in accordance with their individual interests, values, and abilities."[22] As part of its establishment as an independent university, the University of South Florida was directed to relocate its facilities away from the New College campus, which it did on August 28, 2006, when it opened a new campus for USF Sarasota-Manatee on the undeveloped Seagate portion of the campus.[23] With conditions including that neither institution would build on the undeveloped bayfront property, the Uplands Preserve, that New College owned independently by a donation from the subdivision neighborhood when the private college was being founded, New College divided the property and allowed USF Sarasota-Manatee to take possession of a portion of the preserve that is north of the city limit.[24] New College and USF Sarasota-Manatee continued to share campuses until the new campus was completed and thereafter, certain facilities such as the library remained shared.
In 2022, New College was cited as having the highest percentage of students receiving a Fulbright scholarship of any college or university in the United States.[25]
2023 appointment of conservative trustees[edit]
In early 2023, Governor Ron DeSantis overhauled the college's board of trustees, appointing six new members including Christopher Rufo, Matthew Spalding, Charles R. Kesler, Mark Bauerlein, Debra Jenks, and Eddie Speir. Of those, the first four are well-known conservative activists who appear to live outside Florida.[26] The DeSantis chief of staff, James Uthmeier, said that "It is our hope that New College of Florida will become Florida’s classical college, more along the lines of a Hillsdale of the South."[27] At its first meeting, on January 31, 2023, the new board fired President Patricia Okker ("without cause") and installed Richard Corcoran, a political associate of the governor, as its interim president.[28] These actions received national attention and commentary.[29][30][31]
Early changes included firing the university president, dissolving the university's diversity and equity office, bans on personal pronouns in email signatures by faculty, and the cancellation of events promoting diversity and inclusion. Christopher Rufo was reported as having announced: “We will be shutting down low-performing, ideologically-captured academic departments and hiring new faculty” and “The student body will be recomposed over time: some current students will self-select out, others will graduate; we’ll recruit new students who are mission-aligned.”[32]
According to NPR, "Professors at the New College of Florida are using personal email because they’re afraid of being subpoenaed. Students are concerned, too. Some fear for their physical safety. Many worry their teachers will be fired en masse and their courses and books will be policed. It’s increasingly hard to focus on their studies."[33]
In April 2023, the board of trustees denied tenure to five professors, sparking outcry from an attending audience and leading to the resignation of trustee and faculty chair Matthew Lepinski. When asked to provide reasons for the decision, interim president Richard Corcoran argued for the denial or delay of tenure due to administrative changes and the college's shift towards a more traditional liberal arts focus. Mark Bauerlein argued against granting tenure because the five professors were seeking tenure after meeting all requirements in five years rather than six, citing the "tenure clock" and claiming that receiving tenure after five years is unusual, stating that he would apply different criteria if the faculty stand for tenure again after another year.[34] To the contrary, the faculty handbook states that the criteria for tenure are identical regardless of year,[35] and around 30% of New College faculty hired in the past decade have received tenure after five years.[34] The professors (two organic chemists, an Islamic historian, a Latin American/Caribbean historian, and an oceanographer) had already gained approval for their tenure applications from New College faculty, external reviewers, and the previous administration; they were denied in identical 6-4 votes with the new conservative board members forming the majority.[36] This move was criticized by some as part of a larger trend of conservatives targeting tenure, particularly for professors perceived to hold liberal views.[37] Four of the five professors were awarded tenure the subsequent year, alongside two others who adhered to the standard tenure process. Hugo Viera-Vargas, the specialist in Latin American and Caribbean history and the sole professor permanently denied tenure, was identified by the now-permanent president Richard Corcoran as having insufficient class sizes to qualify for tenure.[38] Uniquely, Viera-Vargas was also the sole New College professor that had taken legal action, serving as a plaintiff in a lawsuit against SB266, a comprehensive higher education bill from Governor Ron DeSantis that also eliminated arbitration in university employment disputes.[39]
By mid-July 2023, over a third of the existing faculty had left the college, many choosing to resign or take a leave of absence as a direct result of the conservative takeover.[40] Of those who left, some attempted to form an alternative called "Alt New College", which was threatened by a lawsuit by New College of Florida in late 2023.[41][42] The alternative would end up renaming to AltLiberalArts following the lawsuit.[43]
All of the six trustees appointed by DeSantis were eventually confirmed by the Florida Senate except Eddie Speir, a co-founder of a local Christian academy.[44] Speir blamed the school's new interim president for the Senate's rejection in early May.[45]
In October 2023, when formally announced as New College's new president, Corcoran's total annual compensation of over $1 million drew scrutiny from media and experts in academic and executive compensation, significantly in excess of expected pay for the president of a public university with a small student body population.[46][47]
In November 2023, New College requested $400 million in state funding to transform the school, more than $500,000 per student.[48]
Governance[edit]
New College is governed by a thirteen member board of trustees. One member is the chair of the faculty senate or equivalent, one is the student body president, six are appointed by the governor, and five are appointed by the Board of Governors. The appointments are subject to confirmation by the state senate and serve staggered 5-year terms. This composition is specified by Section 7(c), Article IX of the state constitution.
Previously, there were 12 trustees who serve staggered four-year terms. Of the twelve members, three were residents of Sarasota County and two were from Manatee County.[49]
Campus[edit]
New College's 144-acre (0.58 km2) bay front campus is located in west Sarasota, Florida, approximately 50 mi (80 km) south of Tampa. The primary campus is located on the former Edith and Charles Ringling estate.[50] The campus also includes portions of The Uplands, a residential neighborhood that is bounded by the historic bayfront campus to the south where half of the bayfront had been a portion of the estate and half of which in The Uplands plat (being donated to New College during the original founding of the college), and the Seagate property to the north, Sarasota Bay to the west, and Tamiami Trail to the east.
The campus's most remarkable structures are its three Florida 1920s boom time, grand-scale residences: College Hall was the home of Edith and Charles Ringling;[51] Cook Hall was the home of Hester Ringling Lancaster Sanford;[52] and the third, Caples Hall that was the home of Ellen and Ralph Caples. The well-appointed structures date from the early to mid-1920s, are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and are similar in style to the adjacent John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art and their residence, Cà d'Zan.[53] The homes are major aspects of the Caples'-Ringlings' Estates Historic District.
The campus is also home to several examples of high modernist architecture designed by I. M. Pei. These buildings include a complex of student residences known as "Pei," a cafeteria, and a student center. The other dormitories are Dort, Goldstein, and Palmer B. Five new dormitory buildings were opened in the 2007–2008 school year.
The Jane Bancroft Cook Library is for both New College students and the University of South Florida's Sarasota-Manatee campus.[54] It is also a resource for Manatee Community College. The local library collection has several hundred thousand items and access to over eleven million items through the State University Libraries system.[55]
The Pritzker Marine Biology Research Center opened in 2001. The facility supports the biology, marine biology, and environmental sciences programs, three of the most popular fields of study at New College.
In 2005, a long range campus master plan was developed through public workshops held by several design teams with participation by students, faculty, administration, residents of the community, and staff members of local governmental agencies.
In 2011, the college opened a new Academic Center and the adjacent Robert and Beverly Koski Academic Plaza. The most recent addition to the campus, in 2017, is a 22,000-square-foot addition to the Heiser Natural Sciences Center.
Academics[edit]
Academic rankings | |
---|---|
Liberal arts | |
U.S. News & World Report[56] | 82 |
Washington Monthly[57] | 54 |
Undergraduate programs[edit]
As an honors college, the college is distinguished by its unusual "contract system", in which students are given written evaluations instead of grades and agree to semester-long contracts in which a certain number of classes must be passed. For example, in a "three out of five" contract, a student who failed two classes would face no penalty, although one who failed three classes would risk losing all credits for the entire semester. The system was devised to encourage academic experimentation and foster curiosity about disparate topics outside one's usual course of study. New College students are required to complete an undergraduate thesis project and baccalaureate exam, during which the student presents and defends their project to a committee of professors.[58]
Graduate programs[edit]
New College offers a master's degree in Applied Data Science.[59] The MS in Applied Data Science is an adaptation of the original MS in Data Science, featuring a greater focus of application to industry.[60] The MS in Data Science was created in 2015, and began with a founding cohort of seven students.[61] As of 2022, there were 27 students enrolled in the Applied Data Science graduate program.[62] The MS in Applied Data Science is a two-year program, featuring a 100% employment rate upon graduation.[59] Students of the MS in Applied Data Science program are required to complete a paid practicum during the final semester of their degree.[60] New College undergraduates pursuing any major may apply for the 3+2 path, putting them on track to be awarded a bachelor's degree and an MS in Applied Data Science in five years.[63] The New College MS in Applied Data Science was ranked #25 on Fortune's "Best Master’s in Data Science Programs in 2022".[64]
Cost of attendance[edit]
For the 2021–22 school year, tuition and fees for in-state residents amounted to $6,916.[62] Tuition and fees for both out-of-state residents and international students totaled $29,944, or $832 per credit hour.[62] New College charges both in-state and out-of-state residents $10,892 for room and board each academic year.[65] For international students, the cost of room and board at New College is $12,992.[66] These costs have been stable for several years through 2022.[62] For master's degree students, the cost of first-year tuition and fees is $11,383.92 for in-state residents, and $28,067.28 for out-of-state and international students.[67] On average, New College students take on the least debt compared to undergraduates from any other school in the state university System.[68] Only 33% of New College students took on any loans with an average loan of about $5500. At comparable institutions, 53% of students took on loans with an average loan of approximately $6300.[69] New College offers scholarships to the majority of admitted students.[70]
Cross College Alliance[edit]
The Cross College Alliance is composed of five institutions: New College of Florida, Ringling College of Art and Design, The Ringling/FSU, State College of Florida Sarasota-Manatee, and University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee.[71] The alliance aims to foster community among these local organizations through shared resources.[71] Students at New College of Florida may cross-register at any of the three other colleges in the alliance.[71]
Recognition[edit]
In 2023, New College of Florida was ranked No. 100 among all "National Liberal Arts Colleges", by U.S. News and World Report.[72] Eighty-six New College students have been awarded Fulbright scholarships since the founding of the college.[73] The nonprofit organization "Colleges That Change Lives" recommended New College for its flexible academic path as well as its consistency in producing successful graduates.[74]
Student life[edit]
Race and ethnicity[75] | Total | ||
---|---|---|---|
White | 67% | ||
Hispanic | 18% | ||
Other[a] | 5% | ||
Black | 4% | ||
Asian | 4% | ||
Foreign national | 3% | ||
Sex[76] | |||
Female | 67% | ||
Male | 33% | ||
Economic diversity | |||
Low-income[b] | 26% | ||
Affluent[c] | 74% |
New College Student Alliance[edit]
The New College Student Alliance (NCSA) is New College's student government organization. "Towne Meetings," held monthly, are the main forum for public debate and are open to all students, faculty, and staff.
Athletics[edit]
In 2023 in parallel with the university's academic overhaul, New College joined the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) as a member of the Sun Conference. The school announced plans to offer 17 new sports and increase its number of student-athletes from 140 in 2023 to 350 by Fall 2027.[77] In March 2023, Mariano Jimenez was announced as new athletic director and baseball coach.[78]
Previously, New College of Florida offered only intercollegiate archery, esports, powerlifting, rowing, sailing, and swimming. The club sailing team is a member of the South Atlantic Intercollegiate Sailing Association (SAISA). The New Crew SRQ rowing club was launched in 2021 and trains at Nathan Benderson Park. The New College powerlifting team competes in regional and state competitions against other Florida colleges and universities.
Alumni[edit]
Alumni[d] include Mark Weiser, the Xerox PARC computer scientist who conceived of the approach to evolving computer interfaces known as "ubiquitous computing". Weiser attended New College from 1970 through 1974. Other prominent New College graduates include William Dudley, former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; Ambassador Nancy McEldowney, National Security Advisor to Vice President Harris; University of Pennsylvania law professor and vice provost Anita L. Allen, named to the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues; the late mathematician and Fields medalist William Thurston; Margee Ensign, current president of Dickinson College and former president of American University of Nigeria; Jennifer Granick, surveillance and cybersecurity counsel at the ACLU and former civil liberties director at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society and the Electronic Frontier Foundation; bestselling author of Getting Things Done David Allen (author); national MSNBC, NBC and Telemundo anchor José Díaz-Balart; founder of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies Rick Doblin; Emmy Award-winning television writer/producer Carol Flint; former U.S. representative Lincoln Díaz-Balart; David M. Smolin, professor of law and director for Cumberland School of Law's Center for Biotechnology, Law, and Ethics; "Mother of Sharks" Melissa Cristina Márquez,[81] a marine biologist and science communicator; Jackie Wang, finalist for the 2021 National Book Award for Poetry; author Malcolm Brenner; and attorney Robert Bilott profiled in the 2019 movie Dark Waters.
Notes[edit]
- ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans and those who prefer to not say.
- ^ The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students
- ^ The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum
- ^ As of 2022, there have only been 6,709 New College graduates.[79] However, every student who has completed one semester-long contract is considered a New College alumnus, and unlike most colleges, New College refers to alumni by the year they entered, not by graduation year.[80]
References[edit]
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- ^ Mazzei, Patricia. "DeSantis's Latest Target: A Small College of 'Free Thinkers'". www.nytimes.com. New York Times. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
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- ^ Suarez, Carlos, Denise Royal and Nicquel Terry Ellis. "Students, professors report chaos as semester begins at New College of Florida". www.cnn.com. CNN. Retrieved 9 November 2023.
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- ^ "USF Sarasota-Manatee - New Campus". Archived from the original on 2007-07-15. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
- ^ Werner, Johannes, New College 'beautifies' bayfront preserve cutting trees for soccer and volleyball, WSLR, Sarasota, May 24, 2024
- ^ New College of Florida Named a ‘Top Producer of U.S. Fulbright Students’ for 2010-11, New College News, October 27, 2010
- ^ Moody, Josh (2023-01-11). "DeSantis Aims to Turn Public College Into 'Hillsdale of the South'". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved 2023-02-02.
- ^ Moody, Josh (11 January 2023). "DeSantis seeks to overhaul small liberal arts college". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
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- ^ Wallace-Wells, Benjamin (February 22, 2023). "What Is Ron DeSantis Doing to Florida's Public Liberal-Arts College?". Washington Post. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
- ^ "A college in upheaval: 'War on woke' sparks fears in Florida". Associated Press. March 30, 2023.
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- ^ "IPEDS Data Feedback Report 2019: New College of Florida." National Center for Education Statistics, Department of Education, United States of America.
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- ^ "New College of Florida – Colleges That Change Lives". Retrieved 2022-10-03.
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- ^ "Student diversity: Gender distribution". US News & World Report. Retrieved 13 March 2023.
- ^ Casale, Christian (2023-10-05). "New College of Florida athletics gets admittance to NAIA; could carry 23 sports by 2027". Florida Phoenix. Retrieved 2023-10-20.
- ^ "Mariano Jimenez Named Athletic Director & Head Baseball Coach at New College of Florida". New College of Florida. 2023-03-31. Retrieved 2023-10-20.
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- ^ Campbell, Mike (Summer 1997). "The Year In Review: Membership". Nimbus. New College Alumnae/i Association. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
- ^ "Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month: Latina women in science (featuring NCF Alum Melissa Cristina Márquez)". New College News. 2021-10-13. Retrieved 2021-12-10.
Further reading[edit]
- Paulson, Lawrence and Luke Salisbury. 2014. First-Class Times: Writing about New College's Charter Classes. Maryland: Shambling Gate Press., pp. 224.
- Elmendorf, John. 1975. Transmitting information about experiments in higher education. New York: Academy for Educational Development, Inc., pp. 43.
- Glasser Kay E. 1977. The New College Story as told by One Hundred And Three Alumni. Ph.D., pp. 20.
External links[edit]
- Official website
- Official athletics website
- "The Culture War Goes to College," Reveal June 24, 2023. https://revealnews.org/podcast/the-culture-war-goes-to-college/
- New College of Florida
- 1960 establishments in Florida
- Buildings and structures in Sarasota, Florida
- Buildings and structures in Sarasota County, Florida
- Universities and colleges established in 1960
- Education in Sarasota County, Florida
- Liberal arts colleges in Florida
- Public honors colleges
- Public universities and colleges in Florida
- Universities and colleges accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools
- Tourist attractions in Sarasota County, Florida
- Education in Sarasota, Florida
- Conservatism in the United States