Alma College
Alma College is a private liberal arts college in Alma, Michigan. It enrolls approximately 1,400 students and is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission.[3] It is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church (USA) and five degrees (Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Music, Bachelor of Fine Arts, and Bachelor of Science in Nursing) in 41 majors.[4]
Type | Private liberal arts college |
---|---|
Established | 1886 |
Religious affiliation | Presbyterian |
Endowment | $109.9 million (2016)[1] |
President | Dr. Jeff Abernathy |
Provost | Dr. Kathleen Dougherty |
Academic staff | 82 |
Undergraduates | 1,378 full-time 41 part-time[2] |
Location | , , United States 43.380°N 84.671°W |
Campus | Small city, rural area 125 acres (0.51 km2) |
Colors | Maroon and Cream |
Nickname | Scots |
Mascot | Scotty |
Website | alma.edu |
History
The College was founded by Michigan Presbyterians in 1886. It received funding from lumber magnate Ammi W. Wright, for whom Wright Hall on campus and Wright Avenue in the city of Alma are named.
Prior to 1934, the Alma mascot was the Fighting Presbyterians. This became the subject of debate in 1931 due to a series of stories by The Almanian, a student-run newspaper, expressing discontent over the limitation on cheers to "Go Presbyterians" or "Go Campbellites", the latter in support of the football coach, Royal Campbell.[5]
While still maintaining a close relationship with the Presbyterian Church, Alma College offers an environment that welcomes students of all religious backgrounds. The college's 13th president, Dr. Jeff Abernathy, assumed leadership in June 2010.[3]
Criticisms of ranking systems
In January 1997, President Alan Stone of Alma College asked 480 colleges to boycott the U.S. News and World Report Rankings due to weaknesses in the peer assessment survey, which counted for 25% of a college's ranking. According to the Chronicle of Higher Education, in 1996, Alma College surveyed 158 colleges about the rankings. The result of the survey indicated that "84 percent of the respondents admitted that they were unfamiliar with some of the institutions they had been asked to rank. Almost 44 percent indicated that they 'tended to leave responses for unfamiliar schools blank.'" Stone said, "this makes me wonder just how many votes are being considered for each school's academic-reputation ranking".[6][7]
After a June 2007 meeting of the Annapolis Group, Alma college joined others who would be boycotting the rankings. According to a June 22, 2007 article for The Morning Sun:
President Dr. Saundra Tracy said she agreed with a majority of her peers at a meeting this week to stop participating in the personality assessment portion of the annual college rankings published by U.S. News and World Report. A consensus was taken at the end of an annual meeting of the Annapolis Group, an association of liberal arts colleges. Tracy supported the action and criticized the magazine's unscientific process to rate the popularity and reputation of a school based on what presidents, provosts and admission deans say in a survey.[8]
Presidents
The following thirteen individuals have served as president of Alma College from the creation of the office to the present. Where years do not overlap, there was a gap of a few months while a suitable candidate was found. The only Alma College alumnus to become president of the college was John Wirt Dunning (class of 1904).[9]
- George F. Hunting (1887–1891)
- August Bruske (1891–1912)
- Thomas Blaisdell (1912–1915)
- Harry M. Crooks (1915–1937)
- John Wirt Dunning (1938–1942)
- Roy W. Hamilton (1943–1946)
- Dale Welch (1947–1950)
- Stanley Harker (1950–1956)
- Robert Swanson (1956–1980)
- Oscar E. Remick (1980–1987)
- Alan Stone (1988–2000)
- Saundra Tracy (2001–2010)
- Jeff Abernathy (2010–present)
Academics
Alma has a 4-4-1 academic calendar, with 14-week terms in the fall and winter, and a four-week term in May. Students typically use the latter term for travel classes, research and internships.
The College has a nationally competitive Scholarship Committee, designed to help juniors and seniors apply for funding opportunities for graduate and professional school. Alma students have won Fulbright, Gates-Cambridge, Truman, and Udall scholarships, as well as becoming finalists for the Marshall and Rhodes scholarships. Since 2003, 45 students have received nationally competitive scholarships and fellowships, including 24 Fulbright scholarships.[10]
The Posey Global Fellowship program and the Responsible Leadership Institute are designed to further students' awareness of ethical leadership and service in an increasingly global economy and political landscape. In addition, the Presidential Honors Program is an intellectual community centered on collaborative research and a conscious commitment to the liberal arts.[11]
Alma Commitment
Alma College offers a four-year graduation promise, the Alma Commitment. In addition, it pledges that each interested student can participate in an experiential learning opportunity, such as an internship, research fellowship, or study abroad, backed by up to $2,500 in Alma Venture funding from the college.[12] The Alma Commitment, offered for the first time to the entering fall 2013 class, applies to all 136-credit majors. If a student meets program requirements but is not able to graduate in four years (eight terms), the college will pay the tuition cost for the student's ninth term.
Programs of emphasis
In addition to traditional majors, students may opt to create a Program of Emphasis (POE).[13] Students work with faculty mentors to create their own major by taking courses from a variety of departments and combining them with internships and research experience that round out their POE. Some recent POEs have included Anthropology, Foreign Service, and Nonprofit Management.
Model United Nations
Alma College's nationally recognized Model United Nations program has won top honors at the National Model United Nations conference in New York City for 23 consecutive years (1997–2019)—the longest active winning streak of any college or university in the nation. Alma College's all-time 45 "outstanding delegation" awards are the most of any college or university in the 92-year history of the conference.[14] The Huffington Post has called Alma College's MUN team a "superpower".[15]
Campus
Alma College is located in a small-town setting, the city of Alma having slightly fewer than 10,000 residents. Its primary academic buildings, built with a red brick motif, are centered around a large square, McIntyre Mall. West of this mall is picturesque Dunning Memorial Chapel. The majority of buildings are located on North Campus, that is, the area north of Superior Street. These include the major dormitory residences, as well as the academic and student life buildings. South Campus is home to suite-style residences ("New Dorms", so named because they were built later in the 1960s than residences in North Campus) as well as the new environmentally friendly apartment-style Wright Hall, inaugurated in 2005 and the second residence of its name, the former being demolished in 1976. South Campus is also home to "Fraternity Row" (Center Street) and "Sorority Row" (Superior Street) as well as several other themed houses. Over 50 percent of the buildings on Alma's campus were built under the long tenure (1956–1980) of Robert D. Swanson, after whom the main academic building is named. Recent additions to the campus include the Alan J. Stone Recreation Center in 2001, the Oscar E. Remick Heritage Center in 2000, Colina Library Wing in 2006,[16] and the Hogan Physical Education Center[17][18]
In addition to the main campus, the College also owns a 180-acre (0.73 km2) ecological research area containing woodlands, a willow marsh, a sphagnum bog, and a glacial kettle lake, with a full research facility and a bird observatory, located in Vestaburg, about 15 miles (24 km) west of Alma.
Athletics
Alma College athletic teams, nicknamed the Scots, are part of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) - Division III and the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MIAA). Generally, more than a third of Alma's students participate in sports. In October 2010, the College added men's wrestling,[19] women's bowling,[20] and men's and women's lacrosse as varsity sports, effective in the 2011-12 academic year. With these additions, the college offers 11 men's and 11 women's varsity athletic programs.
The mascot of Alma College is Scotty. Depicted as a Scotsman, he wears a traditional highland Kilt, sporran, and sash woven in the Alma College tartan pattern.
Honors
- In 2006 Alma College quarterback Josh Brehm was named the recipient of the Gagliardi Trophy, the highest individual honor in NCAA Division III football.
- In 1992 Alma's women's basketball team earned the NCAA Division III championship.
- In 1999 Alma's Men's soccer team made it to the NCAA Final Four.
- In 2016 Alma's Men's Basketball team made it to the NCAA Round of Eight, the first appearance in the NCAA tournament in the program's history.
- In 2017 Alma's Competitive Cheer Team won the NCA National Championship in the All-Girl Intermediate Division 3 category.
- In 2018 Alma's Competitive Cheer Team won the NCA National Championship in the All-Girl Advanced Division 3 category.
- In 2019 Alma's Competitive Dance Team won the NDA National Championship in the Division 3 team dance category.
Performing arts
More than a third of all Alma students take part in at least one performance each year. The College offers majors in theatre, dance and music, but students of all majors may join in productions. The Heritage Center for the Performing Arts is the region's premiere performing arts facility. It houses the Theatre and Dance Department, and serves as the performance venue for the College's eight music ensembles. It features a 500-seat concert hall for large performances, an intimate 190-seat theatre, and a dance studio.
Greek life
Several social Greek letter organizations are active on the Alma College campus. There are five social fraternities: Zeta Sigma, Delta Gamma Tau, Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, Sigma Chi, and Tau Kappa Epsilon. There are five social sororities: Kappa Iota, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Xi Delta, Gamma Phi Beta, and Phi Sigma Sigma. Other Greek organizations on campus include Sigma Alpha Iota, a women's music fraternity, and Alpha Phi Omega, a co-ed National Service Fraternity, in addition to numerous honorary and professional fraternities.
Notable alumni
- George Allen (1918-1990), NFL coach inducted in Pro Football Hall of Fame
- Jake Boss (born 1971), NCAA Baseball player and coach, head coach at Michigan State University
- Bob Bruce (1933–2017), Major League Baseball pitcher from 1959–67
- Paul Hale Bruske (1877–1956), writer, journalist, advertising executive, and sportsman
- William Skinner Cooper (1884–1978), botanist and ecologist; former president of the Ecological Society of America and the Minnesota Academy of Science
- Jim Daniels (born 1956), poet and writer
- Bob Devaney (1915–1997), NCAA football player and Nebraska coach inducted in College Football Hall of Fame
- Paul Ganus, (born, 1961), actor
- Brad Guigar (born 1969), cartoonist
- Jennifer Haase (born 1974), teacher and politician, served in Michigan State House of Representatives
- Frank Knox (1874–1944), newspaper editor and publisher; served as Secretary of the Navy and was a onetime Republican Party vice presidential candidate
- Betty Mahmoody (born 1945), writer and activist, author of Not Without My Daughter (1987), adapted as 1991 film of the same name
- Jim Northrup (1939–2011), MLB player, Detroit Tigers
- Gary Peters (born 1958), Politician, currently member United States Senate (D-MI)
- Dan Scripps, Former politician and President of the Michigan Energy Innovation Business Council
- Lester W. Sharp (1887–1961), Botanist and pioneer in cytogenetics
- Tom Shaw (1945–2014, SSJE), priest and Fifteenth Episcopal Bishop of Massachusetts
- Denny Stolz (born 1934), NCAA football player and coach
- Claude Watson (1885–1978), lawyer, businessman, and minister; temperance movement leader and two-time Prohibition Party presidential candidate
References
- "U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2016 Market Value of Endow" (PDF). NACUBO. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-02-15. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
- "Higher Learning Commission".
- "Alma College's new president begins tenure". MLive.com. 2010-05-15. Retrieved 2014-05-08.
- "Academics: Alma College".
- Lab, Digital Scholarship. "History Engine: Tools for Collaborative Education and Research - Episodes".
- "Alma College's President Urges Boycott of "U.S. News" Rankings". Chronicle of Higher Education. 1997-01-31. Archived from the original on 2008-08-21. Retrieved 2007-06-22.
- "Alma College's President Urges Boycott of "U.S. News" Rankings". Rice University. 1997-01-31. Archived from the original on 9 July 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-22.
- HORVATH, ROSEMARY (22 June 2007). "Alma College pulls out of U.S. News rankings". The Morning Sun. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28.
- "Dunning Memorial Chapel". alma.edu. Alma, Michigan: Alma College. Retrieved November 21, 2020.
- "About: Alma College".
- "Presidential Honors Program". Alma College. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
- "The Alma Commitment". Alma College. Retrieved 2014-05-09.
- Program of Emphasis
- "National Model UN Winning Streak Reaches 18 Years". Alma College. 2014-04-07. Retrieved 2014-05-08.
- "Alma College Dominates Model UN". Huffington Post. 2012-03-29. Retrieved 2014-05-09.
- "Alma College Map". Alma College. Archived from the original on 29 May 2009. Retrieved 17 June 2009.
- "Hogan Center Renovation Moving Full Steam Ahead". Alma College. Archived from the original on 2009-02-23. Retrieved 2009-06-17.
- Gittleman, Linda "Alma College met challenge in tough climate", Morning Sun (February 28, 2010)
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-06-05. Retrieved 2011-06-01.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-05-11. Retrieved 2011-06-01.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)