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Coordinates: 34°12′1″N 82°9′56″W / 34.20028°N 82.16556°W / 34.20028; -82.16556
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'''Lander University''' is a [[Public university|public]] [[university]] located in [[Greenwood, South Carolina|Greenwood]], [[South Carolina]]. It is the [[U.S. state|state's]] smallest publicly-funded [[Bachelor's degree|baccalaureate]] institution.
'''Lander University''' is a [[Public university|public university]] located in [[Greenwood, South Carolina|Greenwood]], [[South Carolina]]. It is the [[U.S. state|state's]] smallest publicly-funded [[Bachelor's degree|baccalaureate]] institution.


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 05:56, 28 January 2010

Lander University
TypePublic 4-year university
Established1872
ChancellorRick Astley
PresidentDaniel W. Ball
ProvostJacob Bennett
Academic staff
136
Students3,000
Address
320 Stanley Ave.
, , ,
34°12′1″N 82°9′56″W / 34.20028°N 82.16556°W / 34.20028; -82.16556
ColorsBlue and Gold
MascotSenators (Former), Bearcat (Current)
Websitehttp://www.lander.edu

Lander University is a public university located in Greenwood, South Carolina. It is the state's smallest publicly-funded baccalaureate institution.

History

Lander University was founded by Methodist clergyman Samuel Lander in 1872 as Williamston Female College in Williamston, South Carolina. It remained a private institution for 26 years. In 1898 the College gained the support of the South Carolina Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. The college moved to Greenwood in 1904 and was renamed Lander College in honor of its founder who died in the same year. It remained a women's college until 1943 when men were first admitted.

In 1948, when the Methodist Conference, pursuant to a policy of consolidation of its education efforts decided to end support of Lander College, interested citizens of Greenwood formed the Lander Foundation as a non-profit corporation and leased the College from the Church.

In 1951, the Greenwood County obtained the College name and property from the Methodist Conference. The South Carolina General Assembly created the Greenwood County Education Commission, known as the Lander Foundation, to serve as the board of control of the College. Lander thus became the only four-year liberal arts college in the United States to be controlled and financed by a county government.

In 1973, Lander College became a state-supported college and in 1992 its name was changed to Lander University. The institution is now completely co-educational.

Campus

Lander is situated on a wooded site near the center of the City of Greenwood, of approximately 123 acres (0.50 km2). In addition to six major buildings erected since 1973, campus improvements have included extensive renovations to a number of older facilities, new housing complexes, athletics fields and parking lots. Lander created a new 10-year Campus Master Plan in 2003. The first phase of the plan, the creation of a campus entrance, is complete, and a new residence hall for 300 students opened in 2006. An expanded dining hall opened in January 2007.

Students

Enrollment is approximately 3,000 with a student body representing 23 states and 16 foreign countries. Minorities make up 25 percent of the student body; 67 percent of the student body is female and 33 percent is male. Campus residence halls accommodate approximately 1,100 students.

Faculty

Lander has a student/faculty ratio of 19:1 with 123 full-time faculty members, the majority of whom hold terminal degrees in their areas. The average class size is 19.

Academics

More than 80 areas of undergraduate study are offered, as well as a Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) with a concentration in art and a Master of Education (M.Ed.) in elementary education. Three programs are offered completely online: the R.N. to B.S.N. completion option, the criminal justice management bachelor’s degree, and the health care management certificate. Many areas of study require or strongly recommend internship experiences, and there is an active study abroad program.

Lander also offers courses and a few degree programs at the University Center of Greenville, a consortium of public and private institutions.

Athletics

Varsity athletic teams have reaped honors at district and national levels, including 12 national championships in men’s tennis. A member of the NCAA Division II, Lander plays in the Peach Belt Conference and fields teams in men’s and women’s basketball, soccer and tennis; men’s baseball and golf; and women’s cross country, softball and volleyball. Lander also offers club sports that include equestrian, ultimate disc, rugby and volleyball teams, and it has an intramural program open to all students.

In March 2007, Lander won the Peach Belt Tournament Men's Basketball tournament. They advanced to the NCAA tournament against the defending national champions, Virginia Union. The Lander women's basketball team won the Peach Belt regular season title in 2008 and conference tournament title in 2008 and 2009.

The Lander mascot is the bearcat.

Accreditation

Lander is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to award bachelor's and master's level degrees.

All but one of its academic programs, for which there is an accrediting body, are accredited. The University's programs in Business Administration, Nursing, Teacher Education, Music, Visual Arts, and Theatre are accredited respectively by the appropriate national accrediting agencies (the AACSB, the NLNAC, the NCATE, the NASM, the NASAD, and the NAST). Lander’s new Computer Information Systems undergraduate degree program will seek ABET accreditation in 2008, the first year it will be eligible to receive accreditation.

See also

External links