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Revision as of 22:41, 13 April 2015
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Scripps College Logo | |
Motto | Incipit Vita Nova (Latin) |
---|---|
Motto in English | "Here begins new life" |
Type | Private |
Established | 1926 |
Endowment | $310.5 million (2014)[1] |
President | Lori Bettison-Varga |
Academic staff | 112 (75% full-time) [2] |
Students | 1,009 |
Undergraduates | 990 (2013)[3] |
Postgraduates | 19 (2013)[3] |
Location | , , |
Campus | Suburban, 37 acres (15.0 ha)[2] |
Colors | Scripps Green (sage green) and White |
Mascot | La Semeuse ("she who sows") |
Website | www.scrippscollege.edu |
Scripps College for Women | |
Location | Columbia and 10th St., Claremont, California |
Area | 17.5 acres (7.1 ha) |
Built | 1927 |
Architectural style | Late 19th And 20th Century Revivals, Other, Mediterranean |
NRHP reference No. | 84000887[4] |
Added to NRHP | September 20, 1984 |
Scripps College, founded in 1926, is a progressive liberal arts women's college in Claremont, California, United States with an annual enrollment of approximately 950 students. It is one of the Claremont Colleges.
History
Scripps College was founded in 1926 by Ellen Browning Scripps, a pioneering philanthropist and influential figure in the worlds of education, publishing, and women’s rights. "The paramount obligation of a college," she believed, "is to develop in its students the ability to think clearly and independently, and the ability to live confidently, courageously, and hopefully."[5]
At the age of 89, Scripps founded the College as one of the few institutions in the West dedicated to educating women for professional careers as well as personal growth. Scripps’ “experiment in education” called for a setting with an artistic connection between buildings and garden landscape on an intimate scale.
The motto of the college is "Incipit Vita Nova" ("Here Begins New Life") from Dante's New Life.[6]
Campus
Scripps College is frequently described as one of America’s most beautiful college campuses and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.[7][8] In its 2015 edition of The Best 379 Colleges, the Princeton Review cited the campus as the fifth most beautiful in the United States. It’s a sentiment that’s been echoed by Forbes[9] , U.S. News & World Report, The Huffington Post, and others. [10] [11]
Scripps sits in the heart of the Claremont Colleges, surrounded by Harvey Mudd College to the north, Pitzer College to the east, Claremont McKenna College, and Pomona College to the south, and Claremont Graduate University to the west. Situated on 30 (12ha) acres of land, Scripps consists of more than two dozen buildings, including nine residence halls.
The original campus was designed by pioneering architect Gordon Kaufmann in the Spanish Colonial Revival Style architecture. In general, his 1926 campus plan has been carefully preserved, with major vistas linking the central areas and the overall planting schemes and landscaping devised by Edward Huntsman-Trout still followed.
The campus offers a number of interactive landscaping elements, including a rose garden to the north designated for community cutting and fruit trees available for picking. Oranges grapefruits, pomegranates, kumquats, and loquats are a small sampling of the food available to the students; the College also harvests olives from its numerous olive trees and presses it into award-winning olive oil.
Central to the Scripps campus community is The Motley Coffeehouse (commonly called "The Motley"), a student-run coffee shop located in Seal Court. The Motley is a socially- and environmentally-conscious business providing students with a venue for events and concerts as well as providing space to study, hang out, and drink fair trade beverages. The Motley prides itself on being the only all-women, undergraduate, student-run coffeehouse "west of the Mississippi.”[12]
Temperatures in Claremont average 63 degrees Fahrenheit, with an average high of 77 and low of 50. Scripps sees sun approximately 280 days out of the year.
Several facilities are shared by the members of the Claremont Consortium including Honnold/Mudd Library, the Keck Science Center, and the Robert J. Bernard Field Station.
Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery
Scripps College is also the home of the Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery,[13] which maintains Scripps College's permanent art collection of some 7,500 objects spanning 3,000 years of art history.[14] Objects are available for use in classes, displayed in campus exhibitions, and loaned to other exhibiting institutions. Among the holdings in the collection are works by American artists Andy Warhol, Winslow Homer, Childe Hassam, and John James Audubon, and an extensive collection of paintings by the California artist and Scripps Professor Emeritus Millard Sheets.
Margaret Fowler Garden
Originally designed as a European medieval-style cloister garden to be located east of a proposed (but never built) chapel, the Margaret Fowler Garden is a walled garden located on the Scripps College Campus. The garden is laid out in two distinct sections: the western area contains the sculpture "Eternal Primitive", a central pool and four walkways extending in the cardinal directions. The eastern end has a Mediterranean style tiled wall fountain and open flagstone area. Arcades run along the north and south sides of the garden.
On the south wall of the Margaret Fowler Garden are murals by Alfredo Ramos Martínez. The College commissioned Martinez in 1946 to paint a mural (entitled "The Flower Vendors" by Martínez) on the south wall of the Fowler garden. Martínez sketched in the entire composition on the plaster wall and began working on several panels before dying unexpectedly on November 8, 1946 at the age of 72, leaving the mural unfinished. In 1994, a grant from the Getty Endowment allowed the mural to be conserved.[15]
Environmental sustainability
Scripps College has several sustainability initiatives underway, from energy conservation to green building practices. On the conservation front, the college has seen monetary and energy savings through use of a new energy management system, and has designed water systems to cut down on waste. Turning "Alumnae Field" into a natural surface also helped in efforts to conserve water. Scripps has also downsized trash bins and made "to-go" containers recyclable, in order to divert more waste from landfills. On the emissions reductions front, maintenance staff use electric blowers and carts (as opposed to gas powered equipment), while a ride-sharing program is available for students, faculty and staff.[16]
For its practices regarding sustainability, Scripps earned a D+ on the College Sustainability Report Card 2009, published by the Sustainable Endowments Institute. This grade reflects a quantitative analysis of how effective the institute's initiatives have been. The college received positive recognition for their exploration of the possibility of investing in renewable energy, but fared particularly badly on evaluation categories of shareholder engagement and endowment transparency.[17]
Academics
Scripps is a member of the Claremont Colleges, and much of student life revolves around the five colleges, or "5Cs." Scripps College, Claremont McKenna College, Pomona College, Pitzer College and Harvey Mudd College not only interact socially, but also share dining halls, libraries, and other facilities spread throughout the bordering campuses. All five colleges, along with Claremont Graduate University and Keck Graduate Institute of Applied Life Sciences, are part of the Claremont University Consortium.
Students attending Scripps College are welcome to cross-register for classes at or enroll in the majors of any of the undergraduate schools at the Claremont Colleges. This unique collaboration across the colleges allows Scripps students to choose from more than 60 majors and 2,000 courses each semester, giving them a wide breadth of study while emphasizing the small liberal arts college experience. Top majors for 2013-14 include art, biology, economics, English, French studies, math, politics, and psychology. Classes average 16 students, with an overall student-to-teacher ratio of 10:1. Indeed, more than 21% choose to double or dual major by the time they graduate. All courses are taught by faculty.
Academics are focused on interdisciplinary humanistic studies, combined with rigorous training in the disciplines. General requirements include classes in mathematics, fine arts, letters, natural sciences, social sciences, foreign language, women's/gender studies, and race/ethnic studies. Scripps also requires first-year students to take a writing course, “Writing 50.” Each graduating student must complete a senior thesis or project.
The Core Curriculum
A key part of the Scripps experience is the Core Curriculum, a sequence of three classes that encourage students to think critically and challenge ideas. Every first-year student takes Core I in the fall, which introduces students to major ideas that shape the modern world. Core II seminars focus on specific ideas introduced in Core I and are team-taught by two professors in different fields, such as physics and art. The concluding Core III classes encourage discussion and critical thinking for first-semester sophomores, culminating in individual projects.
Off-Campus Study
Scripps College also maintains a robust study abroad program called Off-Campus Study. The program, which more than 60% of students take advantage of, offers access to more than 120 approved programs in 86 cities in 47 countries (including domestic exchanges with Spelman College and George Washington University and internships in Silicon Valley and Washington, DC).
Rankings
The 2015 annual ranking by U.S. News & World Report categorizes Scripps as 'most selective' and rates it the overall No. 24 liberal arts college in the nation, and the 3rd best women's college, after Wellesley College and Smith College.[18] Forbes in 2014 rated it 69th in its America's Top Colleges ranking of 650 schools, which includes military academies, national universities, and liberal arts colleges.[19] Kiplinger's Personal Finance places Scripps at 27th in its 2014 ranking of best value liberal arts colleges in the United States.[20]
Admissions profile
For the class of 2018, Scripps accepted 27% of applicants.[3] The middle 50% range of SAT scores for enrolled freshmen was 640-733 for critical reading, 640-720 for math, and 660-750 for writing, while the ACT Composite middle 50% range was 29–32.[3]
Student life
Residential life
Scripps is a residential campus, with nine halls and on-campus apartments providing living arrangements for all four years of undergraduate study. In 2006, The Princeton Review included Scripps in several of their rankings, such as "Dorms Like Palaces" (#4), "Most Beautiful Campus" (#17), and "Best Campus Food" (#19).[21]
All residence halls are mixed-class halls; first-year students, sophomores, juniors, and seniors live in one shared community. The number of residents in each hall ranges from 70 to 120, and each is governed by a Hall Council made up of five officers elected by the residents of that hall.
As of October 2014, an anonymous donor gifted Scripps College with $10 million to support the construction of a 10th residence hall currently named NEW Hall.[22]
Athletics
Scripps joined with Claremont Men's College and Harvey Mudd College in 1976 to form the collaborative NCAA Division III CMS (Claremont-Mudd-Scripps) Athletics programs. Women's teams compete as the Athenas (men's teams are known as the Stags). CMS Athletics is also a part of the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC); their traditional rivals are the Pomona-Pitzer Sagehens. [23]
CMS fields 11 women’s teams throughout the academic year, including basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field, volleyball, and water polo. Students interested in other sports like crew, field hockey, rugby, and more are encouraged to participate in intramural sports.
As of the 2013-14 season, the women’s teams (Athenas) have won 95 titles, and 13 Scripps students are in the CMS Athletics hall of fame. In 2014-15, Athenas volleyball participated in the Division III championships, and basketball and swimming and diving posted undefeated conference play.
Noted people
Presidents
- Ernest Jaqua (1926–1942)
- Mary Kimberly Shirk (1942–1943) -- acting president
- Frederick Hard (1944–1964)
- Mark Curtis (1965–1976)
- John H. Chandler (1976–1989)
- E. Howard Brooks (1989–1990)
- Nancy Y. Bekavac (1990–2007) -- first female president
- Frederick "Fritz" Weis (2007–2009)
- Lori Bettison-Varga (2009–present)
Notable faculty
- Hartley Burr Alexander - iconographer, educator, and philosopher
- Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz - historian
- Hao Huang - pianist, music scholar
- Jun Kaneko - artist
- Gail Kubik - musician
- Nathan M. Pusey - historian and 24th president of Harvard University
- Michael S. Roth - historian, author, curator; 16th president of Wesleyan University; 8th president of California College of the Arts
- Millard Sheets - artist
- Paul Soldner - artist
- Albert Stewart - sculptor
Notable alumnae
- Anne Hopkins Aitken - one of the modern mothers of Zen Buddhism in the western world
- Serena Altschul - journalist
- China Chow - actor and model
- Nonie Creme, Co-Founder and Former Creative Director, Butter London[24]
- Winslow Eliot - author
- Marsha Genensky - singer, Anonymous 4
- Molly Ivins - columnist; attended Scripps for 1962–1963, then transferred to Smith College
- Hon. Judith N. Keep - first female judge and first female Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of California.
- Hannah-Beth Jackson - politician
- Mary Parker Lewis - politician
- Gabrielle Giffords - United States Representative of Congressional District number 8 of Arizona
- Elizabeth 'Liz' (Goodman) Logelin - the inspiration for The Liz Logelin Foundation and the best-selling memoir, Two Kisses for Maddy by Matthew Logelin
- Suzanne Muchnic - art critic
- Edith Pattou - author
- Melanie Rawn - author
- Karen I. Tse - Human rights defender and social entrepreneur
- Elizabeth Turk - sculptor and MacArthur Fellow
- Rosemary Radford Ruether - American feminist scholar and theologian
- Ellen Rosenblum - Oregon Attorney General (first female Attorney General in Oregon's history), attended Scripps College before earning her undergraduate degree from the University of Oregon in 1971.
References
- ^ As of June 30, 2014. "U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year (FY) 2014 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY 2013 to FY 2014" (PDF). National Association of College and University Business Officers and Commonfund Institute. 2015.
- ^ a b "Scripps College Facts". Scripps College. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
- ^ a b c d "Scripps College Common Data Set 2013-2014" (PDF). Scripps College.
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ http://www.scrippscollege.edu/parents/handbook-mission.php
- ^ "Dante Online - Le Opere". danteonline.it.
- ^ "Scripps College". campusheritage.org.
- ^ "Scripps College". Encyclopedia Britannica.
- ^ "America's Most Beautiful College Campuses". Forbes.
- ^ "Scripps College". Niche.com. 12 December 2014.
- ^ ""America's most beautiful college campuses", Travel+Leisure (September 2011)". Travel + Leisure. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
- ^ "Motley Coffee House official site". Retrieved 17 October 2014.
- ^ http://www.scrippscollege.edu/williamson-gallery/index.php
- ^ "Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery". Web-kiosk.scrippscollege.edu. Retrieved 2014-08-17.
- ^ http://www.scrippscollege.edu/about/campus-guide/margaret-fowler-gardens.php
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ "Scripps College - Green Report Card 2009". Greenreportcard.org. 2007-06-30. Retrieved 2014-08-17.
- ^ "National Liberal Arts Colleges Rankings". U.S. News & World Report. 2015.
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(help) - ^ "America's Top Colleges". Forbes. 2014-07-30.
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(help) - ^ "Best Values in Private Colleges". Kiplinger's Personal Finance. March 2014.
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(help) - ^ http://www.scrippscollege.edu/dept/newscenter/news/2005/hottestcollege.html
- ^ "Anonymous Gift Lays the Foundation for New Scripps Residence". Scripps College.
- ^ http://www.scrippscollege.edu/students/athletics/index.php
- ^ Hoder, Randye. "'Money Is Only Actually Fun If You're Already Happy'". TIME.
External links
- Official website
- Scripps College official athletics website
- Website of the Claremont Colleges
- Ken Gonzales-Day Collection in the Claremont Colleges Digital Library
- Paintings from the Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery in the Claremont Colleges Library
- Conservation at the Williamson Gallery in the Claremont Colleges Library
- Scripps College at College Navigator, a tool from the National Center for Education Statistics
- Scripps College
- Claremont Colleges
- Independent Colleges of Southern California
- Universities and colleges in Los Angeles County, California
- Women's universities and colleges in the United States
- Claremont, California
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Los Angeles County, California
- School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in California
- Educational institutions established in 1926
- Schools accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges
- Council of Independent Colleges
- Members of the Annapolis Group
- San Gabriel Valley
- Women in California
- Mediterranean Revival architecture in California
- Mission Revival architecture in California
- Spanish Colonial Revival architecture in California
- Spanish Revival architecture in California
- 1926 establishments in California