Pennsylvania State University Commonwealth campuses

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2601:545:8281:e7f0:59c:7cf3:c492:765d (talk) at 08:12, 12 July 2020 (Undid revision 963494043 by 2601:98A:4080:3680:15E3:DE1F:66E1:B8F1 (talk) While the source lists 25 (not 26), WC, Carlisle, Great Valley, Hershey, and Williamsport serve unique purposes and are not grouped among the other 20 (https://bulletins.psu.edu/undergraduate/campuses/). UP is not a Commonwealth campus, the term describing those other than UP. This leaves the number at 19.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.


The Pennsylvania State University is a geographically dispersed university system with campuses located throughout the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. While the administrative hub of the university is located at its flagship campus, University Park, the 19 additional commonwealth campuses together enroll 39 percent of Penn State's undergraduate student population.[1]

Organization

Under the present administrative structure, enacted by the Penn State Board of Trustees in 2005, the 19 undergraduate campuses (not including University Park and Penn State's special-mission campus, the Pennsylvania College of Technology) are overseen by the Vice President for Commonwealth Campuses. Each campus is led by a chancellor who reports to the Vice President. (This position replaced the existing titles of campus dean and campus executive officer) [2]

All 19 campuses are considered part of Penn State's Commonwealth campus system, and all offer Penn State baccalaureate degrees. Five campuses are considered “college” campuses. Those five are Penn State Abington, Penn State Altoona, Penn State Berks, Penn State Behrend, and Penn State Harrisburg. The other fourteen campuses are referred to collectively as the "University College". These campuses, while having their own chancellor, also report to the Dean of the University College, a position concurrently held by the Vice President for Commonwealth Campuses.

List of Commonwealth campuses

The first two years of education for any Penn State major are available at all campuses; however, some majors can be completed only at specific campuses.

Campus Location Enrollment[3] Year
established
Nickname Athletics (Affiliation)
Penn State Abington1 Abington, Pennsylvania 3,728 1950 Nittany Lions NEAC (NCAA Division III)
Penn State Altoona Logan Township, Pennsylvania 3,070 1939 Nittany Lions AMCC (NCAA Division III)
Penn State Beaver Monaca, Pennsylvania 599 1965 Nittany Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State Erie, The Behrend College2 Erie, Pennsylvania 4,108 1948 Lions AMCC (NCAA Division III)
Penn State Berks Spring Township, Pennsylvania 2,482 1958 Nittany Lions NEAC (NCAA Division III)
Penn State Brandywine3 Media, Pennsylvania 1,332 1967 Nittany Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State DuBois DuBois, Pennsylvania 563 1935 Nittany Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State Fayette Uniontown, Pennsylvania 589 1934 Roaring Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State Greater Allegheny4 McKeesport, Pennsylvania 439 1948 Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State Harrisburg, The Capital College Middletown, Pennsylvania 4,898 1966 Lions Capital (CAC) (NCAA Division III)
Penn State Hazleton Hazleton, Pennsylvania 619 1934 Nittany Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State Lehigh Valley Center Valley, Pennsylvania 977 1912 Nittany Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State Mont Alto Mont Alto, Pennsylvania 730 1903 Nittany Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State New Kensington New Kensington, Pennsylvania 545 1958 Nittany Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State Schuylkill Schuylkill Haven, Pennsylvania 631 1934 Nittany Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State Scranton5 Dunmore, Pennsylvania 975 1923 Nittany Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State Shenango6 Sharon, Pennsylvania 402 1965 Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State Wilkes-Barre Lehman, Pennsylvania 424 1916 Nittany Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State York York, Pennsylvania 828 1926 Nittany Lions PSUAC (USCAA)
Penn State University Park7 University Park, Pennsylvania next to State College, Pennsylvania 46,723 1855 Nittany Lions NCAA Division IBig Ten Conference
Notes
  1. - formerly Penn State Ogontz
  2. - formerly Penn State Behrend and colloquially referred to simply as "Behrend"
  3. - formerly Penn State Delaware County
  4. - formerly Penn State McKeesport
  5. - formerly Penn State Worthington Scranton
  6. - formerly Penn State Shenango Valley
  7. - Penn State's flagship, main campus; often referred to synonymously as "Penn State University"

See also

References

  1. ^ University Budget Office. "Percent of Enrollment by Location Fall 2016". Penn State Fact Book. Penn State University. Retrieved September 2, 2017.
  2. ^ Office of University Relations (2005-05-13). "Plan for administrative reorganization approved by Penn State Board of Trustees". Penn State University. Archived from the original on 2006-04-25. Retrieved 2007-02-10.
  3. ^ Undergraduate and Graduate/First Professional Fall Enrollment 2019 and 2018

External links