Lake Erie College

Lake Erie College is a private liberal arts college in Painesville, Ohio. Founded in 1856 as a female seminary, the college converted to a coeducational institution in 1985. As of the 2016–2017 academic year, the total enrollment was 1,177 students.[3]

Lake Erie College
TypePrivate liberal arts college
Established1856
Endowment~$31.4 million
PresidentBrian Posler
Academic staff
45
Undergraduates783
Postgraduates253
Location, ,
41°43′00″N 81°15′06″W
CampusSuburban, 52 acres (21 ha)[1]
Colors          Forest green and white[1]
AthleticsNCAA Division IIGreat Midwest Athletic Conference
NicknameStorm
AffiliationsCouncil of Independent Colleges, Ohio Foundation of Independent Colleges
MascotStormy the Cyclone[2]
Websitelec.edu

In addition to 63 programs of study for undergraduate students, Lake Erie offers master's programs in education and physician assistant studies, as well as the IACBE-accredited Parker Master of Business Administration program, first founded in 1981.

Campus

Lake Erie College is approximately 30 miles (48 km) east of downtown Cleveland in downtown Painesville. Students under the age of 22 whose official residence is outside a 50-mile (80 km) radius of the campus are required to live on campus during the academic year.[4]

College Hall, built in 1857, on the campus of Lake Erie College in Painesville, Ohio

Students can rely on their own transportation or the Lake County Laketran bus system that has stops near the campus. Parking one personal vehicle on campus is available upon registering with the college.[5]

History

Lake Erie Female Seminary

Founded as the Lake Erie Female Seminary in 1856, the institution toppled the belief that women were not capable of significant intellectual improvement. The only single-sex institution of higher education for women in the Western Reserve, it took after its sister seminary, Mount Holyoke.

The seminary was relocated in Painesville after Willoughby Seminary, founded in 1847, burned to the ground. Its founders include prominent local citizens Timothy Rockwell, general store owner Silas Trumbull Ladd, Judge William Lee Perkins, Mayor and Judge Aaron Wilcox, Charles Austin Avery and Judge Reuben Hitchcock, a president of the Cleveland and Mahoning Railroad and cousin of Edward Hitchcock.

Scholarship was not a chief concern at the Seminary for many years, however. Educating future mothers through domestic work, physical education and etiquette ranked among the Seminary's chief aims. For a tuition of $160, seminarians trained as teachers.[6]

Over 40 years, the seminary raised standards, finally delivering a college degree. It took on the official name of Lake Erie College in 1908 when a charter was passed.

Expansion

The Arts took up a home in the halls of Lake Erie. Helen Rockwell Morley Memorial Music Building, opened in 1927, still shines – its classic Greek design, Corinthian pillars, seating for more than 1,000, and four-manual E.M. Skinner organ with 5,000 pipes.

The Civil Aeronautics Authority approved Lake Erie for a civilian pilot program in 1939, several years after Amelia Earhart visited the campus to speak to its Aviators Club.[7]

In the 1940s, President Dr. Helen D. Bragdon, a Harvard alumna, moved the College from more Victorian ideals toward an active, responsible citizenry. Her successor, Dr. Paul Weaver, initiated a required general studies lecture series to demonstrate the interconnectivity of fields of study, three 10 week terms, and the establishment of study centers in many European cities.

In 1954, Lake Erie College became the first institution of higher education in the United States to require a term abroad for its students.

In 1967, Lake Erie added a School of Equine Studies to its equestrian riding program developed by Laddie Andahazy, an influential horseman who founded the Cleveland Grand Prix.

A special exhibit of Modern art signaled the opening of Royce Hall for the Fine and Performing Arts in 1970. Prints, sculpture, graphics and more by celebrated artists such as Dali, dekooning, Magritte, Miro and Picasso were on display. R. Buckminster Fuller spoke at the facility's ground-breaking.[8]

In 1985, Lake Erie College became coeducational, merging Garfield Senior College with Lake Erie College for Women, and men were admitted officially as students.

Presidents

# Name Term of Office
1 Lydia Sessions 1859–1866
2 Anna M. Edwards 1866–1868
3 Mary Evans 1868–1909
4 Vivian Blance Small 1909–1941
5 Helen Dalton Bragdon 1941–1950
Alfred T. Hill 1950–1951 (interim)
6 Paul S. Weaver 1951–1976
Paul Newland 1976–1977 (interim)
7 Charles E.P. Simmons 1977–1984
Marilyn S. Jones 1984–1985 (interim)
8 Edward Q. Moulton 1985–1986
9 Clodus R. Smith 1986–1992
10 Hal Laydon 1992–2005
M. Sue Dreitzler 2005–2006 (interim)
11 Michael T. Victor 2006–2015
Peter M. Gerhart 2015–2016 (interim)
12 Brian Posler 2016–present

Academics

Lake Erie College houses five academic schools: the School of Business, the School of Arts and Humanities, the School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, the School of Education and Professional Studies, and the School of Equine Studies. Each maintains its own majors, minors, and programs under the direction of its respective dean. All students complete a general curriculum, called CORE, as a foundation to courses required by their major field(s) of study.

School of Business

The IACBE-accredited School of Business offers its students ten undergraduate majors and six minors.[9]

Center for Entrepreneurship

Lake Erie College is a member of the Entrepreneurship Education Consortium and its programming integrates entrepreneurship concepts and collaborative retreats and competitions such as ideaLabs and Entrepreneurship Immersion Week into traditional academic studies. Its Center for Entrepreneurship consists of business faculty and a resident entrepreneur.

School of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences

The School of Arts and Humanities offers its students 13 undergraduate majors and 16 minors. Some popular majors include criminal justice, psychology, communication and English. Minors such as gender, sexuality & women's studies as well as comedy studies fall outside the scope of major fields of study. While most major fields lead to a Bachelor of Arts degree, a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree is also offered.[10]

School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics

The School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics offers its students four majors.[11] Students have access to regional land preserves due to the School's partnership with The Nature Conservancy.[12]

School of Education and Professional Studies

In addition to three undergraduate programs, the School of Education and Professional Studies also offers endorsements in TESOL and reading, post-baccalaureate programming, and an M.Ed. degree.[13]

School of Equine Studies

The School of Equine Studies offers its students four majors.[14]

Equestrian riding

Lake Erie College's equestrian riding teams compete throughout the calendar year in English and Western events, including the IHSA Hunt Seat Team, IHSA Western Team, and IDA Dressage Team. The college hosts shows, clinics and events, most notably the annual Prix de Villes, at its George M. Humphrey Equestrian Center.

Athletics

Known as the Lake Erie College Storm, the College is a member of NCAA Division II and the Great Midwest Athletic Conference (GMAC).[15] Lake Erie College fields 17 varsity sports teams at the Division II level and joined the GMAC prior to the start of the 2017-18 academic year. Prior to joining the GMAC, Lake Erie was a member of the Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference from 2010-2017. Lake Erie College was also a member of the Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference (AMCC) of Division III; LEC had been part of the AMCC from 2007-2010.[16]

The official nickname of the College’s athletics teams is the Storm. The name was chosen to replace the nickname Unicorns when the College added men’s intercollegiate athletics beginning in 1988. Their mascot is Stormy.The College offers basketball, cross country, lacrosse, soccer, softball, indoor/outdoor track and field, and volleyball for women, and baseball, basketball, cross country, football, lacrosse, soccer, indoor/outdoor track and field, and wrestling for men. Sixteen teams participate in the GLIAC currently while men's lacrosse competes in the Great Midwest Athletic Conference. A newly heated rivalry has begun with Ashland University, a two-hour drive away in Ashland, Ohio.

Notable alumni

gollark: +>markov
gollark: +>markov
gollark: +>markov
gollark: +>markov
gollark: +>markov 241757436720054273

References

  1. Lake Erie College - Facts at a Glance
  2. Traditions – Stormy Archived 2010-01-25 at the Wayback Machine
  3. https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=lake+erie+college&s=all&id=203580
  4. Lake Erie College - Student Life Archived 2007-08-01 at the Wayback Machine
  5. Lake Erie College - Safety and Security Archived 2007-10-24 at the Wayback Machine
  6. Geissman., Gross, Margaret (1993). Dancing on the table : a history of Lake Erie College. Burnsville, N.C.: Celo Valley Books. pp. 8–9. ISBN 0923687289. OCLC 29442846.
  7. "Resources". The Ninety-Nines, Inc. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  8. Geissman., Gross, Margaret (1993). Dancing on the table : a history of Lake Erie College. Burnsville, N.C.: Celo Valley Books. pp. 56–57. ISBN 0923687289. OCLC 29442846.
  9. "School of Business | Lake Erie College". www.lec.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  10. "The School of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences | Lake Erie College". www.lec.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  11. "School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics | Lake Erie College". www.lec.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  12. "Lake Erie College partners with The Nature Conservancy to provide new educational opportunities". www.lec.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  13. "School of Education and Professional Studies | Lake Erie College". www.lec.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  14. "Equine Studies, Lake Erie College". www.lec.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  15. "GLIAC grants two schools provisional membership". Retrieved 2009-11-23.
  16. "NCAA approves Lake Erie College as Division II Provisional Member". Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2008-08-29.
  17. "Minding Other People's Business: On Dawn Powell - Los Angeles Review of Books". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.