St. Louis Community College–Meramec

St. Louis Community College–Meramec (also known as STLCC-Meramec or Meramec) campus is located in the suburb of Kirkwood, MO. Meramec is the largest community college in Missouri with over 12,000 undergraduate and transfer students.[2][3] Along with the 78-acre (31.6 ha) main campus in Kirkwood, Meramec operates one satellite campus in South St. Louis County - Meramec’s South County Education and University Center. The college is named after the Meramec River that meanders through central Missouri before emptying into the Mississippi River at the border between St. Louis and Jefferson Counties.

St. Louis Community College–Meramec
Motto"Expanding Minds. Changing Lives."
TypePublic, community
Established1972[1]
Students12,000
Location, ,
38.5684°N 90.4205°W / 38.5684; -90.4205
CampusSuburban
ColorsNavy and silver          
AthleticsArchers
AffiliationsSTLCC System
Websitewww.stlcc.edu/mc/

History

St. Joseph College opened in 1889 on the site of the present day STLCC-Meramec campus The school was a small private Catholic college from 1889 until the early 1960s. When the college closed the land was redeveloped into the modern STLCC campus.[4]

Notable programs

Meramec has many programs of study and offers a wide variety of associate degrees, some of the most popular being Business, Accounting, Music,[5] Finance, Supply Chain Management, and Education. Meramec also has an extensive Horticulture program; the gardens and greenhouses can be seen on the southwestern part of campus from Big Bend Road.[6] The student newspaper, the Montage, has won the MCMA-Missouri College Media Association's best two-year college newspaper in Missouri.[7]

Meramec athletics

STLCC operates as a single entity in athletic competition; Meramec students are permitted to participate if eligible.

Meramec serves as the "home field" for Men's Baseball, Women's Soccer, and Women's Softball.

Prior to STLCC consolidating all athletic programs under one banner, STLCC-Meramec participated under the name Magic.

Notable former athletes

gollark: Support commas, apioform.
gollark: It should allow commas.
gollark: Go is at least technically modern, if not... modern in the sense of taking any lessons from modern language design at all.
gollark: Neither is hugely C-like though.
gollark: They're both modern languages *somewhat* inspired by C which aim to increase safety and reduce memory management hassles in some way.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.