- Washington Adventist University
-
Washington Adventist University Motto "Gateway to Service" Established 1904 Type Private President Weymouth Spence Students 1,298 Location Takoma Park, MD, USA Campus Suburban Colors Blue and Orange Mascot The Shock Website www.wau.edu Washington Adventist University is a Seventh-day Adventist liberal arts university operating in Takoma Park, Maryland, United States.
Contents
Academics
WAU is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools; the Adventist Accrediting Association of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists; and approved by the Maryland Higher Education Commission. Professional accreditations include the Department of Baccalaureate and Higher Degree Programs of the National League for Nursing, the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs, and the Maryland State Department of Education.
The university offers undergraduate Associate and Bachelors degrees, as well as several Certificate programs. Graduate programs include the following: MBA, Masters of Nursing with Business Leadership, Masters in Public Administration, Masters of Religion, and Masters in Psychology. Adult evening courses towards accelerated bachelors degree programs are also available from the School of Graduate and Professional Services.
History
Washington Adventist University was established in 1904 by the Seventh-day Adventist Church as Washington Training College. In 1907, it was renamed Washington Foreign Mission Seminary, in 1914, Washington Missionary College, in 1961, Columbia Union College, and in 2009 received its current name.[1]
The current president of the college is Weymouth Spence, who has announced plans for structural changes to attempt to revitalize the school.[2] The changes are described in detail in a document called The Plan. [3] President Spence succeeded Randal Wisbey, who left in 2007 for La Sierra University. The resident agent is The Corporation Trust, Inc., in Baltimore, MD.
Environment/campus
The campus occupies 19 acres (77,000 m2) in suburban Takoma Park, MD just north of the Washington D.C. line. There are 17 buildings including residence halls on campus. A new Music building is planned for construction, with the demolition of the old building to occur in Fall, 2010.
The university operates a radio station, WGTS, that plays contemporary Christian music.
Student life
The student body is diverse with students attending from a reported 40 states and 47 different countries. The University reports employing around 150 people.
WAU has 16 separate student clubs/organizations, including 6 honor societies. Musical and Art student groups include a touring orchestra, band, chorale, and black gospel choir. Other groups include the following:
- Mock trial team
- Newspaper/college journal
- Ethnic groups
- Political groups
- Social service groups
- Student Association
WAU sports program includes both intercollegiate and intramural sports for men and women. Sports facilities and activities available to students include NCAA Division II Athletics (baseball and basketball), track and field, cross country, softball, and soccer. A volleyball club, running club, fitness club, racquetball and tennis courts, sports fields, and weight room complement the program. The school's team name is the Washington Adventist University Shock. The 2008 men's baseball team won the USCAA National Championship, the first national championship in the school's history. The "Iron Nine" of the Washington Adventist University baseball team have played in three national championship games between 2006 and 2009. Along with winning the title in 2008 they have been national runnerups in 2006 and 2009.
WAU also features a Sports-Acrobatics Exhibition Team. The Acro-Airs have performed across the country and for a variety of venues. The team does performances at schools and community events where they spread the message of healthy living including abstaining from drugs, alcohol, and tobacco. Washington Adventist University's Acro-Airs also perform Half-Time shows for NBA games. They have performed at games for the Washington Wizards, Indiana Pacers, New York Knicks, and others. A recent performance was at the "Discover Strathmore Open House 2009", which was sponsored in part by the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Baily Circus.
The Columbia Journal serves as the campus newspaper and is commonly referred to as the "CJ."
Many of the student body are members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, though students of all faiths and belief systems may enroll. Weekly church services are held at the campus church, Sligo Church.
Study abroad opportunities
Washington Adventist University co-sponsors Adventist Colleges Abroad,[4] a program in which qualified students study overseas while completing requirements for graduation at Washington Adventist University. This language and cultural immersion is available in eight locations: Argentina, Austria, Brazil, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, and Spain, WAU undergraduate students may also study business courses in England through an exclusive partnership program with Newbold College just outside of London, England.
WGTS controversy
WAU nearly accepted a $25 million bid for the radio station owned by WAU, WGTS 91.9FM, from American Public Media Group in 2007. The Board of Trustees voted against selling the radio station in September of 2007.
WGTS listeners and supporters ran multiple campaigns against the sale for months before the final decision was made by the board.
WAU would have used the sale payment to pay down about $5 million in debts and to increase its endowment of $4 million. The school, which has an enrollment of about 1,000 students, also anticipated that the proceeds would pay for constructing the first new building on campus in 37 years.[5]
Restructuring in 2008
In 2008, President Weymouth Spence announced he would eliminate or freeze up to 22 faculty and staff positions in order to restructure the school’s curriculum and relieve WAU's multimillion-dollar debt.
The announcement came as part of Spence's plan to restructure WAU into a health science-focused institution.
As a result, some students and faculty expressed uncertainty and displeasure regarding the change in school focus to local and school-wide media.
Notable alumni and former students
- Leonard L Bailey - 1964 - pediatric heart surgeon[7]
- Roscoe Bartlett - 1947 - Republican in United States House of Representatives representing Maryland's 6th congressional district[8]
- Hans-Jørgen Holman, Norwegian-American musicologist and educationalist
- H.M.S. Richards - 1919 - pioneer radio broadcaster and founder of the Voice of Prophecy media ministry[9]
- Rachel Roy - 1996 - fashion designer[citation needed]
- Thomas L. Saaty - 1948 - mathematician and inventor of the Analytic Hierarchy Process[10]
- David Tate - 1970 - radio broadcaster[11]
- Benjamin G. Wilkinson - major contributor to the King-James-Only Movement with his book Our Authorized Bible Vindicated[citation needed]
- Ted N. C. Wilson - 1971 - General Conference president of the Seventh Day Adventist church[12]
See also
References
- ^ "Washington Adventist University" New Name for CUC
- ^ CUC's New President Talks About 'The Plan' | Spectrum
- ^ "The Plan for Columbia Union College". 2008-03-05. http://www.cuc.edu/uploads/PDF/THE%20PLAN%20FOR%20CUC-2008.pdf. Retrieved 2008-05-28.
- ^ Adventist Colleges Abroad
- ^ Christian College to Keep Radio Station
- ^ Columbia Union to cut, freeze teaching positions
- ^ James Coffin. "Leonard Bailey; Exclusive Interview Leonard Bailey Tells His Story". Adventist Review".
- ^ "Maryland and the US Government, House of Representatives" (HTML). Maryland Government. http://www.mdgovpap.net/msa/mdmanual/39fed/06ushse/html/msa01956.html. Retrieved October 10, 2010.
- ^ "Life Sketch of HMS Richards" (HTML). Voice of Prophecy. http://www.vop.com/article.php?id=746. Retrieved October 10, 2010.
- ^ "Perseverance, creativity keys to success, Tyler lecturer says" (HTML). University of Delaware. http://www.udel.edu/udaily/2009/oct/tyler101308.html. Retrieved October 10, 2010.
- ^ "David Tate, Radio Broadcaster" (HTML). Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Tate_(radio_broadcaster). Retrieved October 24, 2010.
- ^ Sheila M. Poole. "Wilson; Ted Wilson elected new president of Seventh-day Adventist Church". Atlanta News".
External links
Seventh-day Adventist colleges and universities in the US and Canada National Universities National Liberal Arts College Health Science Masters Universities Regional Colleges Union College (Midwest) · Washington Adventist University (North) · Oakwood University (South) · Southern Adventist University (South) · Southwestern Adventist University (West)Canadian Distance learning Griggs UniversityUnaccredited Historical Related Adventist Accrediting AssociationNotable Figures Sidney Brownsberger · W. W. Prescott · Raymond Cottrell · Denton E. Rebok ·
John Burden · Fritz Guy · Standish brothers · Larry Geraty · Randal Wisbey ·
Heather Knight · J. N. Andrews ·Public Institutions Biotechnology Institute · Bowie State · Center for Environmental Science · Coppin State · Frostburg State · Morgan State · Naval Academy · St. Mary's · Salisbury · Towson · University of Baltimore · University of Maryland, Baltimore · UMBC · University of Maryland, College Park · UMES · UMUC · USM at Hagerstown
Private Institutions Baltimore International · Capitol · Goucher · Griggs · Hood · Johns Hopkins · Labor · Loyola · MBCS · MICA · McDaniel · Mt. St. Mary's · Ner Israel · Notre Dame · St. John's · St. Mary's Seminary · Sojourner-Douglass · Stevenson · Washington · Washington Adventist
Community Colleges Allegany · Anne Arundel · Baltimore City · Baltimore County · Carroll · Cecil · Chesapeake · Frederick · Garrett · Hagerstown · Harford · Howard · Montgomery · Prince George's · Southern Maryland · Wor-Wic
Defunct Institutions Baltimore Hebrew University · Eastern Christian College · Mount Saint Agnes College · St. Charles College · Woodstock CollegeCategories:- Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools
- Universities and colleges affiliated with the Seventh-day Adventist Church
- Universities and colleges in Montgomery County, Maryland
- Educational institutions established in 1904
- Council of Independent Colleges
- National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities members
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.