College of Staten Island

College of Staten Island
The College of Staten Island
CSI logo.png
Established 1976
Type Public
President Tomás D. Morales, Ed.D.
Students 13,092 (Fall 2008)[1]
Location Staten Island, New York, USA
Colors French Blue & White
Mascot Dolphin
Affiliations City University of New York
Website www.csi.cuny.edu

The College of Staten Island (CSI) is a four-year, senior college of (CUNY) and is one of the 11 senior colleges in the City University of New York. Programs in the liberal arts and sciences and professional studies lead to bachelor's and associate's degrees. The master's degree is awarded in 13 professional and liberal arts and sciences fields of study. The College participates in doctoral programs of The City University Graduate School and University Center in Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Nursing, Physics, and Psychology.

Contents

History

It was established in 1976 from the merger of Richmond College (opened in 1965) and Staten Island Community College (opened 1956). Richmond College had been threatened with closure because of New York City's financial crisis, while the older school, because of its status as a community college, received state support. The merger was particularly logical since the community college offered two year degrees, while Richmond College was an "upper divisional" college (the third in the nation) that offered degrees to those in their third and fourth years of schooling.

The College of Staten Island has been located on the grounds of the former Willowbrook State School since 1993. It is the largest campus, in terms of physical size, in New York City. Before the relocation to Willowbrook, the college had a split campus, located at the former Staten Island Community College (in Sunnyside, on Todt Hill) and Richmond College (in St. George).

The first president of the college, Dr. Edmond Volpe, an American literature scholar, retired in 1994, after having successfully handled the merger of the two colleges and the unification of the two campuses. He was succeeded by Dr. Marlene Springer, as the second president of the college, an English and American literature scholar, under whose leadership the College improved academic standards, introduced two doctoral programs and several master's programs, raised the level of the faculty, added research institutes, and introduced an Honors College, the Verrazano School, and the CSI High School for International Studies. She retired in August 2007 and was succeeded by Tomás D. Morales, who was awarded an Ed.D. in Educational Administration from SUNY-Albany in 1998, as the third president of the college. He has arranged for a free bus from the Staten Island ferry to the Willowbrook campus.

The Campus

Completed in 1994, the 204-acre (0.83 km2) campus of CSI/CUNY is the largest site for a college in New York City. Set in a park-like landscape, the campus is centrally located on Staten Island. Mature trees and woodlands, flowering trees and ornamental plantings, fields and outdoor athletic facilities, the great lawn, sculpture, and seating areas create a rural oasis in an urban setting. In 2005 an academic building on the campus was converted into the CSI High School for International Studies; the first senior class to graduate from the high school did so in 2009. The high school has since moved off-site to a new, purpose-built facility.

Twenty one new and renovated neo-Georgian buildings serve as classrooms, laboratories, facilities buildings and offices. The academic buildings house 300 classrooms, laboratories and instructional spaces, study lounges, department and program offices, and faculty offices.

Beginning on July 1, 2011 the campus is now smoke-free, allowing fresh air all over the campus. Smokers are forced to smoke their cigarettes in designated areas on campus only. Smoking anywhere else is strictly prohibited including students cars. Fines are enforced if you are caught lighting up out of the designated areas.

North and South Academic Quadrangles are connected by the Alumni Walk, with the Library and Campus Center as focal points. The Center for the Arts is located midway between the Quadrangles at the fountain plaza. The Sports and Recreation Center and the athletic fields are located near the main entrance to the campus. the college of staten island is located in staten island new york.

Sixteen works of art, a permanent collection of works either commissioned or purchased through the Art Acquisitions Program of the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York, are installed throughout the campus. The artists and their free-standing sculptures and reliefs are: Vincenzo Amato, Body of Hector/Glaucus; Miriam Bloom, Shooliloo; Fritz Bultman, Garden at Nightfall (extended loan); Chryssa, Untitled; Lucille Friedland, Big Stride (gift of the artist); Red Grooms, Marathon; Sarah Haviland, Staten Island Arch; Jon Isherwood, Borromini's Task; Zero Higashida, Maquette for a Small Universe; Valerie Jaudon, Untitled; Niki Ketchman, Red Inside; Win Knowlton, Ellipse; Mark Mennin, Torak; Don Porcaro, Moon Marker; and Hans Van de Bovenkamp, Stele in the Wind.

Astrophysical Observatory

The 16-foot (4.9 m) dome astrophysical observatory was completed in 1996. In addition to serving students in astronomy courses, the facility is used for faculty and student research projects, environment monitoring projects, and community programs.

Biological Sciences/Chemical Sciences Building

An ultramodern facility, the building (6S) contains a lecture hall, nine teaching laboratories, faculty offices, research facilities for faculty and students, the Center for Environmental Science, and the Center for Developmental Neuroscience and Developmental Disabilities.

Advanced Imaging Facility

Located in Building 6S, the Advanced Imaging Facility houses two transmission electron microscopes, a field-emission scanning electron microscope, a spectral imaging confocal microscope, an atomic force microscope with inverted light microscope for TIRF imaging, and a flow cytometer. The facility is open for use by faculty from all higher education institutions in the region and offers courses for training of advanced undergraduates from the college.

Campus Center

The Campus Center (1C) provides facilities for a complete student life including offices for student organizations, food services, health services, a study lounge, chapel, game room, screening room, bookstore, and the studios of WSIA-FM, the student-operated radio station.

Center for the Arts

Entered from the Great Lawn and from the Alumni Walk, the Center houses two academic wings for programs in the arts (1P) (Studio Art, Art History, Dance, Dramatic Arts, Music, Music Technology, and Photography) as well as superb public spaces: the 440-seat Clara and Arleigh B. Williamson Theatre, the 900-seat Marlene Springer Concert Hall, a recital hall, a lab theater, lecture halls, two art galleries, and a small conference center.

Library Building

(1L) Designed with inviting reading rooms, open shelves, a café, several computer labs and study carrels, the Library research and study facilities are enhanced by computer data-based operations available to all students. The Library Media Services make accessible pedagogical multimedia materials to distant classrooms and laboratories by means of the campus fiber-optic network.[2]

Sports and Recreation Center

This 77,000-square-foot (7,200 m2) multipurpose facility and surrounding athletic fields serve the intercollegiate and intramural sports and recreation programs. On a membership basis, faculty, staff, alumni, and the general public also have access to the facilities. The Sports and Recreation Center is building 1R on campus.

Special programs

New Student Orientation

New students are welcomed through a unique orientation program called CLUE, the College Life Unit Experience. In addition to helping new students make a smooth transition to college life, CLUE gives new students the opportunity to have meaningful exchanges with faculty, staff, and current students.

  • Baccalaureate Program for first-year students meeting senior college admissions standards.
  • Teacher Education Honors Academy
  • Macaulay Honors College
  • Departmental Honors Program
  • Verrazano School Program for high achieving students.
  • Study-Abroad programs through the Center for International Service.
  • University Skills Immersion Program provides academic preparation for first-year students. Tutoring through the Academic Support Center for students with deficiencies in the academic skills and subject matter.
  • Adults Returning to the Classroom (ARC), introductory courses at off-campus locations.
  • Internships with government agencies and in the private sector.

Notable alumni

  • Justin Brannan, musician, writer, political activist
  • Gene Simmons, Lead Singer of Kiss, attended Richmond College before it merged with Staten Island Community College.

Student Life Organizations/Publications

Third Rail
Executive Editors Jeff McGraham
Neil Schuldiner
Categories political arts magazine
Frequency Quarterly
Circulation 3,000 per
First issue Fall 1994
Company College of Staten Island
Country  United States
Language English
Website www.thirdrailmag.com

The Third Rail

The Third Rail is the literary political arts magazine of the College of Staten Island (CSI) and publishes semesterly. Fully embracing W.E.B. DuBois' notion that "art is propaganda," and in the tradition of “FIRE!” the groundbreaking political arts magazine founded and destroyed during the Harlem Renaissance.

The Third Rail features Poetry • Political Commentaries • Philosophy • Photography Arts • Fiction • Non-Fiction • Drawings • Social Commentaries, Plays & everything in the nature of the political arts

  • Third Rail has won the Independent Press Associations (IPA) 2003 Journalism Award for Best Reporting.
  • Third Rail has been placed on The Nations “One of Our Favorite College Papers” list.
  • The spring 2007 issue of Third Rail which focused on student apathy featured a cover shot of two nude students, one male, and one female. As a result of this cover the issue has constantly been stolen from school racks and dumped in trash cans. This has prompted the first ever second printing of a single issue. The ongoing story of the battle over censorship has been covered by the Student Press Law Center and Staten Island Advance.

WSIA

WSIA is the campus radio station. It airs jazz, rock, and urban formatted content in addition to talk radio.

References

  1. ^ CSI Institutional Profile, Fall 2008
  2. ^ http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/videoconference

External links


Coordinates: 40°36′00″N 74°09′00″W / 40.6°N 74.15°W / 40.6; -74.15


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