- Ontario Agricultural College
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Ontario Agricultural College at the University of Guelph Established 1874 Type Public university Agricultural College Dean Robert Gordon, PhD Undergraduates 3,000 students Location Alfred, Guelph, Kemptville and Ridgetown, Ontario, Canada Colours Red and White Affiliations CUSID, UACC, ACCC, CCAA, Website www.oac.uoguelph.ca/ Agriculture General Agribusiness · Agricultural science
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The Ontario Agricultural College (OAC) originated at the agricultural laboratories of the Toronto Normal School, and was officially founded in 1874 as an associate agricultural college of the University of Toronto. Since 1964, it has become affiliated with the University of Guelph, which operates four campuses throughout Ontario.
Contents
History
Ontario farmers increasingly demanded more information on the best farming techniques. Their demands led to farm magazine and agricultural fairs. In 1868 the assembly created an agricultural museum, which morphed into the Ontario Agricultural College in Guelph in 1874.[1] Its first building was Moreton Lodge, located where Johnston Hall now stands, which included classrooms, residences, a library, and a dining room. (Several buildings constructed during this time period are still a part of campus life today, including President's Residence, Raithby House, and Day Hall.)
The War Memorial Hall (more generally known as Memorial Hall) is a landmark building built in June 1924 as a lecture hall or theatre at the Ontario Agricultural College to honour students who had enlisted and died in the First World War, and in the Second World War. Two bronze tablets in the Memorial Chapel remembers alumni who died in the First World War and in the Second World War.[2]
Subsequently, the Ontario Agricultural College (OAC) became one of three founding colleges of the University of Guelph in 1964. (The other two were the Ontario Veterinary College and the Macdonald Institute.)
The OAC opened on May 1, 1874 with an enrollment of 28 students. The OAC administration was housed in Moreton Lodge until 1931, when the building was torn down to make way for Johnston Hall. The OAC's offices have resided in Johnston Hall ever since. The Canadian-American economist John Kenneth Galbraith earned a bachelor's degree in animal husbandry from the College.
August 2008 Dr. Robert Gordon named the new Dean of the Ontario Agriculture College
Campus
In 1997, three other agricultural colleges affiliated with the Ontario Agricultural College and the University of Guelph[1]: College d'Alfred, a francophone college in the eastern part of the province at Alfred, Ontario; Kemptville College, founded in 1917 and located at Kemptville, Ontario about 30 minutes south of Ottawa, and Ridgetown College at Ridgetown, Ontario founded in 1922 and located in southwestern Ontario near Chatham. In May 2007, they were renamed Campus d'Alfred, Kemptville Campus and Ridgetown Campus in order to recognize their full integration into the university.[2]
Programs
The OAC offers a wide range of degree and diploma programs based on four main pillars: food, agriculture, environment, and rural communities.[3] The following degrees and diplomas are available under the OAC:
- Associate Diploma
- Agriculture
- Turfgrass Management
- Bachelor of Arts
- Agricultural Economics
- Bachelor of Bio-Resource Management
- Bachelor of Science in Agriculture
- Agriculture
- Animal Science
- Crop Science
- Horticultural Science
- Organic Agriculture
- Turfgrass Science
- Bachelor of Science in Environmental Sciences
- Environmental Sciences
- Bachelor of Landscape Architecture
- Bachelor of Commerce
- Food and Agricultural Business
- Bachelor of Science
- Animal Biology
- Earth Surface Science
- Environmental Biology
- Food Science
- 1877 - one-year diploma program expanded to two years
- 1887 - B.Sc.(Agr) degree program begins (University of Toronto awards the degrees from 1888 until 1964).
- 1891 - short courses offered to general public.
- 1901 - degree program adds a fourth year (still a U of T degree).
- 1926 - graduate program begins
- 1964 - B.Sc.(Agr) degree awarded by the University of Guelph.
- 1988 - Bachelor of Commerce and Bachelor of Environmental Science programs begins.
- 1995 - "Experience Agriculture" curriculum for B.Sc.(Agr) program begins.
- 1997 - Agricultural colleges in Kemptville, Ridgetown and Alfred affiliate with OAC and the University of Guelph.
- 2006 - the Faculty of Environmental Sciences is relocated permanently to the OAC.
- 2009 - the School of Environmental Sciences is formed by a merger of the departments of Environmental Biology and Land Resource Sciences, and the Faculty of Environmental Sciences.
See also
References
- ^ John Carter, "The Education of the Ontario Farmer," Ontario History, May 2004, Vol. 96 Issue 1, pp 62-84
- ^ http://www.library.guelph.on.ca/localhistory/photodbase/dborig/C6-0-0-0-0-848.jpg War Memorial Hall
- ^ About OAC
External links
- Ontario Agricultural College Home Page
- Student Federation of the Ontario Agricultural College (SFOAC) Website
Post-secondary education in Ontario Degree-granting institutions Public Universities[1] Private Universities[2] All above institutions are either established through an Act of the Legislative Assembly or through a Royal CharterDegree Programs Offered
under Ministerial ConsentCommunity colleges Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology Algonquin† · Boréal · Cambrian† · Canadore · Centennial† · Confederation† · Durham · Fanshawe† · Fleming† · George Brown† · La Cité† · Lambton† · Loyalist† · Mohawk† · Niagara† · Northern · St. Clair† · St. Lawrence† · Sault · Seneca†Institutes of Technology and Advanced Learning Institutes of Advanced Studies †Degree programs offeredOther recognized institutions Specialist institutions Affiliated Colleges Assumption · Brescia · Caterbury · Conrad Grebel · Huron · Iona · King's · Renison · St. Jerome's · St. Paul'sCategories:- University of Guelph
- Agricultural universities and colleges
- Educational institutions established in 1874
- Vocational education in Canada
- Education in Guelph
- Associate Diploma
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