Castleton State College

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Castleton State College

Established 1787
Type Public Liberal Arts
President David S. Wolk
Faculty 89
Students 2,000
Undergraduates 1,800
Postgraduates 153
Location Castleton, Vermont, USA (43.60778° N 73.17806° W)
Address 86 Seminary Street, Castleton, VT 05735
Telephone (802) 468-5611
Campus small town
Colors Green and white
Nickname Spartans
Website http://www.castleton.edu

Castleton State College is a public liberal arts college located at Castleton in the U.S. state of Vermont. Castleton has an enrollment of 2000 students and offers more than 30 undergraduate programs as well as master’s degrees in education and forensic psychology.

Contents

[edit] History and governance

Castleton State College was founded in 1787 with a charter from the Vermont General Assembly. It is the oldest college in Vermont, the third oldest in New England, and the eighteenth oldest in the United States. Castleton was founded as a grammar school, teaching Greek and Latin and helping to fulfill the Vermont Constitution's requirement of universal free education for Vermont's citizens. In 1867 the State Normal School was founded in Castleton. "Normal school" a term based on the French école normale supérieure, a school to educate teachers. For 30 years the Normal School was privately owned by Abel Leavenworth and his son Philip. In 1912 the State of Vermont purchased the property. In 1947 the Normal School became Castleton Teachers College.

The College saw dramatic growth in students and its stature in the 1920s and 1930s under the direction of Caroline Woodruff. Woodruff modernized the school's curriculum, incorporating the theories of Vermont educator-philosopher John Dewey, especially his precepts of "learning by doing" and "learning by teaching." Caroline Woodruff hired staff with advanced degrees and broadened her students' exposure to the world by bringing people such as Helen Keller, Robert Frost, and Norman Rockwell to Castleton. A friend of Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt, Woodruff was the first woman and first Vermonter to become president of the National Education Association. With increased enrollment from men, intercollegiate athletics began in the 1950s. In 1962 Castleton joined other state supported colleges in becoming a part of the Vermont State Colleges, a consortium of five colleges governed by a common board of trustees, chancellor and Council of Presidents, each college with its own president and deans.

[edit] Campus

The campus is bordered by Mechanic Street to the west, Glenbrook Drive to the East and is bisected by South Street. Seminary Street leads to the President's House after going past Wright House (Admissions), the Fine Arts Center, and Georgian Revival Woodruff Hall. Castleton incorporates a building known as the Old Seminary or Old Chapel, which was once the home of an unrelated medical college that operated from 1818 to 1862 and attracted students from around the world. At present the College is undergoing a series of major renovations. A new fitness center was built in 2004. Dorms and a science center are currently under construction.

The College's campus, portions of which are built in the Georgian Revival style, was featured in the sci-fi movie Time Chasers, which was spoofed in a classic episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links