Florida International University

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Florida International University

 Seal of Florida International University

Motto Spes Scientia Facultas (Latin: "Hope, Knowledge, Opportunity")
Established 1965
Type Public
Endowment $91.1 million
President Dr. Modesto A. Maidique
Faculty 1,681
Staff 6,818
Students 39,500
Undergraduates 31,000
Postgraduates 8,500
Location Miami, Florida, USA
Campus Urban, 573.4 acres (2.31 km²)
Colors Blue and Gold            
Nickname Golden Panthers
Mascot Roary the Panther
Website www.fiu.edu

Florida International University (FIU) is a major public research university located in Miami, Florida, well-known for its architecture, business, engineering, hospitality management, and law programs. It currently has more than 39,500 students, 1,681 full-time faculty, and 117,500 alumni, making it the largest university in South Florida and placing it among the nation’s 20 largest colleges and universities.

Florida International University is a Carnegie Doctoral/Research Extensive institution, the top designation by the Carnegie Foundation and has awarded over 136,000 degrees. [1] The university is comprised of 27 separate colleges and schools that offer more than 205 programs of study with more than 280 majors.

FIU is ranked among the top 100 public national universities in the U.S. News & World Report annual guide to "America's Best Colleges." FIU was the youngest institution in that group. U.S. News & World Report's "America's Best Colleges" (2006 and 2007) also ranks FIU's undergraduate international business programs 7th best in the nation and lists the Chapman Graduate School of Business among the top 20 business schools in the U.S. for excellence in international business.

This recognition comes as the academic quality of the university improves and its admissions rates become more selective. Admission rates have also decreased greatly from 63.2% for Fall 2005 to 42.8% for Fall 2006. [2] The average incoming freshmen had a SAT score of 1131, a 24 ACT score and a 3.64 high school GPA. [3]

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Birth of the idea

The founding of FIU began in 1943, when state Sen. Ernest 'Cap' Graham (father of future Florida governor and U.S. senator Bob Graham) presented the state legislature with the initial proposal for the establishment of a public university in South Florida.

Sen. Graham is recognized for his early awareness of the necessity of a public university to serve Miami’s growing population. While his bill did not pass, Graham persisted in presenting his proposal to colleagues, advising them that the city needed a state university.

In 1964, Senate Bill 711 was introduced by Florida senator Robert M. Haverfield; it instructed the state Board of Education and the Board of Regents (BOR), to begin planning for the development of a state university in Miami. The bill was signed into law by then-governor W. Haydon Burns in June 1965. FIU was on its way to becoming a reality.

FIU's founding president Charles "Chuck" Perry was appointed by the Board of Regents in July 1969 after a nationwide search. Just 31 years old, the new president was the youngest in the history of the State University System and, at the time, the youngest university president in the country.

Perry recruited the three co-founders - Butler Waugh, Donald McDowell and Nick Sileo - who came to abandoned Tamiami Airport in the summer of 1969 and launched the monumental task of creating a new university. Alvah Chapman, former Miami Herald publisher and Knight Ridder chairman, used his civic standing and media power to assist the effort. In the 1980s, Chapman would become chair of the FIU Foundation Board of Trustees.

[edit] Opening of the doors

In September 1972, 5,667 students finally entered the new state university. Miami had been the largest city in the country lacking a public baccalaureate-granting institution, and now it finally had a university that offered both accessibility and affordability. Eighty percent of the student body had just graduated from Miami-Dade Community College. A typical student entering FIU was 25 years old and attending school full-time while holding down a full-time job. Forty-three percent were married. FIU was far from a typical university.

Negotiations with University of Miami and Miami-Dade Community College led FIU to open as an upper-division only school. It would be 10 years before lower-division classes were added.

The first commencement, held in June 1973, was held in the reading room of the ground floor of Primera Casa (today called the Perry Building) - the only place large enough on campus for the ceremony. More than 1,500 family members and friends watched FIU's first class of 191 graduates receive their diplomas.

By late 1975, after seven years at the helm, Chuck Perry felt he had accomplished his goal and left the University to become president and publisher of the Sunday newspaper magazine Family Weekly (now USA Weekend), one of the country's largest magazines. When he left, there were over 10,000 students attending classes and a campus with five major buildings and a sixth being planned.

[edit] FIU Today

Harold Crosby, the University's second president and the founding president of the University of West Florida in Pensacola, agreed in 1976 to serve a three-year "interim" term. Under his leadership, the North Campus (which would be officially renamed the Biscayne Bay Campus in February) - located on the former Interama site on Biscayne Bay - was opened in 1977. State Senator Jack Gordon was instrumental in securing funding for the development of the campus. President Crosby was also insistent that the "I" in FIU be highlighted, which prompted the launching of new programs with an international focus and the recruitment of faculty from the Caribbean and Latin America. President Crosby's resignation in January 1979, triggered the search for a "permanent" president.

Gregory Baker Wolfe, a former United States diplomat and then-president of Portland State University became FIU's third president, from 1979 to 1986. After stepping down as president, Wolfe went on to teach in the university's International Relations department. The student union on the Biscayne Bay Campus is named in his honor.

In 1986, Dr. Modesto A. Maidique became President of FIU. Maidique set forth a number of goals for the institution, including a substantial growth in its ability to serve the local population, the addition of a football team to the sports program, and the development of programs in architecture, law, and medicine. These goals have been achieved - FIU has since grown to become the largest university in South Florida, with a budget of over $567 million. [4]

Since 2001, FIU has grown immensely with the construction of three new residence halls, a school of Architecture, Law and Marine Biology, a new recreation center for students, three new parking garages, the Frost Art Museum, new Greek houses, and numerous classroom buildings [5]. In 2002, FIU achieved two major milestones: fielding its first football team, and opening the first public law school in South Florida, the Florida International University College of Law. In March of 2006, the Florida Board of Governors approved FIU's bid to open a College of Medicine, which will begin operating in 2009.

[edit] Academics

The FIU logo.
The FIU logo.

FIU offers more than 204 bachelor's degree, master's degree and doctorate programs in 27 colleges and schools. In addition, 95% of the Faculty have terminal degrees, and 57% currently have tenure at the university with a student/teacher ratio of 17:1.

In the last five years, there has been a 64% increase in applications to the university with a 42.8% acceptance rate for Fall 2006, which has greatly decreased as the university becomes more selective. The average incoming freshmen for Fall 2006 had a SAT score of 1131, a 24 ACT score and a 3.64 high school GPA. [6]

FIU is also ranked among the top 100 public national universities in the U.S. News & World Report annual guide to "America's Best Colleges." FIU was the youngest institution in that group.

[edit] Recognition

In 2000, FIU received the highest research university ranking conferred by The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. That same year, FIU was awarded Phi Beta Kappa chapter, the country's oldest and most distinguished academic honor society. FIU is one of only 78 universities nationwide to hold both designations.

FIU has been ranked among the top 100 public national universities in the U.S. News & World Report annual guide to "America's Best Colleges." FIU was the youngest institution in that group. However, FIU was placed in the fourth tier of the National Universities category which includes both public and private schools [7]. The magazine also reported that FIU students are among the least indebted college students in the nation, and it recognized the university as a "best buy" in higher education.

In 1998, Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine ranked FIU as the country's 18th best value in public higher education. FIU was named one of the top 10 public commuter colleges in the U.S. in the 1995 edition of Money Guide, an annual report published by Money magazine, and has been cited in several other of the country's leading college guides.

The College of Law logo.
The College of Law logo.

FIU's engineering programs are consistently ranked among the best in the United States. The program is well-funded, partly from major research projects including Motorola’s Nanofabrication Research Facility. The university is 7th among all universities - public and private - in the number of U.S. Patents.

The 1999 National CPA Examination Report noted that FIU Accounting graduates ranked first in the nation in passing the CPA exam on the first try and are consistently (last 5 years) ranked in the top 5 in their exam scores. In January 2001, the Academy of Management Journal ranked FIU's College of Business Administration (CBA) Management Information Systems (MIS) unit the 11th best in the U.S. The Creative Writing Program is ranked among the top ten in the country by "Who Runs American Literature?" in the Dictionary of Literary Biography. The School of Hospitality Management is recognized by industry leaders as one of the nation's top five hospitality management programs.

Fortune Small Business (March 8, 2006) cited FIU's business school as among the "Ten Cool Colleges for Entrepreneurs," offering "some of the most innovative programs for fledgling business owners."

U.S. News & World Report's "America's Best Colleges" (2006 and 2007) ranks FIU's undergraduate international business programs 7th best in the nation.

U.S. News & World Report's "America's Best Graduate Schools" (2007) lists the Chapman Graduate School of Business among the top 20 business schools in the U.S. for excellence in international business.

BusinessWeek (2002, 2004) ranks the College of Business among the top 68 graduate business schools in the U.S. and in the top 25 among public business schools.

Hispanic Business (since 1998) and Hispanic Trends (since 2003) have placed the College of Business among the top 25 business schools for Hispanics and most recently in the top 10.

AméricaEconomía ranks the College of Business among the top international business schools in the world for Latin American business students.

[edit] Facilities


The eight-story Green Library at FIU's University Park campus is the University's largest building and the largest library in the Southeastern United States.
The eight-story Green Library at FIU's University Park campus is the University's largest building and the largest library in the Southeastern United States.

FIU has two major campuses and several minor campuses around South Florida. The largest campus, University Park (UP), encompasses 344 acres (1.4 km²) in west Miami-Dade County, Florida, several miles southwest of Miami International Airport. Until recent years, aerial pictures of the campus clearly revealed the features of the airport that used to occupy the space. Construction has obliterated most of these features, however - and has caused some disconcertion among students. With several major buildings now under construction at any given time, already-stressed parking lots have been closed off from student use, serving instead as staging areas for construction equipment.

However, to alleviate these stresses, 2 new Parking Garages have been completed within the last 2 years. Current construction on the University Park campus includes an independent art museum for the Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum, a Business School complex, a 45,000 seat football stadium (2010). Recently completed is the College of Law building and Lakeview Residence Hall.

The University Park Campus suffered a direct hit by Hurricane Katrina as it passed through South Florida on August 25, 2005. The storm felled many trees and damaged buildings under construction, but existing campus facilities experienced little damage, and the University was able to open for the Fall semester as scheduled on August 29, 2005.

The Biscayne Bay Campus (BBC) in North Miami is about 200 acres (809,000 m²), directly on the bay and adjacent to the Oleta River State Park, with which FIU has a research partnership. Access to these resources has inspired the creation of a marine biology program on the BBC campus, for which a state-of-the-art facility is now in the late stages of construction. The BBC campus is also adjacent to the Munisport Landfill, known to locals as Munisport Dump, a site previously listed on the Federal Superfund list as one of the country's most toxic waste dumps. That area is now being developed with condominiums, and a large K-8 school. University buses run between the main campuses throughout the day on school days.[8]

The Campus Libraries combine to host over 1.8 million volumes.

[edit] Current Construction and Expansion

  • Patricia and Phillip Frost Art Museum (2007)
  • Graduate Business School Complex (2007)
  • New Soccer Field (2007)
  • Medical School Complex (Fall 2009)
  • 45,000-seat Football Stadium (Phase I: 2008, Phase II: 2010)
  • Molecular Biology Building (2010)
  • Social Sciences Building (2010)
  • Student Services Building to house undergraduate admissions, advising, financial aid and a welcome center (2011)

[edit] Regional Campuses

  • A 36 acre (145,000 m²) Engineering Center (EC), which houses the College of Engineering, located within two miles of University Park. This campus is also serviced by University transportation. It is also the home of the Motorola Nanofabrication Research Facility.
  • A Graduate Business School Center in Downtown Miami.
  • A campus shared with several other universities and colleges in Davie, Florida
  • A recently opened site in Homestead, Florida, which is at the southern end of Miami-Dade County.

Recently in the summer of 2006, the University opened a campus in Tianjin, China, from which a branch of its Hospitality Management program operates. The facility was constructed as a cooperative venture with the local municipal government.

[edit] Housing

The main campus contains all of the University's student housing facilities, with more than 3,000 beds distributed throughout various apartment buildings and residence hall facilities on the University Park Campus, with approximately 14% of students living on-campus. Another 300 beds are in a single apartment building on the Biscayne Bay Campus at the Bay Vista Housing.

There is a main push for housing on the South Campus, with the opening of two new residence halls between 2002 and 2007, with more residence halls and 3 fraternity and sorority mansions expected to be constructed within the next few years. Future construction of residence halls will be built on the northwest side of campus by the Graduate School of Business Building.

University Park:

  • University Park Apartments (1986)
  • Panther Hall (1996)
  • University Park Towers (2000)
  • Everglades Hall (2002)
  • Lakeview Hall (North and South) (2006)

Biscayne Bay Campus:

  • Bay Vista Housing (1984)

[edit] Athletics

Main article: FIU Golden Panthers
The FIU logo displaying the Golden Panther mascot.
The FIU logo displaying the Golden Panther mascot.

FIU colors are dark blue and gold, and their nickname is the Golden Panthers. The school's original nickname, the "Sunblazers", was changed in 1987. FIU is a member of the NCAA, participating in Division I and the Sun Belt Conference in all sports except for men's soccer (which competes in Conference USA as an affiliate member). It joined the conference in 1998. FIU had previously competed in the Trans America Athletic Conference, from 1991 to 1998.

FIU competes in the following 11 sports:

Men's sports

Women's sports

FIU's athletics department has produced several professional and Olympic athletes, including current players in Major League Baseball, Major League Soccer, and the National Basketball Association.

FIU won two NCAA Division II national championships in men's soccer, in 1982 and 1984. To date these are the only national titles the university has achieved in athletic competition. The men's soccer team reached the Division I championship game in 1996, losing to St. John's University 4-1.

The men's soccer team competes as an affiliate member of Conference USA. This relationship began in 2005 and was formed since the Sun Belt Conference does not sponsor men's soccer. The team played in the Atlantic Soccer Conference from 2000 to 2004.

The old FIU athletics logo used predominantly during the 1990s.
The old FIU athletics logo used predominantly during the 1990s.

The school's football team competes in the annual Shula Bowl against in-state rival Florida Atlantic University. They play home games at FIU Stadium nicknamed "The Cage" and are currently coached by Mario Cristobal. The men's and women's basketball teams, along with the women's volleyball team, play their home games at the Pharmed Arena, and baseball plays its home games at University Park Stadium.

In 2005, the Golden Panthers moved to the SBC for football, making their transition from D-1AA to D-1A complete. In their first season in the Sunbelt FIU winning (5-6). Later on October 14, 2006, FIU and the University of Miami, began a cross-town rivalry after a football game in which both teams caused a brawl, consequently one of the largest in collegiate history. However games between the two schools are expected to continue as normal despite the violence that erupted in their first meeting. See Miami-FIU brawl.

See also: FIU Golden Panthers Football

[edit] Activities

View of the Ryder College of Business Administration Building from the northern entrance to FIU's University Park campus.
View of the Ryder College of Business Administration Building from the northern entrance to FIU's University Park campus.

FIU has an array of over 300 student clubs and organizations, 29 fraternities and sororities (with 2 fraternity houses: Phi Gamma Delta (FIJI) and Pi Kappa Alpha), several honor societies, and a theatre/drama club called "Dramatic PAWS".

FIU also services the large artistic and cultural communities that exist in South Florida by supporting the performing arts; many plays, musicals, concerts, operas, and dance shows are produced each year, through the School of Theatre, Dance, & Speech Communication.

FIU also has an extensive, highly influential Student Government Association with an operating budget of over 9.3 million dollars. [9] Because of the sizeable branch Biscayne Bay Campus in North Miami, FIU has long had two separate student governments.

The FIU student newspaper is called The Beacon and is published twice weekly on Mondays and Thursdays and is distributed throughout both campuses. Free copies are available campus-wide mainly in the residence halls, Graham Center, and campus buildings.

FIU also has a student-run radio station, WRGP Radiate FM, broadcasting from Homestead, FL on 88.1 MHz. A broadcast translator rebroadcasts Radiate FM's signal on 95.3 Mhz at the University Park Campus and another translator is installed at the Biscayne Bay Campus, broadcasting on 96.9 Mhz.

[edit] Other

The National Hurricane Center (NOAA) is located at the University Park campus on the western side of campus. It is here from where NOAA's hurricane research headquarters are.

A ropes course called the Team Ropes Adventure Challenge program is located at the Biscayne Bay Campus.

In 2006 Carlos Alvarez, an FIU professor, and his wife, Elsa, (also employed by FIU) were arrested and charged with spying for the Cuban government.

The Miami-Dade County Fair and Exposition is annually held at Tamiami Park next to campus during the month of March.

The "Sunblazers" basketball team was featured in a second season episode of Miami Vice entitled "The Fix".

FIU annually hosts the Food Network South Beach Wine & Food Festival on-campus, an event that showcases the talents of the world’s most renowned wine and spirits producers, chefs and culinary personalities with the School of Hospitality and Tourism Management.

[edit] Notable alumni

FIU now has over 117,500 alumni, including:

[edit] Athletics

[edit] Law and Politics

[edit] Authors and Entertainers

[edit] Others

[edit] External links

[edit] Others


Florida International University

Academics

School of ArchitectureCollege of Business AdministrationCollege of Engineering and ComputingFrost Art MuseumHonors CollegeInternational Hurricane Research CenterCollege of LawCollege of MedicineModesto MaidiqueWolfsonian-FIUChuck Perry

Athletics

Golden PanthersFIU FootballMiami-FIU brawlRoary RageMario CristobalDon StrockTony NathanShula BowlDon Shula AwardFIU StadiumPharmed ArenaUniversity Park StadiumConference USASun Belt Conference

Campus Life

Miami, FloridaSouth BeachWRGP Radiate FMUniversity ParkEngineering CenterBiscayne Bay Campus


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