Motto | Minds that move the world |
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Established | 1897 |
Type | Public Space Grant |
Endowment | $115.1 million (2008)[1] |
President | Stephen L. Weber |
Admin. staff | 1,684 |
Students | 29,256 (fall 2009) |
Undergraduates | 24,134 |
Postgraduates | 5,122 |
Location | San Diego, California |
Campus | Urban |
Former names | San Diego Normal School (1897–1923) San Diego Teachers College (1923–35) San Diego State College (1935–70) |
Carnegie status | Research University with high research activity |
Colors | black, scarlet (red), and Gold |
Athletics | 17 varsity teams |
Nickname | Aztecs |
Mascot | Aztec warrior |
Affiliations | California State University system Mountain West Conference (NCAA Division 1) |
Website | www.sdsu.edu |
Wordmark Official Seal |
For a railway station that serves the campus, see SDSU Transit Center.
San Diego State University (SDSU), founded in 1897 as San Diego Normal School, is the largest and oldest higher education facility in the greater San Diego area (generally the City and County of San Diego), and is part of the California State University system. It is the third-oldest university in the California State University system, and one of the oldest universities in California. SDSU has a student body of approximately 29,256 (as of the beginning of the Fall 2009 academic year) and an alumni base of more than 200,000. San Diego State University had an acceptance rate of 31.2 % for the 2008 academic year. According to SDSU's website, the university received 62,000 applications for the 2008 school year.
The Carnegie Foundation has designated San Diego State University a "Research University with high research activity." SDSU is the only California State University campus with this classification, which places it among the top 200 higher education institutions in the country conducting research.[2] Notably, pursuant to the Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index (FSP Index) released by the Academic Analytics organization of Stony Brook, NY, SDSU is the number one small research university in the United States as of the last four (4) academic years, from 2005-2006 through the 2009-2010 academic years.[3][4][5][6]. In 2010, The Daily Beast ranked SDSU No.21 in its list of "Tech's 29 Most Powerful Colleges."[7]
San Diego State University awards bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees (Ph.D., Ed.D, and Au.D) in a total of 151 fields. SDSU offers the most doctoral degrees of any campus of the California State University system, currently in sixteen academic and research disciplines.
San Diego State University is a member of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU), the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges, the Southwest Border Security Consortium, and the Oak Ridge Associated Universities, a national organization of universities that promotes science and technology education and research.
Established on March 13, 1897 San Diego State University first began as the San Diego Normal School, intended to educate local future female elementary school teachers. Curriculum in a normal school was limited to what would "normally" be taught in schools. In 1923, the San Diego Normal School became San Diego State Teachers College, "a four-year public institution controlled by the state Board of Education." In 1935 the school became San Diego State College. In 1960, San Diego State College became a part of the California College System, now known as the California State University system. Finally in 1970 San Diego State College became San Diego State University (SDSU).
One in seven San Diegans with a college degree attended SDSU,[8] making SDSU a primary educator of the region's work force. Committed to serving the diverse San Diego region, SDSU ranks among the top ten universities nationwide in terms of ethnic and racial diversity among its student body, as well as the number of bachelor's degrees conferred upon minority students.[8]
San Diego State University has been designated a "Research University" by the Carnegie Foundation.[9] University faculty consistently attract hundreds of millions of U.S. dollars annually in grants and contracts for research and program administration, and SDSU's research and graduate degree programs lead all other campuses of the California State University system.[8] In the 2009-10 academic year, the university obtained $150 million for research, including $26 million from the National Institutes of Health.[10]
For the beginning of the 2006-2007 academic year, SDSU expanded its classrooms and support space by more than 200,000 square feet (19,000 m2) with the opening of three new buildings, the College of Arts and Letters, the Calpulli Center and BioScience Center. The buildings, respectively, feature high-technology classrooms, upgraded health and wellness facilities, and scientific research laboratories.
SDSU's Astronomy Department owns the Mount Laguna Observatory located in the Cleveland National Forest. It operates the observatory concurrently with the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.[11]
John F. Kennedy, then the President of the United States of America, gave the graduation commencement address at San Diego State University on June 6, 1963.[12][13][14]
“ | As a nation, we have no deeper concern, no older commitment and no higher interest than a strong, sound and free system of education for all. In fulfilling this obligation to ourselves and our children, we provide for the future of our nation-and for the future of freedom. | ” |
—John F. Kennedy, President of the United States of America, Graduation commencement address to San Diego State College (San Diego, California), June 6, 1963 |
The permanent financial endowment of San Diego State University (SDSU) is currently valued at $120.3 million U.S. dollars (USD) as of the end of the 2007 academic year.[19]
The primary philanthropic arm of San Diego State University is The Campanile Foundation, controlled by the University Advancement division of the university. The San Diego State University Research Foundation, an auxiliary corporation owned and controlled by the university, is the manager and administrator of all philanthropic funds and external funding for the university and its affiliated and auxiliary foundations and corporations.
As of June 30, 2006, permanent assets of the SDSU Campanile Foundation totaled $134 million.[20]
For the 2004-2005 academic year, SDSU received over $157 million USD in external funding from grants and contracts, as well as an additional $57 million USD in donations and charitable giving.[21] For 2005-2006, SDSU received $152 million USD in grants and contracts to support research. This is followed by $47.7 million USD in donations, gifts and other charitable giving.[22]
An auxiliary to The Campanile Foundation is the Aztec Athletic Association, which primarily raises funds for the student athletes in the San Diego State University athletics programs (see discussion of Athletics below and at SDSU Aztecs).
In addition to its permanent endowment, San Diego State University raises over $55 million U.S. dollars per year (approximately) in philanthropic gifts to support its research and academic affairs.[23]
The California State University system budget is being cut by $564 million this year, with SDSU's budget being reduced by $55 million.[24] As a result of California’s state budget cuts, student enrollment is being reduced by 4, 618 by Fall 2010.[25]
San Diego State University is the leader in the California State University system in awarding Ph.D. (joint with UCSD [26]) or Ed.D degrees, currently awarding such degrees in 16 academic disciplines. As a result of recent statutory changes (SB 724), SDSU intends to expand the scope and number of doctoral degree programs that it offers its graduate students. . SDSU has been referred to as the research flagship campus of the California State University system.
Undergraduate | |
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African American | 4.1% |
Asian American | 15.8% |
White American | 43.2% |
Hispanic American | 23.9% |
Native American | 0.6% |
International | 3.0% |
Ethnicity unreported/unknown | 9.4% |
SDSU's high-speed computing facilities and Department of Geography are host to MAP.SDSU.EDU, a web-based mapping, wiki, and geographic information database concering the October 2007 California wildfires and the October 2003 California wildfires, managed by the San Diego GIS force group, a volunteer group of SDSU faculty and students.
The first major sport on campus was rowing, but it initially had no coaches or tournaments.[27] Other sports that developed early in the campus's history were tennis, basketball, golf, croquet, and baseball.[27] The school's football program had such a limited selection of players that faculty had to be used to fill the roster.[27] When the college merged with the junior college in 1921, SDSU became a member of the Junior College Conference. After the school won the majority of the conference titles in a variety of sports, the league requested that SDSU leave out of fairness to the smaller schools. For its football program, the team outscored its opponents 249 to 52 in ten games, resulting in the first sales of season tickets in 1923.[28] From 1925-26, SDSU played as an independent. It then joined the Southern California Conference in 1926, where it did not win a football conference championship until 1936. However, in other sports including tennis and basketball, it excelled.[28] SDSU remained with the conference until 1939, when it joined the California Collegiate Athletic Association.[29]
The basketball team reached and won multiple championships games during the 1930-40s, including a conference title in 1931, 1934, 1937, and 1939. It reached the national championship in 1939 and 1940, losing in the final rounds. However, in 1941 SDSU returned and won the college's first national title.[29] In track, the team won conference titles in 1935, 1936, 1937, 1938, and 1939.[29] The football team won conference titles in 1936 and 1937, and the baseball team won three conference titles and placed second three times between 1935-1941.[29]
In 1955, the Aztec Club was established and raised $20,000 a year by 1957. The club worked in increasing athletic scholarships, hiring better coaches, and developing the college’s intercollegiate athletic programs. In 1956, students approved through a vote of allowing a mandatory student activity fee, with a portion going to athletics. By the end of the decade the budget had doubled to $40,000. The campus’s most successful sports program during the 1950s was cross-country as the team won eight straight conference titles, AAU regional titles, and placed high in national competitions. Basketball ranged from last in the conference to multiple conference, regional, and national appearances. The football program had its first undefeated team in 1951, but in the last part of the decade earned the worst records in the school’s football program under the direction of head coach Paul Governali.[30]
Under Governali, the campus’s football program suffered, due to Governali’s policy of not recruiting new players. To improve the program, Love hired Don Coryell in 1961, which helped the program to win three consecutive championships (1966–68), and end with a record of 104 wins, 19 losses, and 2 ties by the time he left SDSU. Coryell was assisted by John Madden, Joe Gibbs, and Rod Dowhower, among others. In Coryell’s first year, attendance at home games averaged 8,000 people, but by 1966 it had doubled to 16,000. This later jumped to 26,000-41,000 per game with the addition of the new San Diego stadium. At some games, attendance was larger than at San Diego Chargers games. There were several undefeated seasons and multiple players broke records for most catches, touchdowns, and passing yards, among others. In 1969, SDSU moved into NCAA Division 1, leaving the California Collegiate Athletic Association. In 1972, Coyrell left to pursue coaching in the NFL.[31]
Basketball also did well, with the 1967-68 team being ranked the number one college-level team in the nation, although it did not win a national title. The Aztecs also won the 1960 CCAA baseball title, and won multiple national championships throughout the 1960s in track, cross country, and swimming.[31]
By 1970-71, the campus had 14 NCAA sports. The 1973 men’s volleyball team won the NCAA national championship which was the first NCAA national title since moving to Division I status.[32]
SDSU competes in NCAA Division I FBS. Its primary conference is the Mountain West Conference; its women's water polo team participates in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation and its men's soccer team participates as an Associate Member of the Pacific-10 Conference (the "Pac-10" Conference). The ice hockey team competes in the ACHA with other western region club teams (www.sdsuhockey.com). The crew team's championship regatta is in the WIRA (Western International Rowing Association). The university colors are scarlet (red) and black, SDSU's athletic teams are nicknamed "Aztecs", and its current mascot is the Aztec Warrior, historically referred to as "Monty - Montezuma". Athletics revenues have been down recently.[33]
Initial clubs that were first started on campus including the Debating Club, the Associated Student Body, YWCA, and in 1906, an alumni association.[34] The oldest club on campus was The Rowing Association.[35]
The first fraternity on campus was the Delta chapter of Epsilon Eta, which formed on October 25, 1921. By the end of the decade there were six other fraternities and eight sororities. The fraternities and sororities were all local, and did not attain national status until after World War II.[35] In 1925, in order to encourage higher grades, the Inter-Fraternity Council and Inter-Sorority Council published the average grades of the fraternity and sorority members. On a 3.0 scale, the average GPA (grade point average) for all students was 1.49, for fraternities was 1.35, and sororities was 1.47.[35]
By the mid-1930s there were eight fraternities and eleven sororities,[36] and later expanded to fifteen fraternities and twelve sororities in the 1940s.[37] The first fraternity to go national was Theta Chi and the first sorority was Alpha Xi Delta.[37] In 1962 state attorney general Stanley Mosk and president Love required the fraternities and sororities to either delete the discriminatory clauses in their constitutions or risk receiving recognition from the campus. At first all but four of the sororities refused to sign, but by 1968, the first minority student was admitted into the fraternity Sigma Pi.[38]
On April 27, 1974 Phi Beta Kappa honor society established a SDSU chapter. It was the first in the CSU system as well as the San Diego area.[39] During the 1960s and early 1970s, the Greek population had dwindled to 699, but gradually began to increase in the 1980s, reaching 2,900 in 1988. There were 20 fraternities and 13 sororities officially affiliated with the Inter Fraternity Council and Panhellenic Council as well as six independent fraternities/sororities. This made it one of the largest fraternity and sorority systems in the western U.S.[40] On April 6, 1978, Gamma Phi Beta sorority hired a plane to drop marshmallows on fraternity houses during Derby Week, but the plane crashed near Peterson Gym, injuring four students aboard.[41] In 1983 a USA Today article reported that SDSU Greeks GPAs were below the campus average, so SDSU tightened restrictions and supervision and by 1989 their grades had increased to slightly above University average.[41] Between 1989-91, several riots among the fraternities occurred, including one numbering 3,500 people, and another requiring 34 police officers to end it.[42] The 2008 drug bust resulted in the suspension of several fraternities as well as the arrests of multiple fraternity members.[43] Currently there are over 48 social fraternities and sororities, including both general and culturally based organizations, represented by four governing councils.
Business Fraternity
List and map of fraternities and sororities at SDSU [3]
"S" mountain was created by the Council of Twelve and initially supported by President Hardy. On February 27, 1931, he allowed 500 students to paint rocks, forming a 400-foot "S" on Cowles Mountain. The giant S was lit at night for the opening football game of a season (performed by the freshman to build school spirit) along with pep rallies, and was repainted throughout its history.[44][45] At the time, it was the largest collegiate symbol in the world.[46] During World War II, the S was camouflaged to prevent it becoming a reference point for enemy bombing aircraft.[47] It was returned to its normal state in April 1944.[48] In the 1970s students stopped painting it and brush obstructed the symbol. After a 1988 brush fire it was exposed, and students repainted it. In fall, 1997, a group of 100 volunteers climbed Cowles Mountain after dusk to commemorate the one hundredth anniversary of the school by using flashlights to once again outline the "S" on the side of the mountain. In 1990, a high school prank defaced the S to read as "91" in honor of their graduating class.[49]
The initial colors of the school were white and gold. When the junior college was added to the campus in 1921, its colors of blue and gold were merged together, resulting in a blue, gold, and white color scheme. New colors were later chosen as gold and purple, until being replaced by crimson and black on January 28, 1928.[50]
The school's prior nicknames for its mascot included "Normalites", "Professors", and "Wampus Cats". However, after a 1924 committee met to address the issue, the name "Aztecs" was decided on.[51] In 2003, the Aztec Warrior was approved by a student and alumni vote to become the official university mascot after the school's prior mascot, Monty Montezuma, was discontinued.[52]
Students began publishing The White and Gold in 1902, which was a literary magazine and newspaper.[34] In 1913, a new newspaper was established entitled Normal News Weekly.[53] The school newspaper Paper Lantern (Normal News Weekly was renamed after the addition of the junior college) became The Aztec in September 1925.[51] It was later expanded to its current name, The Daily Aztec. The school's annual yearbook was named Del Sudoeste (Spanish for "of the southwest") in the early 1920s.[51]
The San Diego State University shooting occurred on August 15, 1996. A thirty-six year old graduate engineering student, while apparently defending his thesis, shot and killed his three professors, Constantinos Lyrintzis, Cheng Liang, and D. Preston Lowrey III, at San Diego State University. The shooter, who was suffering from certain mental problems, was convicted on July 19, 1997 and was sentenced to life in prison. As a memorial, tables with a plaque with information about each victim have been placed adjacent to the College of Engineering building.
On May 6, 2008, the Drug Enforcement Administration announced the arrest of 96 individuals, of which 33 were San Diego State University students, on a variety of drug charges in a narcotics sting operation dubbed Operation Sudden Fall.[54] It was originally reported that 75 of the arrested were students, but the inflated number included students who had been arrested months earlier, in some cases for simple possession.[55] The bust, which was the largest in the history of San Diego County, drew a mixed reaction from the community.[56] In addition, Associated Students President, James Poet was arrested on October 17, 2008 for driving under the influence and possession of marijuana. Poet expressed full support for the actions of Operation Sudden Fall and the Zero Tolerance Policy. [57]
San Diego State College | |
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U.S. National Register of Historic Places | |
U.S. Historic District | |
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Location: | 5300 Campanile Dr., San Diego, California |
Coordinates: | |
Architect: | multiple |
Architectural style(s): | Mission/Spanish Revival |
Governing body: | State |
Added to NRHP: | September 04, 1997 |
NRHP Reference#: | 97000924[58] |
Several buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places:[59]
Other buildings on campus include:
In 1937, Quetzal Hall, the first dormitory, opened for 40 women students and was located off campus.[36] In 1952, 50 college youth conducted a panty raid at Quetzal Hall, causing $1,000 in damages. Police arrested 13 of the students and the dorm girls later retaliated by attacking the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house.[72] In 1968, the coed dorm Zura Hall was built, and more rooms were added later.[73] Chapultepec Hall held 580 students when first built.[74]
East Side
This is NOT a residence hall but university owned student housing - it has leases rather than license agreements and no RA's
Opened in 1937 as the first residence hall. It was next to present day Aztec Center.
This complex was on the west side of the campus next to Tony Gwynn Stadium across from Chapultepec. Currently it is the site of a new Softball stadium and tennis court complex. They were the same red brick design and floor plan as Maya and Olmeca halls on the east side of campus.
S D S U |
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College of Arts & Letters • College of Business Administration • College of Education • College of Engineering • College of Health & Human Services (and Graduate School of Public Health) • College of Sciences • College of Professional Studies & Fine Arts • College of Extended Studies • American Language Institute • Imperial Valley Campus |
Colleges |
List of San Diego State University alumni and faculty | People |
Malcolm A. Love Library • Aztec Center • Hardy Memorial Tower • Hepner Hall • Montezuma Hall • Open Air Theater |
Campus |
SDSU Research Foundation • Biological Field Stations • HPWREN • Mount Laguna Observatory |
Research |
KPBS Television • KPBS Radio • San Diego State University Press |
Media |
SDSU Aztecs (football, basketball, soccer) • Qualcomm Stadium • Viejas Arena • Aztec Aquaplex • Peterson Gym • Tony Gwynn Stadium |
Athletics |
The Daily Aztec • KCR Radio |
Student Life |
History of San Diego State University |
History |
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