Glendale Community College (California)

Glendale Community College
Motto N/A
Established 1927
Type Public (two-year)
Endowment $8 Million
President Dr. Dawn Lindsay
Academic staff Unknown
Undergraduates 20,000+
Postgraduates N/A
Location , Calif., USA
Campus Suburban, 100 acres (40 ha)
Sports Team Vaqueros "VAQS"
Colors Cardinal and gold
Website http://www.glendale.edu
Not to be confused with Glendale University College of Law or Glendale University.

Glendale Community College (aka GCC) is a community college in Glendale, California, USA. It was founded to serve the needs of the people in the Glendale Union High School District which at the time included La Crescenta, Glendale, and Tujunga. The school was officially founded as Glendale Junior College and from 1927 to 1929 conducted classes in the buildings of Glendale Union High School at Broadway and Verdugo in the City of Glendale. In 1929 the junior college moved to the Harvard School plant of the Glendale Union High School District where it remained until 1937. In this year a new plant, part of the present one, was completed and occupied. The year before, in 1936, the Glendale Junior College District was dissolved as such and became a part of the new Glendale Unified School District. The name of the school was changed to Glendale College in 1944. On July 1, 1970 Glendale College became a part of the Glendale Junior College District. On April 20, 1971 the Board of Education adopted a resolution changing the District name to Glendale Community College District.

On November 3, 1980, Glendale voters approved a measure to establish separate Boards, with the new board taking office in April 1981. The separation resulted in the creation of a Board of Trustees solely responsible for the governance of the Glendale Community College District. In 1936, 25 acres (10 ha) were acquired for the present site of the college. The campus now consists of 100 acres (40 ha) and 15 permanent buildings. It is located on the slopes of the San Rafael Hills overlooking the valleys in the Glendale area.

Representative of the City of Glendale, GCC is a diverse college of more than 15,000 students enrolled in credit courses, and over 7,000 more enrolled in non-credit courses. A full account of the college's population can be found at its research and planning office.

Contents

Glendale Community College in popular culture

Glendale Community College inspired the NBC show Community which premiered in the fall season of 2009. The show uses the fictional setting of Greendale Community College. However, the show creator has stated that the show was actually based on his experience attending Glendale Community College. Dan Harmon expressed that the show would be a positive reflection on the college since "the flawed characters are coming into it and becoming unflawed by being in this place because it's been underestimated by the system around it." [1]

Notable staff

The list of GCC employees includes Dr. Sid Kolpas, who teaches mathematics. Kolpas is part of the Glendale College Scholars Program, the Master Scholars Program (formerly the Alliance for Minority Participation Program), and operates as the Senate Representative of GCC. He was granted the "Distinguished Faculty Award" in 2004, and gave a speech about "The Number 2". He was also awarded a "Peer-Led Team Learning Grant" from the National Science Foundation for his guidance of the student led "Supplemental Instruction". Dr. Kolpas will be quoted and referenced (along with fellow teacher Steve Marsden), in a statistics book published by Princeton University Press for their infinite multiple integration theory. Kolpas also had his 42nd article published in an April issue of Mathematics Teacher. Dr. John Davitt served as president of Glendale College beginning in the 1980s until the 2000s. He served for 21 years and has been widely recognized in the city of Glendale as well as the entire state of California for all the work he did to promote not only Glendale College, but also community colleges statewide. He retired as the longest serving President of junior colleges in the state of California.

Notable alumni

Listed in alphabetical order

References

  1. ^ "Glendale Community College inspired NBC show airing tonight" Los Angeles Daily News 17 September 2009

External links