Mohawk College of Applied Arts and Technology | |
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The Mohawk College Coat of Arms |
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Motto | Scientia Opus Omnium |
Motto in English | Knowledge, the work of all |
Established | 1966 |
Type | Public |
Endowment | C$ 11.3 million[1] |
Chairman | Pat McKay |
President | Rob MacIsaac |
Admin. staff | 1,100 |
Students | 11,700[2] |
Other students | 3,800 apprenticeships, 460 international students[2] |
Location | Hamilton, Ontario, Canada |
Campus | Urban |
Colours | Red, Black and Gold |
Athletics | The Mountaineers |
Sports | Badminton, Basketball, Cross Country, Curling, Fastball, Golf, Rugby, Soccer, Volleyball |
Mascot | Mo the Hawk |
Affiliations | CCAA, OCAA, ACCC, AUCC, CBIE |
Website | mohawkcollege.ca |
Mohawk College is a public College of Applied Arts and Technology located in the Golden Horseshoe of Ontario, Canada. Mohawk has three main campuses: the Fennell Campus located in Hamilton, the Brantford Campus located in Brantford and the STARRT Institute located in Stoney Creek, as well as the Mohawk-McMaster Institute for Applied Health Sciences located at McMaster University in Hamilton. As of 2011[update] more than 1,100 faculty instruct roughly 11,700 full-time students, 46,000 continuing education students and 460 international students [2] studying in over 100 post-secondary and apprenticeship programs. Since its founding in 1966, over 85,000 students have graduated from Mohawk College.[3]
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- Mohawk College was established during the formation of Ontario’s college system in 1966. The school was founded in 1967 as part of a provincial initiative to create many such institutions to provide career-oriented diploma and certificate courses, as well as continuing education programs to Ontario communities.
Mohawk has received three national Yves Landry Foundation awards. The Mohawk and McMaster University Bachelor of Technology Partnership was recognized with the Yves Landry 2006 Innovative Manufacturing Technology Program Award: University Level. Yves Landry Awards were also presented to Mohawk’s Modern Foundry Technologies Institute in 2001 and Integrated Technician Apprenticeship Program in 2004.[4]
Colleges Ontario recognized The Hydro One–College Consortium with the 2008 Community/Corporate Partnership Award. For the first time in Ontario, four community colleges (Mohawk, Algonquin, Georgian and Northern Colleges) are working collaboratively with a provincial employer on an innovative and proactive workforce training and development solution to replace the 30% of Hydro One's highly skilled workforce who will retire within the next 5 years.[5]
Mohawk Advertising students have won 15 national Canadian Marketing Association awards in the past 11 years.[6]
Every year, Mohawk celebrates the career achievements and community contributions of outstanding alumni. Mohawk Alumni of Distinction recipients are nominated by the college for Premier's Awards.[7]
In 2007, Mohawk Vice President Academic Rosemary Knechtel received the Association of Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology of Ontario (now Colleges Ontario) Distinguished Service Award.[8]
In 2008, Mohawk early childhood education graduate Debbie Crickmore and ECE professor Karyn Callaghan received YWCA Hamilton Women of Distinction Awards.[9]
In 2011, Journalism Print & Broadcast along with Broadcasting - Television and Communications Media won a national award from the Broadcast Educators Association of Canada for Best Studio Newcast. The episode of Ignite New that won was created entirely by 2nd year students in graduating class of 2012.
The award was accepted by Owen Thomas, representing the journalism program and Thomas Raike representing the television program. [10]
Mohawk offers one- and two-year Ontario college diplomas, three-year Ontario college advanced diplomas, one-year Ontario college graduate certificates and four-year collaborative degree programs, the latter in association with McMaster University.[11]
Mohawk currently offers 107 full-time programs, 19 apprenticeship programs and more than 1,000 continuing education courses.[12]
Mohawk specialise in health science and engineering technology education and is the largest trainer of apprentices in Ontario.[13]
To serve Hamilton's growing immigrant population, Mohawk offers English language training and innovative bridging programs for foreign-trained professionals in health sciences and engineering technology.[14]
The college has its own campus radio station, INDI101 and student newspaper (The Satellite).[15]
In November 2009, the College joined Project Hero, a scholarship program cofounded by General (Ret'd) Rick Hillier for the families of fallen Canadian Forces members.[16]
Mohawk College has five library locations, one of which is an e-Library.[17]
The faculties include the Faculty of Business, Media and Entertainment, Faculty of Engineering Technology, Faculty of Health Sciences, and the Faculty of Community and Urban Studies.[18]
The Fennell Campus in Hamilton is Mohawk's main campus and is home to programs from Mohawk's Faculty of Business, Media and Entertainment, Faculty of Human Services, Faculty of Engineering Technology and Faculty of Interdisciplinary Studies. Fennell Campus has recently undergone many large-scale construction and renovation projects including the H-Wing and I-Wing, as discussed below.
The H-Wing opened in 2010. This $16.5 million addition is a 40,000 square ft, three-level building which is home to a vast amount of student space, the Cummings Library & Learning Commons, a collaboratory, applied research lab, media lounge and more. In addition, the building is LEED gold certified, hosting a green roof, solar panels, in-floor radiant heating, daylight and occupancy sensors, low flush toilets, LED lights and a living green wall.
In 2004, Mohawk College opened the Information Technology (IT) Centre known as the I-Wing. This $12 million facility provides 1500 fulltime students with a state-of-the-art facility, complete with electronic library/cybercafe/lounge, multi-purpose event spaces, lecture theatres, laboratory, classrooms & administration spaces. The 60,000 square ft wing is home to students in e-commerce, computer science, and applied degree programs in automation and internet technologies.
Mohawk is a member of the Ontario Colleges Athletic Association. The gym facility at Fennell Campus includes two intramural basketball and volleyball courts, badminton courts and fitness areas with free weights and cardio equipment.[19]
McIntyre Theatre accommodates up to 1039 people and is only second to Hamilton Place in size in the area.[20]
A health clinic is available to staff and students with a full-time college physician and nursing staff.[21] Counseling And Disability Services provides students with various services such as counseling, facilitation, and peer tutorial services[22]
Mohawk College's Elgin Street campus in Brantford is home to programs in the College's Faculty of Community and Urban Studies, including the College's Public Safety and Security program.[23] Mohawk has articulation agreements in place with Laurier and Nipissing Universities in Brantford<re name="Mohawk College 2009-2010 Annual Report">[20]</ref>.
Mohawk College has plans to close the Elgin Street campus with a view to moving the programs housed at the facility to a better location.[8] In 2009, the College expressed interest in moving the campus to the downtown core of Brantford but an Federal grant application to relieve some of the estimated $13.5 million funding costs was rejected and the College could not reach an agreement with the city. As a result Mohawk College considered other possible Brantford Campus locations as well as the possibility of leaving the city altogether. Currentlty, the College operates a small campus in the city's core. The Brantford Odeon Campus occupies an old movie theatre and is home to Human Services programs in the College's Faculty of Community and Urban Studies.
Formerly known as the Stoney Creek campus, it was renamed to Skilled Trades and Apprenticeship Research, Resources and Training (STARRT) Institute after a $27 million investment by government, industry and private donors. Mohawk claims to be the largest trainer of apprentices in Ontario, with more than 3,500 apprentices at STARRT.[24]
More than 1,700 full-time students attend Mohawk-McMaster Institute for Applied Health Sciences (IAHS), the first[25] facility in Canada to combine college and university health sciences education and research under one roof. The IAHS is home to collaborative nursing and medical radiation sciences programs that have achieved the highest level of accreditation possible. In 2008 and 2009, teams of undergraduate medical radiation science students have had their class research projects published in an international medical journal. The IAHS includes a clinical simulation lab modelled after a hospital ward and a fully operational medical radiation lab where students gain hands-on experience prior to clinical placements.[26]
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