University of San Francisco College of Arts and Sciences
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Latin: Universitas Sancti Francisci | |
Former names | St. Ignatius Academy (1855–1859) St. Ignatius College (1859–1930) |
---|---|
Motto | Traditional: Pro Urbe et Universitate (Latin) |
Motto in English | Traditional: For City and University Electric current motto: Change the World from Here |
Type | Private university |
Established | October 15, 1855 (October xv, 1855) [1] |
Founder | Anthony Maraschi, S.J. |
Accreditation | WASC |
Religious amalgamation | Roman Catholic (Jesuit) |
Bookish affiliations | AJCU ACCU NAICU |
Endowment | $430.1 one thousand thousand (2020)[2] |
President | Paul J. Fitzgerald, South.J. |
Provost | Julia Chinyere Oparah |
Bookish staff | 1,174 faculty (486 total-time, 688 part-time)[3] |
Administrative staff | 1,083 (autumn 2016: 975 full-time, 108 part-fourth dimension) [4] |
Students | 10,636[iii] |
Undergraduates | vi,577[3] |
Postgraduates | 4,059[3] |
Location | San Francisco, California U.S. 37°46′46″N 122°27′07″W / 37.77944°N 122.45194°W / 37.77944; -122.45194 Coordinates: 37°46′46″N 122°27′07″Westward / 37.77944°N 122.45194°W / 37.77944; -122.45194 |
Campus | Urban - 55 acres (22 ha) |
Colors | Green & gold [5] |
Nickname | Dons |
Sporting affiliations | NCAA Division I – WCC |
Mascot | The Don, a Spanish nobleman |
Website | world wide web |
The University of San Francisco (USF) is a private Jesuit academy in San Francisco, California. The university's master campus is located on a 55-acre (22 ha) setting betwixt the Gilt Gate Bridge and Golden Gate Park. The main campus is nicknamed "The Hilltop" and is split into two sections. Office of the main campus is located on Solitary Mountain, one of San Francisco'due south major geographical features. Its close historical ties with the City and County of San Francisco are reflected in the university's traditional motto, Pro Urbe et Universitate (For the Urban center and University).
History [edit]
Founded by the Jesuits in 1855 as St. Ignatius Academy, USF started as a 1-room schoolhouse along Market Street in what subsequently became downtown San Francisco. Father Anthony Maraschi, S.J. (1820-1897) was the higher'southward founder and first president, a professor, the college's treasurer, and the start pastor of St. Ignatius Church building. Under Maraschi, St. Ignatius Academy received its charter to issue college degrees on April 30, 1859, from the State of California, and signed by governor John B. Weller. In that twelvemonth, the schoolhouse changed its name to St. Ignatius College.
The original curriculum included Greek, Castilian, Latin, English, French, Italian, algebra, arithmetic, history, geography, elocution, and bookkeeping.[six]
A new building was constructed in 1862 to replace the first frame edifice. In June 1863, the academy awarded its kickoff Available of Arts degree. In 1880, the college moved from Market place Street to a new site on the corner of Hayes Street and Van Ness Artery (currently occupied by the Davies Symphony Hall).
The tertiary St. Ignatius Higher received moderate damage in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, but was completely destroyed in the ensuing fire. The campus moved westward, to the corner of Hayes and Shrader Streets, close to Golden Gate Park. It occupied a hastily constructed structure known every bit the Shirt Manufacturing plant (for its resemblance to similar manufacturing buildings of the era) for the next 21 years. The higher moved to its nowadays site on Fulton Street in 1927, on the site of a old Masonic Cemetery.[1]
To celebrate its diamond jubilee in 1930, St. Ignatius College inverse its proper name to the University of San Francisco. The change from college to academy was sought by many alumni groups and by long-time San Francisco Mayor James Rolph Jr.[six]
A male person-only school for most of its history, USF became fully coeducational in 1964, though women started attending the evening programs in business and law as early as 1927. In 1969, the high school partitioning, already wholly split up from the academy, moved to the western function of San Francisco and became St. Ignatius College Preparatory. In 1978, the academy caused Lone Mountain College.[six] Oct 15, 2005, marked the 150th ceremony of the university'due south founding.[7] In the autumn of 2017, USF enrolled eleven,080 undergraduate and graduate students in all of its programs housed in four schools (Law; Management; Education; Nursing and Health Professions) and one college (Arts and Sciences).[8]
Academics [edit]
Aeriform view of San Francisco, facing northeast, with USF in the foreground.
Rankings [edit]
Academic rankings | |
---|---|
National | |
Forbes [9] | 210 |
THE/WSJ [10] | 156 |
U.S. News & Earth Study [11] | 103 |
Washington Monthly [12] | 148 |
Global | |
QS [thirteen] | 1001-1200 |
- USF was ranked tied for 103rd overall by U.S. News & World Report, tied for 68th "All-time College for Veterans", and tied for 69th in "Best Value" in the National Academy category in 2020.[14]
- According to College Factual's 2022 Best Colleges listing, USF is ranked in the summit 10% of all four-yr colleges and universities in the nation.[15]
- Washington Monthly ranked USF 148th out of 389 national universities in 2020 based on its contribution to the public good, as measured by social mobility, research, and promotion of public service.[xvi]
Global education [edit]
USF's Middle for Global Education advises students on international programs sponsored by USF or external organizations and schools and facilitates the procedure. USF has more 40 institutional partnerships with other universities throughout the world, including in Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, the Czech Republic, Chile, China, El Salvador, England, Finland, French republic, Deutschland, Republic of hungary, Republic of ireland, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, the Philippines, Scotland, Singapore, Southward Africa, Espana, Taiwan, Thailand, and Uruguay. USF offers 133 semester-long international programs to its students. During the 2016–2017 bookish twelvemonth, 721 USF students earned academic credit through study abroad, commutation, intern, or social justice programs. Several USF students have received the Gilman Award for their participation in study away programs through the middle.[17]
Campuses [edit]
Path through USF's principal campus
The University of San Francisco offers more than 230 undergraduate, graduate, professional person, and certificate programs on its principal Hilltop Campus. USF also offers programs at several additional campuses.[18]
The USF Downtown San Francisco Campus, founded in the Folger Coffee Company Building at 101 Howard Street in 2012, offers the MBA and the Executive MBA, MBA Dual Degree programs, and master'southward degrees in Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Financial Analysis, Global Entrepreneurial Direction, Nonprofit Administration, Organization Evolution, and Public Administration.[19]
The Orangish County Campus, founded in Orange in 1983, offers the Master'southward in Sport Management and the Main's in Nursing for Non-Nurses.[20]
The Pleasanton Campus, founded in San Ramon in 1986, then moved to Pleasanton in 2012, offers a Bachelor'south in Direction (Degree Completion), the Chief'south in Nursing for the Registered Nurse, and the Principal's in Didactics with the Unmarried or Multiple Subject Teaching Credential.[21]
The Presidio Campus, founded at the San Francisco Presidio in 2003, offers the Master in Behavior Wellness, the Master of Public Health, and the Doc of Psychology (PsyD) in Clinical Psychology.[22]
The Sacramento Campus, founded in 1975, offers the Bachelor of Science in Nursing, the Master of Public Health, the Main'south in Counseling with an Emphasis in Marriage and Family Therapy, and the Master's in Instruction with the Single or Multiple Subject Teaching Credential.[23]
The San Jose Campus, founded in 1980, offers the Master'southward in Information Systems, the Master's in Teaching with the Single or Multiple Subject field Teaching Credential, the Principal'south in Counseling with an Emphasis in Marriage and Family Therapy, and the RN to MSN Nursing/Clinical Nurse Leader.[24]
USF's Lone Mountain Main Edifice
The Santa Rosa Campus, founded in 1989, offers the Master's in Counseling with an Emphasis in Spousal relationship and Family unit Therapy, and the Master'due south in Teaching with the Single or Multiple Subject Pedagogy Credential.[25]
Campus buildings [edit]
Sculpture of Los Lobos de Loyola in front of Gleeson Library
- Saint Ignatius Church (1914)
- Kalmanovitz Hall (1927/2008)
- School of Education Building (1930)
- Lone Mountain (1932)
- Gleeson Library (1950) and the Geschke Learning Resources Center (1997)
- Toler Hall (1955)
- War Memorial Gymnasium (1958)
- Ulrich Field (1958)
- Fromm Hall (1959/2003)
- The Koret Law Eye: Kendrick Hall (1962) and Dorraine Zief Law Library (2000)
- Lonely Mountain North (1963)
- Gillson Hall (1965)
- Harney Science Eye (1965)
- Hayes-Healy Hall (1966)
- Academy Center (1966)
- Cowell Hall (1969)
- Negoesco Stadium (1982)
- USF Koret Health and Recreation Centre (1989)
- Loyola House (1999)
- 281 Masonic (2000)
- Pedro Arrupe Hall (2000)
- Loyola Village (2002)
- Malloy Hall (2004)
- John Lo Schiavo, Southward.J. Center for Science and Innovation (2013)
- Sobrato Heart (2015)[26]
Organization and administration [edit]
Lone Mountain main buildling
The University of San Francisco is chartered every bit a non-profit organization and is governed by a privately appointed lath of trustees, forth with the university president, the university chancellor, the university provost and vice-presidents, and the deans. The board currently has 43 voting members who serve 3, iii-year terms and is chaired by Stephen A. Hamill. The board of trustees elects a president to serve as the general director and primary executive of the university. The current president (since August 1, 2014) is Paul J. Fitzgerald, S.J.[27] The president, co-ordinate to USF Bylaws, is specifically responsible for articulating and advancing the Jesuit Catholic graphic symbol of the university.[28]
USF'south faculty and librarians are unionized. The Academy of San Francisco Faculty Association, a local of the California Federation of Teachers, represents its members in all matters concerning wages, benefits, and enforcing the Commonage Bargaining Agreement. The USFFA is consulted by the USF administration on matters affecting the working weather condition of the faculty and librarians. Economics professor Michael Lehmann was the founding president of the Union in 1975.
Student clubs and organizations [edit]
USF is home to over 90 clubs and organizations,[29] including bookish/professional, governance, cultural, service, social, political, able-bodied, and special interest. The missions and goals of USF'south student clubs and organizations are to provide programs and services that support students' leadership development and promote student engagement in co-curricular activities.[30]
View from atop Alone Mountain to St. Ignatius Church building on Main Campus.
The Associated Students of the Academy of San Francisco (ASUSF) Senate is the student trunk governance organization responsible for organizing major campus events, voicing student business organization, and reviewing the ASUSF budget.[31] USF's professional person and academic organizations include capacity of many national and international groups, including the Professional Business Fraternity Delta Sigma Pi, the Lambda Iota Tau English Honour Society, Sigma Tau Delta, Jesuit Award Gild Blastoff Sigma Nu, the National Gild of Collegiate Scholars, National Political Scientific discipline Award Society Pi Sigma Blastoff, Biological Honor Lodge Tri Beta, Accounting and Finance Honor Society Beta Blastoff Psi and Psychology Laurels Society Psi Chi. Professional person organizations include the Family Business concern Association, Pre-Professional Health Committee, Pre-Dental Society, Hospitality Direction Clan, the Nursing Students Clan, and the Entrepreneurship Society. Religious and spiritual organizations on campus include the Muslim Educatee Wedlock, the USF chapter of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, and the USF Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life. USF leisure and hobby organizations include a chapter of many national organizations: All-time Buddies, Outdoors and Ecology Education Club, Prism (formerly USF Queer Alliance), San Quentin TRUST Alliance, Knitting for Neighbors, Back to the Roots, Surf and Skate Guild, and the Blitheness Comics and Video Games (ACV) Club. Cultural and multicultural organizations around campus serve international students, Indian students, Blackness students (the Black Student Marriage), Latin American students and Hawaiian Students. At that place are besides groups specifically for women of color and Latinx women. Social justice clubs on campus include capacity of Amnesty International, School of the Americas Sentinel, Up 'til Dawn, Student Outreach for Refugees, Asylees and Immigrants,[32] and Invisible Children. There is also a Politics Guild, Philosophy Society, Women in Media Club, Women in Math Club (AWM), and Women in Science Gild.[33]
Student-produced media [edit]
The San Francisco Foghorn is the official student weekly paper and is sponsored by ASUSF. The Foghorn was founded in 1903 and was first called The Ignatian. In the 1930s when the college name was changed, the newspaper became the San Francisco Foghorn. The Foghorn has played a significant role on campus throughout the years and has some notable alumni: Pierre Salinger, editor of the San Francisco Relate and Press Secretary for President John F. Kennedy; well-known author and historian Kevin Starr; and Leo T. McCarthy, sometime California Lieutenant Governor. In 1961, the Foghorn received the American Newspaper Publishers Clan "Pacemaker Award". In 1998, Associated Collegiate Press named it "College Paper of the Yr".
From 1977, USF radio station KUSF broadcast online until 2011 when its license was sold[34] to a Southern California-based classical radio station. KUSF had garnered international attention for its diverse musical programming, which varied from rock to hip hop to earth music.[35] It received numerous awards,[36] including public service awards,[37] for its weekly community service series. USF'south other radio station, KDNZ, is student-run.[38]
The University of San Francisco tv set station USFTV, founded in 2006[39] and entirely educatee-run, is broadcast on Channel 35 in the dormitories and around campus,[40] with news, sports, and cultural programming. In 2008, USFtv students collaborated with Wyclef Jean to create a music video for his vocal, "If I Was President".[41]
The Ignatian is USF's annual literary magazine published every spring, with a wide array of content from philosophical pieces to personal essays, short fiction, poetry, and photography.
Performing arts [edit]
USF has numerous pupil clubs for the performing arts, including a theater grouping (College Players), two-fourth dimension Golden Gate Regional winning improvisational team (Awkward Silence), choir (ASUSF Voices), USF Don Marching Ring, gimmicky mass ensemble, and a dance program that focuses on social justice.
The College Players, founded in 1863, is considered i of the oldest student-run theater groups in the United States.[42] Their almanac production of The Vagina Monologues gives all its proceeds to women's charities in the Bay Area.[43]
ASUSF Voices, in collaboration with the Performing Arts Department, contains a diverseness of choral ensembles, including jazz and pop.[44] The USF Gimmicky Mass Ensemble (vocal and instrumental) are USF alumni who perform at Sunday Masses in St. Ignatius Church building.[45] The USF trip the light fantastic programme is affiliated with the Performing Arts and Social Justice Major. Students tin can enroll in traditional and modern dance classes and participate in the USF Dance Ensemble nether professional choreographers.[46]
Greek life [edit]
All social sororities and fraternities recognized by the university must participate in the Greek Council, which tends to the development of these organizations and their members.[47] Chapters have some mutual mixers and socials, Thanksgiving potluck, Christmas clothing drive, Homecoming, and Greek Games.[48]
Student body [edit]
Amid the full USF student population in the fall of 2017, 19.9 pct were Asian American, 5.i percent were African American, 20.6 percent were Latino, 0.2 pct were Native American, 0.7 percent were Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, 15.v percent were international, vi.0 percent were of multiple races, and 28.0 percentage were white. There was a 50.4 percentage increase in the overall educatee enrollment from the fall of 2000 to the autumn of 2017. By ethnicity, the number of Latino students increased past 233.0 percent during this menstruation, the number of Asian American students increased past 78.8 pct, and the number of international students increased by 160.7 percent. The African American educatee population increased 36.4 per centum, and the overall white student population decreased by 5.5 percent since 2000. The ethnic limerick of all USF students in the fall of 2017 is displayed in Tabular array 1.[51]
Enrollment, 2000 | Enrollment, 2017 | % change | |
---|---|---|---|
Asian American | i,232 | ii,203 | 78.eight% |
African American | 418 | 570 | 36.iv% |
Latino | 684 | ii,278 | 233.0% |
Native American | 49 | 23 | -53.1% |
Hawaii/ Pacific Islands | 128 | 80 | -37.five% |
International educatee | 657 | one,713 | 160.vii% |
White | iii,284 | three,104 | -5.5% |
Other | 914 | 440 | -51.9% |
Total | 7,366 | 11,080 | 50.four% |
Notable students marked the early years of student variety at the USF. Chan Chung Wing, whose parents had immigrated from most Canton, was in the first law class at then St. Ignatius College of Law. In 1929, the Filipino Ignatians was founded. In 1930, the African American Isaiah Fletcher was a starting tackle on the football squad, years earlier near colleges became integrated. In 1936, Earl Booker, some other African American, won the Intercollegiate Boxing Championship.[52]
International students made up 15.five% of the educatee body in the fall of 2017. International students take a special orientation menstruum[53] and a diverseness of student groups like the International Student Association, Global Living Community,[54] an International Advisory Council, and an International Network Plan.[55] USF sponsors an annual International Education Week with an international off-white featuring consulates in the San Francisco area, storytelling opportunities, educational speakers, and a operation event chosen "Culturescape".[56]
Undergraduate admissions [edit]
USF's undergraduate admissions are categorized as more selective past U.S. News & World Report,[57] and are amongst the nearly selective 10% of all colleges and universities in the United States.[58] Also according to U.Southward. News & World Report, USF is ranked #1 in student trunk ethnic diversity for all non-historically blackness colleges and universities (HBCUs).[59] USF'southward acceptance charge per unit was 64.v% in the fall of 2021.[60] For freshman enrolling in the fall of 2021, the boilerplate high school grade point average (GPA) was 3.54. 75% of all applicants admitted to University of San Francisco have an SAT score between 1140 and 1330 or college, an ACT score between 24 and 30 or higher.[61]
Financial aid [edit]
In the 2019–2020 financial assist year, 82.0% of freshmen were given financial aid and/or scholarships at Academy of San Francisco, averaging $23,895 per person, placing USF in the top 20th percentile of all accredited colleges and universities nationwide. In addition to scholarships, 26.0% of get-go twelvemonth students received federal grant aid, for an average of almost $v,970 per person.[62]
[63]
For the 2021–2022 twelvemonth, tuition for full-time undergraduates is $52,920. The total estimated cost for one year, including fees, housing, and dining, is $69,612.[63]
Athletics [edit]
Benedetti Diamond, displaying the USF logo used since 2012
USF competes in NCAA Partition I and is a charter member of the West Coast Briefing, along with local rivals Santa Clara Academy and Saint Mary's Higher of California. Sports offered are men's and women'southward basketball game, cantankerous state, golf, soccer, lawn tennis, track and field, also as men's baseball and women'due south volleyball and sand volleyball. USF's mascot is the Don and its colors are dark-green and gold.
History [edit]
Athletics at USF dates back to its founding in 1855, when founder Anthony Maraschi, Due south.J., organized ball games as recreation for the commencement students. Intercollegiate competition dates back to 1907, when then St. Ignatius College began playing organized baseball, basketball, and rugby against other local colleges and high schools. Rivalries with neighboring Santa Clara University and Saint Mary's Higher of California have their origins in this early on menstruation.[6]
1951 USF Dons football game team [edit]
The 1951 USF football game team
The 1951 Academy of San Francisco Dons football game team, coached by Joe Kuharich, went undefeated with a record of ix–0, and produced 9 future NFL players. Five became NFL Pro-Bowlers, and Gino Marchetti, Ollie Matson, and Bob St. Clair later were inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame – a record for one college team. Also the team'southward Bulge Toler became the first African American official in the NFL.[64] Time to come NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle played a office as the Dons' Athletic Publicist. At the elevation of their success, due to the squad having 2 African-American star players, Ollie Matson and Bulge Toler, they were not invited to play in whatever of the higher football bowl games hosted past the SEC (Southeastern Conference).[65] The team, less Toler and Matson, was invited to the Orange Bowl but declined. Guard Dick Columbini said, "'No, we're not going to leave 'em at domicile' ... 'We're going to play with 'em or we're not going to play.'"[64] The USF Athletic Department was forced to driblet its football game program in 1952, due to a deficit in section funds.
Basketball game [edit]
The 1954-55 USF NCAA Championship basketball team
The men's basketball game programme won three national championships: the 1949 NIT Title, with Don Lofgran as MVP, and the 1955 and 1956 NCAA National Championships, going undefeated in the 1956 season. Led by NBA Hall of Famers Bill Russell and K.C. Jones, the 1956 Dons became the first undefeated team to win a national title, winning a then-tape 60 games in a row from 1954 to 1956 earlier losing an exhibition game to the USA Men'south Olympic Basketball team. Also of annotation, the 1954-1955 USF basketball teams became the first major college or university basketball team to win a national title with three African American starters (Russell, Jones, and Hal Perry).[6]
Soccer [edit]
The soccer program began at USF in 1931, and they succeeded from the start, winning five titles from 1932 to 1936. The team captain was All-American Gus Donoghue, who returned to the university as caput coach in 1946, winning several titles, including a co-championship with Penn State in 1949.
At Donoghue's retirement in 1960, Stephen Negoesco, All-American and Holocaust survivor took over, having played under Donoghue in the 50s. He coached the team from 1962 to 2000, and led them to 540 wins and iv national championships (1966, 1975, 1976, and 1980). Negoesco was inducted into the National Soccer Hall of Fame in 2003, having gear up a U.s. tape for games won in intercollegiate soccer contest.
Under Negoesco's successor, alumnus Erik Visser, the men'southward team earned the 2004, 2005, and 2008 WCC titles.[6]
Alumni [edit]
See also [edit]
- St. Ignatius Institute
- List of colleges and universities in California
- List of Jesuit sites
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- ^ a b Lukacs, John D. "Waiting for the Perfect Ending", United states of america Today, June 24, 2003. Sports 8C.
- ^ Clark, Kristine. "Undefeated, United and Uninvited: A Documentary of the 1951 Academy of San Francisco Dons Football Team". Griffin Publishing, May 2002.
Further reading [edit]
- McGloin S.J., John Bernard. (1972). Jesuits past the Golden Gate: the Lodge of Jesus in San Francisco, 1849-1969. University of San Francisco.
- Pollack, Chris. (2001) San Francisco's Aureate Gate Park: A Yard and 17 acres (6.9 ha) of Stories. Portland, Oregon: WestWinds Printing.
- Ziajka, Alan. (2005). Legacy & Hope: 150 years of Jesuit education at the Academy of San Francisco. San Francisco: Academy of San Francisco, Association of Jesuit Academy Presses.
- Ziajka, Alan. (2012). The University of San Francisco Schoolhouse of Law: 100 Years of Educating for Justice. San Francisco: University of San Francisco, Association of Jesuit Academy Presses.
- Ziajka, Alan. (2014). Lighting the City, Changing the World: A History of the Sciences at the University of San Francisco. San Francisco: Academy of San Francisco, Clan of Jesuit University Presses.
External links [edit]
- Official website
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_San_Francisco
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