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Montgomery College

Montgomery College (MC) is a public community college in Montgomery County, Maryland.

Montgomery College
Montgomery College Insignia
Former names
Montgomery Junior College
MottoMake Your Move
TypePublic community college
EstablishedAugust 20, 1946; 77 years ago (1946-08-20)
AccreditationMSCHE
Academic affiliation
CUWMA
PresidentJermaine F. Williams
Studentsc. 55,000 credit and noncredit students
Location,
U.S.

39°05′54″N 77°09′33″W / 39.0982°N 77.1591°W / 39.0982; -77.1591
CampusCampuses in
NewspaperThe MC Advocate
The MC Globe
The MC Excalibur
Colors   Purple & silver
Sporting affiliations
NJCAA Division I
MascotRaptors (since 2012)
Websitewww.montgomerycollege.edu

The school was founded in 1946 as Montgomery Junior College. Four years later, it absorbed the 57-year-old Bliss Electrical School, which became the junior college's electrical program.

The college has three campuses, the largest of which is in Rockville. Its other campuses are in Takoma Park/Silver Spring and Germantown. Its off-campus sites include the Business Training Center in Gaithersburg and Westfield South in Wheaton, which are operated by the college's Workforce Development and Continuing Education Division.

History edit

19th century edit

The Bliss Electrical School was a private, for-profit institution in Takoma Park, Maryland. Established in 1893 and named after its founder Louis D. Bliss. Its first class was on October 15, 1893, in a single room on the third floor of Water Building at the corner of Ninth and Ebbs Street. It was a night class with 26 students, including Thomas E. Robertson, who would later go on to be the United States Commissioner of Patents. The capital investment in the school was $400, representing an advance payment of $20 each from 20 men. In 1895, Charles Francis Jenkins, of motion picture and television fame, enrolled as a student.[1]

20th century edit

W. B. Connelly, a 1904 graduate of Bliss, worked for the General Electric Company at Schenectady, N.Y., where he led the inspection of some two miles of switchboards for the Panama Canal. Before going to GE, Connelly taught at Bliss; his student Skipwith B. Cole would later become dean of the school's faculty.

On November 6, 1908, the Bliss Electrical School building burned down, forcing a move.

On June 3, 1914, Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan addressed the school's graduating class in the auditorium of the Calvary Baptist Church.

In 1917, the United States entered World War I. By special permission granted by the War Department, the Bliss Electrical School organized a searchlight company of engineers consisting of 57 men from the 1917 class, headed by Lt. Clyde K. Krisee of the faculty, and under Major John C. Gotwals of the Engineer Corps of the United States Army. This company went overseas with the First Division of the American Expeditionary Forces. These men were used for instruction purposes in a searchlight school in Paris. All returned safely to the United States after the war except one, who was killed in an automobile accident in Paris. The captured German searchlight, which adorns the campus, was presented to the Bliss Electrical School by the War Department as a tribute to the work of the Bliss Searchlight Company of Engineers.

 
Drafted men from Washington, D.C., install wires for electric lights and motors in the Bliss wiring laboratory in 1918. The school provided an intensive course of training for Army electricians.

At the request of the War Department in 1918, Bliss School prepared an intensive training course in the fundamentals of electricity for drafted men entering the Army. This course was adopted by the War Department, and was the first course used in all the colleges throughout the country, giving instructions along this line to army personnel in the Student Army Training Corps. The school contracted with the War Department to house, feed, and instruct selected groups of soldiers for this course. Beginning June 15, 1918, the school trained 700 soldiers in three detachments. The contract called for training these men at cost. This cost was determined by the auditors in the War Department at $2.00 for the first detachment, at $1.80 for the second detachment, and $1.62 for the third detachment per man per day for housing, feeding, instruction, and supplies. The school was under military control following instruction hence, following the signing of the armistice on November 11, 1918. The third and last detachment of the Student Army Training Corps was mustered out and disbanded on December 6, 1918, and the school was released from military control. In 1919, Bliss returned to civilian training. The first edition of the Bliss School textbook, Theoretical and Practical Electrical Engineering, was published in September 1921.

During World War II, Bliss was selected by the U.S. Navy as one of six engineering schools to give Primary School in the Electronics Training Program and it graduated over 3,000 students.[2] Bliss Electrical School's building was sold to Montgomery County for $350,000.[3]

 
BCC High School where the college started, and which lends its tower to the school crest

The current college was organized in 1946 as "Montgomery Junior College," with its campus located at the Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School.[4] Its first dean was Hugh G. Price.[5][6] The first day of class was held on September 16, 1946.[4] During its first school year, it had about 175 students.[4]

In 1950, the college moved to Takoma Park, absorbing the Bliss Electrical School[7][3] Previously, Montgomery Junior College could only hold evening classes because the high school used the building for its classes during the day, but with the acquisition of Bliss Electrical School's building, Montgomery Junior College began holding daytime classes as well.[8][9] The first day of classes at the new location began on October 2, 1950.[9] At the time, it was segregated, with an enrollment of over 500 students. The newly established Carver Junior College in Rockville was expected to have 40 African-Americans enrolled, but only 19 managed to show up, due both to problems in finding transportation to school and the cost of tuition.[10]

The Rockville campus of Montgomery College opened in September 1965,[11] and the Germantown campus opened in early 1970s, occupying its present permanent site since 1978. Montgomery College also offers learning opportunities through its extensive Workforce Development and Continuing education programs.

21st century edit

In 2010, DeRionne Pollard assumed leadership of Montgomery College, and its three campuses. She spearheaded the development of a new Montgomery College mission and strategic plan. She has partnered actively with Montgomery County Public Schools and the universities at Shady Grove in the creation of Achieving Collegiate Excellence and Success (ACES), a support program designed to help disadvantaged students transition from high school to college completion. The program now has 1,700 students enrolled. Montgomery College is also a member of Achieving the Dream network, a non-governmental reform movement for student success at community colleges.

In 2016, NBC 4 investigated frivolous spending claims made by students and staff against Pollard. NBC 4 had received letters from staff throughout the summer asking the news organization to investigate the president.[12] In response, the school released a statement supporting Pollard and claiming that none of the charges were unjustified, and that there was no inappropriate use of college funds. The matter was dropped.

Campuses edit

 
Cafritz Arts Center, Silver Spring
 
Cultural Arts Center, Silver Spring

Takoma Park / Silver Spring edit

The Takoma Park campus began expanding into neighboring city of Silver Spring with the opening of a new Health Sciences Center in January 2004. The campus expansion in Silver Spring included the addition of The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Arts Center which opened in fall 2007. The building houses the campus visual arts programs and the School of Art + Design, formerly the Maryland College of Art and Design, which merged with Montgomery College in September 2004. To reflect the campus's expansion into Silver Spring, the Board of Trustees renamed the Takoma Park campus as the "Takoma Park/Silver Spring Campus" in June 2005.[13] The Cultural Arts Center, which contains two theaters, opened in 2009.[14]

Rockville edit

 
Montgomery College Rockville Campus

In 2008, Montgomery College named its Rockville Campus gallery the Sarah Silberman Art Gallery. In addition to donating $500,000 for its complete renovation, Sarah Silberman funded two endowed scholarships in ceramics and sculpture.[15][16][17] In 2011, Montgomery College built its new Science Center on the Rockville Campus which features 29 new laboratories. In January 2017, the new North Garage with over 900 covered parking spaces was opened on the Rockville campus.

Germantown edit

 
Montgomery College, Germantown campus

In 2011, the Montgomery College Germantown Campus started to expand with the addition of the Life Sciences Park which features the new Holy Cross Germantown Hospital. In 2014, the Germantown Campus add a new Bioscience Education Center which features wet labs, a detached greenhouse complex, and a meeting/conference center.

Libraries edit

The Montgomery College Libraries system has a location at each campus.

Organization and administration edit

The Montgomery College Foundation is a 501(c)(3) (tax-exempt) charitable organization governed by business, alumni and community members.[18] The foundation, with assets of $126,554,999, according to the 2017 IRS 990 form, also helps fund the college, placing it among the top five community colleges in the nation in private funding.[citation needed]

Montgomery College's fiscal year 2019 tax-supported operating budget was $262 million, with funding from Montgomery County, the state of Maryland, and student tuition and fees.[19]

Presidents edit

The president of Montgomery College oversees the operations of three academic campuses of Montgomery College in Maryland.[20]

Academics edit

Montgomery College has an enrollment of over 55,000 credit and noncredit students.[21] Of the Montgomery County Public Schools graduates who choose to stay in Maryland for college, 56% attend Montgomery College within the following academic year.[22] The college is one of the most ethnically and culturally diverse in the nation,[citation needed] with students from over 170 countries enrolled. The student body of the college is 54% female and 46% male; 90% of college students are in-county residents; and the student body ethnicity is 27% black, 25% hispanic, and 23% white.[23] The college also employs more than 1,500 faculty members.

Montgomery College is accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education.[24] It offers associate degrees and a variety of professional certificates and letters of recognition. The degrees offered are Associate of Arts (A.A.), Associate of Science (A.S.), Associate of Applied Science (A.A.S.), Associate of Arts in Teaching (A.A.T.), and Associate of Fine Arts (A.F.A.).

The Rockville campus offers more than 600 courses in more than 40 curricula. The Takoma Park/Silver Spring campus is known for its nursing and allied health science career programs, and the Germantown campus is known for its science programs including computer science and biotechnology.

Montgomery College offers study abroad to over 25 countries. In 2018, Montgomery College students transferred to 375 four-year colleges and universities in 48 states and Puerto Rico.

Admissions and costs edit

As with most community colleges, admission to Montgomery College is not selective. The college is open to students who are high school graduates or have received their General Equivalency Diploma (GED); the college does not require standardized test scores, such as the SAT or ACT, for admission.[25]

The total tuition and fees per semester, as of 2022, with 15-hours of credits are:[26]

  • $2,661 — Montgomery County resident
  • $5,127 — Maryland state resident
  • $7,017 — Non Maryland resident

Costs can be more complex than the listed prices, as certain students can qualify for financial aid in the forms of scholarships, student loans, work-study programs, and grants.[27] Tuition rates can be impacted by county budgets and admission trends.[28]

Student life edit

Media edit

Each of Montgomery College's three campuses has its own student-run newspaper: The Globe (Germantown),[29] The Advocate (Rockville),[30] and The Excalibur (Takoma Park/Silver Spring).[31]

At its Rockville campus, the college also operates eRadio WMCR, a student-run online radio station,[32] and the award winning[33] MCTV, a 24/7 cable channel that produces programming for and about the college community.[34]

Athletics edit

The Montgomery College athletics teams are collectively known as the Raptors. During the Spring 2012 semester the college rebranded the mascot to be representative of all campuses. Sports teams are divided among campuses and compete in the NJCAA. Prior to the Spring 2012 semester, each Montgomery College campus had its own athletic teams. The athletic teams were formerly known as the Knights of the Rockville Campus, the Falcons of the Takoma Park/Silver Spring Campus, and the Gryphons of the Germantown Campus.[35]

The basketball/volleyball arena, Knights Arena in Rockville, was home to the Maryland Nighthawks of the Premier Basketball League for the 2007 season, before the team moved to Georgetown Preparatory School Field House.

The baseball field, Knights Field, is the home field of the Rockville Express, a member of the Cal Ripken, Sr. Collegiate Baseball League.[36]

In the Fall 2018 semester, Montgomery College teams were elevated to Division I and Division II levels.[37] The Montgomery College teams elevated to the Division I level were men's soccer, women's soccer, men's outdoor track and field, and women's outdoor track and field. The Montgomery College volleyball, men's basketball, women's basketball, baseball, and softball teams are now competing in NJCAA Division II.

National championships edit

The Knights (Rockville Campus) women's tennis team won the NJCAA Division III National Championship in 2001 and again in 2006.[38] Montgomery College-Rockville golfer Brent Davis won the NJCAA Division III Individual Championship in 2005 with a score of 288.[39]

The Raptors women's track and field team won back to back NJCAA Division III National Championships in 2015 and 2016.[40][failed verification] The Raptors men's track and field team won back to back to back NJCAA Division III National Championships in 2014, 2015, and 2016.[41][failed verification]

Notable people edit

Montgomery College has served over 450,000 credit students since its founding in 1946[22] including:

References edit

  1. ^ Bliss, Louis (1955). Bliss Electrical School Alumni Address (Speech). Bliss Alumni Address. Washington, D.C. Retrieved June 25, 2021.
  2. ^ Raymond C Watson Jr. (2007). Solving the Naval Radar Crisis: The Eddy Test – Admission to the Most Unusual Training Program of World War II. pp. 205–207. ISBN 978-1-4251-6173-6.
  3. ^ a b "Experts Meet To Revise Junior College". The Washington Post. August 15, 1950. p. 8.
  4. ^ a b c Donnell, Thomas J. O. (September 11, 1946). "6 New Junior Colleges in State to Open: Tuition Fee Presents Problem In Establishing Any In City". The Baltimore Sun. p. 28.
  5. ^ Strasser, William C. Jr. (August 1992). "Montgomery College in Its Formative Years, 1946-1979" (PDF). The Montgomery County Story. Vol. 35, no. 3. Montgomery County Historical Society. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2021.
  6. ^ "Ex-Teacher Made Dean Of Junior College". The Baltimore Sun. May 31, 1946. p. 8.
  7. ^ "Bliss Electrical School Reunion". YouTube.
  8. ^ "New Home for Montgomery Junior College (photo caption)". Washington Evening Star. August 4, 1950. Retrieved March 3, 2021 – via Chronicling America.
  9. ^ a b "Montgomery Junior College Coming of Age". The Washington Post. August 27, 1950. p. L3.
  10. ^ "Lack of Transit Hampers Negro Junior College". Washington Evening Star. October 3, 1950. Retrieved March 6, 2020 – via Chronicling America.
  11. ^ Filson, Susan (December 10, 1965). "1550 'Make Do' on MJC's New Campus". The Washington Post. p. B13.
  12. ^ Thompson, Tisha; Yarborough, Rick; Piper, Jeff (November 28, 2016). "Presidential Perks: Students, Staff Complain About Spending at Montgomery College". NBC 4. Washington, D.C. from the original on June 22, 2021. Retrieved June 22, 2021.
  13. ^ Montgomery College. Montgomery College Announcement of Campus Name Change December 5, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ "Montgomery College Cultural Arts Center". Silver Spring Arts & Entertainment District. Silver Spring Urban District. Retrieved December 24, 2019.
  15. ^ Holly, Joe (June 2, 2008). "Sarah Silberman; Sculptor, College Benefactor". The Washington Post.
  16. ^ Crisostomo, Contessa (February 27, 2008). . The Gazette. Rockville, MD. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
  17. ^ Jewish Women's Archive June 1, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Montgomery College. "Montgomery College Foundation." June 2, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Montgomery College Budget Office
  20. ^ "MC Memories and Milestones Timeline". Montgomery College. Archived from the original on July 29, 2012. Retrieved March 3, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  21. ^ Montgomery College. Montgomery College Fall 2006 Enrollment Report March 7, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ a b Montgomery College. "Montgomery College At a Glance." Accessed July 13, 2010. April 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ "Montgomery College at a glance – 20190"
  24. ^ Middle States Commission on Higher Education. Philadelphia, PA. "Institution Directory." Accessed July 13, 2010.
  25. ^ Montgomery College Getting Started: How to Apply and Register
  26. ^ Montgomery College Paying for College
  27. ^ Montgomery College Financial Aid
  28. ^ "Montgomery College Tuition Rising for Second Consecutive Year", Bethesda Magazine.
  29. ^ "The Globe". The Globe. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  30. ^ "About". The Advocate. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  31. ^ "Welcome to the Excalibur!". mcexcalibur.com. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  32. ^ "eRadio WMCR". Montgomery College. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  33. ^ "MCTV Awards | Montgomery College, Maryland". www.montgomerycollege.edu. Retrieved April 11, 2022.
  34. ^ "Montgomery College Television". Montgomery College. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  35. ^ Zakour, Kent (December 4, 2013). "Montgomery College reveals new mascot". Maryland Junior College Athletic Conference. Retrieved May 18, 2021.
  36. ^ Rockville Express official web site
  37. ^ Montgomery College Elevates Athletics Programs to NJCAA Division I and II
  38. ^ NJCAA Division III Women's Tennis Record Book July 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ NJCAA Division III Men's Golf Record Book July 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  40. ^ "MC Women's Track and Field Team Brings Home Three National Championships" (18 May 2015). Inside MC. Montgomery College. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  41. ^ "NJCAA Division III Outdoor Championships". USTFCCCA. U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  42. ^ J. Marshall Guion (IV) (1976). Descendants of Louis Guion, Huguenot, of La Rochelle, France and New Rochelle, West Chester County, Province of New York: A Guion Family Album, 1654 to 1976. Guion. Retrieved September 4, 2020.
  43. ^ The artist's website

External links edit

  • Official website

montgomery, college, colleges, pennsylvania, texas, respectively, montgomery, county, community, college, lone, star, college, montgomery, public, community, college, montgomery, county, maryland, insigniaformer, namesmontgomery, junior, collegemottomake, your. For the colleges in Pennsylvania and Texas respectively see Montgomery County Community College and Lone Star College Montgomery Montgomery College MC is a public community college in Montgomery County Maryland Montgomery CollegeMontgomery College InsigniaFormer namesMontgomery Junior CollegeMottoMake Your MoveTypePublic community collegeEstablishedAugust 20 1946 77 years ago 1946 08 20 AccreditationMSCHEAcademic affiliationCUWMAPresidentJermaine F WilliamsStudentsc 55 000 credit and noncredit studentsLocationMontgomery County Maryland U S 39 05 54 N 77 09 33 W 39 0982 N 77 1591 W 39 0982 77 1591CampusCampuses in Rockville Germantown Takoma Park Silver SpringNewspaperThe MC AdvocateThe MC GlobeThe MC ExcaliburColors Purple amp silverSporting affiliationsNJCAA Division IMascotRaptors since 2012 Websitewww wbr montgomerycollege wbr eduThe school was founded in 1946 as Montgomery Junior College Four years later it absorbed the 57 year old Bliss Electrical School which became the junior college s electrical program The college has three campuses the largest of which is in Rockville Its other campuses are in Takoma Park Silver Spring and Germantown Its off campus sites include the Business Training Center in Gaithersburg and Westfield South in Wheaton which are operated by the college s Workforce Development and Continuing Education Division Contents 1 History 1 1 19th century 1 2 20th century 1 3 21st century 2 Campuses 2 1 Takoma Park Silver Spring 2 2 Rockville 2 3 Germantown 2 4 Libraries 3 Organization and administration 3 1 Presidents 4 Academics 5 Admissions and costs 6 Student life 6 1 Media 7 Athletics 7 1 National championships 8 Notable people 9 References 10 External linksHistory edit19th century edit The Bliss Electrical School was a private for profit institution in Takoma Park Maryland Established in 1893 and named after its founder Louis D Bliss Its first class was on October 15 1893 in a single room on the third floor of Water Building at the corner of Ninth and Ebbs Street It was a night class with 26 students including Thomas E Robertson who would later go on to be the United States Commissioner of Patents The capital investment in the school was 400 representing an advance payment of 20 each from 20 men In 1895 Charles Francis Jenkins of motion picture and television fame enrolled as a student 1 20th century edit W B Connelly a 1904 graduate of Bliss worked for the General Electric Company at Schenectady N Y where he led the inspection of some two miles of switchboards for the Panama Canal Before going to GE Connelly taught at Bliss his student Skipwith B Cole would later become dean of the school s faculty On November 6 1908 the Bliss Electrical School building burned down forcing a move On June 3 1914 Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan addressed the school s graduating class in the auditorium of the Calvary Baptist Church In 1917 the United States entered World War I By special permission granted by the War Department the Bliss Electrical School organized a searchlight company of engineers consisting of 57 men from the 1917 class headed by Lt Clyde K Krisee of the faculty and under Major John C Gotwals of the Engineer Corps of the United States Army This company went overseas with the First Division of the American Expeditionary Forces These men were used for instruction purposes in a searchlight school in Paris All returned safely to the United States after the war except one who was killed in an automobile accident in Paris The captured German searchlight which adorns the campus was presented to the Bliss Electrical School by the War Department as a tribute to the work of the Bliss Searchlight Company of Engineers nbsp Drafted men from Washington D C install wires for electric lights and motors in the Bliss wiring laboratory in 1918 The school provided an intensive course of training for Army electricians At the request of the War Department in 1918 Bliss School prepared an intensive training course in the fundamentals of electricity for drafted men entering the Army This course was adopted by the War Department and was the first course used in all the colleges throughout the country giving instructions along this line to army personnel in the Student Army Training Corps The school contracted with the War Department to house feed and instruct selected groups of soldiers for this course Beginning June 15 1918 the school trained 700 soldiers in three detachments The contract called for training these men at cost This cost was determined by the auditors in the War Department at 2 00 for the first detachment at 1 80 for the second detachment and 1 62 for the third detachment per man per day for housing feeding instruction and supplies The school was under military control following instruction hence following the signing of the armistice on November 11 1918 The third and last detachment of the Student Army Training Corps was mustered out and disbanded on December 6 1918 and the school was released from military control In 1919 Bliss returned to civilian training The first edition of the Bliss School textbook Theoretical and Practical Electrical Engineering was published in September 1921 During World War II Bliss was selected by the U S Navy as one of six engineering schools to give Primary School in the Electronics Training Program and it graduated over 3 000 students 2 Bliss Electrical School s building was sold to Montgomery County for 350 000 3 nbsp BCC High School where the college started and which lends its tower to the school crestThe current college was organized in 1946 as Montgomery Junior College with its campus located at the Bethesda Chevy Chase High School 4 Its first dean was Hugh G Price 5 6 The first day of class was held on September 16 1946 4 During its first school year it had about 175 students 4 In 1950 the college moved to Takoma Park absorbing the Bliss Electrical School 7 3 Previously Montgomery Junior College could only hold evening classes because the high school used the building for its classes during the day but with the acquisition of Bliss Electrical School s building Montgomery Junior College began holding daytime classes as well 8 9 The first day of classes at the new location began on October 2 1950 9 At the time it was segregated with an enrollment of over 500 students The newly established Carver Junior College in Rockville was expected to have 40 African Americans enrolled but only 19 managed to show up due both to problems in finding transportation to school and the cost of tuition 10 The Rockville campus of Montgomery College opened in September 1965 11 and the Germantown campus opened in early 1970s occupying its present permanent site since 1978 Montgomery College also offers learning opportunities through its extensive Workforce Development and Continuing education programs 21st century edit In 2010 DeRionne Pollard assumed leadership of Montgomery College and its three campuses She spearheaded the development of a new Montgomery College mission and strategic plan She has partnered actively with Montgomery County Public Schools and the universities at Shady Grove in the creation of Achieving Collegiate Excellence and Success ACES a support program designed to help disadvantaged students transition from high school to college completion The program now has 1 700 students enrolled Montgomery College is also a member of Achieving the Dream network a non governmental reform movement for student success at community colleges In 2016 NBC 4 investigated frivolous spending claims made by students and staff against Pollard NBC 4 had received letters from staff throughout the summer asking the news organization to investigate the president 12 In response the school released a statement supporting Pollard and claiming that none of the charges were unjustified and that there was no inappropriate use of college funds The matter was dropped Campuses edit nbsp Cafritz Arts Center Silver Spring nbsp Cultural Arts Center Silver SpringTakoma Park Silver Spring edit The Takoma Park campus began expanding into neighboring city of Silver Spring with the opening of a new Health Sciences Center in January 2004 The campus expansion in Silver Spring included the addition of The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Arts Center which opened in fall 2007 The building houses the campus visual arts programs and the School of Art Design formerly the Maryland College of Art and Design which merged with Montgomery College in September 2004 To reflect the campus s expansion into Silver Spring the Board of Trustees renamed the Takoma Park campus as the Takoma Park Silver Spring Campus in June 2005 13 The Cultural Arts Center which contains two theaters opened in 2009 14 Rockville edit nbsp Montgomery College Rockville CampusIn 2008 Montgomery College named its Rockville Campus gallery the Sarah Silberman Art Gallery In addition to donating 500 000 for its complete renovation Sarah Silberman funded two endowed scholarships in ceramics and sculpture 15 16 17 In 2011 Montgomery College built its new Science Center on the Rockville Campus which features 29 new laboratories In January 2017 the new North Garage with over 900 covered parking spaces was opened on the Rockville campus Germantown edit nbsp Montgomery College Germantown campusIn 2011 the Montgomery College Germantown Campus started to expand with the addition of the Life Sciences Park which features the new Holy Cross Germantown Hospital In 2014 the Germantown Campus add a new Bioscience Education Center which features wet labs a detached greenhouse complex and a meeting conference center Libraries edit The Montgomery College Libraries system has a location at each campus Organization and administration editThe Montgomery College Foundation is a 501 c 3 tax exempt charitable organization governed by business alumni and community members 18 The foundation with assets of 126 554 999 according to the 2017 IRS 990 form also helps fund the college placing it among the top five community colleges in the nation in private funding citation needed Montgomery College s fiscal year 2019 tax supported operating budget was 262 million with funding from Montgomery County the state of Maryland and student tuition and fees 19 Presidents edit The president of Montgomery College oversees the operations of three academic campuses of Montgomery College in Maryland 20 Hugh G Price 1948 1953 Donald E Deyo 1953 1965 George A Hodson 1965 1966 William C Strasser 1966 1979 Robert E Parilla 1979 1998 Charlene R Nunley 1998 2007 Brian K Johnson 2007 2009 Hercules Pinkney 2009 2010 acting DeRionne P Pollard 2010 2021 Charlene Mickens Dukes 2021 2022 interim Jermaine F Williams 2022 present Academics editMontgomery College has an enrollment of over 55 000 credit and noncredit students 21 Of the Montgomery County Public Schools graduates who choose to stay in Maryland for college 56 attend Montgomery College within the following academic year 22 The college is one of the most ethnically and culturally diverse in the nation citation needed with students from over 170 countries enrolled The student body of the college is 54 female and 46 male 90 of college students are in county residents and the student body ethnicity is 27 black 25 hispanic and 23 white 23 The college also employs more than 1 500 faculty members Montgomery College is accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education 24 It offers associate degrees and a variety of professional certificates and letters of recognition The degrees offered are Associate of Arts A A Associate of Science A S Associate of Applied Science A A S Associate of Arts in Teaching A A T and Associate of Fine Arts A F A The Rockville campus offers more than 600 courses in more than 40 curricula The Takoma Park Silver Spring campus is known for its nursing and allied health science career programs and the Germantown campus is known for its science programs including computer science and biotechnology Montgomery College offers study abroad to over 25 countries In 2018 Montgomery College students transferred to 375 four year colleges and universities in 48 states and Puerto Rico Admissions and costs editAs with most community colleges admission to Montgomery College is not selective The college is open to students who are high school graduates or have received their General Equivalency Diploma GED the college does not require standardized test scores such as the SAT or ACT for admission 25 The total tuition and fees per semester as of 2022 with 15 hours of credits are 26 2 661 Montgomery County resident 5 127 Maryland state resident 7 017 Non Maryland residentCosts can be more complex than the listed prices as certain students can qualify for financial aid in the forms of scholarships student loans work study programs and grants 27 Tuition rates can be impacted by county budgets and admission trends 28 Student life editMedia edit Each of Montgomery College s three campuses has its own student run newspaper The Globe Germantown 29 The Advocate Rockville 30 and The Excalibur Takoma Park Silver Spring 31 At its Rockville campus the college also operates eRadio WMCR a student run online radio station 32 and the award winning 33 MCTV a 24 7 cable channel that produces programming for and about the college community 34 Athletics editThe Montgomery College athletics teams are collectively known as the Raptors During the Spring 2012 semester the college rebranded the mascot to be representative of all campuses Sports teams are divided among campuses and compete in the NJCAA Prior to the Spring 2012 semester each Montgomery College campus had its own athletic teams The athletic teams were formerly known as the Knights of the Rockville Campus the Falcons of the Takoma Park Silver Spring Campus and the Gryphons of the Germantown Campus 35 The basketball volleyball arena Knights Arena in Rockville was home to the Maryland Nighthawks of the Premier Basketball League for the 2007 season before the team moved to Georgetown Preparatory School Field House The baseball field Knights Field is the home field of the Rockville Express a member of the Cal Ripken Sr Collegiate Baseball League 36 In the Fall 2018 semester Montgomery College teams were elevated to Division I and Division II levels 37 The Montgomery College teams elevated to the Division I level were men s soccer women s soccer men s outdoor track and field and women s outdoor track and field The Montgomery College volleyball men s basketball women s basketball baseball and softball teams are now competing in NJCAA Division II National championships edit The Knights Rockville Campus women s tennis team won the NJCAA Division III National Championship in 2001 and again in 2006 38 Montgomery College Rockville golfer Brent Davis won the NJCAA Division III Individual Championship in 2005 with a score of 288 39 The Raptors women s track and field team won back to back NJCAA Division III National Championships in 2015 and 2016 40 failed verification The Raptors men s track and field team won back to back to back NJCAA Division III National Championships in 2014 2015 and 2016 41 failed verification Notable people editMain category Montgomery College people This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Montgomery College news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Montgomery College has served over 450 000 credit students since its founding in 1946 22 including Tori Amos American singer songwriter Dubfire Iranian American house and techno DJ Neal Fredericks 1989 cinematographer Molly Guion artist 42 Paul James American television and film actor Zayed Khan Indian actor Joshua Leonard Rick Leventhal American news reporter and correspondent for Fox News Chelsea Manning former United States Army soldier convicted of violations of the Espionage Act and other offenses after disclosing to WikiLeaks nearly 750 000 military and diplomatic documents Komelia Hongja Okim sculptor professor emerita 43 Eduardo Sanchez 1990 director of The Blair Witch Project Barbara Walsh American musical theatre actress of Broadway shows who received a Tony Award nomination Jerome Williams former professional basketball player for the National Basketball Association NBA Morgan Wootten American high school basketball coachReferences edit Bliss Louis 1955 Bliss Electrical School Alumni Address Speech Bliss Alumni Address Washington D C Retrieved June 25 2021 Raymond C Watson Jr 2007 Solving the Naval Radar Crisis The Eddy Test Admission to the Most Unusual Training Program of World War II pp 205 207 ISBN 978 1 4251 6173 6 a b Experts Meet To Revise Junior College The Washington Post August 15 1950 p 8 a b c Donnell Thomas J O September 11 1946 6 New Junior Colleges in State to Open Tuition Fee Presents Problem In Establishing Any In City The Baltimore Sun p 28 Strasser William C Jr August 1992 Montgomery College in Its Formative Years 1946 1979 PDF The Montgomery County Story Vol 35 no 3 Montgomery County Historical Society Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved March 4 2021 Ex Teacher Made Dean Of Junior College The Baltimore Sun May 31 1946 p 8 Bliss Electrical School Reunion YouTube New Home for Montgomery Junior College photo caption Washington Evening Star August 4 1950 Retrieved March 3 2021 via Chronicling America a b Montgomery Junior College Coming of Age The Washington Post August 27 1950 p L3 Lack of Transit Hampers Negro Junior College Washington Evening Star October 3 1950 Retrieved March 6 2020 via Chronicling America Filson Susan December 10 1965 1550 Make Do on MJC s New Campus The Washington Post p B13 Thompson Tisha Yarborough Rick Piper Jeff November 28 2016 Presidential Perks Students Staff Complain About Spending at Montgomery College NBC 4 Washington D C Archived from the original on June 22 2021 Retrieved June 22 2021 Montgomery College Montgomery College Announcement of Campus Name Change Archived December 5 2008 at the Wayback Machine Montgomery College Cultural Arts Center Silver Spring Arts amp Entertainment District Silver Spring Urban District Retrieved December 24 2019 Holly Joe June 2 2008 Sarah Silberman Sculptor College Benefactor The Washington Post Crisostomo Contessa February 27 2008 Montgomery College Dedicates Art Gallery to Alumna The Gazette Rockville MD Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Jewish Women s Archive Archived June 1 2011 at the Wayback Machine Montgomery College Montgomery College Foundation Archived June 2 2012 at the Wayback Machine Montgomery College Budget Office MC Memories and Milestones Timeline Montgomery College Archived from the original on July 29 2012 Retrieved March 3 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Montgomery College Montgomery College Fall 2006 Enrollment Report Archived March 7 2008 at the Wayback Machine a b Montgomery College Montgomery College At a Glance Accessed July 13 2010 Archived April 12 2008 at the Wayback Machine Montgomery College at a glance 20190 Middle States Commission on Higher Education Philadelphia PA Institution Directory Accessed July 13 2010 Montgomery College Getting Started How to Apply and Register Montgomery College Paying for College Montgomery College Financial Aid Montgomery College Tuition Rising for Second Consecutive Year Bethesda Magazine The Globe The Globe Retrieved August 1 2021 About The Advocate Retrieved August 1 2021 Welcome to the Excalibur mcexcalibur com Retrieved August 1 2021 eRadio WMCR Montgomery College Retrieved August 1 2021 MCTV Awards Montgomery College Maryland www montgomerycollege edu Retrieved April 11 2022 Montgomery College Television Montgomery College Retrieved August 1 2021 Zakour Kent December 4 2013 Montgomery College reveals new mascot Maryland Junior College Athletic Conference Retrieved May 18 2021 Rockville Express official web site Montgomery College Elevates Athletics Programs to NJCAA Division I and II NJCAA Division III Women s Tennis Record Book Archived July 16 2011 at the Wayback Machine NJCAA Division III Men s Golf Record Book Archived July 16 2011 at the Wayback Machine MC Women s Track and Field Team Brings Home Three National Championships 18 May 2015 Inside MC Montgomery College Retrieved May 3 2020 NJCAA Division III Outdoor Championships USTFCCCA U S Track amp Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Retrieved May 3 2020 J Marshall Guion IV 1976 Descendants of Louis Guion Huguenot of La Rochelle France and New Rochelle West Chester County Province of New York A Guion Family Album 1654 to 1976 Guion Retrieved September 4 2020 The artist s websiteExternal links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en 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