fbpx
Wikipedia

City College of San Francisco

City College of San Francisco (CCSF or City College) is a public community college in San Francisco, California, United States. Founded as a junior college in 1935, the college plays an important local role, enrolling as many as one in nine San Francisco residents annually.[3] CCSF is accredited by the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges (ACCJC).

City College of San Francisco
Former names
San Francisco Junior College
MottoThe Truth Shall Make You Free
TypeCommunity college
EstablishedAugust 26, 1935 (August 26, 1935)
Academic affiliations
CCCS
CCCAA
Budget$202.2 million (2015–16)[1]
Academic staff
1,836
Students23,410 (2023)[2]
Location,
U.S.

37°43′33″N 122°27′01″W / 37.725716°N 122.450178°W / 37.725716; -122.450178
CampusUrban
NewspaperThe Guardsman
Colors   Red & white
NicknameRams
Websiteccsf.edu

CCSF, the only community college in San Francisco, offers tuition-free education for all residents of the city.[4] The Ocean Avenue campus, bordering the Sunnyside, Westwood Park and Ingleside neighborhoods, is the college's largest location. The college has five other locations around the city.[5]

CCSF offers Associate degree programs and certificate programs. City College of San Francisco has articulation agreements with the California State University system, the University of California system, and other private and public universities in California and across the United States. Free non-credit courses in subjects such as ESL and citizenship as well as adult education classes are also provided.[3]

History edit

San Francisco Junior College edit

The founding of a junior college in San Francisco had long been the dream of Archibald Jeter Cloud, the Chief Deputy Superintendent of the San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD). In response to Black Tuesday and the ensuing Great Depression, Cloud worked to convince the San Francisco Board of Education of the necessity of a junior college in Depression-era San Francisco and of the District's financial ability to form one. Cloud's presentation of fiscal studies in 1934 convinced the Board of the availability of Federal and State funding for a junior college. City College of San Francisco was established by the Board of Education of the San Francisco Unified School District on February 15, 1934, and officially opened on August 26, 1935, as San Francisco Junior College. The college had no central campus at the time.[6] Instruction began on September 4, 1935, with morning classes held at the University of California Extension building on Powell Street and afternoon classes held at Galileo High School. The long distance between the two locations gave the college the nickname "Trolley Car College."[6] Increasing enrollment gave way to the college's expansion to Lick-Wilmerding High School, Samuel Gompers Trade School, Marina Junior High School, and other locations. A permanent main campus near Ocean Avenue was approved by the San Francisco Board of Education in 1937 and opened in 1940 with the opening of Science Hall.[7]

City College of San Francisco edit

 
Ocean Avenue Campus with Beniamino Bufano's Saint Francis of the Guns of 1968 sculpture in the foreground

In February 1948, the name was changed to City College of San Francisco.[8] It now consists of eleven campuses, the Ocean Campus being the primary one.

In 1970, the college separated from the San Francisco Unified School District. The college continued to hold noncredit education programs throughout San Francisco's neighborhoods. However, as a result of CCSF's rapid growth, the San Francisco Community College District divided the programs between a division for credit courses at the Ocean Campus and one other division for noncredit courses throughout locations in San Francisco. The two educational divisions merged as a single division in 1990 with program locations held at campuses of City College of San Francisco.[3]

Since the 1990s, the college has significantly renovated and expanded its locations and developed new buildings and facilities throughout San Francisco.

Since its founding in 1935, City College has evolved into a multicultural, multi-campus community college that is one of the largest in the country. CCSF offers courses in more than 50 academic programs and over 100 occupational disciplines. There is a full range of credit courses leading to the Associate of Arts and Associate of Science degrees, most of which meet the general education requirements for transfer to a four-year colleges and universities.

Accreditation crisis edit

In 2012, the college began experiencing significant public turmoil. On July 2, 2012, the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges (ACCJC), gave the college eight months to prove it should remain accredited and ordered it to "make preparations for closure".[9][10][11] As summarized by the San Francisco Chronicle in 2015, "the commission has never found wrongdoing or substandard instruction, but has said the college should lose accreditation because of tangled governance structures, poor fiscal controls and insufficient self-evaluation and reporting."[12] In September 2012, the state chancellor's office warned that a special trustee would be appointed to oversee the institution's finances if the college did not voluntarily invite one; the board of trustees voted to invite a special trustee, despite student protests and objection.[13] A report issued by California's Fiscal Crisis & Management Assistance team in September 2012 found the institution to be in a "perilous financial position" caused largely by "poor decisions and a lack of accountability.[14]

In July 2013, the ACCJC elected to take action to terminate the college's accreditation, subject to a one-year review and appeal period. The decision was based on a variety of deficiencies in standards. A Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team report was expected to be released by the end of July 2013. Nearly two months later, San Francisco city attorney Dennis Herrera filed two legal challenges to stop the ACCJC from revoking City College of San Francisco's accreditation alleging conflicts of interest, a faulty evaluation process, and a politically motivated decision-making process.[15] The 2013 decision to revoke accreditation in 2014 was put on hold pending the legal challenges.[12] In January 2015, with the legal conflict still ongoing, ACCJC said that CCSF remained out of compliance with standards in 32 areas but granted the college a two-year extension for resolving these issues and avoiding a shutdown.[12]

In 2017, ACCJC reaffirmed the college's accreditation for seven years.[16] It operates with approximately $22M annual Stabilization funding from the California legislature which will expire in 2021. For the 2017/18 Fiscal year, the Board of Trustees approved a $49M Deficit budget.

Free City College edit

After the accreditation crisis in 2012, CCSF was having low student enrollment issues.[17] In the years that followed the crisis, student enrollment went from 90,000 students down to 60,000 students by 2017.[18] In February 2017, the City of San Francisco began offering free tuition at CCSF for San Francisco city residents in a two year pilot program called “Free City College”.[18][19] The money for the free tuition was raised from Proposition W, a transfer of properties tax on property sold over $5 million.[19] By Fall 2017, student enrollment was increased by 16% (4,900 students).[18] However, a financial audit in 2019 showed that the college was still in dire straits with deficits for at least three years and nearly $14 million more in spending than revenue during the previous fiscal year.[20]

Organization and administration edit

CCSF is part of the San Francisco Community College District which is independent and co-extensive with the City and County of San Francisco and part of the California Community Colleges System. The district's board of trustees is elected by San Francisco residents. District funds are allocated from the state legislature, local property taxes, student tuition and fees, lottery funds, sales tax funds, and miscellaneous sources.

Unique to California Community Colleges, CCSF support staff are pooled in the County of San Francisco's Civil Service system, so they may transfer between the community college and other City/County of San Francisco departments and participate in the City and County's benefit programs. This is an exception to academic independence enabled by Education Code section 88137. College administrators do not have control of the hiring and placement of classified staff. Although it allows for benefit and seniority portability, CCSF classified staff are not paid at the same rate as their equivalent in other cities/county departments, so transfer to the college is effectively a demotion.[21]

City College of San Francisco is located in an urban environment and has the associated crime rate.[22] All campuses are maintained by the San Francisco Community College District Police Department (SFCCDPD).[23] The SFCCDPD has twenty eight police officers and nine civilian employees.

Although most colleges and universities have auxiliary foundations for fundraising, the foundation of City College's assets were frozen in 2010 for illegal use, leading to felony money laundering charges against the college's chancellor.[24] The Foundation subsequently made a break from the college, and today, the college has a quasi-endowment of a little over $1M that it does not control.

Academics edit

 
Science Building atop Cloud Hill as viewed from Ram Plaza (the Quad); a CCSF police car patrols along Cloud Circle.

City College of San Francisco offers 16 Associate of Arts degree programs, 34 Associate Degree for Transfer programs, and 47 Associate of Science programs. In addition, CCSF also offers 108 certificate programs, including eight that are not for credit.[25]

CCSF has a transfer rate to four-year institutions of 62.7% and most students transfer to universities in the California State University and University of California systems.[26]

While the CSU doesn't offer a guaranteed admission program,[27] 35–40% of CCSF's transfer students enroll in San Francisco State University.[28]

7.1% of CCSF transfer students enroll in University of California, Berkeley, making it the second most common transfer destination.[28] UC Davis, UC Irvine, UC Merced, UC Riverside, UC Santa Barbara, and UC Santa Cruz offer Transfer Guaranteed Admission contracts to CCSF students.[29]

Schools edit

CCSF consists of eight schools that are divided into departments.[30]

  • School of Business, Fashion & Hospitality (5 departments)
  • School of English, World Languages and Cultures, and Communication Studies (3 departments)
  • School of Fine Applied Communication Arts (10 departments)
  • School of Health, Physical Education & Social Services (8 departments)
  • School of ESL, International Education & Transitional Studies (3 departments)
  • School of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (13 departments)
  • School of Social Sciences, Behavioral Sciences, Ethnic Studies & Social Justice (12 departments)
  • School of Library, Academic Resources, Educational Technology, and Online Programs (4 departments)

Notable programs edit

The Department of Culinary Arts and Hospitality Studies was founding in 1936 as the Hotel and Restaurant Department and was the oldest hospitality program in the United States.[31] At the Ocean Campus, students and staff in the department operate the school's cafeteria, City Streets, a quick-service outlet in the cafeteria featuring international cuisines, and Chef's Table, a fine dining restaurant. At the Downtown Center, students and staff currently run Educated Palate Cafe, a pop-up bakeshop. Educated Palate was fine-dining restaurant at the center that served American cuisine. The restaurant is temporarily closed.[32]

The school offers courses in nine languages with full courses including American Sign Language, Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Russian, and Spanish. Degrees available for these language programs include an Associate of Arts degree (AA), an Associate of Arts for Transfer degree (AA-T) or a Certificate of Achievement in languages.[33]

The school also offers Cantonese language classes. In December 2021 there were budget cuts which threatened the status of the program.[34] Alan Wong, a member of the CCSF board, stated that since the Cantonese class does not result in a certificate, the class was in jeopardy.[35] At least two "Save Cantonese" campaigns were created to save the language classes.[36] Ultimately the school's Cantonese program remained.[37]

Campus and academic centers edit

 
City College of San Francisco, Mission Campus

CCSF officially opened in 1935, during the Depression era, at the Industrial school, a school for juvenile delinquents, at the Ocean/Phelan Avenue site. Instruction began on September 4, 1935, with morning classes held at the University of California Extension Division building on Powell Street and afternoon classes at Galileo High School with students moving between sites using the trolley system at the time. As the student population grew, classes became available at other sites across San Francisco at a variety of sites. As Juila Bergman writes in the book City College of San Francisco, "Thus, in a real sense, the history of the college is a history of San Francisco and its transportation system."

Today, CCSF provides courses at Ocean Campus and five satellite locations around San Francisco.[5] They are commonly called "campuses," but are officially "academic centers" in the state-approved framework of the California Community Colleges System, having less than the range of educational facilities and services offered at a typical community college campus.[38] Courses are also offered online and are available to all residents of California.[39]

Active locations edit

Source:[5]

  • Chinatown/North Beach Center, 808 Kearny Street
  • Downtown Center, 88 4th Street
  • Evans Center, 1400 Evans Avenue
  • John Adams Center, 1860 Hayes Street
  • Mission Center, 1125 Valencia Street
  • Ocean Campus, 50 Frida Kahlo Way (main campus)

Former locations edit

  • Airport Center, San Francisco International Airport, Bldg. 928
  • Civic Center, 1170 Market Street
  • Fort Mason Center, Fort Mason Center, 1934-Bldg. B
  • Gough Street Site, 31–33 Gough Street (administration)
  • Southeast Center, 1800 Oakdale Avenue

The Airport Center closed in 2020, following the expiration of CCSF's lease at SFO.[40] The other centers are grandfathered but would not have been permitted to open under the 2012 California Community College guidelines.[21]

Art on campus edit

Most of the early art on CCSF campus was due to the work of Timothy L. Pflueger, the architect in charge of designing CCSF in the 1930s.[6] Pflueger was on a committee of well-known Beaux-Arts architects organizing and designing the Golden Gate International Exposition (GGIE). In 1940, he organized Art in Action, an exhibit showcasing work by multiple artists.[6] Many of these pieces from GGIE are now permanently housed at the Ocean Campus.

Diego Rivera edit

Diego Rivera's work Pan American Unity, originally created for the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1940, has been displayed at the theater at the Ocean Campus of San Francisco City College since 1961.[41] This large mural stands, 22' high and 74' long made up of 5 panels. The mural was entitled by Rivera, “Unión de la Expresión Artistica del Norte y Sur de este Continente” (The Marriage of the Artistic Expression of the North and South of this Continent) but now commonly called Pan American Unity. There are three self-portraits and a portrait on his wife, artist Frida Kahlo within this mural.[41] As of 2014, City College is in the process of supporting The Diego Rivera Mural Project, with goals to return the mural to the position of public importance, stabilize the environment in which it is set, and secure funding to make the project self supportive.[41]

Frederick Olmsted Jr. edit

 
"Theory and Science" mural located at San Francisco City College (CCSF) up close detail, two 12′ x 8′ tempera frescos painted by Frederick Olmsted Jr. in 1941 and restored in 2002, New Deal Agencies: Federal Art Project (FAP)

Frederick Olmsted Jr.'s 1941 Theory and Science mural is located at CCSF's Ocean Campus in the Science Hall's west entrance.[42] This is two 12′ x 8′ tempera fresco murals and depicts a range of careers in the sciences, featuring men, women and people of color doing things such as viewing bacteria through a microscope, conducting field research, and excavating dinosaur remains.[42] Olmsted also created two large, limestone sculptures of Leonardo da Vinci and Thomas Edison heads that are on display in the Ocean Campus middle courtyard.[43] The giant Leonardo da Vinci and Thomas Edison heads were created in 1940 as part of the Golden Gate International Exposition's Art in Action exhibition and later given to CCSF for care and display.[43]

Beniamino Bufano edit

Beniamino Bufano was a California-based Italian American sculptor, best known for his large-scale monuments representing peace. Bufano's sculpture Saint Francis of the Guns of 1968 stands at San Francisco City College in front of the Science Building. It is a statue of Saint Francis of Assisi—San Francisco's namesake—made from melted-down guns mixed with bronze to prevent rust from the city's dampness; this work was inspired by that year's assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy. The sculpture is of a 9-ft tall figure of a robed Catholic saint, his arms spread in peaceful greeting. On his robe, Bufano created a mosaic tile mural showing the glowing heads of four of America's assassinated leaders: Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King Jr., Robert Kennedy and John F. Kennedy.[44] This was one of Bufano's last works before he died.[44]

Dudley C. Carter edit

Dudley C. Carter has three works at the CCSF Ocean Campus, including The Ram sometimes called Mountain Ram, Goddess of the Forest, and The Beast sculptures. Dudley had donated The Ram because he knew it was the school mascot and it had been part of the Golden Gate International Exposition's Arts in Action exhibition.[45] The Ram sculpture stood outside on the campus periodically changing locations from time to time, students would coat it in paint with campus colors red and white. Sometimes rival schools would repaint The Ram in their own school colors. By 1980 The Ram had many layers of paint and damage and in Spring of 1983 it was restored by Carter with use of a pick axe and its original, natural redwood.[45] Currently located in the lobby of Conlan Hall, on the Ocean Campus.[45] The Goddess of the Forest is another redwood sculpture created during GGIE, it is very large standing at 26 feet tall and had a girth at the base of 21 feet. For years this piece was located at Golden Gate Park, until 1986 when it began to show distress and decay. It was then moved to CCSF to an indoor location awaiting restoration.[45]

Ignacio Perez Solano edit

In 2004, the then-Governor of Veracruz, Mexico, Miguel Alemán Velazco, presented CCSF with a reproduction of an Olmec colossal head in honor of the new Pan-American Center.[46] The gift, a 14-ton, 9-foot tall replica of “El Rey” (The King) San Lorenzo #1 created in volcanic tuff is now the centerpiece of the proposed Frida Kahlo Garden next to the Diego Rivera Theater at City College of San Francisco.[47] The artist who carved the replica was Ignacio Perez Solano, also known as “il Maestro.”[46] This is only one of five Olmec head reproductions in the United States. The Olmecs are viewed by some as the "mother culture" of Mexico.[48]

Herman Volz edit

Two 50′ x 45′ low-relief polished marble mosaics by the Swiss-born artist Herman Volz are located in the south portico of San Francisco City College's Science Hall, located on Ocean Campus.[49] The murals are named Organic and Inorganic Science. The imagery of the mosaics represent fields such as physics, chemistry, biology, and mathematics with text accompanying the mural that reads ‘Give me a base and I move the world.’ These murals were originally part of the Golden Gate International Exposition’s Art in Action show in 1940 on Treasure Island before they were moved to the college. The two mosaics took two years to install with a staff of eight workmen, Juan Breda served as assistant mosaicist for the project. The murals were restored in 2005.[49]

Student life edit

Student Activities Office edit

The Student Activities Office provides resources, support and leadership training for eight Associated Students Councils and more than 80 clubs and student organizations. It sponsors a wide variety of concerts and lectures throughout the year. It funds the Book Loan Program, Dr. Betty Shabazz Family Resource Center, Multi-Cultural Resource Center, Queer Resource Center, Student Health, Students Supporting Students mentoring program, and Women's Resource Center. Performances given by students in music, dance, and theater arts further enhance campus life.

Students can also avail themselves of the Fitness Center, nationally ranked intercollegiate sports, and participate in the college's award-winning intercollegiate Speech and Debate Program.

Media edit

The Guardsman is the college's student-run newspaper. CCSF's journalism students also publish Etc. Magazine.[50]

The Free Critic was an alternative paper.[51][52]

LGBT community edit

Currently, there is a Queer Alliance student group and a Queer Resource Center on campus.[53] The Queer Resource Center is an informational and advocacy resource center for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, gender queer, intersex, questioning, and straight allies. The Queer Resource Center aims to empower and celebrate its demographic as well as its community,[54] part of which they have supported the addition of new queer studies classes and a new queer-focused associate degree in 2019.[53] The center has participated in anti-violence, anti-homophobia, and anti-transphobia rallies and workshops.[55] The center has struggled with funding although this has caught the attention of politicians, notably the Green Party, whose candidate for board of trustees John Rizzo promised in 2006 funds for more LGBT studies and the Queer Resource Center.[56]

Women edit

On campus, there are numerous student activity groups, gender-specific courses, and health services. For example, the Women's Resource Center and Library (Smith Hall, 103–104) offers women on campus an opportunity to network with academic support services and resources, and Project Survive is a campus peer education group working to promote healthy relationships and end abuse and sexual violence.[57]

Athletics edit

Teams edit

Intercollegiate athletics are offered for men and women. College teams compete in the CCCAA Coast Conference North Section. Intercollegiate sports include baseball, basketball, cross-country, football, soccer, softball, tennis, track, badminton, volleyball, and judo. These teams are all nicknamed The Rams. City College of San Francisco Football Teams have won ten national championships. The annual rivalry football game is played against the College of San Mateo Football team.[58]

Sports facilities edit

All of the CCSF Rams teams are based at the Ocean Campus. The home venue for baseball is Carter Field. Football and track and field use the George M. Rush Stadium. The Soccer Practice Field is north of the stadium. The Wellness Center, south of the stadium, houses staff offices, weight rooms, a swimming pool, locker rooms, classrooms, and an indoor gym. The north and south gyms were located east of the stadium but were replaced with bungalows and a parking lot. Tennis courts are further east.[59]

Notable people edit

Alumni edit

This is a list of notable alumni from City College of San Francisco, listed in alphabetical order by last name.

Actors edit

Artists and designers edit

Athletes edit

Baseball edit
Basketball edit
Football edit

Journalists and writers edit

Politics and civil service edit

Other edit

Faculty edit

This is a list of notable faculty from City College of San Francisco, listed in alphabetical order by last name.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 17, 2016. Retrieved May 23, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ "California Community Colleges Chancellor's Office - Data Mart". Datamart.cccco.edu. Retrieved January 16, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c White, Austin (2005). "Short History of City College of San Francisco" (PDF). City College of San Francisco. p. 11.
  4. ^ "Free City | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c "Centers | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d Bergman, Julia; White, Austin; Sherer Mathes, Valerie (2010). City College of San Francisco. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0738581347.
  7. ^ Bergman, Julia; Sherer Mathes, Valerie; White, Austin (September 13, 2010). City College of San Francisco. Campus History. California: Arcadia Publishing. p. 7. ISBN 9780738581347.
  8. ^ White, Austin (2005), (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on September 23, 2015, retrieved September 9, 2012
  9. ^ Andrea Koskey (July 3, 2013). "City College of San Francisco Accreditation Terminated". The San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved July 3, 2013.
  10. ^ Barbara A. Beno, Ph.D. (July 2, 2012). (PDF). Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 5, 2013. Retrieved December 3, 2013.
  11. ^ Paul Fain (July 3, 2013). "Mammoth 2-Year College to Lose Accreditation". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved July 4, 2013.
  12. ^ a b c Asimov, Nanette (January 14, 2015). "CCSF wins reprieve: Shutdown averted with 2-year extension". San Francisco Chronicle.
  13. ^ Nanette Asimov (September 11, 2012). "CCSF risks bankruptcy, chancellor warns". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved September 20, 2012.
  14. ^ "Deadline looms for City College". San Francisco Chronicle. September 19, 2012. Retrieved September 20, 2012.
  15. ^ "San Francisco Sues To Block City College Accreditation Sanctions". CBS San Francisco. Viacom CBS. August 22, 2013. Retrieved December 3, 2013.
  16. ^ "CCSF keeps accreditation, ending years of uncertainty - by m_barba - The San Francisco Examiner". www.sfexaminer.com. January 13, 2017. Retrieved January 29, 2017.
  17. ^ "A welcome change at SF City College: overflowing classrooms". SFGate. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  18. ^ a b c "City College enrollment up with free tuition for SF residents". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  19. ^ a b "SF reaches deal for free tuition at City College". SFGate. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  20. ^ Asimov, Nanette (January 20, 2020). "CCSF faces dire budget crisis 8 years after college nearly closed in face of financial woes". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
  21. ^ a b c d "California Community Colleges Chancellor's Office City College of San Francisco, Fiscal Review" (PDF). FCMAT.org. Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team (FCMAT), California Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office (CCCCO). September 14, 2012. p. 33. (PDF) from the original on March 17, 2015.
  22. ^ "District Total Crime Statistics". Retrieved May 13, 2008.
  23. ^ "SFCCD Police Department". Retrieved May 13, 2008.
  24. ^ Rice, Stephanie (January 25, 2010). "City College Foundation Seeks Control of Assets". San Francisco Chronicle.
  25. ^ "Degrees, Certificates & Transfer | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 25, 2023.
  26. ^ "CCSF Fact Sheet – Transfers" (PDF). December 25, 2023.
  27. ^ "Transfer to the CSU System | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  28. ^ a b c d "Guru(s): Artists Barry McGee and Chris Johanson". PAPERMAG. November 15, 2012. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
  29. ^ "Transfer to the UC System | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  30. ^ "Schools & Departments | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  31. ^ "About CAHS & FAQs | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  32. ^ "What's Cooking | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  33. ^ "World Languages and Cultures Department". CCSF. Retrieved November 24, 2022.
  34. ^ Simpson, Katherine (December 16, 2021). "Students continue fight to save Cantonese at CCSF". KALW. Retrieved January 29, 2022.
  35. ^ "Cantonese language classes in jeopardy at CCSF". San Francisco Examiner. Bay City News. December 23, 2021. Retrieved January 29, 2022.
  36. ^ Lo, Esther (August 20, 2021). "Cantonese reigns in Bay Area, but at Stanford, City College, language is imperiled". KTVU. Retrieved January 29, 2022.
  37. ^ Do, Anh (April 17, 2022). "The quest to save Cantonese in a world dominated by Mandarin". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 29, 2022.
  38. ^ "California Community Colleges: Fiscal Review" (PDF). Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team. p. 34.
  39. ^ "CityOnline | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  40. ^ "CCSF Puts Hold on Physically Moving the Aircraft Maintenance Program | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  41. ^ a b c "Mural Project". San Francisco City College (CCSF). Retrieved January 5, 2014.
  42. ^ a b . City College of San Francisco (CCSF). Archived from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved September 25, 2014.
  43. ^ a b "Edison and DaVinci by Olmsted". www.ArtAndArchitecture-SF.com. Retrieved September 25, 2014.
  44. ^ a b "St. Francis Made of Melted Guns". Roadside America. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  45. ^ a b c d Schniewind, Arno P.; Baird, Roger; Kronkright, Dale P. (1996). "Rescuing Dudley Carter's Goddess of the Forest" (PDF). WAG Postprints. Wooden Artifacts Group (WAG) of American Institute for Conservation. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  46. ^ a b "Olmec Heads in San Francisco". Accessible Art and Arch. in the San Francisco Area. June 12, 2011. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  47. ^ Davis, Dick (October 2004). . HispanicVista. HispanicVista.com. Archived from the original on February 17, 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
  48. ^ White, Austin; Sherer Mathe, Valerie; Bergman, Julia (2010). City College of San Francisco. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. p. 48. ISBN 978-0738581347.
  49. ^ a b Brechin, Gray. "City College of San Francisco "Organic and Inorganic Science" Mosaic – San Francisco CA". New Deal Art Registry. Retrieved November 7, 2014.
  50. ^ "Student Publications | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  51. ^ "The Free Critic". City College of San Francisco. 1969. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  52. ^ Marshall, Patrick (September 10, 2020). "How I Met Robert Heinlein". The River's Edge. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  53. ^ a b Bajko, Matthew S. (August 21, 2019). "Back to School: At City College, gay men helm the board". The Bay Area Reporter. B.A.R. Inc. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  54. ^ Fitzsimons, Tim (July 18, 2018). "Over $20k raised for funeral of trans student whose remains went unclaimed". NBC News. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  55. ^ . San Francisco Human Rights Commission. Archived from the original on November 15, 2008. Retrieved May 4, 2008.
  56. ^ . San Francisco Green Party. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved May 4, 2008.
  57. ^ "Project Survive – History and Philosophy". Retrieved May 4, 2008.
  58. ^ "Athletics". Retrieved September 2, 2012.
  59. ^ "CCSF Map | CCSF". www.ccsf.edu. Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  60. ^ "Bill Bixby, TV Actor, Dies at 59; Starred in 3 Long-Running Series". The New York Times. November 23, 1993. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  61. ^ Clemens, Samuel. "Pageantry", Lulu Press. August 2022
  62. ^ "Actor Danny Glover joins fight to keep CCSF free". The San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
  63. ^ "Remembering Patrick Cowley, Pioneer of Dance Music and Occasional Composer of Porn Soundtracks". Hyperallergic. February 12, 2020. Retrieved February 13, 2020.
  64. ^ Hjortsberg, William (2013). Jubilee Hitchhiker: The Life and Times of Richard Brautigan. Counterpoint.
  65. ^ Baker, Kenneth (June 22, 2011). "Freda Koblick, influential abstract artist, dies". SFGATE. Retrieved June 14, 2021.
  66. ^ "Manuel Neri". Artists Forum. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  67. ^ "Win Ng". Rehistoricizing The Time Around Abstract Expressionism. Retrieved December 28, 2016.
  68. ^ "Angel, O. J.'s prep QB, finds end run 'unbelievable'". Baltimore Sun News. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  69. ^ "Neumann: Former Cal QB sets paper airplane record". ESPN. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  70. ^ . MSNBC. Archived from the original on May 5, 2016. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  71. ^ . The Readers Review. Archived from the original on August 17, 2016. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
  72. ^ . SF State Magazine. 2003. Archived from the original on February 21, 2018. Retrieved February 21, 2018.
  73. ^ "Commission Confirms Judge Martin Jenkins as Court of Appeal Justice". Metropolitan News-Enterprise. April 7, 2008. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  74. ^ "Fred Lau overcame height restrictions to fulfill dream of joining force". SFGate. 1996. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  75. ^ "Cloud Over City College / Successful football coach may have broken state rules". SFGate. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
  76. ^ Garber, Steve (2004). "Dr. Maxime A. Faget". NASA History. Retrieved April 19, 2016.

External links edit

  • Official website

city, college, francisco, ccsf, city, college, public, community, college, francisco, california, united, states, founded, junior, college, 1935, college, plays, important, local, role, enrolling, many, nine, francisco, residents, annually, ccsf, accredited, a. City College of San Francisco CCSF or City College is a public community college in San Francisco California United States Founded as a junior college in 1935 the college plays an important local role enrolling as many as one in nine San Francisco residents annually 3 CCSF is accredited by the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges ACCJC City College of San FranciscoFormer namesSan Francisco Junior CollegeMottoThe Truth Shall Make You FreeTypeCommunity collegeEstablishedAugust 26 1935 August 26 1935 Academic affiliationsCCCSCCCAABudget 202 2 million 2015 16 1 Academic staff1 836Students23 410 2023 2 LocationSan Francisco U S 37 43 33 N 122 27 01 W 37 725716 N 122 450178 W 37 725716 122 450178CampusUrbanNewspaperThe GuardsmanColors Red amp whiteNicknameRamsWebsiteccsf wbr eduCCSF the only community college in San Francisco offers tuition free education for all residents of the city 4 The Ocean Avenue campus bordering the Sunnyside Westwood Park and Ingleside neighborhoods is the college s largest location The college has five other locations around the city 5 CCSF offers Associate degree programs and certificate programs City College of San Francisco has articulation agreements with the California State University system the University of California system and other private and public universities in California and across the United States Free non credit courses in subjects such as ESL and citizenship as well as adult education classes are also provided 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 San Francisco Junior College 1 2 City College of San Francisco 1 2 1 Accreditation crisis 1 2 2 Free City College 2 Organization and administration 3 Academics 3 1 Schools 3 2 Notable programs 4 Campus and academic centers 4 1 Active locations 4 2 Former locations 5 Art on campus 5 1 Diego Rivera 5 2 Frederick Olmsted Jr 5 3 Beniamino Bufano 5 4 Dudley C Carter 5 5 Ignacio Perez Solano 5 6 Herman Volz 6 Student life 6 1 Student Activities Office 6 2 Media 6 3 LGBT community 6 4 Women 6 5 Athletics 6 5 1 Teams 6 5 2 Sports facilities 7 Notable people 7 1 Alumni 7 1 1 Actors 7 1 2 Artists and designers 7 1 3 Athletes 7 1 3 1 Baseball 7 1 3 2 Basketball 7 1 3 3 Football 7 1 4 Journalists and writers 7 1 5 Politics and civil service 7 1 6 Other 7 2 Faculty 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editSan Francisco Junior College edit The founding of a junior college in San Francisco had long been the dream of Archibald Jeter Cloud the Chief Deputy Superintendent of the San Francisco Unified School District SFUSD In response to Black Tuesday and the ensuing Great Depression Cloud worked to convince the San Francisco Board of Education of the necessity of a junior college in Depression era San Francisco and of the District s financial ability to form one Cloud s presentation of fiscal studies in 1934 convinced the Board of the availability of Federal and State funding for a junior college City College of San Francisco was established by the Board of Education of the San Francisco Unified School District on February 15 1934 and officially opened on August 26 1935 as San Francisco Junior College The college had no central campus at the time 6 Instruction began on September 4 1935 with morning classes held at the University of California Extension building on Powell Street and afternoon classes held at Galileo High School The long distance between the two locations gave the college the nickname Trolley Car College 6 Increasing enrollment gave way to the college s expansion to Lick Wilmerding High School Samuel Gompers Trade School Marina Junior High School and other locations A permanent main campus near Ocean Avenue was approved by the San Francisco Board of Education in 1937 and opened in 1940 with the opening of Science Hall 7 City College of San Francisco edit nbsp Ocean Avenue Campus with Beniamino Bufano s Saint Francis of the Guns of 1968 sculpture in the foregroundIn February 1948 the name was changed to City College of San Francisco 8 It now consists of eleven campuses the Ocean Campus being the primary one In 1970 the college separated from the San Francisco Unified School District The college continued to hold noncredit education programs throughout San Francisco s neighborhoods However as a result of CCSF s rapid growth the San Francisco Community College District divided the programs between a division for credit courses at the Ocean Campus and one other division for noncredit courses throughout locations in San Francisco The two educational divisions merged as a single division in 1990 with program locations held at campuses of City College of San Francisco 3 Since the 1990s the college has significantly renovated and expanded its locations and developed new buildings and facilities throughout San Francisco Since its founding in 1935 City College has evolved into a multicultural multi campus community college that is one of the largest in the country CCSF offers courses in more than 50 academic programs and over 100 occupational disciplines There is a full range of credit courses leading to the Associate of Arts and Associate of Science degrees most of which meet the general education requirements for transfer to a four year colleges and universities Accreditation crisis edit In 2012 the college began experiencing significant public turmoil On July 2 2012 the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges ACCJC gave the college eight months to prove it should remain accredited and ordered it to make preparations for closure 9 10 11 As summarized by the San Francisco Chronicle in 2015 the commission has never found wrongdoing or substandard instruction but has said the college should lose accreditation because of tangled governance structures poor fiscal controls and insufficient self evaluation and reporting 12 In September 2012 the state chancellor s office warned that a special trustee would be appointed to oversee the institution s finances if the college did not voluntarily invite one the board of trustees voted to invite a special trustee despite student protests and objection 13 A report issued by California s Fiscal Crisis amp Management Assistance team in September 2012 found the institution to be in a perilous financial position caused largely by poor decisions and a lack of accountability 14 In July 2013 the ACCJC elected to take action to terminate the college s accreditation subject to a one year review and appeal period The decision was based on a variety of deficiencies in standards A Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team report was expected to be released by the end of July 2013 Nearly two months later San Francisco city attorney Dennis Herrera filed two legal challenges to stop the ACCJC from revoking City College of San Francisco s accreditation alleging conflicts of interest a faulty evaluation process and a politically motivated decision making process 15 The 2013 decision to revoke accreditation in 2014 was put on hold pending the legal challenges 12 In January 2015 with the legal conflict still ongoing ACCJC said that CCSF remained out of compliance with standards in 32 areas but granted the college a two year extension for resolving these issues and avoiding a shutdown 12 In 2017 ACCJC reaffirmed the college s accreditation for seven years 16 It operates with approximately 22M annual Stabilization funding from the California legislature which will expire in 2021 For the 2017 18 Fiscal year the Board of Trustees approved a 49M Deficit budget Free City College edit After the accreditation crisis in 2012 CCSF was having low student enrollment issues 17 In the years that followed the crisis student enrollment went from 90 000 students down to 60 000 students by 2017 18 In February 2017 the City of San Francisco began offering free tuition at CCSF for San Francisco city residents in a two year pilot program called Free City College 18 19 The money for the free tuition was raised from Proposition W a transfer of properties tax on property sold over 5 million 19 By Fall 2017 student enrollment was increased by 16 4 900 students 18 However a financial audit in 2019 showed that the college was still in dire straits with deficits for at least three years and nearly 14 million more in spending than revenue during the previous fiscal year 20 Organization and administration editCCSF is part of the San Francisco Community College District which is independent and co extensive with the City and County of San Francisco and part of the California Community Colleges System The district s board of trustees is elected by San Francisco residents District funds are allocated from the state legislature local property taxes student tuition and fees lottery funds sales tax funds and miscellaneous sources Unique to California Community Colleges CCSF support staff are pooled in the County of San Francisco s Civil Service system so they may transfer between the community college and other City County of San Francisco departments and participate in the City and County s benefit programs This is an exception to academic independence enabled by Education Code section 88137 College administrators do not have control of the hiring and placement of classified staff Although it allows for benefit and seniority portability CCSF classified staff are not paid at the same rate as their equivalent in other cities county departments so transfer to the college is effectively a demotion 21 City College of San Francisco is located in an urban environment and has the associated crime rate 22 All campuses are maintained by the San Francisco Community College District Police Department SFCCDPD 23 The SFCCDPD has twenty eight police officers and nine civilian employees Although most colleges and universities have auxiliary foundations for fundraising the foundation of City College s assets were frozen in 2010 for illegal use leading to felony money laundering charges against the college s chancellor 24 The Foundation subsequently made a break from the college and today the college has a quasi endowment of a little over 1M that it does not control Academics edit nbsp Science Building atop Cloud Hill as viewed from Ram Plaza the Quad a CCSF police car patrols along Cloud Circle City College of San Francisco offers 16 Associate of Arts degree programs 34 Associate Degree for Transfer programs and 47 Associate of Science programs In addition CCSF also offers 108 certificate programs including eight that are not for credit 25 CCSF has a transfer rate to four year institutions of 62 7 and most students transfer to universities in the California State University and University of California systems 26 While the CSU doesn t offer a guaranteed admission program 27 35 40 of CCSF s transfer students enroll in San Francisco State University 28 7 1 of CCSF transfer students enroll in University of California Berkeley making it the second most common transfer destination 28 UC Davis UC Irvine UC Merced UC Riverside UC Santa Barbara and UC Santa Cruz offer Transfer Guaranteed Admission contracts to CCSF students 29 Schools edit CCSF consists of eight schools that are divided into departments 30 School of Business Fashion amp Hospitality 5 departments School of English World Languages and Cultures and Communication Studies 3 departments School of Fine Applied Communication Arts 10 departments School of Health Physical Education amp Social Services 8 departments School of ESL International Education amp Transitional Studies 3 departments School of Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics 13 departments School of Social Sciences Behavioral Sciences Ethnic Studies amp Social Justice 12 departments School of Library Academic Resources Educational Technology and Online Programs 4 departments Notable programs edit The Department of Culinary Arts and Hospitality Studies was founding in 1936 as the Hotel and Restaurant Department and was the oldest hospitality program in the United States 31 At the Ocean Campus students and staff in the department operate the school s cafeteria City Streets a quick service outlet in the cafeteria featuring international cuisines and Chef s Table a fine dining restaurant At the Downtown Center students and staff currently run Educated Palate Cafe a pop up bakeshop Educated Palate was fine dining restaurant at the center that served American cuisine The restaurant is temporarily closed 32 The school offers courses in nine languages with full courses including American Sign Language Chinese French German Italian Japanese Russian and Spanish Degrees available for these language programs include an Associate of Arts degree AA an Associate of Arts for Transfer degree AA T or a Certificate of Achievement in languages 33 The school also offers Cantonese language classes In December 2021 there were budget cuts which threatened the status of the program 34 Alan Wong a member of the CCSF board stated that since the Cantonese class does not result in a certificate the class was in jeopardy 35 At least two Save Cantonese campaigns were created to save the language classes 36 Ultimately the school s Cantonese program remained 37 Campus and academic centers edit nbsp City College of San Francisco Mission CampusCCSF officially opened in 1935 during the Depression era at the Industrial school a school for juvenile delinquents at the Ocean Phelan Avenue site Instruction began on September 4 1935 with morning classes held at the University of California Extension Division building on Powell Street and afternoon classes at Galileo High School with students moving between sites using the trolley system at the time As the student population grew classes became available at other sites across San Francisco at a variety of sites As Juila Bergman writes in the book City College of San Francisco Thus in a real sense the history of the college is a history of San Francisco and its transportation system Today CCSF provides courses at Ocean Campus and five satellite locations around San Francisco 5 They are commonly called campuses but are officially academic centers in the state approved framework of the California Community Colleges System having less than the range of educational facilities and services offered at a typical community college campus 38 Courses are also offered online and are available to all residents of California 39 Active locations edit Source 5 Chinatown North Beach Center 808 Kearny Street Downtown Center 88 4th Street Evans Center 1400 Evans Avenue John Adams Center 1860 Hayes Street Mission Center 1125 Valencia Street Ocean Campus 50 Frida Kahlo Way main campus Former locations edit Airport Center San Francisco International Airport Bldg 928 Civic Center 1170 Market Street Fort Mason Center Fort Mason Center 1934 Bldg B Gough Street Site 31 33 Gough Street administration Southeast Center 1800 Oakdale AvenueThe Airport Center closed in 2020 following the expiration of CCSF s lease at SFO 40 The other centers are grandfathered but would not have been permitted to open under the 2012 California Community College guidelines 21 Art on campus editMost of the early art on CCSF campus was due to the work of Timothy L Pflueger the architect in charge of designing CCSF in the 1930s 6 Pflueger was on a committee of well known Beaux Arts architects organizing and designing the Golden Gate International Exposition GGIE In 1940 he organized Art in Action an exhibit showcasing work by multiple artists 6 Many of these pieces from GGIE are now permanently housed at the Ocean Campus Diego Rivera edit Main article Pan American Unity Diego Rivera s work Pan American Unity originally created for the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1940 has been displayed at the theater at the Ocean Campus of San Francisco City College since 1961 41 This large mural stands 22 high and 74 long made up of 5 panels The mural was entitled by Rivera Union de la Expresion Artistica del Norte y Sur de este Continente The Marriage of the Artistic Expression of the North and South of this Continent but now commonly called Pan American Unity There are three self portraits and a portrait on his wife artist Frida Kahlo within this mural 41 As of 2014 City College is in the process of supporting The Diego Rivera Mural Project with goals to return the mural to the position of public importance stabilize the environment in which it is set and secure funding to make the project self supportive 41 Frederick Olmsted Jr edit nbsp Theory and Science mural located at San Francisco City College CCSF up close detail two 12 x 8 tempera frescos painted by Frederick Olmsted Jr in 1941 and restored in 2002 New Deal Agencies Federal Art Project FAP Frederick Olmsted Jr s 1941 Theory and Science mural is located at CCSF s Ocean Campus in the Science Hall s west entrance 42 This is two 12 x 8 tempera fresco murals and depicts a range of careers in the sciences featuring men women and people of color doing things such as viewing bacteria through a microscope conducting field research and excavating dinosaur remains 42 Olmsted also created two large limestone sculptures of Leonardo da Vinci and Thomas Edison heads that are on display in the Ocean Campus middle courtyard 43 The giant Leonardo da Vinci and Thomas Edison heads were created in 1940 as part of the Golden Gate International Exposition s Art in Action exhibition and later given to CCSF for care and display 43 Beniamino Bufano edit Beniamino Bufano was a California based Italian American sculptor best known for his large scale monuments representing peace Bufano s sculpture Saint Francis of the Guns of 1968 stands at San Francisco City College in front of the Science Building It is a statue of Saint Francis of Assisi San Francisco s namesake made from melted down guns mixed with bronze to prevent rust from the city s dampness this work was inspired by that year s assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr and Robert F Kennedy The sculpture is of a 9 ft tall figure of a robed Catholic saint his arms spread in peaceful greeting On his robe Bufano created a mosaic tile mural showing the glowing heads of four of America s assassinated leaders Abraham Lincoln Martin Luther King Jr Robert Kennedy and John F Kennedy 44 This was one of Bufano s last works before he died 44 Dudley C Carter edit Dudley C Carter has three works at the CCSF Ocean Campus including The Ram sometimes called Mountain Ram Goddess of the Forest and The Beastsculptures Dudley had donated The Ram because he knew it was the school mascot and it had been part of the Golden Gate International Exposition s Arts in Action exhibition 45 The Ram sculpture stood outside on the campus periodically changing locations from time to time students would coat it in paint with campus colors red and white Sometimes rival schools would repaint The Ram in their own school colors By 1980 The Ram had many layers of paint and damage and in Spring of 1983 it was restored by Carter with use of a pick axe and its original natural redwood 45 Currently located in the lobby of Conlan Hall on the Ocean Campus 45 The Goddess of the Forest is another redwood sculpture created during GGIE it is very large standing at 26 feet tall and had a girth at the base of 21 feet For years this piece was located at Golden Gate Park until 1986 when it began to show distress and decay It was then moved to CCSF to an indoor location awaiting restoration 45 Ignacio Perez Solano edit In 2004 the then Governor of Veracruz Mexico Miguel Aleman Velazco presented CCSF with a reproduction of an Olmec colossal head in honor of the new Pan American Center 46 The gift a 14 ton 9 foot tall replica of El Rey The King San Lorenzo 1 created in volcanic tuff is now the centerpiece of the proposed Frida Kahlo Garden next to the Diego Rivera Theater at City College of San Francisco 47 The artist who carved the replica was Ignacio Perez Solano also known as il Maestro 46 This is only one of five Olmec head reproductions in the United States The Olmecs are viewed by some as the mother culture of Mexico 48 Herman Volz edit Two 50 x 45 low relief polished marble mosaics by the Swiss born artist Herman Volz are located in the south portico of San Francisco City College s Science Hall located on Ocean Campus 49 The murals are named Organic and Inorganic Science The imagery of the mosaics represent fields such as physics chemistry biology and mathematics with text accompanying the mural that reads Give me a base and I move the world These murals were originally part of the Golden Gate International Exposition s Art in Action show in 1940 on Treasure Island before they were moved to the college The two mosaics took two years to install with a staff of eight workmen Juan Breda served as assistant mosaicist for the project The murals were restored in 2005 49 Student life editStudent Activities Office edit The Student Activities Office provides resources support and leadership training for eight Associated Students Councils and more than 80 clubs and student organizations It sponsors a wide variety of concerts and lectures throughout the year It funds the Book Loan Program Dr Betty Shabazz Family Resource Center Multi Cultural Resource Center Queer Resource Center Student Health Students Supporting Students mentoring program and Women s Resource Center Performances given by students in music dance and theater arts further enhance campus life Students can also avail themselves of the Fitness Center nationally ranked intercollegiate sports and participate in the college s award winning intercollegiate Speech and Debate Program Media edit The Guardsman is the college s student run newspaper CCSF s journalism students also publish Etc Magazine 50 The Free Critic was an alternative paper 51 52 LGBT community edit Currently there is a Queer Alliance student group and a Queer Resource Center on campus 53 The Queer Resource Center is an informational and advocacy resource center for lesbian gay bisexual transgender gender queer intersex questioning and straight allies The Queer Resource Center aims to empower and celebrate its demographic as well as its community 54 part of which they have supported the addition of new queer studies classes and a new queer focused associate degree in 2019 53 The center has participated in anti violence anti homophobia and anti transphobia rallies and workshops 55 The center has struggled with funding although this has caught the attention of politicians notably the Green Party whose candidate for board of trustees John Rizzo promised in 2006 funds for more LGBT studies and the Queer Resource Center 56 Women edit On campus there are numerous student activity groups gender specific courses and health services For example the Women s Resource Center and Library Smith Hall 103 104 offers women on campus an opportunity to network with academic support services and resources and Project Survive is a campus peer education group working to promote healthy relationships and end abuse and sexual violence 57 Athletics edit Teams edit Intercollegiate athletics are offered for men and women College teams compete in the CCCAA Coast Conference North Section Intercollegiate sports include baseball basketball cross country football soccer softball tennis track badminton volleyball and judo These teams are all nicknamed The Rams City College of San Francisco Football Teams have won ten national championships The annual rivalry football game is played against the College of San Mateo Football team 58 Sports facilities edit All of the CCSF Rams teams are based at the Ocean Campus The home venue for baseball is Carter Field Football and track and field use the George M Rush Stadium The Soccer Practice Field is north of the stadium The Wellness Center south of the stadium houses staff offices weight rooms a swimming pool locker rooms classrooms and an indoor gym The north and south gyms were located east of the stadium but were replaced with bungalows and a parking lot Tennis courts are further east 59 Notable people editAlumni edit See also Category City College of San Francisco alumni This is a list of notable alumni from City College of San Francisco listed in alphabetical order by last name Actors edit Bill Bixby 1934 1993 Actor 60 Jann Darlyn 1929 model 61 Barbara Eden 1931 actress and singer Danny Glover 1946 American actor film director and activist 62 Lee Meriwether 1935 actress and former model Pat Paulsen 1927 1997 comedian Pat Sheehan 1931 2006 actress and model Hilary Van Dyke 1970 actress Artists and designers edit Lenore Chinn 1949 a queer Chinese American artist and activist best known for her American realist paintings Patrick Cowley 1950 1982 queer disco and Hi NRG dance music composer and recording artist 63 Kenn Davis 1932 2010 surrealist painter and mystery novel writer associated with the Beat generation 64 Emory Douglas 1943 designer illustrator and Minister of Culture for the Black Panther Party from 1967 until the Party disbanded in the 1980s Chris Johanson 1968 painter attended CCSF from 1989 1992 28 Freda Koblick 1920 2011 American acrylic artist and sculptor 65 Barry McGee 1966 a painter and graffiti artist 28 Manuel Neri 1930 artist attended CCSF from 1949 1950 66 Win Ng 1936 ceramics artist designer entrepreneur and co founder of Taylor amp Ng 67 Athletes edit Baseball edit Joe Angel radio sports announcer for professional baseball 68 Doug Davis 1975 professional baseball pitcher Stan Johnson 1937 2013 professional baseball outfielder Dick Nold 1953 professional baseball pitcher Mike Norris 1955 professional baseball pitcher Walt Williams 1943 2016 Basketball edit Justin Brownlee born 1988 player in the Philippine Basketball Association McKenzie Moore born 1992 player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League Travante Williams born 1993 player in the Portuguese Basketball League Football edit Natey Adjei 1988 CFL Wide Receiver Joe Ayoob 1984 Arena Football Quarterback 69 Desmond Bishop 1984 NFL Linebacker Allen Chapman 1991 Arena Football Al Cowlings 1947 NFL Linebacker Vernon Crawford 1974 NFL Linebacker DeJon Gomes 1989 NFL Safety Larry Grant 1985 NFL Linebacker Lavelle Hawkins 1986 NFL Wide Receiver Cole Hikutini 1994 NFL Tight End James Hundon 1971 NFL Wide Receiver Jeremiah Masoli 1988 CFL Quarterback Maurice Purify 1986 NFL Wide Receiver Nick Rolovich 1979 College Football Head Coach O J Simpson 1947 Retired Football Player Broadcaster and Actor 21 Dick Stanfel 1927 2015 NFL and Pro Football Hall of Fame Lenny Walls 1979 NFL Cornerback Gibril Wilson 1981 NFL Safety Journalists and writers edit Joe Angel American radio sports announcer for professional baseball 21 Monica C Lozano 1956 newspaper editor the publisher and CEO of La Opinion a Spanish language daily newspaper Richard Lui 1972 journalist and news anchor 70 Lorene Zarou Zouzounis writer and poet 71 Politics and civil service edit Allen Broussard 1929 1996 an African American judge and justice of the California Supreme Court Saeb Erekat born 1955 a Palestinian diplomat who previously served as chief of the PLO Steering and Monitoring Committee 72 Martin Jenkins 1953 former federal judge 73 Ed Jew 1960 former Chinese American politician who was convicted of extortion bribery and perjury in 2008 Fred H Lau 1949 former chief of police for San Francisco from 1996 2002 74 Peggy Pierce 1954 2013 Nevada politician Other edit Dubee Northern Californian rapper 75 Maxime Faget 1921 2004 Belizean born American mechanical engineer and designer of spacecraft 76 Faculty edit See also Category City College of San Francisco faculty This is a list of notable faculty from City College of San Francisco listed in alphabetical order by last name Margaret Cruikshank 1940 lesbian activist and educator Keith Kerr 1936 retired brigadier general gay activist and as of 1995 retired CCSF faculty Him Mark Lai 1925 2009 activist and historian of Chinese America Helene Mayer 1910 1953 German and American Olympic champion fencer James Torlakson 1951 printmaker artist CCSF professor from 1999 until 2017 Doug Siebum professional audio engineerSee also edit nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portalArt in Action the art exhibition that donated most of the prominent art on campus to CCSF s Ocean Campus Berkeley City College BCC a community college located in Berkeley California Community College Athletic Association CCCAA California Community Colleges system Canada College a community college located in Redwood City College of Marin a community college located in Marin College of San Mateo a community college located in San Mateo Laney College a community college located in Oakland Merritt College a community college located in Oakland Skyline College a community college located in San BrunoReferences edit Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 17 2016 Retrieved May 23 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link California Community Colleges Chancellor s Office Data Mart Datamart cccco edu Retrieved January 16 2024 a b c White Austin 2005 Short History of City College of San Francisco PDF City College of San Francisco p 11 Free City CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 26 2023 a b c Centers CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 26 2023 a b c d Bergman Julia White Austin Sherer Mathes Valerie 2010 City College of San Francisco Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0738581347 Bergman Julia Sherer Mathes Valerie White Austin September 13 2010 City College of San Francisco Campus History California Arcadia Publishing p 7 ISBN 9780738581347 White Austin 2005 From Dream to Reality City College of San Francisco A Short History PDF archived from the original PDF on September 23 2015 retrieved September 9 2012 Andrea Koskey July 3 2013 City College of San Francisco Accreditation Terminated The San Francisco Examiner Retrieved July 3 2013 Barbara A Beno Ph D July 2 2012 Letter to Dr Pamila Fisher Interim Chancellor City College of San Francisco PDF Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges Archived from the original PDF on December 5 2013 Retrieved December 3 2013 Paul Fain July 3 2013 Mammoth 2 Year College to Lose Accreditation Inside Higher Ed Retrieved July 4 2013 a b c Asimov Nanette January 14 2015 CCSF wins reprieve Shutdown averted with 2 year extension San Francisco Chronicle Nanette Asimov September 11 2012 CCSF risks bankruptcy chancellor warns San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved September 20 2012 Deadline looms for City College San Francisco Chronicle September 19 2012 Retrieved September 20 2012 San Francisco Sues To Block City College Accreditation Sanctions CBS San Francisco Viacom CBS August 22 2013 Retrieved December 3 2013 CCSF keeps accreditation ending years of uncertainty by m barba The San Francisco Examiner www sfexaminer com January 13 2017 Retrieved January 29 2017 A welcome change at SF City College overflowing classrooms SFGate Retrieved January 17 2018 a b c City College enrollment up with free tuition for SF residents San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved January 17 2018 a b SF reaches deal for free tuition at City College SFGate Retrieved January 17 2018 Asimov Nanette January 20 2020 CCSF faces dire budget crisis 8 years after college nearly closed in face of financial woes San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved January 23 2020 a b c d California Community Colleges Chancellor s Office City College of San Francisco Fiscal Review PDF FCMAT org Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team FCMAT California Community Colleges Chancellor s Office CCCCO September 14 2012 p 33 Archived PDF from the original on March 17 2015 District Total Crime Statistics Retrieved May 13 2008 SFCCD Police Department Retrieved May 13 2008 Rice Stephanie January 25 2010 City College Foundation Seeks Control of Assets San Francisco Chronicle Degrees Certificates amp Transfer CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 25 2023 CCSF Fact Sheet Transfers PDF December 25 2023 Transfer to the CSU System CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 26 2023 a b c d Guru s Artists Barry McGee and Chris Johanson PAPERMAG November 15 2012 Retrieved February 7 2018 Transfer to the UC System CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 26 2023 Schools amp Departments CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 26 2023 About CAHS amp FAQs CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 26 2023 What s Cooking CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 26 2023 World Languages and Cultures Department CCSF Retrieved November 24 2022 Simpson Katherine December 16 2021 Students continue fight to save Cantonese at CCSF KALW Retrieved January 29 2022 Cantonese language classes in jeopardy at CCSF San Francisco Examiner Bay City News December 23 2021 Retrieved January 29 2022 Lo Esther August 20 2021 Cantonese reigns in Bay Area but at Stanford City College language is imperiled KTVU Retrieved January 29 2022 Do Anh April 17 2022 The quest to save Cantonese in a world dominated by Mandarin Los Angeles Times Retrieved September 29 2022 California Community Colleges Fiscal Review PDF Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team p 34 CityOnline CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 26 2023 CCSF Puts Hold on Physically Moving the Aircraft Maintenance Program CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 26 2023 a b c Mural Project San Francisco City College CCSF Retrieved January 5 2014 a b Public Art on Campus Murals City College of San Francisco CCSF Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 25 2014 a b Edison and DaVinci by Olmsted www ArtAndArchitecture SF com Retrieved September 25 2014 a b St Francis Made of Melted Guns Roadside America Retrieved September 26 2014 a b c d Schniewind Arno P Baird Roger Kronkright Dale P 1996 Rescuing Dudley Carter s Goddess of the Forest PDF WAG Postprints Wooden Artifacts Group WAG of American Institute for Conservation Retrieved September 26 2014 a b Olmec Heads in San Francisco Accessible Art and Arch in the San Francisco Area June 12 2011 Retrieved September 30 2014 Davis Dick October 2004 He Left His Head In San Francisco Olmec presence in the USA HispanicVista HispanicVista com Archived from the original on February 17 2014 Retrieved September 30 2014 White Austin Sherer Mathe Valerie Bergman Julia 2010 City College of San Francisco Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing p 48 ISBN 978 0738581347 a b Brechin Gray City College of San Francisco Organic and Inorganic Science Mosaic San Francisco CA New Deal Art Registry Retrieved November 7 2014 Student Publications CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 26 2023 The Free Critic City College of San Francisco 1969 Retrieved February 2 2022 Marshall Patrick September 10 2020 How I Met Robert Heinlein The River s Edge Retrieved February 2 2022 a b Bajko Matthew S August 21 2019 Back to School At City College gay men helm the board The Bay Area Reporter B A R Inc Retrieved October 30 2019 Fitzsimons Tim July 18 2018 Over 20k raised for funeral of trans student whose remains went unclaimed NBC News Retrieved October 30 2019 Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Advisory Committee Minutes of the November 15 2005 Meeting San Francisco Human Rights Commission Archived from the original on November 15 2008 Retrieved May 4 2008 John Rizzo s questionnaire San Francisco Green Party Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved May 4 2008 Project Survive History and Philosophy Retrieved May 4 2008 Athletics Retrieved September 2 2012 CCSF Map CCSF www ccsf edu Retrieved December 26 2023 Bill Bixby TV Actor Dies at 59 Starred in 3 Long Running Series The New York Times November 23 1993 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 19 2016 Clemens Samuel Pageantry Lulu Press August 2022 Actor Danny Glover joins fight to keep CCSF free The San Francisco Examiner Retrieved February 7 2018 Remembering Patrick Cowley Pioneer of Dance Music and Occasional Composer of Porn Soundtracks Hyperallergic February 12 2020 Retrieved February 13 2020 Hjortsberg William 2013 Jubilee Hitchhiker The Life and Times of Richard Brautigan Counterpoint Baker Kenneth June 22 2011 Freda Koblick influential abstract artist dies SFGATE Retrieved June 14 2021 Manuel Neri Artists Forum Retrieved April 19 2016 Win Ng Rehistoricizing The Time Around Abstract Expressionism Retrieved December 28 2016 Angel O J s prep QB finds end run unbelievable Baltimore Sun News Retrieved April 19 2016 Neumann Former Cal QB sets paper airplane record ESPN Retrieved April 19 2016 MSNBC s Richard Lui shares his educational story MSNBC Archived from the original on May 5 2016 Retrieved April 19 2016 Thursdays at Readers Poetry Series Lorene Zarou Zouzounis and James Cagney The Readers Review Archived from the original on August 17 2016 Retrieved February 7 2018 SFSU Magazine Fall Winter 03 Saeb Erekat Forging a Path to Peace SF State Magazine 2003 Archived from the original on February 21 2018 Retrieved February 21 2018 Commission Confirms Judge Martin Jenkins as Court of Appeal Justice Metropolitan News Enterprise April 7 2008 Retrieved April 19 2016 Fred Lau overcame height restrictions to fulfill dream of joining force SFGate 1996 Retrieved April 19 2016 Cloud Over City College Successful football coach may have broken state rules SFGate Retrieved February 7 2018 Garber Steve 2004 Dr Maxime A Faget NASA History Retrieved April 19 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to City College of San Francisco Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title City College of San Francisco amp oldid 1208410877, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.