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Wikipedia

San Francisco State University

San Francisco State University (San Francisco State, SF State and SFSU) is a public research university in San Francisco. It was established in 1899 as the San Francisco State Normal School and is part of the California State University system.

San Francisco State University
Former name
San Francisco State Normal School (1899–1921)
San Francisco State Teachers College (1921–1935)
San Francisco State College (1935–1972)
California State University, San Francisco (1972–1974)
MottoExperientia Docet (Latin)
Motto in English
"Experience Teaches"
TypePublic research university
Established1899; 125 years ago (1899)
Parent institution
California State University
AccreditationWSCUC
Academic affiliation
USU
Endowment$140.8 million (2020)[1]
Budget$354.6 million (2023)[2]
PresidentLynn Mahoney
ProvostAmy Sueyoshi
Academic staff
1,905 (2022) [3]
Administrative staff
1,398 (2022) [3]
Students25,046 (2022)[3]
Undergraduates21,868 (2022)[3]
Postgraduates3,178 (2022)[3]
Location, ,
United States
CampusLarge city, 141.1 acres (57.1 ha)[4]
Other campuses
NewspaperGolden Gate Xpress
ColorsPurple and gold[5]
   
NicknameGators
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IICCAA
MascotGator
Websitewww.sfsu.edu
Official nameSan Francisco State Teacher's College
Designated1/7/2008
Reference no.N2378[6]

It offers 119 bachelor's degree programs, 105 master's degree programs, and 3 doctoral degree programs, along with 22 teaching credential programs among seven colleges.[7][8][9] The 144.1-acre main campus is located in the southwest part of the city, less than two miles from the Pacific coast.[10] The university has 12 varsity athletic teams which compete at the NCAA Division II level.

San Francisco State is classified among "R2: Doctoral Universities – High research activity."[11] It is also a Hispanic-serving institution (HSI) and is eligible to be designated as an Asian American Native American Pacific Islander serving institution (AANAPISI).

San Francisco State's past and present faculty and alumni include 21 Pulitzer Prize winners, 16 Academy Award winners, 49 Emmy Award winners, 10 Grammy Award winners, 12 Tony Award laureates, 4 billionaires, and 1 astronaut.[12]

History edit

 
Graduating class, State Normal School at San Francisco, June 1906

19th Century edit

In 1857, the San Francisco Board of Education created the San Francisco Weekly Normal School,[13][14] also known as the Minns' Evening Normal School.[15] In 1862, it became the California State Normal School, the first postsecondary institution established by the state.[14] Only six students were enrolled on its first day. By 1866, enrollment had increased to 384.[16]

In 1867, the principal of Girls' High School and Normal School, Ellis Holmes, realized that the California State Normal School was not meeting the demand for teachers. The city approved the addition of a new year-long teacher-training program to his high school's curriculum, for girls who wanted to pursue a career in education. This program is what would eventually become San Francisco State University. When the California State Normal School was moved to San José in 1871, Girls' High became the only publicly-supported teacher-training institution.[16]

In 1895, the teaching program was split from the school and became San Francisco City Normal School.[16] Due to a lack of funding, the school closed in 1898.[13] A group of teachers, students, and supporters pressured the California State Legislature to convert it into a state-funded institution.[16]

On March 22, 1899,[17] the California State Legislature approved the creation of the San Francisco State Normal School, with an appropriation of $10,000. Frederic Lister Burk was appointed as the first president and chose the school's motto, Experientia Docet.[18] The school rented[16] space in a building on Powell Street between Clay and Sacramento Streets and 31 women were enrolled in the first year.[19][20]

20th Century edit

The 1906 earthquake and fire forced the school to relocate from Nob Hill to a temporary campus at the Grant School in Oakland.[20]

In 1921, the school began offering Bachelor's degree options and was renamed San Francisco State Teachers College.[16][21] Teachers Colleges in California received authorization to grant Bachelor of Arts degrees in 1923.[14]

Also in 1921, construction for a new campus started at a property bound by Laguna, Haight, Buchanan and Hermann Streets. The campus consisted of four Spanish Colonial Revival style buildings designed by George McDougall, a California state architect.[22][23]

In 1924, Burk died and Archibald B. Anderson took over as acting president.

There were three presidents of the teachers college in 1927. Anderson served until his death in the summer of that year. Then, Mary A. Ward, the Dean of Women, served as acting president until the fall, when Alexander C. Roberts was appointed president.

In the 1930s, overcrowding became an issue at the campus. It had been designed for 1500 students, but had to accommodate about 3000. When the Hetch Hetchy project was completed in 1934, the city no longer needed land near Lake Merced for a reservoir. By 1939, the land had been acquired to build a new campus, but plans were paused due to World War II. Many students took part in the war, causing enrollment to decline.[24]

During the 1920s and '30s, State Teachers Colleges expanded beyond being only vocational schools to train teachers. They were formally authorized to offer four-year liberal arts curriculums and renamed State Colleges in 1935.[25] So, the school became known as San Francisco State College.[21]

When veterans started returning in 1945, the Vets Village, a housing complex, was built at the site of the new campus. Some students commuted from there to the campus at Buchanan and Haight Streets.[24] In the same year, J. Paul Leonard became president after Alexander C. Roberts retired.[18]

In 1949, master's degrees were authorized to be offered.[10]

In 1951, the Gymnasium building was the first major building to be completed at the current campus near Lake Merced. The Creative Arts building was built second. The campus opened for classes for Fall 1953, before it was formally dedicated in October 1954.[17]

From 1957 to 1961, Glenn S. Dumke was president of San Francisco State.

San Francisco State College became part of the California State College system established under the Donahoe Higher Education Act in 1960.[16] Dumke resigned to become the system's vice chancellor for academic affairs, before becoming the second chancellor of the system for 20 years.

In Fall 1965, the Experimental College was started by students Cynthia Carlson, Donna Michaelson, Sharon Gold, and James Nixon, in an effort to teach untraditionally. In 1927, over 2000 students enrolled in courses offered by the Experimental College.[16] The original Experimental College stopped operating after 1969.[26]

Demonstrations of the 1960s edit

1967 edit

On May 2, 1967, 60 students staged a sit-in protest in President John Summerskill's office, opposing the practice of providing students' academic standing to the Selective Service System. On June 22 of the same year, students and faculty picketed administrative offices to protest the California State College Chancellor Glenn S. Dumke's directive to continue providing students' academic standings.[27]

On November 6, James Vaszko, the campus editor of the Gater, the student newspaper at the time, was assaulted by members of the Black Student Union.[28] This event became known as the Gater Incident. In an interview the day after the assault, Vaszko said he had no idea why it happened, but something was said during the incident about the Gater not running a photo of the BSU candidate for homecoming queen. However, the Gater had included a photo of the candidate. The District Attorney's office issued arrest warrants on November 9 for Ben Stewart, George Murray and Jack H. Alexis.[29]

About 450 students participated in a protest on December 2, against President Summerskill and the Vietnam War.[27]

On December 6, students protested against the suspension of students in the Gater incident. During the protest, students broke into the Administration building.[27]

1968 edit

President Summerskill announced his resignation, effective in September, on February 22.[27]

The Third World Liberation Front was a coalition of the Black Students Union, the Latin American Students Organization, the Filipino-American Students Organization, and El Renacimiento. They occupied the school's YMCA office on March 23.[27]

On May 21, in the Administration building, approximately 400 students held a sit-in protesting various issues, including an end to AFROTC on campus and the hiring of nine minority faculty members. After nine hours, police were called to remove the students. 26 people were arrested.[27]

Students protested again on May 23. On the following day, Chancellor Dumke asked President Summerskill to resign immediately. Robert Smith, a professor of education, was appointed president on June 1.[27][16]

On September 10, George Mason Murray, a graduate student in English and Black Panther Minister of Education, was hired as a teaching assistant to teach introductory English classes for 400 students.[27]

President Smith announced the creation of a Black Studies Department and named Dr. Nathan Hare, a professor of sociology, as acting chair on September 18.[27]

On September 26, after Murray allegedly made inflammatory remarks at Fresno State College and San Francisco State, the California State College Trustees voted to ask President Smith to reassign George Murray to a non-teaching position.

Smith refused, causing Chancellor Dumke to order him to suspend Murray on October 31. On the same day, the Black Student Union Third World Liberation Front threatened to strike on November 6 and presented their 15 demands.[27] The demands were not met, and a lengthy student strike erupted. It was the longest student strike in American history.

On November 13, 1968, the campus closed after a week of confrontations between students and police. On November 18, the California State College Trustees ordered Smith to reopen the campus. The faculty didn't want to reopen the campus, but met for a convocation to discuss the issues. On November 26, Black Student Union leaders confronted Smith and the faculty during the convocation. Smith resigned the same day.[30]

On December 2, S. I. Hayakawa was appointed president. On his first day, he climbed onto a sound truck positioned at 19th and Holloway Avenues. and pulled out the speaker wires. According to a student who was inside the truck, "he was so mad, you could see the foam on his mouth."[31]

On December 10, Mayor Joseph Alioto organized a citizen's committee to help end the strike.[30]

The school closed for the holidays a week early, on December 13.[30]

Also during that month, two bombs were discovered on campus. One was in the Administration building and the other was in the Psychology building (now Ethnic Studies and Psychology building).[32]

1969 edit

On January 4, 1969, President Hayakawa banned meetings and gatherings on campus and limited picketing activities to the perimeter of the campus.[30] Picketers ignored the ban.[33]

About 350 teachers who were part of the American Federation of Teachers picketed around the campus on January 6.[30]

On January 23, over 500 people had gathered on campus for a rally. Police surrounded the protestors and arrested hundreds of them, backing up San Francisco's court system for months.[33]

On March 5, Timothy Peebles, a freshman, set off a bomb in the Creative Arts building at night. The bomb injured his hands and face.[34][30]

The strike officially ended on March 20, after an agreement was signed by representatives of the Black Student Union, the Third World Liberation Front, and the school.[16][30][33] The school agreed to establish the first College of Ethnic Studies in the country, housing the departments of American Indian Studies, Asian American Studies, Black Studies, and La Raza Studies, and to accept almost all nonwhite applicants for the Fall 1969 semester.[33]

1970s and onwards edit

In 1972, the State Colleges system was designated "The California State University and Colleges." 14 colleges met the criteria established by the Board of Trustees and the Coordinating Council for Higher Education, including San Francisco State, which was renamed California State University, San Francisco.[14] This name was not popular with students, and the university was soon renamed San Francisco State University in 1974.[16]

Hayakawa resigned in 1973. This led to the appointment of Paul F. Romberg.[35]

The Student Union building (now Cesar Chavez Student Center) was opened in 1975.[16] It was designed by Paffard Keatinge-Clay.

President Romberg secured a permanent federal lease for 25 acres of shoreline in Tiburon for just $1 in 1978.[36] The Romberg Tiburon Campus would eventually expand to 53 acres.

In 1983, Chia-Wei Woo became the 11th president of the university. Woo was the first Chinese-American to head a major American university.[37]

On May 14, 1985, a pipe bomb in a purse was found in the Business/Ethnic Studies Building (now Business Building).[38][39] A US Army bomb disposal team removed it.[40] In September that year, Coy Ray Phelps was arrested and charged for the attempted bombing.[41] Phelps had also planted bombs in four other locations in San Francisco, but only one exploded at the offices of the local Humanist Party.[42][43] On September 17, 1986, Phelps was placed in a psychiatric facility after being found not guilty by reason of insanity. He was released in 1999, but after starting a website that advocated for murdering Black people and Jewish people, a panel of three judges ruled that he should not have been released in the first place, and he was rearrested in 2002.[43] He appealed the ruling, but his case was dismissed in 2004.[44] On September 23, 2015, he was released from the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners.[45][46]

In 1993, the College of Extended Learning (now College of Global and Professional Education) opened the Downtown Center in San Francisco's Multimedia Gulch, at 425 Market St. [16][47]

 
Cesar Chavez Student Center

In 1994, a mural depicting Malcolm X was painted on the Student Union building, commissioned by the Pan-African Student Union and African Student Alliance. The mural's border contained yellow Stars of David and dollar signs mingled with skulls and crossbones and near the words "African Blood." The next week, after demonstrations on both sides, the university's administration had the mural painted over, and subsequently sand blasted.[48] Two years later, a new Malcolm X mural was painted, without the controversial symbols.[49]

In 1995, San Francisco State alumni Geoff Marcy and Paul Butler discovered two new Jupiter-sized planets within 35 light-years of Earth, including one that could contain elements for organic life. They discovered another planet about 40 light years away less than three months later.[50][51]

21st Century edit

In 2007, the Downtown Campus was opened at 835 Market Street, replacing the Downtown Center. The campus had nearly 47,000 square feet of classroom space in Westfield San Francisco Centre. The campus was used for courses in the College of Extended Learning and Lam Family College of Business.[52]

The first Rhythms Music Festival happened in March 2011.[53] The annual music festival is held in a building known as the Annex.[54]

In 2013, the Science Building was found to have "unsafe levels" of airborne mercury, lead and asbestos in the basement as a result of reports that pesticide-laden Native American artifacts were previously stored with a material now known to be highly hazardous. Over $3.6 million was spent for remediation of the pervasive contamination. University administration terminated several employees who reported the contamination, resulting in several wrongful termination and whistle-blower lawsuits, including one by the recently hired director. In July 2014, Cal/OSHA cited the university for various health and safety violations in the Science Building, which included SFSU failing to locate asbestos in the building and warn employees about the hazards of mercury.[55][56] SFSU previously ran into trouble with its Environmental Health and Safety program when the director prior, Robert Shearer, was accused of accepting bribes from a waste disposal firm in exchange for at least $4 million in university funds.[57]

In March 2016, a video of a student being attacked for having dreadlocks went viral and sparked discussions about cultural appropriation.[58][59]

In response to the College of Ethnic Studies being underfunded since 2008, four students held a ten-day hunger strike from May 2–11, 2016, resulting in one hospitalization. The strike ended when President Leslie Wong agreed to commit nearly $500,000 to the college and meet a portion of their demands.[60]

The Experimental College was revived in Fall 2017. One-unit courses are created and taught by students.[26][61]

Also in 2017, a group of Jewish students and local residents accused SFSU of encouraging antisemitism, and excluding Jewish student pro-Israel activist groups from campus activities.[62][63][64] The students filed two lawsuits focusing on the disruption of a speech by Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat in 2016. One suit was dismissed by a federal judge in 2018.[65] Another lawsuit was settled in 2019 and included provisions for a $200,000 university fund to promote viewpoint diversity, a new coordinator of Jewish Student Life position for at least four years, and an independent consultant to review the university's non-discrimination policies.[66]

In May 2019, Lynn Mahoney became the first woman to become president of San Francisco State in a permanent capacity.[67] Mary Ward had served as an acting president in the summer of 1927, after the death of Archibald Anderson.[68]

On September 23, 2020, SFSU faculty Rabab Abdulhadi and Tomomi Kinukawa hosted a discussion on Zoom titled "Whose Narratives? Gender, Justice, and Resistance."[69] The event's speakers included Leila Khaled, a Palestinian political activist and plane hijacker, Laura Whitehorn, an American political activist and domestic bomber. Zoom and YouTube canceled the broadcast due to Khaled's history of violent actions towards civilians. Facebook also removed a page for the event.[65][70][71] President Lynn Mahoney wrote a letter about the incident. A second event titled "Whose Narratives? What Free Speech for Palestine?" was scheduled for April 23, 2021, and was also blocked. The event had nine speakers scheduled, including Khaled, Whitehorn, Sekou Odinga, an activist and former Black Panther, and Sean Malloy, an author and professor at UC Merced.[72][73]

In 2022, the new Downtown Campus opened on the fifth floor and a part of the 12th floor of 160 Spear St., replacing the Downtown Campus at 835 Market Street.[74] The campus now only occupies the fifth floor.

On April 6, 2023, former NCAA swimmer Riley Gaines visited SFSU for a Turning Point USA student chapter event and spoke publicly about her campaign against transgender athletes in women's sports.[75][76] Protesters attended the event and were peaceful. After the event concluded, more protesters arrived.[77][75] Gaines was escorted by university police officers to shelter in a classroom.[77][75] Video clips were posted to social media, including by Gaines, that appear to show protesters chanting, shouting, and holding signs.[77] After the event, Gaines said she had been physically struck twice by a person during the protest.[78][77] Soon after the event, the university police stated that no arrests have been made, and an investigation is ongoing.[78]

 
Students at San Francisco State University rallied and marched in protest of the CSU tuition increase on September 11, 2023.

On September 11 of the same year, about 300 students rallied and marched against the CSU system's proposed tuition increase.[79] On September 15, CSU's Board of Trustees voted in favor of the plan to reduce the system's $1.5 billion deficit with annual tuition increases of 6%, starting from the 2024–2025 academic year to the 2028–2029 academic year.[80][81]

After years of declining enrollment, budget cuts were announced on August 31, totaling $11 million.[82] The university is also facing a $9 million budget deficit. A plan to eliminate the deficit calls for cutting the equivalent of 125 full-time positions.[83] The California Faculty Association said it would result in the layoff of about 325 part-time lecturers.[84] On October 11, the CFA held a practice rally against the tuition increase and possible layoffs.[85] On October 26, the CFA and the university Young Democratic Socialists of America chapter led about 300 students and faculty in a rally and march against layoffs and the tuition increase.[86] The CFA led another rally against layoffs on November 15.[87]

 
Hundreds of students walked out and rallied at San Francisco State's Malcolm X Plaza on October 25, 2023.

In response to the 2023 Israel–Hamas War, hundreds of students walked out and rallied on October 25, calling for a ceasefire.[88] It was part of a nationwide walkout organized by Students for Justice in Palestine.[89]

On November 14, Teamsters Local 2010 held a one-day strike across all 23 CSU campuses, seeking higher pay.[90] San Francisco State skilled laborers marched through the university before joining the picket line at the university's 19th Ave and Holloway entrance.[91]

Students walked out and protested on November 28, in response to 655 courses being cut and over 300 faculty members being laid off in the Spring 2024 semester.[92]

One-day strikes led by the CFA were held across four CSU campuses from December 4–7, including San Francisco State on December 5.[93] Faculty and students picketed against budget cuts and possible layoffs and are seeking a raise of 12%.[94]

In 2024, the Science & Engineering Innovation Center will open. The center includes a new 125,000 square-foot building and a renovated 54,000 square-foot building.[95]

Milestones edit

  • 1901 – First graduating class consisting of 36 women.[20][10]
  • 1923 – First Bachelor of Arts degree awarded[10]
  • 1930 – Became four-year school[4]
  • 1929 – Grace Hackett became the first known African-American to graduate from the school[20]
  • 1949 – Master's degree first offered[10]
  • 1972 – Received university status
  • 1974 – Renamed San Francisco State University[21]
  • 1975 – Cesar Chavez Student Center opened its doors to students[16]
  • 1999 – Celebrated 100th birthday[96]

Governance edit

San Francisco State University is part of the California State University system. The CSU is governed by a 25-member Board of Trustees who oversee the system's chancellor.[97] The president of SF State reports to the chancellor. The president oversees six cabinet units. Cabinet units collaborate via 13 committees and work in conjunction with three semi-independent 501(c)(3) organizations that support the university.[98] Each cabinet, except the Office of the President, is led by a vice president.[99] The the vice president of Academic Affairs is also university's provost and oversees 15 administrative units, including the university's seven colleges. Each college is led by a dean.[100] The colleges are comprised of departments, led by department chairs, and schools, led by directors. Departments and schools are at the same administrative level.

Presidents edit

Academics edit

 
San Francisco State University's library

The university operates on a semester calendar. Students generally enroll in courses during the fall and spring semesters, but courses are also offered during the summer semester and winter session.[108] Winter courses are not eligible for financial aid.[109]

The university has a four-year graduation rate of 49% and a six-year graduation rate of 55%.[110][111] The student-faculty ratio at SFSU is 20:1.[110]

In Fall 2022, the university had 1,905 instructional faculty, of which 807 (or 42 percent) were tenured or on the tenure track.[10]

Colleges edit

The university's seven colleges are:

  • College of Liberal & Creative Arts[112]
  • Lam Family College of Business[113]
  • College of Ethnic Studies[114]
  • College Health and Social Sciences[115]
  • College of Science and Engineering[116]
  • Graduate College of Education[117]
  • College of Professional & Global Education (formerly College of Extended Learning)[118]

Undergraduate programs edit

SFSU offers 119 bachelor's degree programs across its seven colleges.

The most popular undergraduate majors are Business Administration, Biology, Kinesiology, Engineering, English, Communication Studies, Psychology, Criminal Justice Studies, Sociology, and Cinema.[119]

The College of Health and Social Sciences also offers accelerated Bachelor of Science degrees in nursing in partnership with the City College of San Francisco and College of San Mateo.[120]

Blended master's programs edit

SFSU offers 34 blended bachelor's and master's degree programs, called San Francisco State Scholars programs.[121] The programs provide students an accelerated path to a graduate degree by allowing students to earn graduate credit while in their junior and/or senior years.

Graduate and professional programs edit

The university offers 105 master's degree programs across six colleges: College of Liberal & Creative Arts, Lam Family College of Business, College of Ethnic Studies, College Health and Social Sciences, College of Science and Engineering, and Graduate College of Education.[122]

The Graduate College of Education offers two doctoral programs: Ph.D in special education, in partnership with University of California, Berkeley and Ed.D in Educational Leadership.[123] The College of Health and Social Sciences offers a DPT program in partnership with University of California, San Francisco. The Graduate College of Education also offers 22 teaching credential programs.[9]

Other academic programs edit

Experimental College edit

The original Experimental College, known as E.C., was created in 1965 and lasted until 1969. The revived Experimental College, known as EXCO, allows students to create curriculums and teach one-unit courses about any topic.[26] It is similar to Oberlin College's ExCo program and University of California, Berkeley's DeCal program. Recent course offerings include BDSM 101, Lucid Dreaming, Adventures in SF, Thematic Analysis of Studio Ghibli Films, and United States Foster System.[124][125] EXCO is part of the Department of Undergraduate Education and Academic Planning.[126]

Open University edit

People without formal admission to the university can enroll in undergraduate or graduate courses on a space available basis, through the College of Professional & Global Education's Open University program. Up to undergraduate 24 units can be applied towards a bachelor's degree or six units towards a master's degree at San Francisco State. The program costs $395 per unit and is open to everybody except SFSU students. This includes high school students, community college students, and international students. This program is the university's concurrent enrollment program.[127]

ElderCollege edit

ElderCollege is a noncredit program provided by the College of Professional & Global Education that allows people 50 and older to sit in on courses on a space available basis, with the approval of an instructor. There are no official records of enrollment, attendance, or grades as ElderCollege students participate only for their personal benefit.[128] ElderCollege students are expected to attend regularly and participate, but are not expected to take exams or write papers.[129]

Osher Lifelong Learning Institute edit

SFSU's Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, or OLLI, was founded in 2003. OLLIs are education organizations for older adults that are operated independently. SFSU's OLLI provides six-week courses and "mini courses" intended for people 50 and older, but people under 50 may join.[130][131] The courses are not for credit. OLLI does not use SFSU's semester calendar and has its own five-session academic calendar in which six-week courses are taught; the sessions are spring, summer, late summer, fall, and winter.[132] Membership is required to attend six-week courses, while mini courses are open to non-members. Mini courses consist of one to three class meetings.[133] Mini courses are offered six months per year: January, March, May, July, September, and December.[132] Courses are not taught at the main campus, and instead are available over Zoom and in person at SFSU's Downtown Campus.[130] OLLI also offers interest groups and social events.[134]

Accreditation edit

The university is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges Commission for Senior Colleges and Universities.[135] The College of Business is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB International).[136] The School of Engineering is accredited by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET).[137]

Admissions and enrollment edit

In Fall 2022, SFSU's total enrollment was 25,046. This included 21,868 undergraduate students and 3,178 postgraduate students. In-state students were 96% of undergraduate students enrolled at the university.[138]

SFSU uses Cal State Apply, the centralized application system for all 23 CSU campuses. There is a $70 fee per application, but fee waivers are available.[139]

The university does not use school rank, personal statements and essays, letters of recommendation, legacy status, or standardized test scores in the admissions process.[140]

Fall Admissions Data
  2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010
Applicants 31,924 30,966 27,777 31,429 34,631 35,605 34,521 36,220 35,121 31,963 34,929 31,461 30,096 29,395
Admits 28,719 28,180 25,782 26,431 23,310 25,550 24,327 24,703 23,841 21,088 20,889 20,070 19,569 18,401
Admit rate 90% 91% 92.8% 84.1% 67.3% 71.8% 70.5% 68.2% 67.9% 66% 59.8% 63.8% 65% 62.6%
Enrolled 2,984 3,339 3,148 2,779 3,689 4,286 4,323 3,570 4,259 3,751 3,611 3,785 3,537 3,659

Rankings and distinctions edit

In 2020, SFSU was ranked the 19th top university in the United States by PayScale and CollegeNET's Social Mobility Index university rankings.[148] In 2022, the Philosophical Gourmet Report listed San Francisco State University as one of the top eight universities to earn a terminal MA in philosophy.[149] SFSU was one of the first California State University campuses to offer a doctorate of education. It was also instrumental in the establishment of the International University of Kyrgyzstan (1993).[150] The university is the only one in California to offer a bachelor's degree in technical and professional writing.[150] It is also the only university in the California State University system to offer a master's degree in Classics.[151]

The Cinema Department, in the College of Liberal & Creative Arts, was named one of the world's best film schools by Variety in 2019.[152] SFSU was also listed as one of the nation's top 25 film schools by The Hollywood Reporter, having produced many leading filmmakers, with over 13 Academy Award wins among its alumni.[153][154]

The Sutro Library houses the largest collection of genealogical records west of Salt Lake City.[155]

Demographics edit

Undergraduate demographics as of Fall 2022[138]
Race and ethnicity Total
Hispanic 38% 38
 
Asian 24% 24
 
White 15% 15
 
Foreign national 4% 4
 
Black 6% 6
 
Pacific Islander 1% 1
 
Other[a] 10% 10
 
Economic diversity
Low-income[b] 48% 48
 
Affluent or middle-class[c] 52% 52
 

In 2021, SFSU was ranked fifth for diversity nationwide and third for diversity in the western U.S. by the Wall Street Journal.[156][157]

SFSU has the second largest Asian and Filipino American enrollment percentage in the CSU system.[158]

Main campus buildings edit

Academic buildings[159] edit

 
Business Building
  • Burk Hall (BH)
  • Business (BUS)
  • Creative Arts (CA)
  • Ethnic Studies & Psychology (EP)
  • Fine Arts (FA)
  • Health & Social Sciences (HSS)
  • Hensill Hall (HH)
  • Humanities (HUM)
  • Liberal and Creative Arts (LCA)
  • J. Paul Leonard Library (LIB)
  • Science (SCI)
  • Science & Engineering Innovation Center (Under construction)[160]
  • Sutro Library (in LIB)
  • Thornton Hall (TH)
  • Marcus Hall (MH)

Residence buildings, communities, and services[159] edit

 
The Village at Centennial Square is one of San Francisco State University's housing communities.
  • City Eats Dining Center (DC)[161][162]
  • Manzanita Square (MZS)[163]
  • Mary Park Hall (MPH)[164]
  • Mary Ward Hall (MWH)[164]
  • Towers Junior Suites (TJS)[165]
  • The Towers at Centennial Square (TCS)[166]
  • The Village at Centennial Square (VCS)[167]
  • University Park North (UPN)[168]
  • University Park South (UPS)[169]
  • West Campus Green Residential Building (Under construction)[170]

A dormitory building, Verducci Hall, was imploded in 1999, having sustained damage from the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.[171]

Conference and event facilities[159] edit

  • Seven Hills Conference Center[172]
  • Student Life Events Center/Annex I (SLEC)[173]
  • Towers Conference Center (TCONF)[174]

Student and administrative services[159] edit

 
Inside Cesar Chavez Student Center
  • Administration (ADM)
  • Cesar Chavez Student Center (CCSC)[175]
  • Corporation Yard (CYD)
  • Gator Health Center (Under construction)[170]
  • Early Childhood Education Center (formerly Child Care Center) (A.S. ECEC)[176]
  • Mashouf Wellness Center (MWC)
  • Student Health Center (SHS)
  • Student Services (SSB)

Athletic facilities[159] edit

Gallery edit

Satellite campuses edit

In addition to the main campus, the university also has three satellite campuses.

Downtown Campus (DTC) edit

 
A classroom at the Downtown Campus

The Downtown Campus located on the fifth floor of 160 Spear St., in San Francisco, California.[177] It is used and managed by the Lam Family College of Business and the College of Professional & Global Education (formerly College of Extended Learning).[177] The campus spans approximately 15,850 square feet.[10]

SF State has maintained facilities in Downtown San Francisco since the 1950s. The current Downtown Campus replaces the previous, underused campus that was located in the San Francisco Centre.[178] The old Downtown Campus was a replacement for the Downtown Center located at 425 Market Street.[179]

The campus has a student lounge, a computer lab, and study rooms.[180] A portion of 160 Spear St.'s 12th floor was part of the campus until 2024.[179]

Sierra Nevada Field Campus (SNFC) edit

The 7.1-acre Sierra Nevada Field Campus is located in Sierra County, near Yuba Pass and the Sierra Valley, at 35400 Hwy 49 in Calpine, California.[10] It is over 200 miles north of the main campus.[181] The current director of the campus is Darrow Feldstein.[182]

The campus offers three to seven-day courses and workshops to students as well as the general public.[183][184] Accredited, one-unit courses are processed by the College of Professional & Global Education. Workshops are not for credit and processed by the University Corporation.[184] The campus is also used for research by graduate students of the College of Science and Engineering.[185]

Due to its remote location, there is no cell service and extremely limited internet access at the campus. Accommodations at the campus consist of tents with mattresses. Students and visitors can to bring their own tents or vehicles to sleep in, or stay off campus.[186][187] The campus has a moderately high elevation of about 5522 feet or 1683 meters.[188][189]

The campus is supported by Friends of Sierra Nevada Field Campus, a non-profit organization.[190]

Buildings edit

There are three buildings at the campus.[191]

  • Director's Cabin
  • Staff Cabin
  • Dining Hall

Romberg Tiburon Campus (RTC) edit

 
A pier at the Romberg Tiburon Campus

The Romberg Tiburon Campus is a 53.7-acre research campus located in Marin County, at 3150 and 3152 Paradise Drive in Tiburon, California. It is home to the only marine and environmental science lab on San Francisco Bay.[10][192] Katharyn Boyer is the interim executive director of the Estuary & Ocean Science Center and manages the campus.[193][194]

The Tiburon branch of the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center's Marine Invasions Lab[195] and the offices for the San Francisco Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve are also located there.[196]

 
Research vessels at the Romberg Tiburon Campus

The campus was a former U.S. Navy base. SF State has operated a marine lab on the site since 1978, when it began acquiring the land from the federal government for $1, under the condition that the site be used for education.[16][196]

A master plan is being currently being drafted for the campus. It has never had a master plan formally prepared and adopted by the campus or the CSU Board of Trustees. An approved master plan and certified environmental impact statement are required before the university can begin significant construction projects at the campus.[197][198]

The campus is at risk of closing due to financial struggles.[196][194]

Buildings edit

 
Inside Delta Hall

There are eight occupied buildings at the campus.[199][200]

  • Bay Conference Center (BCC)[201]
  • Delta Hall
  • Estuary Hall
  • Farallon Hall
  • Greenhouse
  • Ohrenschall Guest House
  • N. Barracks
  • S. Barracks

Athletics edit

 
San Francisco State Gators wordmark

The university's intercollegiate athletics teams, the Gators, compete in NCAA Division II and are a member of the California Collegiate Athletic Association (wrestling competes in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference). SF State fields 12 sports: men's and women's cross country, men's and women's soccer, women's volleyball, men's and women's basketball, men's baseball, wrestling, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field and softball.

The Gators have also produced 13 National Football League players, including Billy Baird, Elmer Collett, Maury Duncan, Carl Kammerer, Douglas Parrish, and Floyd Peters. Mike Holmgren got his collegiate coaching start as the team's Offensive Coordinator in 1981. The football program ended in 1995.

SF State has produced three Major League Baseball players, two of whom became All-Stars (former Mets shortstop Bud Harrelson, and former Brewers and Red Sox outfielder Tommy Harper). The soccer program has had one player enter the professional ranks. Jared MacLane played in the soccer Professional First Division in Santa Cruz, Bolivia.

SF State Wrestling sent a wrestler to a national championship meet every year from 1963–64 to 2016–17.[202]

As of 2019, the Gators have earned one NCAA team championship at the Division II level, a 1997 wrestling championship.[203][204]

Mascot edit

In the early 20th century, collegiate sports at SF State became more popular, creating a need for a team name, and the search for a mascot started in 1921.[205] The university's newspaper at the time, the Bay Leaf, asked for suggestions for a mascot.[206] Students suggested an alligator named "Golden Gater" in reference to the Golden Gate.[207][208] Students voted in favor of the name and the alligator choice was finalized in 1931,[205] but after numerous misspellings by the newspaper, use of "Golden Gator" stuck.[209] In the beginning, two female students were chosen each year as alligator mascots.[205] The mascot's name was eventually shortened to the Gator.[208] In 2023, the Gator became Alli Gator and was redesigned.[210]

Intramural Sports edit

Intramural sports at SF State include indoor soccer, costume dodgeball, and badminton.[211]

Student life and traditions edit

As of December 2023, SFSU has 248 formally recognized student organizations.[212] In order to receive funding, student organizations must be formally recognized by the Office of Student Activities & Events.[213]

49 Greek life organizations are formally recognized[214] and include chapters of Alpha Phi, Sigma Pi Alpha, and Phi Sigma Sigma.

Housing edit

SFSU has three on-campus housing neighborhoods: the Central Neighborhood, the North Neighborhood, and the South Neighborhood. These neighborhoods are further divided into housing communities.[215] Also Parkmerced, a planned neighborhood consisting of high-rise and low-rise apartments, is located to the south of the university.[216]

First-year student accommodations edit

 
The Village at Centennial Square is part of the Central Neighborhood

The Central Neighborhood consists of housing for first-year students. There are two residence halls available: Mary Ward Hall and Mary Park Hall. They are colloquially known as the Maries. In the Fall 2024 semester, a new residence hall will be completed and open to students.[170] The Towers at Centennial Square has full and partial high-rise suites. The Village at Centennial Square has apartments. The difference between suites and apartments is that apartments are available to be leased year-round, but suites are only available during the academic year. The Central Neighborhood is the closest housing neighborhood to the university's dining center, City Eats.[217]

Non-first-year student accommodations edit

The North Neighborhood has high-rise and low-rise garden apartments in the University Park North community. This neighborhood is closest to Stonestown Galleria, a shopping mall.

The South Neighborhood consists of University Park South and Manzanita Square. University Park South offers townhome-style apartments. Manzanita Square is a LEED Gold certified apartment building.[218] It is owned and operated by American Campus Communities.[219]

Health edit

Student Health Services edit

Student Health Services, or SHS, operates out of the Student Health Center.[220][221] Primary care, vaccinations, x-rays, pharmacy services, gynecology services, and STI testing are some of the services provided.[220][222][223] Many of the services are low-cost or provided at no charge to students.[222][224] In 2023, state law required abortion services to be provided at all SHS locations, which are located at all CSU campuses.[225] SHS is accredited by the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care.[222]

Recreation edit

The main recreation facility at SF State, Mashouf Wellness Center, opened in 2017.[226] It is named after Manny Mashouf, who donated $10 million towards the $86.5 million construction costs.[227] The LEED Platinum certified, 118,700-square-foot facility features two heated pools, a hot tub, a sauna, a 41-foot climbing wall, fitness studios, exercise equipment, an indoor running track, a racquetball court, a two basketball courts, a multipurpose activities court.[226][228][229] It was also the university's first LEED rated building.[230]

In addition, the university's Gymnasium building has a pool and multi-use spaces. The building is mostly used for basketball, volleyball, badminton, and indoor soccer events.[231]

The Campus Recreation department hosts student-led camping, hiking, and climbing trips, called Gator Outdoor Adventures. The trips are one to four days long and have varying levels of difficulty.[232][233]

Associated Students edit

 
The top of Cesar Chavez Student Center at night

The student government of San Francisco State is known as Associated Students Inc. of SF State.[234] Associated Students provides funding for student organizations and operates the Cesar Chavez Student Center, the Early Childhood Education Center, two food pantry programs, a weekly farmers' market, and many other programs.[234][235]

Cesar Chavez Student Center edit

The Cesar Chavez Student Center was built in the mid-1960s with a capacity of 12,000 students.[236] Around 2002, it was renovated and expanded to 142,160 square feet across five floors with a capacity of over 30,000.[236] The building includes staff and student offices, a 500-seat auditorium, conference rooms, an art gallery, a multi-cultural center, student lounges, restaurants, a bookstore, and additional restrooms.[236] In 2003, the Filipino American Community Mural at the center was unveiled, becoming the first Filipino-American mural on a CSU campus.[237]

Project Rebound edit

Project Rebound is a special admissions and support program for formerly incarcerated people.[238][239] It was founded by John Irwin, a professor of sociology, in 1967.[240][241] After Irwin served five years at Soledad State Prison in the 1950s for armed robbery, he wanted to create a program that provided educational support to people like him.[242] The program has grown since its founding at SFSU, with 15 CSU campuses now having Project Rebound programs.[243][244]

Rhythms Music Festival edit

Associated Students hosts the Rhythms Music Festival annually. Before the main show, there are two competitions: one for DJs and one for bands. The winners of each competition then open for the main show.[245]

The annual event started as a joke when a student, Franko Ali, made a Facebook group called “If 15,000 people join this group then the campus will let us have a rave in the Annex.” Over 5,000 people joined. In 2010, a year after Ali made the group, he was elected to the student government. Inspired by Ali's group, the Associated Students Board of Directors voted to hire Travie McCoy for a performance, but couldn't afford his booking fees after one of his songs was used in Glee. Ali proposed a three-day music festival instead and it was approved. The first festival took place in March 2011.[246]

Del the Funky Homosapien, and K Theory also performed in 2012.[247][248][247] In 2020, the event was held at the Fort Mason Festival Pavilion instead of the Annex.[256] In 2021, the festival was held over Zoom.[257]

Annual Folk Festival edit

Associated Students hosted the annual San Francisco State College Folk Festival from 1962 to 1970.[260][261][262][263] The 2nd Annual Folk Festival included performances by Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter.[264]

OneCard edit

Since 2017, each student has been issued an ID card called a OneCard.[265] The cards also function as university library cards, Clipper cards, meal plan cards, and campus payment cards.[266] When the cards' Clipper functions are used during the fall and spring semesters, students can use Muni (excluding cable cars) and SamTrans for free and receive a 50% discount on BART trips to and from Daly City station. Students are charged a "Gator Pass" transit fee each semester, which pays for the transit benefits.[267]

Media edit

Golden Gate Xpress edit

Golden Gate Xpress is the university's daily online student newspaper.[59][268][269] The university's newspaper has changed names several times, but its history can be traced back to 1927.[270] Golden Gate Xpress has been awarded by the Associated Collegiate Press, College Media Association, and the Hearst Journalism Awards Program.[271][272][273]

Xpress Magazine edit

Xpress Magazine is a student magazine published during the fall and spring semesters. Four issues are published per semester, two of which are also printed. The magazine was originally known as Prism and dates back December 1969. In October 1999, the magazine was published for the first time under its current name.[274] Xpress Magazine has been awarded by the Associated Collegiate Press.[272][275]

Alumni Magazine edit

SF State Magazine is published by the university's Strategic Marketing and Communications department. The semiannual publication is mailed to over 80,000 alumni.[276]

Fourteen Hills edit

Creative Writing graduate students have published Fourteen Hills, an international literary journal, since 1994.[277][278]

Transfer Magazine edit

Since 1950, undergraduate students in the Creative Writing department have published Transfer Magazine, featuring literature and art by SFSU students.[279][280][281]

Radio Station edit

KSFS is a college radio station run by Broadcast and Electronic Communication Arts (BECA) students, streaming online, at 100.7 on Comcast Cable radio in San Francisco, and at 88.1 FM near or at the main campus.[282][283]

Notable faculty and alumni edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans & those who prefer to not say.
  2. ^ The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students.
  3. ^ The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum.

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External links edit

  • Official website
  • San Francisco State Athletics website

37°43′24″N 122°28′47″W / 37.72333°N 122.47972°W / 37.72333; -122.47972

francisco, state, university, confused, with, university, francisco, university, california, francisco, francisco, state, state, sfsu, public, research, university, francisco, established, 1899, francisco, state, normal, school, part, california, state, univer. Not to be confused with the University of San Francisco or the University of California San Francisco San Francisco State University San Francisco State SF State and SFSU is a public research university in San Francisco It was established in 1899 as the San Francisco State Normal School and is part of the California State University system San Francisco State UniversityFormer nameSan Francisco State Normal School 1899 1921 San Francisco State Teachers College 1921 1935 San Francisco State College 1935 1972 California State University San Francisco 1972 1974 MottoExperientia Docet Latin Motto in English Experience Teaches TypePublic research universityEstablished1899 125 years ago 1899 Parent institutionCalifornia State UniversityAccreditationWSCUCAcademic affiliationUSUEndowment 140 8 million 2020 1 Budget 354 6 million 2023 2 PresidentLynn MahoneyProvostAmy SueyoshiAcademic staff1 905 2022 3 Administrative staff1 398 2022 3 Students25 046 2022 3 Undergraduates21 868 2022 3 Postgraduates3 178 2022 3 LocationSan Francisco California United StatesCampusLarge city 141 1 acres 57 1 ha 4 Other campusesRomberg Tiburon CampusDowntown CampusSierra Nevada Field CampusNewspaperGolden Gate XpressColorsPurple and gold 5 NicknameGatorsSporting affiliationsNCAA Division II CCAAMascotGatorWebsitewww wbr sfsu wbr eduCalifornia Historical LandmarkOfficial nameSan Francisco State Teacher s CollegeDesignated1 7 2008Reference no N2378 6 It offers 119 bachelor s degree programs 105 master s degree programs and 3 doctoral degree programs along with 22 teaching credential programs among seven colleges 7 8 9 The 144 1 acre main campus is located in the southwest part of the city less than two miles from the Pacific coast 10 The university has 12 varsity athletic teams which compete at the NCAA Division II level San Francisco State is classified among R2 Doctoral Universities High research activity 11 It is also a Hispanic serving institution HSI and is eligible to be designated as an Asian American Native American Pacific Islander serving institution AANAPISI San Francisco State s past and present faculty and alumni include 21 Pulitzer Prize winners 16 Academy Award winners 49 Emmy Award winners 10 Grammy Award winners 12 Tony Award laureates 4 billionaires and 1 astronaut 12 Contents 1 History 1 1 19th Century 1 2 20th Century 1 2 1 Demonstrations of the 1960s 1 2 1 1 1967 1 2 1 2 1968 1 2 1 3 1969 1 2 2 1970s and onwards 1 3 21st Century 1 4 Milestones 2 Governance 2 1 Presidents 3 Academics 3 1 Colleges 3 2 Undergraduate programs 3 3 Blended master s programs 3 4 Graduate and professional programs 3 5 Other academic programs 3 5 1 Experimental College 3 5 2 Open University 3 5 3 ElderCollege 3 5 4 Osher Lifelong Learning Institute 3 6 Accreditation 3 7 Admissions and enrollment 3 8 Rankings and distinctions 4 Demographics 5 Main campus buildings 5 1 Academic buildings 159 5 2 Residence buildings communities and services 159 5 3 Conference and event facilities 159 5 4 Student and administrative services 159 5 5 Athletic facilities 159 5 6 Gallery 6 Satellite campuses 6 1 Downtown Campus DTC 6 2 Sierra Nevada Field Campus SNFC 6 2 1 Buildings 6 3 Romberg Tiburon Campus RTC 6 3 1 Buildings 7 Athletics 7 1 Mascot 7 2 Intramural Sports 8 Student life and traditions 8 1 Housing 8 1 1 First year student accommodations 8 1 2 Non first year student accommodations 8 2 Health 8 2 1 Student Health Services 8 2 2 Recreation 8 3 Associated Students 8 3 1 Cesar Chavez Student Center 8 3 2 Project Rebound 8 3 3 Rhythms Music Festival 8 3 4 Annual Folk Festival 8 4 OneCard 8 5 Media 8 5 1 Golden Gate Xpress 8 5 2 Xpress Magazine 8 5 3 Alumni Magazine 8 5 4 Fourteen Hills 8 5 5 Transfer Magazine 8 5 6 Radio Station 9 Notable faculty and alumni 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksHistory edit nbsp Graduating class State Normal School at San Francisco June 190619th Century edit In 1857 the San Francisco Board of Education created the San Francisco Weekly Normal School 13 14 also known as the Minns Evening Normal School 15 In 1862 it became the California State Normal School the first postsecondary institution established by the state 14 Only six students were enrolled on its first day By 1866 enrollment had increased to 384 16 In 1867 the principal of Girls High School and Normal School Ellis Holmes realized that the California State Normal School was not meeting the demand for teachers The city approved the addition of a new year long teacher training program to his high school s curriculum for girls who wanted to pursue a career in education This program is what would eventually become San Francisco State University When the California State Normal School was moved to San Jose in 1871 Girls High became the only publicly supported teacher training institution 16 In 1895 the teaching program was split from the school and became San Francisco City Normal School 16 Due to a lack of funding the school closed in 1898 13 A group of teachers students and supporters pressured the California State Legislature to convert it into a state funded institution 16 On March 22 1899 17 the California State Legislature approved the creation of the San Francisco State Normal School with an appropriation of 10 000 Frederic Lister Burk was appointed as the first president and chose the school s motto Experientia Docet 18 The school rented 16 space in a building on Powell Street between Clay and Sacramento Streets and 31 women were enrolled in the first year 19 20 20th Century edit The 1906 earthquake and fire forced the school to relocate from Nob Hill to a temporary campus at the Grant School in Oakland 20 In 1921 the school began offering Bachelor s degree options and was renamed San Francisco State Teachers College 16 21 Teachers Colleges in California received authorization to grant Bachelor of Arts degrees in 1923 14 Also in 1921 construction for a new campus started at a property bound by Laguna Haight Buchanan and Hermann Streets The campus consisted of four Spanish Colonial Revival style buildings designed by George McDougall a California state architect 22 23 In 1924 Burk died and Archibald B Anderson took over as acting president There were three presidents of the teachers college in 1927 Anderson served until his death in the summer of that year Then Mary A Ward the Dean of Women served as acting president until the fall when Alexander C Roberts was appointed president In the 1930s overcrowding became an issue at the campus It had been designed for 1500 students but had to accommodate about 3000 When the Hetch Hetchy project was completed in 1934 the city no longer needed land near Lake Merced for a reservoir By 1939 the land had been acquired to build a new campus but plans were paused due to World War II Many students took part in the war causing enrollment to decline 24 During the 1920s and 30s State Teachers Colleges expanded beyond being only vocational schools to train teachers They were formally authorized to offer four year liberal arts curriculums and renamed State Colleges in 1935 25 So the school became known as San Francisco State College 21 When veterans started returning in 1945 the Vets Village a housing complex was built at the site of the new campus Some students commuted from there to the campus at Buchanan and Haight Streets 24 In the same year J Paul Leonard became president after Alexander C Roberts retired 18 In 1949 master s degrees were authorized to be offered 10 In 1951 the Gymnasium building was the first major building to be completed at the current campus near Lake Merced The Creative Arts building was built second The campus opened for classes for Fall 1953 before it was formally dedicated in October 1954 17 From 1957 to 1961 Glenn S Dumke was president of San Francisco State San Francisco State College became part of the California State College system established under the Donahoe Higher Education Act in 1960 16 Dumke resigned to become the system s vice chancellor for academic affairs before becoming the second chancellor of the system for 20 years In Fall 1965 the Experimental College was started by students Cynthia Carlson Donna Michaelson Sharon Gold and James Nixon in an effort to teach untraditionally In 1927 over 2000 students enrolled in courses offered by the Experimental College 16 The original Experimental College stopped operating after 1969 26 Demonstrations of the 1960s edit Main article Third World Liberation Front strikes of 1968 1967 edit On May 2 1967 60 students staged a sit in protest in President John Summerskill s office opposing the practice of providing students academic standing to the Selective Service System On June 22 of the same year students and faculty picketed administrative offices to protest the California State College Chancellor Glenn S Dumke s directive to continue providing students academic standings 27 On November 6 James Vaszko the campus editor of the Gater the student newspaper at the time was assaulted by members of the Black Student Union 28 This event became known as the Gater Incident In an interview the day after the assault Vaszko said he had no idea why it happened but something was said during the incident about the Gater not running a photo of the BSU candidate for homecoming queen However the Gater had included a photo of the candidate The District Attorney s office issued arrest warrants on November 9 for Ben Stewart George Murray and Jack H Alexis 29 About 450 students participated in a protest on December 2 against President Summerskill and the Vietnam War 27 On December 6 students protested against the suspension of students in the Gater incident During the protest students broke into the Administration building 27 1968 edit President Summerskill announced his resignation effective in September on February 22 27 The Third World Liberation Front was a coalition of the Black Students Union the Latin American Students Organization the Filipino American Students Organization and El Renacimiento They occupied the school s YMCA office on March 23 27 On May 21 in the Administration building approximately 400 students held a sit in protesting various issues including an end to AFROTC on campus and the hiring of nine minority faculty members After nine hours police were called to remove the students 26 people were arrested 27 Students protested again on May 23 On the following day Chancellor Dumke asked President Summerskill to resign immediately Robert Smith a professor of education was appointed president on June 1 27 16 On September 10 George Mason Murray a graduate student in English and Black Panther Minister of Education was hired as a teaching assistant to teach introductory English classes for 400 students 27 President Smith announced the creation of a Black Studies Department and named Dr Nathan Hare a professor of sociology as acting chair on September 18 27 On September 26 after Murray allegedly made inflammatory remarks at Fresno State College and San Francisco State the California State College Trustees voted to ask President Smith to reassign George Murray to a non teaching position Smith refused causing Chancellor Dumke to order him to suspend Murray on October 31 On the same day the Black Student Union Third World Liberation Front threatened to strike on November 6 and presented their 15 demands 27 The demands were not met and a lengthy student strike erupted It was the longest student strike in American history On November 13 1968 the campus closed after a week of confrontations between students and police On November 18 the California State College Trustees ordered Smith to reopen the campus The faculty didn t want to reopen the campus but met for a convocation to discuss the issues On November 26 Black Student Union leaders confronted Smith and the faculty during the convocation Smith resigned the same day 30 On December 2 S I Hayakawa was appointed president On his first day he climbed onto a sound truck positioned at 19th and Holloway Avenues and pulled out the speaker wires According to a student who was inside the truck he was so mad you could see the foam on his mouth 31 On December 10 Mayor Joseph Alioto organized a citizen s committee to help end the strike 30 The school closed for the holidays a week early on December 13 30 Also during that month two bombs were discovered on campus One was in the Administration building and the other was in the Psychology building now Ethnic Studies and Psychology building 32 1969 edit On January 4 1969 President Hayakawa banned meetings and gatherings on campus and limited picketing activities to the perimeter of the campus 30 Picketers ignored the ban 33 About 350 teachers who were part of the American Federation of Teachers picketed around the campus on January 6 30 On January 23 over 500 people had gathered on campus for a rally Police surrounded the protestors and arrested hundreds of them backing up San Francisco s court system for months 33 On March 5 Timothy Peebles a freshman set off a bomb in the Creative Arts building at night The bomb injured his hands and face 34 30 The strike officially ended on March 20 after an agreement was signed by representatives of the Black Student Union the Third World Liberation Front and the school 16 30 33 The school agreed to establish the first College of Ethnic Studies in the country housing the departments of American Indian Studies Asian American Studies Black Studies and La Raza Studies and to accept almost all nonwhite applicants for the Fall 1969 semester 33 1970s and onwards edit In 1972 the State Colleges system was designated The California State University and Colleges 14 colleges met the criteria established by the Board of Trustees and the Coordinating Council for Higher Education including San Francisco State which was renamed California State University San Francisco 14 This name was not popular with students and the university was soon renamed San Francisco State University in 1974 16 Hayakawa resigned in 1973 This led to the appointment of Paul F Romberg 35 The Student Union building now Cesar Chavez Student Center was opened in 1975 16 It was designed by Paffard Keatinge Clay President Romberg secured a permanent federal lease for 25 acres of shoreline in Tiburon for just 1 in 1978 36 The Romberg Tiburon Campus would eventually expand to 53 acres In 1983 Chia Wei Woo became the 11th president of the university Woo was the first Chinese American to head a major American university 37 On May 14 1985 a pipe bomb in a purse was found in the Business Ethnic Studies Building now Business Building 38 39 A US Army bomb disposal team removed it 40 In September that year Coy Ray Phelps was arrested and charged for the attempted bombing 41 Phelps had also planted bombs in four other locations in San Francisco but only one exploded at the offices of the local Humanist Party 42 43 On September 17 1986 Phelps was placed in a psychiatric facility after being found not guilty by reason of insanity He was released in 1999 but after starting a website that advocated for murdering Black people and Jewish people a panel of three judges ruled that he should not have been released in the first place and he was rearrested in 2002 43 He appealed the ruling but his case was dismissed in 2004 44 On September 23 2015 he was released from the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners 45 46 In 1993 the College of Extended Learning now College of Global and Professional Education opened the Downtown Center in San Francisco s Multimedia Gulch at 425 Market St 16 47 nbsp Cesar Chavez Student CenterIn 1994 a mural depicting Malcolm X was painted on the Student Union building commissioned by the Pan African Student Union and African Student Alliance The mural s border contained yellow Stars of David and dollar signs mingled with skulls and crossbones and near the words African Blood The next week after demonstrations on both sides the university s administration had the mural painted over and subsequently sand blasted 48 Two years later a new Malcolm X mural was painted without the controversial symbols 49 In 1995 San Francisco State alumni Geoff Marcy and Paul Butler discovered two new Jupiter sized planets within 35 light years of Earth including one that could contain elements for organic life They discovered another planet about 40 light years away less than three months later 50 51 21st Century edit In 2007 the Downtown Campus was opened at 835 Market Street replacing the Downtown Center The campus had nearly 47 000 square feet of classroom space in Westfield San Francisco Centre The campus was used for courses in the College of Extended Learning and Lam Family College of Business 52 The first Rhythms Music Festival happened in March 2011 53 The annual music festival is held in a building known as the Annex 54 In 2013 the Science Building was found to have unsafe levels of airborne mercury lead and asbestos in the basement as a result of reports that pesticide laden Native American artifacts were previously stored with a material now known to be highly hazardous Over 3 6 million was spent for remediation of the pervasive contamination University administration terminated several employees who reported the contamination resulting in several wrongful termination and whistle blower lawsuits including one by the recently hired director In July 2014 Cal OSHA cited the university for various health and safety violations in the Science Building which included SFSU failing to locate asbestos in the building and warn employees about the hazards of mercury 55 56 SFSU previously ran into trouble with its Environmental Health and Safety program when the director prior Robert Shearer was accused of accepting bribes from a waste disposal firm in exchange for at least 4 million in university funds 57 In March 2016 a video of a student being attacked for having dreadlocks went viral and sparked discussions about cultural appropriation 58 59 In response to the College of Ethnic Studies being underfunded since 2008 four students held a ten day hunger strike from May 2 11 2016 resulting in one hospitalization The strike ended when President Leslie Wong agreed to commit nearly 500 000 to the college and meet a portion of their demands 60 The Experimental College was revived in Fall 2017 One unit courses are created and taught by students 26 61 Also in 2017 a group of Jewish students and local residents accused SFSU of encouraging antisemitism and excluding Jewish student pro Israel activist groups from campus activities 62 63 64 The students filed two lawsuits focusing on the disruption of a speech by Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat in 2016 One suit was dismissed by a federal judge in 2018 65 Another lawsuit was settled in 2019 and included provisions for a 200 000 university fund to promote viewpoint diversity a new coordinator of Jewish Student Life position for at least four years and an independent consultant to review the university s non discrimination policies 66 In May 2019 Lynn Mahoney became the first woman to become president of San Francisco State in a permanent capacity 67 Mary Ward had served as an acting president in the summer of 1927 after the death of Archibald Anderson 68 On September 23 2020 SFSU faculty Rabab Abdulhadi and Tomomi Kinukawa hosted a discussion on Zoom titled Whose Narratives Gender Justice and Resistance 69 The event s speakers included Leila Khaled a Palestinian political activist and plane hijacker Laura Whitehorn an American political activist and domestic bomber Zoom and YouTube canceled the broadcast due to Khaled s history of violent actions towards civilians Facebook also removed a page for the event 65 70 71 President Lynn Mahoney wrote a letter about the incident A second event titled Whose Narratives What Free Speech for Palestine was scheduled for April 23 2021 and was also blocked The event had nine speakers scheduled including Khaled Whitehorn Sekou Odinga an activist and former Black Panther and Sean Malloy an author and professor at UC Merced 72 73 In 2022 the new Downtown Campus opened on the fifth floor and a part of the 12th floor of 160 Spear St replacing the Downtown Campus at 835 Market Street 74 The campus now only occupies the fifth floor On April 6 2023 former NCAA swimmer Riley Gaines visited SFSU for a Turning Point USA student chapter event and spoke publicly about her campaign against transgender athletes in women s sports 75 76 Protesters attended the event and were peaceful After the event concluded more protesters arrived 77 75 Gaines was escorted by university police officers to shelter in a classroom 77 75 Video clips were posted to social media including by Gaines that appear to show protesters chanting shouting and holding signs 77 After the event Gaines said she had been physically struck twice by a person during the protest 78 77 Soon after the event the university police stated that no arrests have been made and an investigation is ongoing 78 nbsp Students at San Francisco State University rallied and marched in protest of the CSU tuition increase on September 11 2023 On September 11 of the same year about 300 students rallied and marched against the CSU system s proposed tuition increase 79 On September 15 CSU s Board of Trustees voted in favor of the plan to reduce the system s 1 5 billion deficit with annual tuition increases of 6 starting from the 2024 2025 academic year to the 2028 2029 academic year 80 81 After years of declining enrollment budget cuts were announced on August 31 totaling 11 million 82 The university is also facing a 9 million budget deficit A plan to eliminate the deficit calls for cutting the equivalent of 125 full time positions 83 The California Faculty Association said it would result in the layoff of about 325 part time lecturers 84 On October 11 the CFA held a practice rally against the tuition increase and possible layoffs 85 On October 26 the CFA and the university Young Democratic Socialists of America chapter led about 300 students and faculty in a rally and march against layoffs and the tuition increase 86 The CFA led another rally against layoffs on November 15 87 nbsp Hundreds of students walked out and rallied at San Francisco State s Malcolm X Plaza on October 25 2023 In response to the 2023 Israel Hamas War hundreds of students walked out and rallied on October 25 calling for a ceasefire 88 It was part of a nationwide walkout organized by Students for Justice in Palestine 89 On November 14 Teamsters Local 2010 held a one day strike across all 23 CSU campuses seeking higher pay 90 San Francisco State skilled laborers marched through the university before joining the picket line at the university s 19th Ave and Holloway entrance 91 Students walked out and protested on November 28 in response to 655 courses being cut and over 300 faculty members being laid off in the Spring 2024 semester 92 One day strikes led by the CFA were held across four CSU campuses from December 4 7 including San Francisco State on December 5 93 Faculty and students picketed against budget cuts and possible layoffs and are seeking a raise of 12 94 In 2024 the Science amp Engineering Innovation Center will open The center includes a new 125 000 square foot building and a renovated 54 000 square foot building 95 Milestones edit 1901 First graduating class consisting of 36 women 20 10 1923 First Bachelor of Arts degree awarded 10 1930 Became four year school 4 1929 Grace Hackett became the first known African American to graduate from the school 20 1949 Master s degree first offered 10 1972 Received university status 1974 Renamed San Francisco State University 21 1975 Cesar Chavez Student Center opened its doors to students 16 1999 Celebrated 100th birthday 96 Governance editSan Francisco State University is part of the California State University system The CSU is governed by a 25 member Board of Trustees who oversee the system s chancellor 97 The president of SF State reports to the chancellor The president oversees six cabinet units Cabinet units collaborate via 13 committees and work in conjunction with three semi independent 501 c 3 organizations that support the university 98 Each cabinet except the Office of the President is led by a vice president 99 The the vice president of Academic Affairs is also university s provost and oversees 15 administrative units including the university s seven colleges Each college is led by a dean 100 The colleges are comprised of departments led by department chairs and schools led by directors Departments and schools are at the same administrative level Presidents edit Frederic Lister Burk 1899 1924 101 102 Archibald B Anderson 1924 1927 Mary A Ward 1927 103 Alexander C Roberts 1927 1945 J Paul Leonard 1945 1957 104 Glenn Dumke 1957 1961 105 Frank L Fenton 1961 1962 Paul A Dodd 1962 1965 Stanley F Paulson 1965 1966 John Summerskill 1966 1968 Robert R Smith 1968 S I Hayakawa 1968 1973 Paul F Romberg 1973 1983 Chia Wei Woo 1983 1988 Robert A Corrigan 1988 2012 Leslie Wong 2012 2019 106 Lynn Mahoney 2019 present 107 Academics edit nbsp San Francisco State University s libraryThe university operates on a semester calendar Students generally enroll in courses during the fall and spring semesters but courses are also offered during the summer semester and winter session 108 Winter courses are not eligible for financial aid 109 The university has a four year graduation rate of 49 and a six year graduation rate of 55 110 111 The student faculty ratio at SFSU is 20 1 110 In Fall 2022 the university had 1 905 instructional faculty of which 807 or 42 percent were tenured or on the tenure track 10 Colleges edit The university s seven colleges are College of Liberal amp Creative Arts 112 Lam Family College of Business 113 College of Ethnic Studies 114 College Health and Social Sciences 115 College of Science and Engineering 116 Graduate College of Education 117 College of Professional amp Global Education formerly College of Extended Learning 118 Undergraduate programs edit SFSU offers 119 bachelor s degree programs across its seven colleges The most popular undergraduate majors are Business Administration Biology Kinesiology Engineering English Communication Studies Psychology Criminal Justice Studies Sociology and Cinema 119 The College of Health and Social Sciences also offers accelerated Bachelor of Science degrees in nursing in partnership with the City College of San Francisco and College of San Mateo 120 Blended master s programs edit SFSU offers 34 blended bachelor s and master s degree programs called San Francisco State Scholars programs 121 The programs provide students an accelerated path to a graduate degree by allowing students to earn graduate credit while in their junior and or senior years Graduate and professional programs edit The university offers 105 master s degree programs across six colleges College of Liberal amp Creative Arts Lam Family College of Business College of Ethnic Studies College Health and Social Sciences College of Science and Engineering and Graduate College of Education 122 The Graduate College of Education offers two doctoral programs Ph D in special education in partnership with University of California Berkeley and Ed D in Educational Leadership 123 The College of Health and Social Sciences offers a DPT program in partnership with University of California San Francisco The Graduate College of Education also offers 22 teaching credential programs 9 Other academic programs edit Experimental College edit The original Experimental College known as E C was created in 1965 and lasted until 1969 The revived Experimental College known as EXCO allows students to create curriculums and teach one unit courses about any topic 26 It is similar to Oberlin College s ExCo program and University of California Berkeley s DeCal program Recent course offerings include BDSM 101 Lucid Dreaming Adventures in SF Thematic Analysis of Studio Ghibli Films and United States Foster System 124 125 EXCO is part of the Department of Undergraduate Education and Academic Planning 126 Open University edit People without formal admission to the university can enroll in undergraduate or graduate courses on a space available basis through the College of Professional amp Global Education s Open University program Up to undergraduate 24 units can be applied towards a bachelor s degree or six units towards a master s degree at San Francisco State The program costs 395 per unit and is open to everybody except SFSU students This includes high school students community college students and international students This program is the university s concurrent enrollment program 127 ElderCollege edit ElderCollege is a noncredit program provided by the College of Professional amp Global Education that allows people 50 and older to sit in on courses on a space available basis with the approval of an instructor There are no official records of enrollment attendance or grades as ElderCollege students participate only for their personal benefit 128 ElderCollege students are expected to attend regularly and participate but are not expected to take exams or write papers 129 Osher Lifelong Learning Institute edit SFSU s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute or OLLI was founded in 2003 OLLIs are education organizations for older adults that are operated independently SFSU s OLLI provides six week courses and mini courses intended for people 50 and older but people under 50 may join 130 131 The courses are not for credit OLLI does not use SFSU s semester calendar and has its own five session academic calendar in which six week courses are taught the sessions are spring summer late summer fall and winter 132 Membership is required to attend six week courses while mini courses are open to non members Mini courses consist of one to three class meetings 133 Mini courses are offered six months per year January March May July September and December 132 Courses are not taught at the main campus and instead are available over Zoom and in person at SFSU s Downtown Campus 130 OLLI also offers interest groups and social events 134 Accreditation edit The university is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges Commission for Senior Colleges and Universities 135 The College of Business is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business AACSB International 136 The School of Engineering is accredited by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology ABET 137 Admissions and enrollment edit In Fall 2022 SFSU s total enrollment was 25 046 This included 21 868 undergraduate students and 3 178 postgraduate students In state students were 96 of undergraduate students enrolled at the university 138 SFSU uses Cal State Apply the centralized application system for all 23 CSU campuses There is a 70 fee per application but fee waivers are available 139 The university does not use school rank personal statements and essays letters of recommendation legacy status or standardized test scores in the admissions process 140 Fall Admissions Data 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010Applicants 31 924 30 966 27 777 31 429 34 631 35 605 34 521 36 220 35 121 31 963 34 929 31 461 30 096 29 395Admits 28 719 28 180 25 782 26 431 23 310 25 550 24 327 24 703 23 841 21 088 20 889 20 070 19 569 18 401Admit rate 90 91 92 8 84 1 67 3 71 8 70 5 68 2 67 9 66 59 8 63 8 65 62 6 Enrolled 2 984 3 339 3 148 2 779 3 689 4 286 4 323 3 570 4 259 3 751 3 611 3 785 3 537 3 659Rankings and distinctions edit Academic rankingsNationalForbes 141 188THE WSJ 142 401 500U S News amp World Report 143 178Washington Monthly 144 84GlobalU S News amp World Report 145 1175 2022 2023 USNWR National Program Rankings 146 Top Public Schools 118Top Performers on Social Mobility 15Best Undergraduate Engineering Programs 59 At schools where doctorate not offered Nursing 135 USNWR Graduate School Rankings 147 Program RankingRehabilitation Counseling 32Social Work 79Public Affairs 81Public health 89Speech Language Pathology 109Fine Arts 124 In 2020 SFSU was ranked the 19th top university in the United States by PayScale and CollegeNET s Social Mobility Index university rankings 148 In 2022 the Philosophical Gourmet Report listed San Francisco State University as one of the top eight universities to earn a terminal MA in philosophy 149 SFSU was one of the first California State University campuses to offer a doctorate of education It was also instrumental in the establishment of the International University of Kyrgyzstan 1993 150 The university is the only one in California to offer a bachelor s degree in technical and professional writing 150 It is also the only university in the California State University system to offer a master s degree in Classics 151 The Cinema Department in the College of Liberal amp Creative Arts was named one of the world s best film schools by Variety in 2019 152 SFSU was also listed as one of the nation s top 25 film schools by The Hollywood Reporter having produced many leading filmmakers with over 13 Academy Award wins among its alumni 153 154 The Sutro Library houses the largest collection of genealogical records west of Salt Lake City 155 Demographics editUndergraduate demographics as of Fall 2022 138 Race and ethnicity TotalHispanic 38 38 Asian 24 24 White 15 15 Foreign national 4 4 Black 6 6 Pacific Islander 1 1 Other a 10 10 Economic diversityLow income b 48 48 Affluent or middle class c 52 52 In 2021 SFSU was ranked fifth for diversity nationwide and third for diversity in the western U S by the Wall Street Journal 156 157 SFSU has the second largest Asian and Filipino American enrollment percentage in the CSU system 158 Main campus buildings editAcademic buildings 159 edit nbsp Business BuildingBurk Hall BH Business BUS Creative Arts CA Ethnic Studies amp Psychology EP Fine Arts FA Health amp Social Sciences HSS Hensill Hall HH Humanities HUM Liberal and Creative Arts LCA J Paul Leonard Library LIB Science SCI Science amp Engineering Innovation Center Under construction 160 Sutro Library in LIB Thornton Hall TH Marcus Hall MH Residence buildings communities and services 159 edit nbsp The Village at Centennial Square is one of San Francisco State University s housing communities City Eats Dining Center DC 161 162 Manzanita Square MZS 163 Mary Park Hall MPH 164 Mary Ward Hall MWH 164 Towers Junior Suites TJS 165 The Towers at Centennial Square TCS 166 The Village at Centennial Square VCS 167 University Park North UPN 168 University Park South UPS 169 West Campus Green Residential Building Under construction 170 A dormitory building Verducci Hall was imploded in 1999 having sustained damage from the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake 171 Conference and event facilities 159 edit Seven Hills Conference Center 172 Student Life Events Center Annex I SLEC 173 Towers Conference Center TCONF 174 Student and administrative services 159 edit nbsp Inside Cesar Chavez Student CenterAdministration ADM Cesar Chavez Student Center CCSC 175 Corporation Yard CYD Gator Health Center Under construction 170 Early Childhood Education Center formerly Child Care Center A S ECEC 176 Mashouf Wellness Center MWC Student Health Center SHS Student Services SSB Athletic facilities 159 edit Cox Stadium Gymnasium GYM Maloney FieldGallery edit nbsp Marcus Hall nbsp Burk Hall nbsp Administration Building nbsp Mashouf Wellness Center nbsp Ethnic Studies and Psychology Building nbsp J Paul Leonard Library nbsp J Paul Leonard Library seating area nbsp The Quad nbsp Open24 nbsp Thornton Hall and Hensill Hall nbsp Humanities Building nbsp Student housingSatellite campuses editIn addition to the main campus the university also has three satellite campuses Downtown Campus DTC edit nbsp A classroom at the Downtown CampusThe Downtown Campus located on the fifth floor of 160 Spear St in San Francisco California 177 It is used and managed by the Lam Family College of Business and the College of Professional amp Global Education formerly College of Extended Learning 177 The campus spans approximately 15 850 square feet 10 SF State has maintained facilities in Downtown San Francisco since the 1950s The current Downtown Campus replaces the previous underused campus that was located in the San Francisco Centre 178 The old Downtown Campus was a replacement for the Downtown Center located at 425 Market Street 179 The campus has a student lounge a computer lab and study rooms 180 A portion of 160 Spear St s 12th floor was part of the campus until 2024 179 Sierra Nevada Field Campus SNFC edit The 7 1 acre Sierra Nevada Field Campus is located in Sierra County near Yuba Pass and the Sierra Valley at 35400 Hwy 49 in Calpine California 10 It is over 200 miles north of the main campus 181 The current director of the campus is Darrow Feldstein 182 The campus offers three to seven day courses and workshops to students as well as the general public 183 184 Accredited one unit courses are processed by the College of Professional amp Global Education Workshops are not for credit and processed by the University Corporation 184 The campus is also used for research by graduate students of the College of Science and Engineering 185 Due to its remote location there is no cell service and extremely limited internet access at the campus Accommodations at the campus consist of tents with mattresses Students and visitors can to bring their own tents or vehicles to sleep in or stay off campus 186 187 The campus has a moderately high elevation of about 5522 feet or 1683 meters 188 189 The campus is supported by Friends of Sierra Nevada Field Campus a non profit organization 190 Buildings edit There are three buildings at the campus 191 Director s Cabin Staff Cabin Dining HallRomberg Tiburon Campus RTC edit Main article San Francisco State University Romberg Tiburon Campus nbsp A pier at the Romberg Tiburon CampusThe Romberg Tiburon Campus is a 53 7 acre research campus located in Marin County at 3150 and 3152 Paradise Drive in Tiburon California It is home to the only marine and environmental science lab on San Francisco Bay 10 192 Katharyn Boyer is the interim executive director of the Estuary amp Ocean Science Center and manages the campus 193 194 The Tiburon branch of the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center s Marine Invasions Lab 195 and the offices for the San Francisco Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve are also located there 196 nbsp Research vessels at the Romberg Tiburon CampusThe campus was a former U S Navy base SF State has operated a marine lab on the site since 1978 when it began acquiring the land from the federal government for 1 under the condition that the site be used for education 16 196 A master plan is being currently being drafted for the campus It has never had a master plan formally prepared and adopted by the campus or the CSU Board of Trustees An approved master plan and certified environmental impact statement are required before the university can begin significant construction projects at the campus 197 198 The campus is at risk of closing due to financial struggles 196 194 Buildings edit nbsp Inside Delta HallThere are eight occupied buildings at the campus 199 200 Bay Conference Center BCC 201 Delta Hall Estuary Hall Farallon Hall Greenhouse Ohrenschall Guest House N Barracks S BarracksAthletics editMain article San Francisco State Gators nbsp San Francisco State Gators wordmarkThe university s intercollegiate athletics teams the Gators compete in NCAA Division II and are a member of the California Collegiate Athletic Association wrestling competes in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference SF State fields 12 sports men s and women s cross country men s and women s soccer women s volleyball men s and women s basketball men s baseball wrestling indoor track and field outdoor track and field and softball The Gators have also produced 13 National Football League players including Billy Baird Elmer Collett Maury Duncan Carl Kammerer Douglas Parrish and Floyd Peters Mike Holmgren got his collegiate coaching start as the team s Offensive Coordinator in 1981 The football program ended in 1995 SF State has produced three Major League Baseball players two of whom became All Stars former Mets shortstop Bud Harrelson and former Brewers and Red Sox outfielder Tommy Harper The soccer program has had one player enter the professional ranks Jared MacLane played in the soccer Professional First Division in Santa Cruz Bolivia SF State Wrestling sent a wrestler to a national championship meet every year from 1963 64 to 2016 17 202 As of 2019 the Gators have earned one NCAA team championship at the Division II level a 1997 wrestling championship 203 204 Mascot edit In the early 20th century collegiate sports at SF State became more popular creating a need for a team name and the search for a mascot started in 1921 205 The university s newspaper at the time the Bay Leaf asked for suggestions for a mascot 206 Students suggested an alligator named Golden Gater in reference to the Golden Gate 207 208 Students voted in favor of the name and the alligator choice was finalized in 1931 205 but after numerous misspellings by the newspaper use of Golden Gator stuck 209 In the beginning two female students were chosen each year as alligator mascots 205 The mascot s name was eventually shortened to the Gator 208 In 2023 the Gator became Alli Gator and was redesigned 210 Intramural Sports edit Intramural sports at SF State include indoor soccer costume dodgeball and badminton 211 Student life and traditions editAs of December 2023 SFSU has 248 formally recognized student organizations 212 In order to receive funding student organizations must be formally recognized by the Office of Student Activities amp Events 213 49 Greek life organizations are formally recognized 214 and include chapters of Alpha Phi Sigma Pi Alpha and Phi Sigma Sigma Housing edit SFSU has three on campus housing neighborhoods the Central Neighborhood the North Neighborhood and the South Neighborhood These neighborhoods are further divided into housing communities 215 Also Parkmerced a planned neighborhood consisting of high rise and low rise apartments is located to the south of the university 216 First year student accommodations edit nbsp The Village at Centennial Square is part of the Central NeighborhoodThe Central Neighborhood consists of housing for first year students There are two residence halls available Mary Ward Hall and Mary Park Hall They are colloquially known as the Maries In the Fall 2024 semester a new residence hall will be completed and open to students 170 The Towers at Centennial Square has full and partial high rise suites The Village at Centennial Square has apartments The difference between suites and apartments is that apartments are available to be leased year round but suites are only available during the academic year The Central Neighborhood is the closest housing neighborhood to the university s dining center City Eats 217 Non first year student accommodations edit The North Neighborhood has high rise and low rise garden apartments in the University Park North community This neighborhood is closest to Stonestown Galleria a shopping mall The South Neighborhood consists of University Park South and Manzanita Square University Park South offers townhome style apartments Manzanita Square is a LEED Gold certified apartment building 218 It is owned and operated by American Campus Communities 219 Health edit Student Health Services edit Student Health Services or SHS operates out of the Student Health Center 220 221 Primary care vaccinations x rays pharmacy services gynecology services and STI testing are some of the services provided 220 222 223 Many of the services are low cost or provided at no charge to students 222 224 In 2023 state law required abortion services to be provided at all SHS locations which are located at all CSU campuses 225 SHS is accredited by the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care 222 Recreation edit The main recreation facility at SF State Mashouf Wellness Center opened in 2017 226 It is named after Manny Mashouf who donated 10 million towards the 86 5 million construction costs 227 The LEED Platinum certified 118 700 square foot facility features two heated pools a hot tub a sauna a 41 foot climbing wall fitness studios exercise equipment an indoor running track a racquetball court a two basketball courts a multipurpose activities court 226 228 229 It was also the university s first LEED rated building 230 In addition the university s Gymnasium building has a pool and multi use spaces The building is mostly used for basketball volleyball badminton and indoor soccer events 231 The Campus Recreation department hosts student led camping hiking and climbing trips called Gator Outdoor Adventures The trips are one to four days long and have varying levels of difficulty 232 233 Associated Students edit nbsp The top of Cesar Chavez Student Center at nightThe student government of San Francisco State is known as Associated Students Inc of SF State 234 Associated Students provides funding for student organizations and operates the Cesar Chavez Student Center the Early Childhood Education Center two food pantry programs a weekly farmers market and many other programs 234 235 Cesar Chavez Student Center edit The Cesar Chavez Student Center was built in the mid 1960s with a capacity of 12 000 students 236 Around 2002 it was renovated and expanded to 142 160 square feet across five floors with a capacity of over 30 000 236 The building includes staff and student offices a 500 seat auditorium conference rooms an art gallery a multi cultural center student lounges restaurants a bookstore and additional restrooms 236 In 2003 the Filipino American Community Mural at the center was unveiled becoming the first Filipino American mural on a CSU campus 237 Project Rebound edit Project Rebound is a special admissions and support program for formerly incarcerated people 238 239 It was founded by John Irwin a professor of sociology in 1967 240 241 After Irwin served five years at Soledad State Prison in the 1950s for armed robbery he wanted to create a program that provided educational support to people like him 242 The program has grown since its founding at SFSU with 15 CSU campuses now having Project Rebound programs 243 244 Rhythms Music Festival edit Associated Students hosts the Rhythms Music Festival annually Before the main show there are two competitions one for DJs and one for bands The winners of each competition then open for the main show 245 The annual event started as a joke when a student Franko Ali made a Facebook group called If 15 000 people join this group then the campus will let us have a rave in the Annex Over 5 000 people joined In 2010 a year after Ali made the group he was elected to the student government Inspired by Ali s group the Associated Students Board of Directors voted to hire Travie McCoy for a performance but couldn t afford his booking fees after one of his songs was used in Glee Ali proposed a three day music festival instead and it was approved The first festival took place in March 2011 246 Year Headliners2011 Grieves Budo The Hood Internet Toro y Moi 247 2012 Toro y Moi 248 2013 Big Boi 249 2014 Timeflies 250 2015 G Eazy 251 2016 Kehlani 252 253 2017 Vince Staples 254 2018 T Pain 250 2019 Hayley Kiyoko 255 2020 Bishop Briggs 256 2021 Jane Handcock 257 2023 Lupe Fiasco 258 259 Del the Funky Homosapien and K Theory also performed in 2012 247 248 247 In 2020 the event was held at the Fort Mason Festival Pavilion instead of the Annex 256 In 2021 the festival was held over Zoom 257 Annual Folk Festival edit Associated Students hosted the annual San Francisco State College Folk Festival from 1962 to 1970 260 261 262 263 The 2nd Annual Folk Festival included performances by Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter 264 OneCard edit Since 2017 each student has been issued an ID card called a OneCard 265 The cards also function as university library cards Clipper cards meal plan cards and campus payment cards 266 When the cards Clipper functions are used during the fall and spring semesters students can use Muni excluding cable cars and SamTrans for free and receive a 50 discount on BART trips to and from Daly City station Students are charged a Gator Pass transit fee each semester which pays for the transit benefits 267 Media edit Golden Gate Xpress edit Golden Gate Xpress is the university s daily online student newspaper 59 268 269 The university s newspaper has changed names several times but its history can be traced back to 1927 270 Golden Gate Xpress has been awarded by the Associated Collegiate Press College Media Association and the Hearst Journalism Awards Program 271 272 273 Xpress Magazine edit Xpress Magazine is a student magazine published during the fall and spring semesters Four issues are published per semester two of which are also printed The magazine was originally known as Prism and dates back December 1969 In October 1999 the magazine was published for the first time under its current name 274 Xpress Magazine has been awarded by the Associated Collegiate Press 272 275 Alumni Magazine edit SF State Magazine is published by the university s Strategic Marketing and Communications department The semiannual publication is mailed to over 80 000 alumni 276 Fourteen Hills edit Creative Writing graduate students have published Fourteen Hills an international literary journal since 1994 277 278 Transfer Magazine edit Since 1950 undergraduate students in the Creative Writing department have published Transfer Magazine featuring literature and art by SFSU students 279 280 281 Radio Station edit KSFS is a college radio station run by Broadcast and Electronic Communication Arts BECA students streaming online at 100 7 on Comcast Cable radio in San Francisco and at 88 1 FM near or at the main campus 282 283 Notable faculty and alumni editMain article List of San Francisco State University people nbsp Stanley Mazor co inventor of the microprocessor nbsp Yvonne Cagle NASA astronaut nbsp Willie Brown 41st Mayor of San Francisco nbsp Annette Bening actress nbsp Manny Mashouf founder bebe Stores Inc nbsp Anne Rice author of the Vampire Chronicles nbsp Ron Dellums 48th Mayor of Oakland nbsp Danny Glover actor nbsp Alex Borstein actress voice of Lois on Family Guy nbsp Melba Pattillo Beals journalist and member of the Little Rock Nine nbsp George Miller U S Congressman 1975 2015 nbsp Ben Fong Torres journalist for Rolling Stone and the San Francisco Chronicle nbsp Kevin Mullin U S Congressman 2022 present nbsp Jonas Rivera producer Pixar Animation Studios nbsp BD Wong actor nbsp Mohammad Javad Zarif Former Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs nbsp John Patitucci jazz bassist nbsp Dana Carvey comedian and actor nbsp Kirk Hammett lead guitarist for Metallica nbsp Oscar Zeta Acosta attorney politician novelist and activist nbsp Jeffrey Tambor actor nbsp Kari Byron television host and artist nbsp Rob Schneider actor and comedian nbsp Johnny Mathis singer nbsp Ronnie Schell comedian and actor co starred as Duke on Gomer Pyle USMC nbsp Michael Burkett a k a Fat Mike lead vocalist for NOFX nbsp Michael Medved author and radio talk show host nbsp Nina Hartley pornographic actress activist and educatorSee also edit nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portal nbsp California portalBay Area Television Archive DOC Film InstituteNotes edit Other consists of Multiracial Americans amp those who prefer to not say The percentage of students who received an income based federal Pell grant intended for low income students The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum References edit As of June 30 2020 U S and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2020 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY19 to FY20 Report National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA February 19 2021 Retrieved February 20 2021 As of August 31 2023 University Budget Committee August 31 2023 Presentation PDF San Francisco State University 2023 a b c d e SF State Facts San Francisco State University 2022 a b SF State Facts 2009 2010 San Francisco State University Color System Identity System Guidelines Logo sfsu edu July 14 2015 Archived from the original on October 26 2015 Retrieved October 20 2015 San Francisco State Teacher s College Historical landmark California State Parks Office of Historic preservation Retrieved September 20 2023 Search CSU Degrees Degrees calstate edu Retrieved February 5 2014 Doctoral Programs Graduate College of Education gcoe sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 a b Credential Programs Graduate College of Education gcoe sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 a b c d e f g h i SF State Facts Strategic Marketing and Communications marcomm sfsu edu Retrieved November 23 2023 San Francisco State University Indiana University 2022 Retrieved February 18 2022 About the University San Francisco State University 2022 Retrieved April 26 2022 a b Which Came First San Francisco State or San Jose State www sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 a b c d History CSU www calstate edu Retrieved November 25 2023 Steffens Kate SJSU Research Guides San Jose State Normal Training School History Minns Evening Normal School 1857 1862 libguides sjsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o SFSU Centennial History Long Narrative of SF State www sfsu edu Retrieved November 23 2023 a b San Francisco State University Celebrates 100 Years of Opportunity and Academic Innovation in the Bay Area www sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 a b SFSU Centennial history www sfsu edu Retrieved December 25 2023 SFSU Centennial History 1899 www sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 a b c d Eliassen Meredith October 3 2007 San Francisco State University Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 1 4396 3589 6 a b c Pollak Mark November 16 2018 The Playing Grounds of College Football A Comprehensive Directory 1869 to Today McFarland p 346 ISBN 978 1 4766 3260 5 National Register 07001391 San Francisco State Teacher s College in San Francisco California noehill com Retrieved November 25 2023 SAN FRANCISCO STATE TEACHER S COLLEGE CA State Parks Retrieved November 25 2023 a b Project Western Neighborhods Streetwise Celebrating San Francisco State www outsidelands org Retrieved November 25 2023 Gerth Donald R 2010 The People s University A History of the California State University Berkeley Public Policy Press ISBN 978 0 87772 435 3 a b c A Revised History of the Experimental College 1960 s to present SF State s Experimental College ueap sfsu edu Retrieved November 26 2023 a b c d e f g h i j San Francisco State College Strike Collection Bibliography of Secondary Source Materials November 29 2014 Archived from the original on November 29 2014 Retrieved November 25 2023 Anonymous October 30 2018 San Francisco State University Black Student Union BSU Attack Gater campus newspaper editor James Vaszko San Francisco CA November 6 1967 Cleveland Museum of Art Retrieved November 25 2023 Interview with Jim Vaszko Bay Area Television Archive diva sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 a b c d e f g S F STATE STRIKE 1968 69 CHRONOLOGY FoundSF www foundsf org Retrieved December 25 2023 From semantics to the U S Senate S I Hayakawa oac cdlib org Retrieved December 25 2023 Bombs at SF State Bay Area Television Archive diva sfsu edu Retrieved November 30 2023 a b c d Ethnic Studies Born in the Bay Area from History s Biggest Student Strike KQED July 30 2020 Retrieved December 25 2023 stdin sixties l SF State Bombings Radical Campus Chaplains lists village virginia edu Retrieved December 25 2023 San Francisco State Faculty Protests Selection of Hayakawa s Successor News The Harvard Crimson www thecrimson com Retrieved December 25 2023 SFSU Centennial History 1978 www sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 Centennial Historical Presidents Chia Wei Woo www sfsu edu Retrieved December 25 2023 Archives L A Times May 14 1985 Ticking Bomb Found on Campus in San Francisco Los Angeles Times Retrieved November 30 2023 San Francisco State College Campus Guide Retrieved November 29 2023 Bomb at SF State College Bay Area Television Archive diva sfsu edu Retrieved November 30 2023 Archives L A Times September 21 1985 S F Man Held in One Bombing Three Attempts Los Angeles Times Retrieved November 30 2023 United States of America Plaintiff appellee v Coy Ray Phelps Defendant appellant 35 F 3d 573 9th Cir 1994 Justia Law Retrieved November 30 2023 a b Egelko Bob March 22 2002 Man s release a mistake judge rules Found insane he escaped bomb charges SF Gate Retrieved November 29 2023 Phelps v United States 92 F App x 539 Casetext Search Citator casetext com Retrieved November 30 2023 Inmate Locator www bop gov Retrieved November 30 2023 Judge EDWARD M CHEN District U S v PHELPS No CR 85 00899 EMC By EDWARD 20151125994 Leagle com Leagle Retrieved November 30 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Adams Gerald D December 16 1999 S F State trumpets downtown campus CT Insider Retrieved November 23 2023 Malcolm X Mural Is Marred Amid Dispute on Its Content The New York Times May 22 1994 The Chronicle of Higher Education chronicle com Archived from the original on April 30 2009 Lemonick Michael D January 29 1996 IS SOMEONE OUT THERE Time ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved November 25 2023 Space Scientist Geoff Marcy and Paul Butler Discover Magazine Retrieved November 25 2023 Berlin Kyran SF State evaluates new locations for Downtown Campus Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 25 2023 Sheffer Devery ASI sponsored Rhythms Music Festival kicks off tomorrow in the Annex Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved December 29 2023 Rhythms Associated Students Retrieved December 29 2023 SFSU fired whistleblower who exposed Science Building scandal The San Francisco Examiner Retrieved October 26 2018 SFSU attorneys ordered to release Science Building scandal emails The San Francisco Examiner Retrieved October 26 2018 Contractor Pleads Guilty to 118 Counts of Bribery Involving Former SFSU Official sfappeal com Retrieved October 26 2018 Roommate of woman in viral dreadlocks video at SF State speaks out ABC7 San Francisco Retrieved January 2 2024 a b The white student who was harassed over his dreadlocks has spoken out The Independent March 31 2016 Retrieved January 2 2024 Herrera Jack 10 day hunger strike victory for SFSU students USA TODAY Retrieved November 25 2023 Pilot Program Revives 1960s Experimental College at S F State KQED December 11 2017 Retrieved November 26 2023 Pine Dan August 5 2017 Investigation SF Hillel improperly excluded from student fair J Retrieved November 25 2023 A Reluctant Campus Acknowledges Zionism Commentary Magazine March 22 2019 Retrieved November 25 2023 Egelko Bob June 20 2017 Lawsuit says Jewish students intimidated at SF State San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved November 25 2023 a b Egelko Bob March 15 2022 Tensions over ethnic studies continue at S F State as president vetoes faculty decision siding with professor San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved November 25 2023 Martos Shaylyn Cortney Protesters denounce CSU settlement over Zionism Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 25 2023 Lynn Mahoney CSU www calstate edu Retrieved November 25 2023 Centennial Historical Presidents Mary Ward www sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 Whose Narratives Gender Justice and Resistance Event Arab America September 29 2020 Archived from the original on September 29 2020 Retrieved November 25 2023 Zoom refuses to stream university event featuring member of terrorist organization September 27 2020 Archived from the original on September 27 2020 Retrieved November 25 2023 Vincent James September 24 2020 Zoom cancels talk by Palestinian hijacker Leila Khaled at San Francisco State University The Verge Retrieved November 25 2023 McLaughlin Sarah April 22 2021 Zoom cancels another academic event with Leila Khaled again raising questions about company s role in the classroom www thefire org Retrieved November 25 2023 Greschler Gabriel September 4 2020 Palestinian hijacker Leila Khaled to speak at S F State J Retrieved November 25 2023 New Downtown Campus We Moved College of Professional amp Global Education cpage sfsu edu Retrieved November 23 2023 a b c Hernandez Adriana April 7 2023 Riley Gaines visit to SF State results in trans rights activist protest Golden Gate Xpress Archived from the original on April 8 2023 Retrieved April 8 2023 Ross Alexandra March 28 2023 Spiritual warfare Riley Gaines speaks against trans women in women s sports at on campus event The Pitt News Archived from the original on April 5 2023 Retrieved April 8 2023 a b c d Regimbal Alec April 7 2023 Anti Lia Thomas activist whisked away by police amid protest at San Francisco State SFGATE Archived from the original on April 7 2023 Retrieved April 8 2023 a b Former college swimmer says she was assaulted at an event opposing the inclusion of trans women in women s sports CNN April 7 2023 Hernandez Adriana Stop the hike SFSU students oppose tuition increase Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 25 2023 Multi Year Tuition Proposal CSU www calstate edu Retrieved November 25 2023 Facing 1 5B deficit California State University to hike tuition 6 annually for next 5 years AP News September 13 2023 Retrieved November 25 2023 King Stephanie Budget cuts hit all colleges totaling over 11 million Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 25 2023 University Budget Committee August 31 2023 Presentation PDF University Budget Committee August 31 2023 Retrieved November 25 2023 Singh Preetina October 12 2023 Organizing Against Massive Layoffs at San Francisco State University California Faculty Association Retrieved November 25 2023 Osborn Sophia CFA rally against tuition increase and working conditions Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 25 2023 Osborn Sophia CFA rally at SFSU for a better contract amidst vote to strike Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 25 2023 Pratap Ishaan CFA hosts rally to save SFSU faculty jobs Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 25 2023 Osborn Sophia SFSU walkout of class to call ceasefire in Gaza Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 25 2023 Walkouts Protesting Gaza Genocide Planned on Campuses Across U S Haaretz Retrieved November 25 2023 Arbona Catie November 16 2023 Teamsters Show our POWER on Strike Teamsters Local 2010 Retrieved November 25 2023 Osborn Sophia Teamsters 2010 Union goes on strike Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 25 2023 Hernandez Jason Gators bite back in latest walkout Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 30 2023 California Faculty Association Instagram Post November 9 2023 Retrieved November 25 2023 Osborn Sophia The other side Q amp A With CFA SFSU Brad Erickson retrieved November 25 2023 University raises 10 million for new science building Catalyze the Future catalyze sfsu edu Retrieved December 21 2023 Hoover Ken March 21 1999 1899 1999 100 Years of Opportunity A century and 185 020 degrees after its humble beginnings San Francisco State University proudly celebrates its legacy of service activism and diversity San Francisco Chronicle pp SC 1 Retrieved December 10 2009 Board of Trustees CSU www calstate edu Retrieved January 16 2024 About Campus Governance Administration amp Finance adminfin sfsu edu Retrieved January 16 2024 Administrative Officers lt San Francisco State University bulletin sfsu edu Retrieved January 16 2024 About Academic Affairs Academic Affairs and the Office of the Provost academic sfsu edu Retrieved January 16 2024 Eliassen Meredith February 1 2019 San Francisco State University Archives California History 96 1 33 45 doi 10 1525 ch 2019 96 1 33 ISSN 0162 2897 S2CID 166317280 Centennial Historical Presidents San Francisco State University President Mary A Ward University Communications SFSU J Paul Leonard 93 University President The New York Times March 1 1995 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 4 2022 Dr Glenn S Dumke 72 Is Dead Was California Universities Head The New York Times July 1 1989 Retrieved November 23 2008 Asimov Nanette May 11 2012 Leslie Wong is named president of S F State SFGATE San Francisco Retrieved August 13 2018 Lynn Mahoney Appointed President of San Francisco State University May 22 2019 Academic Calendar SF State University webapps sfsu edu Retrieved November 23 2023 Office of Student Financial Aid San Francisco State University financialaid sfsu edu Retrieved November 26 2023 a b San Francisco State University U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 21 2017 Student Right to Know Institutional Research ir sfsu edu Retrieved January 16 2024 College of Liberal amp Creative Arts San Francisco State University lca sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Innovate Sustainably Lead Responsibly Lam Family College of Business cob sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 College of Ethnic Studies San Francisco State University ethnicstudies sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 College of Health amp Social Sciences San Francisco State University chss sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 The College of Science amp Engineering CoSE College of Science amp Engineering cose sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Graduate College of Education San Francisco State University gcoe sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 College of Professional and Global Education CPaGE San Francisco State University Bay Area California Continuing Education Extension Classes Certificates cpage sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Visit SF State Fast Facts SFSU edu Archived from the original on September 3 2017 Retrieved September 23 2017 ADN BSN School of Nursing www nursing sfsu edu Retrieved December 21 2023 SF State Scholars Blended Bachelor s Master s Programs Division of Graduate Studies amp Career Development grad sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 Find Your Graduate Program Division of Graduate Studies amp Career Development grad sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 Joint Doctorate in Special Education Department of Special Education sped sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 EXCO Courses ueap sfsu edu Retrieved November 26 2023 EXCO Past Courses Fall 2023 SF State s Experimental College ueap sfsu edu Retrieved November 26 2023 Undergraduate Education and Academic Planning Undergraduate Education and Academic Planning ueap sfsu edu Retrieved November 26 2023 Open University San Francisco State University College of Professional amp Global Education cpage sfsu edu Retrieved December 28 2023 ElderCollege at San Francisco State University San Francisco State University Courses for Mature Learners College of Professional amp Global Education cpage sfsu edu Retrieved December 28 2023 eldercollege pdf Powered by Box sfsu app box com Retrieved December 28 2023 a b About OLLI Osher Lifelong Learning Institute olli sfsu edu Retrieved December 28 2023 Frequently Asked Questions Osher Lifelong Learning Institute olli sfsu edu Retrieved December 28 2023 a b Session Dates Osher Lifelong Learning Institute olli sfsu edu Retrieved December 28 2023 OLLI SF State Courses Osher Lifelong Learning Institute olli sfsu edu Retrieved December 28 2023 Osher Lifelong Learning Institute olli sfsu edu Retrieved December 28 2023 SF State WASC Accreditation Archived from the original on November 1 2012 Retrieved November 8 2012 SF State AACSB Accreditation Abet Accredited Programs San Francisco State University a b College Navigator San Francisco State University nces ed gov Retrieved November 25 2023 How To Apply Division of Graduate Studies amp Career Development grad sfsu edu Retrieved November 25 2023 College Navigator San Francisco State University nces ed gov Retrieved November 25 2023 Forbes America s Top Colleges List 2023 Forbes Retrieved September 22 2023 Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education College Rankings 2022 The Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education Retrieved July 26 2022 2023 2024 Best National Universities U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 22 2023 2022 National University Rankings Washington Monthly Retrieved September 13 2022 2022 23 Best Global Universities Rankings U S News amp World Report Retrieved February 25 2023 California State University San Francisco Rankings U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 12 2022 San Francisco U S News Best Grad School Rankings U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 24 2020 Social Mobility Index Social Mobility Index CollegeNET and PayScale 2020 Retrieved November 12 2021 Graduate Philosophy Department Ranks 8 Nationwide Archived from the original on May 21 2018 Retrieved May 20 2018 a b Programs San Francisco State University Sfsu edu Archived from the original on December 5 2013 Retrieved February 5 2014 Schools amp Departments Retrieved May 24 2018 Entertainment Education Report The Best Film Schools for 2019 Variety 2019 Retrieved July 13 2019 The Top 25 American Film Schools Ranked The Hollywood Reporter August 15 2019 University Impact Report 2023 University Development develop sfsu edu Retrieved January 12 2024 McGrane Sally August 26 2001 Family Matters Learning about relatives near and far expands our sense of self SFGATE San Francisco Retrieved September 23 2017 Wall Street Journal ranks SF State top 5 for diversity nationwide SF State News news sfsu edu Retrieved November 26 2023 Top Colleges in the West for Diversity Wall Street Journal November 17 2021 ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved November 26 2023 Ethnicity Enrollment Profile www calstate edu Archived from the original on October 25 2019 Retrieved July 9 2019 a b c d e Welcome Campus Maps maps sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Science amp Engineering Innovation Center School of Engineering engineering sfsu edu Retrieved November 23 2023 Welcome to DineOnCampus at San Francisco State University by Chartwells Higher Education Dineoncampus com Retrieved November 4 2011 Dining Center SF State University Property Management Sfsu edu Archived from the original on September 7 2011 Retrieved November 4 2011 Manzanita Square University Housing housing sfsu edu Retrieved December 24 2020 a b Mary Park and Mary Ward Residence Halls SF State University Property Management Sfsu edu Archived from the original on November 17 2011 Retrieved November 4 2011 Towers at Centennial Square Archived from the original on June 2 2017 Retrieved June 4 2017 Towers at Centennial Square SF State University Property Management Sfsu edu Archived from the original on November 17 2011 Retrieved November 4 2011 Village at Centennial Square SF State University Property Management Sfsu edu Archived from the original on November 17 2011 Retrieved November 4 2011 University Park North Archived from the original on June 3 2008 Retrieved June 18 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link University Park South Archived from the original on February 20 2009 Retrieved June 18 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c West Campus Green Site Development Capital Planning Design and Construction cpdc sfsu edu Retrieved November 23 2023 Levy Dan March 29 1999 Old Dorm Reduced To Dust Thousands watch implosion at S F State San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved January 27 2017 Meeting and Conference Facilities Seven Hills SF State University Property Management Sfsu edu Retrieved November 4 2011 Student Life Events Center Student Activities amp Events activities sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Meeting and Conference Facilities Towers SF State University Property Management Sfsu edu Retrieved November 4 2011 Cesar Chavez Student Center Associated Students Retrieved November 27 2023 Early Childhood Education Center Associated Students Retrieved November 27 2023 a b Downtown Campus San Francisco State University College of Professional amp Global Education cpage sfsu edu Retrieved November 23 2023 Berlin Kyran SF State evaluates new locations for Downtown Campus Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 23 2023 a b Wong Neal Xplainer Downtown Campus Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved December 21 2023 San Francisco State University Downtown Campus Lam Family College of Business cob sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 February 13 2023 CampusMemo campusmemo sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Contact Sierra Nevada Field Campus sierra sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Welcome to the San Francisco State Sierra Nevada Field Campus SF State Sierra Nevada Field Campus Retrieved December 15 2021 a b Classes amp Workshops Sierra Nevada Field Campus sierra sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Scholarships Sierra Nevada Field Campus sierra sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 FAQs Sierra Nevada Field Campus sierra sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Gallery Sierra Nevada Field Campus sierra sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Sierra Nevada Field Campus Sierra Nevada Field Campus sierra sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Worldwide Elevation Finder elevation maplogs com Retrieved November 27 2023 Friends of the Sierra Nevada Field Campus photo by Sarah Rabkin friendsofsnfc org Retrieved November 27 2023 Sierra Nevada Field Campus 35400 CA 49 Sierra City CA 96124 Sierra Nevada Field Campus 35400 CA 49 Sierra City CA 96124 Retrieved November 27 2023 Romberg Tiburon Campus Estuary amp Ocean Science Center Retrieved September 15 2021 Lang Gretchen June 29 2022 The Ark Marine center s new director hopeful amid funding challenges The Ark Retrieved November 27 2023 a b Director s Message Estuary amp Ocean Science Center eoscenter sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Administrator SI OCIO Web August 24 2015 The Tiburon Branch of the Marine Invasions Lab Conducting World class research on the US West Coast Since 2000 Smithsonian Environmental Research Center Retrieved December 25 2023 a b c Alexander Kurtis June 10 2023 The only marine science lab on San Francisco Bay is at risk of closing Here s what s at stake San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved November 23 2023 Campus Planning at San Francisco State University Campus Planning plan sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Romberg Tiburon Campus Master Plan Campus Planning plan sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Estuary amp Ocean Science Center Facilities Services facilities sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Visit Our Offices San Francisco Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve sfbaynerr sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Bay Conference Center Estuary amp Ocean Science Center eoscenter sfsu edu Retrieved September 15 2021 WRE Season concludes at NCAA Regionals SF State Athletics February 24 2017 Retrieved March 28 2017 Championships Summary PDF National Collegiate Athletic Association Retrieved May 20 2018 Division II Wrestling Championships Records Book PDF National Collegiate Athletic Association Retrieved August 19 2019 a b c Eliassen Meredith 2007 San Francisco State University Arcadia Publishing p 35 ISBN 9780738555669 Eliassen Meredith LibGuides SFSU Archives Mascot libguides sfsu edu Retrieved January 1 2024 Alli the Gator New Student amp Family Programs newstudentprograms sfsu edu Retrieved January 1 2024 a b Why is SF State s mascot a Gator KRON4 February 15 2023 Retrieved January 1 2024 Why is SF State s mascot a Gator Library Help sfsu libanswers com Retrieved January 1 2024 Alli Gator gets a glow up SF State News news sfsu edu Retrieved January 1 2024 IMLeagues www imleagues com Retrieved November 28 2023 GatorXperience sfsu campuslabs com Retrieved November 23 2023 Reregister a Club Organization Student Activities amp Events activities sfsu edu Retrieved November 26 2023 Greek Life at SF State Student Activities amp Events activities sfsu edu Retrieved November 23 2023 Residential Community Overview University Housing housing sfsu edu Retrieved January 1 2024 Student Living Parkmerced Retrieved January 1 2024 Dorm Tour SFSU Mary Ward Hall retrieved January 1 2024 San Francisco State University Manzanita Square Multistudio Retrieved January 1 2024 Welcome to Manzanita Square University Housing housing sfsu edu Retrieved January 1 2024 a b Making the most of the Health Center at SFSU retrieved January 2 2024 Student Health Services San Francisco State University LocalWiki localwiki org Retrieved January 2 2024 a b c Student Health Services San Francisco State University health sfsu edu Retrieved January 1 2024 Sexual Health Services at Student Health Services San Francisco State University LocalWiki localwiki org Retrieved January 2 2024 Nutrition Clinic Health Promotion amp Wellness wellness sfsu edu Retrieved January 1 2024 Alonso Johanna Abortions on Campus Inside Higher Ed Retrieved January 1 2024 a b Green designed Mashouf Wellness Center opens its doors SF State News news sfsu edu Retrieved November 26 2023 Dunaway Dayvon Future wellness center named after alumni donor Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved November 26 2023 Mashouf Wellness Center Campus Recreation campusrec sfsu edu Retrieved November 26 2023 San Francisco State University Mashouf Wellness Center WRNS Studio Retrieved November 27 2023 San Francisco State University Mashouf Wellness Center by WRNS Studio www dexigner com December 19 2018 Retrieved January 1 2024 Gymnasium Campus Recreation campusrec sfsu edu Retrieved November 27 2023 Search Programs San Francisco State University Recreation Portal member campusrec sfsu edu Retrieved November 28 2023 Gator Outdoor Adventures Campus Recreation campusrec sfsu edu Retrieved November 28 2023 a b Associated Students Your Student Government Dean of Students DOS dos sfsu edu Retrieved November 26 2023 Associated Students Associated Students Retrieved November 26 2023 a b c Yee Roger 2002 Educational Environments HarperCollins Allyson Tintiangco Cubales E J R David Kevin Leo Yabut Nadal ed September 13 2022 The SAGE Encyclopedia of Filipina x o American Studies Sage Publications p 674 ISBN 9781071828977 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link Project Rebound Associated Students SFSU Associated Students Retrieved January 2 2024 Project Rebound January 2 2024 Al Khasib Sabeen Road to Redemption Project Rebound The Pioneer Retrieved January 1 2024 Project Rebound Celebrates 50 Years of Educating Former Prisoners KQED September 29 2017 Retrieved January 1 2024 Bates Kristin A Swan Richelle S March 28 2023 Juvenile Delinquency in a Diverse Society SAGE Publications ISBN 9781071862278 History of Project Rebound www csueastbay edu Retrieved January 2 2024 Project Rebound CSU www calstate edu Retrieved January 2 2024 Rhythms Associated Students Retrieved December 29 2023 Sheffer Devery ASI sponsored Rhythms Music Festival kicks off tomorrow in the Annex Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved December 29 2023 a b c Rhythms Music Festival Franko Ali cargocollective com Retrieved January 2 2024 a b Mulich Hunter Rhythms Music Festival schedule Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved December 29 2023 Ramos Jonathan Costly Rhythms Music Festival attracts low student turnout Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved December 29 2023 a b Rhythms Just Got Bigger retrieved December 29 2023 Ruidas Kalani Rhythms Music Festival brings familiar faces and new Bay Area talent Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved December 29 2023 Manson Adrian Pintor Connor Hunt Ryan Zaragoza and Madeline Math rock band opens for Kehlani at Rhythms Music festival Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved December 29 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Clark Trent April 15 2016 Kehlani Headlines San Francisco State University Event HipHopDX Retrieved January 2 2024 Rhythms Music Fest Archive 2017 retrieved December 29 2023 Hayley Kiyoko SFSU retrieved December 29 2023 a b Bishop Briggs Coming to SF Rhythms Music Festival 2020 retrieved December 29 2023 a b RHYTHMS MUSIC FESTIVAL 2021 Opener Show sfsu campuslabs com Retrieved December 29 2023 Pratap Ishaan Lupe Fiasco headlines 12th Annual Rhythms Music Festival Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved December 29 2023 KALW Music programmers judge SFSU Battle of the DJs Bands KALW May 22 2023 Retrieved January 2 2024 San Francisco 1966 Folk Festival Photos and Premium High Res Pictures Getty Images https newspaperarchive com lowell sun may 02 1966 p 2 http brunoceriotti weebly com the blues project html https farinafiles1 tripod com timeline htm https www diggers org chrono notes htm https www classicposters com poster 199 https worldradiohistory com hd2 IDX Business Music Billboard Index IDX 1966 Billboard 1966 03 19 II Music on Campus OCR Page 0030 pdf https woodyguthriecenter org archives collections ronald d cohen folk music research collection http sfmuseum org hist1 rock html https dc library northwestern edu items d49eba42 a635 4b3b 8604 463070a23f6a https www gettyimages com detail news photo american songwriter record producer and musician al kooper news photo 1257223144 https www nicholasjennings com 1968 the year of lightfoot s u s breakthrough https folkways si edu vern ray san francisco 1968 country bluegrass music album smithsonian https kpsu org ankenytwang way west maddox brothers vern ray classic cowboys http www deaddisc com GDFD SF State College htm That Be Bop A Lula Cat Jungle Records Digital Collections Libraries Northwestern University S F State Students Approve 180 Per Semester Fee for New Transit Pass KQED April 21 2016 Retrieved January 1 2024 Wong Neal Xplainer OneCard Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved January 1 2024 Gator Pass Transit Fee Vice President for Student Affairs amp Enrollment Management vpsaem sfsu edu Retrieved January 1 2024 Golden Gate Xpress Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved January 2 2024 Department of Journalism College of Liberal amp Creative Arts journalism sfsu edu Retrieved January 2 2024 ABOUT Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved January 2 2024 ACP Pacemaker 100 Retrieved January 2 2024 a b Awards and Honors Department of Journalism journalism sfsu edu Retrieved January 2 2024 jstone October 31 2023 CMA 2023 Pinnacle Award Winners College Media Association Retrieved January 2 2024 Xpress Magazine Xpress Magazine Retrieved January 2 2024 ACP ACP names top student magazines Retrieved January 2 2024 SF State Magazine CASE www case org Retrieved January 2 2024 Alumni amp Student Publications amp Department Publications Department of Creative Writing creativewriting sfsu edu Retrieved January 2 2024 Fourteen Hills The SFSU Review Poets amp Writers March 12 2009 Retrieved January 2 2024 Transfer 119 pdf Google Docs Retrieved January 2 2024 Alumni amp Student Publications amp Department Publications Department of Creative Writing creativewriting sfsu edu Retrieved January 2 2024 Arielle Jones Fiction Editor of Transfer Magazine and Runway Model April 28 2012 Retrieved January 2 2024 SF State News www sfsu edu Retrieved September 10 2018 KSFS Radio KSFS Media Retrieved September 10 2018 San Francisco Bay Area s Bounty of Independent Radio Offerings radiosurvivor com March 12 2012 Retrieved September 10 2018 KSFS sfsu edu April 6 2005 Archived from the original on April 6 2005 Retrieved September 10 2018 via archive org radio Guide baylindo com Retrieved September 10 2018 Media List City of Berkeley Retrieved September 10 2018 KSFS 100 7 F M facebook com Retrieved September 10 2018 RADIO WAVES sfgate com December 4 2005 Retrieved September 10 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to San Francisco State University Official website San Francisco State Athletics website 37 43 24 N 122 28 47 W 37 72333 N 122 47972 W 37 72333 122 47972 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