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Worcester State University

Worcester State University (WSU) is a public university located in Worcester, Massachusetts. The fourth largest of the Commonwealth’s nine Universities, WSU enrolls 4500 undergraduates and nearly 900 graduate students in more than 80 undergraduate majors and minors and 39 graduate programs. Its campus is located on Worcester's west side and includes 10 buildings on more than 58 acres of woods and wetlands. WSU was one of several Massachusetts State Universities that was founded as a normal school in the 19th century before evolving into a state college in the 1960s and achieving university status in 2012. WSU is administered by the Massachusetts Department of Higher Education which oversees 29 campuses including community colleges, state universities, and research universities across the Commonwealth.

Worcester State University
Former names
Massachusetts State Normal School at Worcester (1874–1932)
Worcester State Teachers College (1932–1960)
Worcester State College (1960–2010)
TypePublic university
Established1874; 150 years ago (1874)
AccreditationNECHE
Academic affiliations
Endowment$34.5 million (2020)[1]
PresidentBarry M. Maloney
ProvostLois Wims
Academic staff
217 full-time, 230 part-time
Students6,434 (2022)[2]
Undergraduates5,495 (2022)
Postgraduates939 (2022)
Location, ,
United States

42°16′03″N 71°50′38″W / 42.267586°N 71.843760°W / 42.267586; -71.843760
CampusUrban
ColorsRoyal blue and Gold
  
NicknameLancers
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division III
MASCAC
NEFC
LEC
MascotChandler H. Lancer
Websitewww.worcester.edu

History edit

 
View of the original Worcester State Normal School in circa 1890.

Founded in 1874 as the Massachusetts State Normal School at Worcester, WSU was the fifth of nine teacher training colleges in the state.[3] Spurred by the success of a city-run normal school founded two years earlier, its school committee successfully petitioned the Massachusetts General Court for a state-sponsored institution in Worcester.[4] The original campus was located in a Second Empire-style stone building on St. Ann's Hill, near the city's downtown. By 1900, the campus included a president's house, the "Stoddard Terrace" residence hall, and a turreted gymnasium annex. This site would serve WSU for nearly sixty years until the current Chandler Street campus opened in 1932.[5]

The first "principal" of WSU, Elias Harlow Russell (1874–1909), shaped the school's early curriculum. A pioneer in the Child Study Movement that emphasized childhood development and educational reform efforts, Russell partnered with colleague G. Stanley Hall, who later became President of Clark University, to develop a program that placed normal school students in city schools.[6] Russell was later succeeded by Francis Randsom Lane (1909–1912).

In the 1920s, WSU followed national trends in teacher education by introducing a broader array of college courses and a Bachelor of Science in Education degree in 1921 culminating in a new designation of Worcester State Teachers College in 1932.[7] The Great Depression threatened the College as the state proposed cost-cutting measures that would eliminate many schools.[8] Presidents Dr. William B. Aspinwall (1912–1940) and Clinton E. Carpenter (1940–1946) led the college through this crisis and set the stage for post-war development under the presidency of Eugene A. Sullivan (1947–1970).[9]

President Sullivan oversaw the expansion of the WSU curriculum. In 1952, the college introduced a Master of Science in Education, and in 1963, a Bachelor of Arts degree. In 1960 the school was designated Worcester State College. Sullivan also oversaw the development of a collegiate athletic system, introducing varsity sports in 1950 and constructing a new gymnasium building in 1958.[10] President Robert E. Leestamper (1970–1975), further expanded graduate programs and introduced professional programs such as nursing and business. In 1973, Chandler Village was created as the first residence halls on the Chandler Street campus.[11]

The tenure of presidents Joseph J. Orze (1975–1982) and Phillip D. Vario (1982–1992) expanded the campus with the addition of a student center and a new residence hall, named Dowden Hall, as well as continued support of varsity sports and degree offerings in speech and occupational therapy.[12] Under the tenure of President Vario, the school joined the Coalition of Urban and Metropolitan Universities. The Worcester State Foundation was created in 1994, during the presidency of Kaylan K. Ghosh (1992–2002), to support school fundraising efforts. During the following decade, the campus grew to include the new Ghosh Science and Technology Center, as well as an additional residence hall and parking structure, which was built during the tenure of President Janelle C. Ashley (2002–2011).[13]

In 2010, WSU reorganized into two schools: the School of Humanities and Social Sciences and the School of Education, Health, and Natural Sciences. That same year, the state granted Massachusetts State Colleges university status and the college became the Worcester State University.[14]

In 2011, Worcester State installed its eleventh president, Barry M. Maloney.[15] That same year, students and faculty relaunched the Worcester Spy, a newspaper originally founded in 1775.

At the end of the 2020–2021 academic year, nearby Becker College closed, and transferred custody of their academic records to WSU.[16]

Campus edit

WSU is located on Chandler Street in the Tatnuck neighborhood of Worcester. The 58-acre campus includes woods and wetlands, and features several buildings constructed on a steep, east-facing slope.

In the late nineteenth century, the campus was the site of "Willow Farm", home of William Sever Lincoln (1811–1889), who led the 34th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment during the American Civil War and was brevetted Brigadier General in 1865.[17] He was the son of Levi Lincoln Jr., former Governor of Massachusetts. The property was later purchased by Worcester industrialist George I. Rockwood for whom Worcester's Rockwood Field, adjacent to WSU's campus, is named.[18]

In 1930, the farm was acquired for WSU's new campus and, in 1942, an additional thirty-five acres were added, forming the campus's current boundaries . Today, about thirty-percent of full-time students reside on campus.[19]

Buildings edit

 
View of the May Street Building in 2018.
  • Ghosh Science and Technology Center (2000): The center is named after former President Ghosh and features offices, laboratories, and classrooms for Biology, Chemistry, Communication Sciences and Disorders, Computer Science, Earth, Environment, and Physics, Health Sciences, Nursing, and Occupational Therapy programs.
  • Learning Resource Center (1971): The center includes the university library, along with classrooms and academic departments, namely the Communication, Criminal Justice, and Visual and Performing Arts, and Information Technology Services and Multicultural Affairs offices. The building also includes campus mail services. In 2010 building was re-clad in its distinctive metallic siding during renovations.
  • May Street Building (1949): Built as the home of Temple Emanuel Sinai, WSU purchased the multipurpose building in 2015 to house classrooms, auditoriums, the Department of Sociology, and offices for the Center for Business and Industry.
  • Sagamore Studios: The studios hold visual arts classes within the Worcester Center for Crafts, located at 25 Sagamore Road.
  • Shaughnessy Administration Building (1932): Named for Helen G. Shaughnessy ('43) who served as a long-time educator and administrator, the building houses administrative offices including the offices of the President and the Provost, and offices for Admissions, Alumni, Development, Financial Aid, Graduate and Continuing Education, Marketing, and the Registrar. The building includes the Fuller Theater, a 166-seat venue created within the original campus auditorium.
  • Student Center (1978): The center includes student organization offices, meeting spaces, lounges, and dining areas. Included are offices for Career Services, Commuter Services, International Programs, Military Affairs and Veterans Services, and Student Involvement and Leadership Development.
  • Sullivan Academic Center (1966): The center houses classrooms and offices for multiple academic departments. Included are Business and Economics, Education, English, History and Political Science, Mathematics, philosophy, Psychology, Sociology, and Urban Studies. The center also includes the Sullivan and Eager Auditoriums. Originally the science building, the facility was renamed the Dr. Eugene A. Sullivan Building in 1980 in honor of the fifth university president.
  • Wellness Center (2016): The newest campus building, the center features multipurpose gymnasiums, exercise areas and classrooms. Included are offices for the Department of Athletics

Residence halls edit

 
View of Sheehan Hall in 2018.
  • Chandler Village (1973): The village is an apartment-style complex that accommodates 420 students. It was the first student housing built on the Chandler Street campus.
  • Dowden Hall (1990): Named after Vera M. Dowden, a former education faculty member, the building was expanded in 2010 to include space for 177 students.
  • Sheehan Hall (2014): Named in honor of James F. Sheehan ('55), a Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel, the hall houses 400 students. It also houses the main campus dining hall, as well as Health Services, the Office of Residence Life and Housing, and recreational facilities.
  • Wasylean Hall (2004): Named after Phillip M. Wasylean II ('63), the hall accommodates 350 students. The university police station is located on the ground floor. In 2005, the building received an Honor Award for Design Excellence from the American Institute of Architects of Central Massachusetts.[20]

Athletics edit

 
View of Coughlin Field in 2018.

WSU Athletics is a Division III member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) in the Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference (MASCAC), of which it is a charter member. The field hockey and women's tennis teams also compete within the Little East Conference (LEC). Formerly, the men's football team played in the Commonwealth Coast Football (CCC) between 1985 and 2013.

Their main venue is the John F. Coughlin Memorial Field, a two-thousand seat capacity venue that is located on Chandler Street. Teams also use the Wellness Center, Rockwood Park, and the Worcester Sports Center for games. Coughlin Field was the home soccer field of the Worcester Kings of the Premier Development League for their only two seasons before dissolving.

In 2016, WSU unveiled a new mascot, named Chandler H. Lancer, at the Worcester Art Museum.[21]

Rankings edit

Worcester State University is ranked 96th out of 181 Regional Universities in North by U.S. News & World Report and 450th in the nation by Forbes. [22] [23]

Notable faculty edit

Notable alumni edit

 
View of Alumni Gates in 2018

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Endowment Records Healthy Change in Market Value, Outpacing Powerhouses like Harvard (Report). Worcester State University. February 19, 2021. Retrieved April 11, 2022.
  2. ^ "Worcester State at a Glance | an institution by the numbers | Worcester State University".
  3. ^ Rice, Franklin P. (1899). The Worcester of Eighteen Hundred and Ninety-Eight: Fifty Years a City. Worcester, Massachusetts: Blanchard. p. 192.
  4. ^ Massachusetts State University Council of Presidents (2014). Breitborde, Mary-Lou (ed.). Remembering Massachusetts State Normal Schools: Pioneers in Teacher Education. Institute for Massachusetts Studies. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-692-24671-9.
  5. ^ Rice, p.193.
  6. ^ Breitborde, p.100-101.
  7. ^ "Worcester State University History". www.worcester.edu. Retrieved November 18, 2018.
  8. ^ Breitborde, p. 103-104
  9. ^ Conroy, Thomas G. (2018). Worcester State University. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. pp. 24–26. ISBN 978-1-4671-2844-5.
  10. ^ Conroy, p.8, 15, 28, 83
  11. ^ Conroy, p. 57
  12. ^ Conroy, 31
  13. ^ Conroy, 34
  14. ^ "Governor Patrick Signs Historic University Status Bill". July 28, 2010. Retrieved November 18, 2018.
  15. ^ "Westfield's Loss is Worcester's Gain". Worcester Business Journal. New England Business Media. Retrieved June 25, 2018.
  16. ^ "Becker College". Becker College.
  17. ^ Conroy, p. 14
  18. ^ "Rockwood Field". City of Worcester. Retrieved January 3, 2024.
  19. ^ "Residence Life". Worcester State University. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  20. ^ "Awards". McNamara-Salvia Structural Engineers. McNamara-Salvia.
  21. ^ "Worcester State's New Mascot: Just Call Him Chandler H. Lancer". April 22, 2016.
  22. ^ "Worcester State University". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved January 3, 2024.
  23. ^ "Worcester State University". Forbes. Retrieved January 3, 2024.

External links edit

  • Official website

worcester, state, university, other, uses, worcester, college, disambiguation, public, university, located, worcester, massachusetts, fourth, largest, commonwealth, nine, universities, enrolls, 4500, undergraduates, nearly, graduate, students, more, than, unde. For other uses see Worcester College disambiguation Worcester State University WSU is a public university located in Worcester Massachusetts The fourth largest of the Commonwealth s nine Universities WSU enrolls 4500 undergraduates and nearly 900 graduate students in more than 80 undergraduate majors and minors and 39 graduate programs Its campus is located on Worcester s west side and includes 10 buildings on more than 58 acres of woods and wetlands WSU was one of several Massachusetts State Universities that was founded as a normal school in the 19th century before evolving into a state college in the 1960s and achieving university status in 2012 WSU is administered by the Massachusetts Department of Higher Education which oversees 29 campuses including community colleges state universities and research universities across the Commonwealth Worcester State UniversityFormer namesMassachusetts State Normal School at Worcester 1874 1932 Worcester State Teachers College 1932 1960 Worcester State College 1960 2010 TypePublic universityEstablished1874 150 years ago 1874 AccreditationNECHEAcademic affiliationsCUMUHECCMAEndowment 34 5 million 2020 1 PresidentBarry M MaloneyProvostLois WimsAcademic staff217 full time 230 part timeStudents6 434 2022 2 Undergraduates5 495 2022 Postgraduates939 2022 LocationWorcester Massachusetts United States42 16 03 N 71 50 38 W 42 267586 N 71 843760 W 42 267586 71 843760CampusUrbanColorsRoyal blue and Gold NicknameLancersSporting affiliationsNCAA Division IIIMASCACNEFCLECMascotChandler H LancerWebsitewww wbr worcester wbr edu Contents 1 History 2 Campus 2 1 Buildings 2 2 Residence halls 3 Athletics 4 Rankings 5 Notable faculty 6 Notable alumni 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory edit nbsp View of the original Worcester State Normal School in circa 1890 Founded in 1874 as the Massachusetts State Normal School at Worcester WSU was the fifth of nine teacher training colleges in the state 3 Spurred by the success of a city run normal school founded two years earlier its school committee successfully petitioned the Massachusetts General Court for a state sponsored institution in Worcester 4 The original campus was located in a Second Empire style stone building on St Ann s Hill near the city s downtown By 1900 the campus included a president s house the Stoddard Terrace residence hall and a turreted gymnasium annex This site would serve WSU for nearly sixty years until the current Chandler Street campus opened in 1932 5 The first principal of WSU Elias Harlow Russell 1874 1909 shaped the school s early curriculum A pioneer in the Child Study Movement that emphasized childhood development and educational reform efforts Russell partnered with colleague G Stanley Hall who later became President of Clark University to develop a program that placed normal school students in city schools 6 Russell was later succeeded by Francis Randsom Lane 1909 1912 In the 1920s WSU followed national trends in teacher education by introducing a broader array of college courses and a Bachelor of Science in Education degree in 1921 culminating in a new designation of Worcester State Teachers College in 1932 7 The Great Depression threatened the College as the state proposed cost cutting measures that would eliminate many schools 8 Presidents Dr William B Aspinwall 1912 1940 and Clinton E Carpenter 1940 1946 led the college through this crisis and set the stage for post war development under the presidency of Eugene A Sullivan 1947 1970 9 President Sullivan oversaw the expansion of the WSU curriculum In 1952 the college introduced a Master of Science in Education and in 1963 a Bachelor of Arts degree In 1960 the school was designated Worcester State College Sullivan also oversaw the development of a collegiate athletic system introducing varsity sports in 1950 and constructing a new gymnasium building in 1958 10 President Robert E Leestamper 1970 1975 further expanded graduate programs and introduced professional programs such as nursing and business In 1973 Chandler Village was created as the first residence halls on the Chandler Street campus 11 The tenure of presidents Joseph J Orze 1975 1982 and Phillip D Vario 1982 1992 expanded the campus with the addition of a student center and a new residence hall named Dowden Hall as well as continued support of varsity sports and degree offerings in speech and occupational therapy 12 Under the tenure of President Vario the school joined the Coalition of Urban and Metropolitan Universities The Worcester State Foundation was created in 1994 during the presidency of Kaylan K Ghosh 1992 2002 to support school fundraising efforts During the following decade the campus grew to include the new Ghosh Science and Technology Center as well as an additional residence hall and parking structure which was built during the tenure of President Janelle C Ashley 2002 2011 13 In 2010 WSU reorganized into two schools the School of Humanities and Social Sciences and the School of Education Health and Natural Sciences That same year the state granted Massachusetts State Colleges university status and the college became the Worcester State University 14 In 2011 Worcester State installed its eleventh president Barry M Maloney 15 That same year students and faculty relaunched the Worcester Spy a newspaper originally founded in 1775 At the end of the 2020 2021 academic year nearby Becker College closed and transferred custody of their academic records to WSU 16 Campus editWSU is located on Chandler Street in the Tatnuck neighborhood of Worcester The 58 acre campus includes woods and wetlands and features several buildings constructed on a steep east facing slope In the late nineteenth century the campus was the site of Willow Farm home of William Sever Lincoln 1811 1889 who led the 34th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment during the American Civil War and was brevetted Brigadier General in 1865 17 He was the son of Levi Lincoln Jr former Governor of Massachusetts The property was later purchased by Worcester industrialist George I Rockwood for whom Worcester s Rockwood Field adjacent to WSU s campus is named 18 In 1930 the farm was acquired for WSU s new campus and in 1942 an additional thirty five acres were added forming the campus s current boundaries Today about thirty percent of full time students reside on campus 19 Buildings edit nbsp View of the May Street Building in 2018 Ghosh Science and Technology Center 2000 The center is named after former President Ghosh and features offices laboratories and classrooms for Biology Chemistry Communication Sciences and Disorders Computer Science Earth Environment and Physics Health Sciences Nursing and Occupational Therapy programs Learning Resource Center 1971 The center includes the university library along with classrooms and academic departments namely the Communication Criminal Justice and Visual and Performing Arts and Information Technology Services and Multicultural Affairs offices The building also includes campus mail services In 2010 building was re clad in its distinctive metallic siding during renovations May Street Building 1949 Built as the home of Temple Emanuel Sinai WSU purchased the multipurpose building in 2015 to house classrooms auditoriums the Department of Sociology and offices for the Center for Business and Industry Sagamore Studios The studios hold visual arts classes within the Worcester Center for Crafts located at 25 Sagamore Road Shaughnessy Administration Building 1932 Named for Helen G Shaughnessy 43 who served as a long time educator and administrator the building houses administrative offices including the offices of the President and the Provost and offices for Admissions Alumni Development Financial Aid Graduate and Continuing Education Marketing and the Registrar The building includes the Fuller Theater a 166 seat venue created within the original campus auditorium Student Center 1978 The center includes student organization offices meeting spaces lounges and dining areas Included are offices for Career Services Commuter Services International Programs Military Affairs and Veterans Services and Student Involvement and Leadership Development Sullivan Academic Center 1966 The center houses classrooms and offices for multiple academic departments Included are Business and Economics Education English History and Political Science Mathematics philosophy Psychology Sociology and Urban Studies The center also includes the Sullivan and Eager Auditoriums Originally the science building the facility was renamed the Dr Eugene A Sullivan Building in 1980 in honor of the fifth university president Wellness Center 2016 The newest campus building the center features multipurpose gymnasiums exercise areas and classrooms Included are offices for the Department of Athletics Residence halls edit nbsp View of Sheehan Hall in 2018 Chandler Village 1973 The village is an apartment style complex that accommodates 420 students It was the first student housing built on the Chandler Street campus Dowden Hall 1990 Named after Vera M Dowden a former education faculty member the building was expanded in 2010 to include space for 177 students Sheehan Hall 2014 Named in honor of James F Sheehan 55 a Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel the hall houses 400 students It also houses the main campus dining hall as well as Health Services the Office of Residence Life and Housing and recreational facilities Wasylean Hall 2004 Named after Phillip M Wasylean II 63 the hall accommodates 350 students The university police station is located on the ground floor In 2005 the building received an Honor Award for Design Excellence from the American Institute of Architects of Central Massachusetts 20 Athletics edit nbsp View of Coughlin Field in 2018 WSU Athletics is a Division III member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA in the Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference MASCAC of which it is a charter member The field hockey and women s tennis teams also compete within the Little East Conference LEC Formerly the men s football team played in the Commonwealth Coast Football CCC between 1985 and 2013 Their main venue is the John F Coughlin Memorial Field a two thousand seat capacity venue that is located on Chandler Street Teams also use the Wellness Center Rockwood Park and the Worcester Sports Center for games Coughlin Field was the home soccer field of the Worcester Kings of the Premier Development League for their only two seasons before dissolving In 2016 WSU unveiled a new mascot named Chandler H Lancer at the Worcester Art Museum 21 Rankings editWorcester State University is ranked 96th out of 181 Regional Universities in North by U S News amp World Report and 450th in the nation by Forbes 22 23 Notable faculty editGerard T Indelicato dean Jacob Hen Tov history Julie E Wollman academic affairs Notable alumni edit nbsp View of Alumni Gates in 2018 Bill Adamaitis 1951 professional football player Agnes Ballard 1905 architect John Binienda 1970 member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives Tyler Boudreau 1997 United States Marine Corps veteran David W Breneman honorary educator and economist Mario J Bruno 2000 regional chief executive officer of the American Red Cross Kevin Campbell 1973 United States Army veteran Mark Carron member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives Brien Cullen 1977 football coach for Worcester State Lancers John Dufresne 1970 professor at the Florida International University Mary Fell 1969 poet Kimberly Ferguson member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives Daniel Garvey 1973 President Emeritus of Prescott College Bob Haas professional football player Jimmy Kang 2006 music entrepreneur Paul King National Football League referee Todd Leach 1983 Chancellor of the University System of New Hampshire Raymond Mariano 1973 former Mayor of Worcester Mary McNally 1978 member of the Montana Senate Joe Morrone 1963 soccer coach for the University of Connecticut Huskies David Muradian 2005 member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives Don Nardo 1974 historian and writer DJ Obi disc jockey Jim O Day 1983 member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives Steve Palermo 1971 Major League Baseball umpire Lorine Pruette feminist Tony Reno 1997 football coach for Yale University Bulldogs Brian Skerry 1985 photographer Aron Stevens World Wrestling Entertainment wrestler billed as Damien Sandow Sarah Ella Wilson 1894 educator Geoffrey Zakarian 1981 chefSee also editList of college athletic programs in Massachusetts List of colleges and universities in Massachusetts List of NCAA Division III institutionsReferences edit Endowment Records Healthy Change in Market Value Outpacing Powerhouses like Harvard Report Worcester State University February 19 2021 Retrieved April 11 2022 Worcester State at a Glance an institution by the numbers Worcester State University Rice Franklin P 1899 The Worcester of Eighteen Hundred and Ninety Eight Fifty Years a City Worcester Massachusetts Blanchard p 192 Massachusetts State University Council of Presidents 2014 Breitborde Mary Lou ed Remembering Massachusetts State Normal Schools Pioneers in Teacher Education Institute for Massachusetts Studies p 100 ISBN 978 0 692 24671 9 Rice p 193 Breitborde p 100 101 Worcester State University History www worcester edu Retrieved November 18 2018 Breitborde p 103 104 Conroy Thomas G 2018 Worcester State University Charleston South Carolina Arcadia Publishing pp 24 26 ISBN 978 1 4671 2844 5 Conroy p 8 15 28 83 Conroy p 57 Conroy 31 Conroy 34 Governor Patrick Signs Historic University Status Bill July 28 2010 Retrieved November 18 2018 Westfield s Loss is Worcester s Gain Worcester Business Journal New England Business Media Retrieved June 25 2018 Becker College Becker College Conroy p 14 Rockwood Field City of Worcester Retrieved January 3 2024 Residence Life Worcester State University Retrieved June 20 2018 Awards McNamara Salvia Structural Engineers McNamara Salvia Worcester State s New Mascot Just Call Him Chandler H Lancer April 22 2016 Worcester State University U S News amp World Report Retrieved January 3 2024 Worcester State University Forbes Retrieved January 3 2024 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Worcester State University amp oldid 1218990730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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