Marshall University – South Charleston Campus
Marshall University – South Charleston Campus is a non-residential branch campus of Marshall University located in South Charleston, West Virginia, which is primarily focused on extension graduate programs.
The institution traces its roots to extension graduate programs offered by both Marshall University and West Virginia University throughout West Virginia, and particularly in the metropolitan Charleston, West Virginia area prior to 1969.
In that year, the state reorganized its extension graduate system. WVU was limited to, except in a few subjects, offering extension programs in the northern part of the state, MU was limited to the four counties surrounding the main campus in Huntington, and a graduate only College of Graduate Studies (sometimes incorrectly called "The West Virginia College of Graduate Studies") was founded. The college had no campus of its own, and almost no faculty. It had some offices at West Virginia State College and offered classes on that campus and at locations throughout the rest of southern West Virginia, drawing its faculty from those of West Virginia State College, Concord College, Bluefield State College, Glenville State College and other institutions. The college also utilized adjunct faculty drawn from industry in the Kanawha Valley.
The name, which lacked a geographic identifier, as well as the "impact" of a well-known college, was later briefly changed first to The University of West Virginia College of Graduate Studies and then to the West Virginia Graduate College.
In 1992 the school got a campus of its own, moving to land donated by the Union Carbide Corporation near its research facility. The next year, the state again reorganized its graduate education system, merging the West Virginia Graduate College and the on-campus graduate programs of Marshall University under the name Marshall University Graduate College.
In 2010 the state authorized Marshall to begin offering extension undergraduate programs at the South Charleston location, and the facility was renamed the "Marshall University - South Charleston Campus", and commonly now known as "Marshall-South Charleston".
See also
- Marshall University
External links
- Official website
38°21′26″N 81°41′52″W / 38.35722°N 81.69778°W / 38.35722; -81.69778
- v
- t
- e
- Huntington Main Campus (Buildings)
- Beckley Campus
- South Charleston Campus
- Programs:
- Bill Noe Flight School
- Elizabeth McDowell Lewis College of Business
- Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine
- Other:
- John Marshall Scholars
- Society of Yeager Scholars
- Venues:
- Cam Henderson Center
- Chris Cline Athletic Complex
- Dot Hicks Field
- Jack Cook Field
- Joan C. Edwards Stadium
- Veterans Memorial Soccer Complex
- Other:
- Marco the Bison
- Marching Thunder
- Battle for the Bell (Ohio)
- Friends of Coal Bowl (West Virginia)
- Arthur Weisberg Family Applied Engineering Complex
- Brad D. Smith Center for Business and Innovation
- Brad D. Smith Foundation Hall
- Erma Byrd Higher Education Center
- Forensic Science Center
- Health and Wellness Center
- Marshall Commons
- Memorial Student Center
- Old Main
- Robert C. Byrd Biotechnology Science Center
- Rural Health Clinic
- Visual Arts Center
- The Parthenon
- WMUL
- West Virginia Public Broadcasting
- West Virginia Colored Children's Home
- Southern Airways Flight 932
- Marshall University: Ashes to Glory
- We Are Marshall
- Founded: 1837
- Students: 11,252
- Endowment: 201 million
This article about a university or college in West Virginia is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e