Onondaga Community College

Onondaga Community College
Motto Explore. Discover. Transform.
Type Community college
Established 1961
President Casey Crabill[1]
Academic staff
570[2]
Undergraduates 12,000[3]
Location United States Syracuse, NY, US
43°00′22″N 76°11′50″W / 43.006167°N 76.197306°W / 43.006167; -76.197306Coordinates: 43°00′22″N 76°11′50″W / 43.006167°N 76.197306°W / 43.006167; -76.197306
Campus Suburban
194 acres (79 ha)
Colors Carolina blue and white         
Nickname Lazers
Affiliations National Junior College Athletic Association, Region III, Mid-State Athletic Conference
Website www.sunyocc.edu

Onondaga Community College (OCC) is an accredited,[4] two-year educational institution that serves Onondaga County, New York, at two campuses. Part of the State University of New York (SUNY) system, OCC is one of 30 locally sponsored community colleges in New York State.

History

The college was founded in 1961 in Syracuse, New York. OCC opened its first Residence Halls in August 2006.

Campuses

The college has two campuses. The main campus is on West Seneca Turnpike in the hamlet of Onondaga Hill, west of Syracuse; the North Campus is on Route 57 in Liverpool, New York.

Organization and administration

Entrance to the Main Campus
Whitney Applied Technology Center
Mawhinney Hall
Gordon Student Center
Coulter Library Building

Onondaga Community College is a college of the State University of New York (SUNY) system and one of 30 locally sponsored community colleges throughout New York State.

Academic profile

The College is a Training Center for the National Alternative Fuels Training Consortium.

Student life

Arts

The music program is one of OCC's most well-known and it offers various opportunities. The faculty is made up of accomplished musicians, such as members of Symphoria (previously the Syracuse Symphony Orchestra) and of the Society for New Music. The school offers extra-curricular activities, such as an indoor drumline, which has competed in the WGI world prelims in the Independent Open Class. The school holds music festivals such as JazzFest and the Central New York Day of Percussion, where world class acts such as Victor Wooten, Tommy Igoe, Aretha Franklin, and others come to perform and to give clinics.

Media

Students in the Electronic Media Communications department learn how to tape video, to edit, to direct, and to produce shows for television, many of which are broadcast across the campus' television network. Students can choose one of three curricula: television, digital audio, or digital media. The facilities of EMC include a full TV studio with Program Control and Master Control rooms, audio recording rooms, and non-linear editing (NLE) and digital audio workstation (DAW) labs. The EMC program also offers students the opportunity of taking part in its student run internet radio station, known as Supermix. The station follows an alternative and independent rock format and it also includes various specialty shows that range from sports, hip hop, metal, and country. The station also broadcasts Onondaga Lazers home games and. The station is broadcast through its website Supermix.us, iTunes, the campus' television network, and the Tune In app on smart phones.

Athletics

OCC's athletic teams are nicknamed the Lazers. Several of Onondaga's athletic teams are consistently nationally ranked. Onondaga is a member of the Mid-State Athletic Conference.

Lacrosse

The 2006 and 2007 men's lacrosse team won the NJCAA national championship in May 2006 and 2007. It has been said that the team may have had the most dominant season in college lacrosse history, finishing the season with a record of 18-0, and 33-game winning streak. They outscored their opponents 445-80. Head Coach Chuck Wilbur has compiled a career record of 83-11. Onondagas 2008-2009 Men's and women's lacrosse teams won the national championships for JUCO. The men's lax (lacrosse) team won the NJCAA National Championship in 2010. In the 2015 season, the Men's Lacrosse Team won its seventh straight NJCAA National Championship with its fifth straight perfect season. The men's lacrosse team set the lacrosse record for consecutive wins with 107 wins, spanning 2010 through 2016.

Tennis

In 2008 The Men's Tennis Team won their first National Championship, after being ranked in the top 5 nationally the past 4 years. The Men's Tennis Team went 24-0 with 1st singles through 6th singles winning their league championship respectively. Head Coach John LaRose was inducted in the NJCAA Hall of Fame as one of the most successful coaches in NJCAA history. 4 out of 6 starters were individual national champions and went on to play on some top college teams.

Basketball

The men's basketball program won the 1993 NJCAA Men's Division III Basketball Championship. Erik Saroney became the new men's basketball coach in April 2016*. Mike Wheeler is entering his fifth season as the women's basketball coach.

Football

In 2011 alumnus Derek Demperio started an unaffiliated club football program at OCC known as the Onondaga Ogres. The club participated in its first intercollegiate football game on September 17, 2011 against the Clarkson University Golden Knights losing 25-12. The club gained recognition as a designated club sport from OCC under the rules of the NJCAA the following year and changed its name to the Onondaga Community College Football Club. In 2013 OCC defeated the Southwestern Connecticut Prep. Grizzlies 18-15 in overtime to win the "Yankee Bowl" and the Yankee Collegiate Football Conference (YCFC) Championship. The 2013 squad would then defeat the Columbus State Cougars 22-14 in the Intercollegiate Club Football Federation (ICFF) "Canton Bowl" capturing its first National Championship.

Notable alumni

References

  1. Oppedisano, Lorna (August 2, 2016). "Dr. Casey Crabill: Lessons in Community". Syracuse Woman Magazine: 25–29.
  2. "Onondaga Community College Profile". http://www.petersons.com. Lawrenceville, New Jersey: Peterson's. 2010. Retrieved 2010-04-12. External link in |work= (help)
  3. "Onondaga at a Glance". ABOUT THE COLLEGE. Syracuse, New York: Onondaga Community College. 2008. Retrieved 2010-04-12. External link in |work= (help)
  4. Onondaga Community College: from the EdRef college search directory
  5. Jones, Grace (2015). I'll Never Write My Memoirs. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 45.
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