SUNY Adirondack

SUNY Adirondack
Former names
Adirondack Community College[1]
Type Public College
Established 1961
President Kristine Duffy
Academic staff
246[2]
Undergraduates 3,408[2]
Location United States Queensbury, NY, US
43°21′11″N 73°39′12″W / 43.353056°N 73.653333°W / 43.353056; -73.653333Coordinates: 43°21′11″N 73°39′12″W / 43.353056°N 73.653333°W / 43.353056; -73.653333
Campus Suburban
141 acres (0.57 km2)
Nickname Timberwolves
Affiliations National Junior College Athletic Association, Region III, Mountain Valley Collegiate Conference
Website www.sunyacc.edu

SUNY Adirondack is a public college serving Warren, Washington and northern Saratoga counties in New York State. SUNY Adirondack offers over 30 academic programs of study. It was founded in 1961 as Adirondack Community College (ACC). Four year degrees and master's degree programs became available with the opening of the SUNY at Plattsburgh Queensbury Branch on the SUNY Adirondack campus. It adopted its present name on March 1, 2010.[1][3]

History

This school was founded in 1961 as Adirondack Community College. In 1983, the Adirondack Community College Foundation was established to provide student scholarships.[4]

Campus

Office and service buildings

Warren Hall houses the business office, the financial aid office, payroll, office of the registrar, Barbara Green, the Interim Dean of Student affairs, the admissions office, and the office of accessibility services which provides assistance to students with disabilities.

Student Center houses the school bookstore, a cafeteria, a student lounge with big-screen TV, a pool table, and a number of couches, chairs, and tables for students to relax or sleep. It also houses the Student Activities office, which is home to the SUNY Adirondack Student Senate.

Classroom buildings

Eisenhart Hall is the oldest classroom building on campus. A major renovation was completed in April 2006, including a new geothermal heating system, as it used to have poor climate control. It now also houses a SUNY Plattsburgh lecture hall. Primarily social science classes are taught in this building: psychology, sociology, history, and political science, though other classes are taught here as well.

Washington Hall is next to Eisenhart Hall and is home to nursing labs, the radio station (WGFR), the television studio (for instructional use), a video editing lab, photography labs and darkroom, and a Mac lab for graphic design/media arts students.

Dearlove Hall houses the math lab, English and mathematics classrooms. The 3rd floor contains computer networking (Cisco Academy), IT:End User Support classrooms and tech. The offices of most English and Math professors are located in the basement of this hall. Art, language arts, and mathematics courses are primarily taught in this building. There is also an art gallery and a small lecture hall.

Scoville Building houses a small café, the library, the computer center, a computer lab, and the computer classrooms. There are only a few non-computer classrooms here, which mainly provide room for overflow from Eisenhart Hall. The top floor houses the Office of the President (Kristine Duffy, Ed. D). The library contains more than 63,000 books, including over 5,000 reference books, and subscribes to over 340 journals and other periodicals.

Science and Humanities building is an academic building that contains all science labs, a performance auditorium, and several music classrooms. Music lessons for 17 instruments and private voice are available for credit to all students, regardless of major.

The Regional Higher Education Center houses the extension centers of SUNY Plattsburgh, Empire State and Paul Smith's College. It also contains several classrooms.

Dormitories

New student housing was furnished in the Fall of 2013.

Student life

The Student Senate and the College Activity Board (CAB) provide a variety of activities and events including monthly movies.

Additionally, there are a number of clubs representing a variety of interests. Students can join:

[5]

Athletics

SUNY Adirondack is a member of the NJCAA Region 3 Mountain Valley Athletic Conference and requires students be enrolled full-time and maintain a GPA of 2.0 or higher. The following are inter-collegiate, competitive teams:

Teams in Mountain Valley Athletic Conference | Adirondack Community College - Queensbury, NY, Clinton Community College - Plattsburgh, NY, Columbia-Greene Community College - Hudson, NY, SUNY Delhi - Delhi, NY, Fulton-Montgomery Community College - Johnstown, NY, Herkimer County Community College - Herkimer, NY, Hudson Valley Community College - Troy, NY, Mohawk Valley Community College - Utica, NY, North Country Community College - Saranac Lake NY, Schenectady County Community College - Schenectady, NY

Associated people

Former faculty members

References

  1. 1 2 "SUNY Adirondack brand launches new era for local higher education". Campus News And Events. Queensbury, New York: Adirondack Community College. 2010-02-27. Retrieved 2010-04-12. External link in |work= (help)
  2. 1 2 "Fast Facts". About ACC. Queensbury, New York: Adirondack Community College. 2009. Retrieved 2010-04-12.
  3. "President's Welcome". SUNY Adirondack. Retrieved 2011-02-12.
  4. "ACC Foundation". SUNY Adirondack. Retrieved 2011-02-12.
  5. http://www.sunyacc.edu/studentlife/clubs
  6. "Adirondack Community College Home Page". 9-01-08. Retrieved 2008-09-01. Check date values in: |date= (help)
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