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Florida State University

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Florida State University
Image:FSU seal.png
Motto Vires, artes, mores
(Latin: Strength, skill, customs)
Established 1851
Type Public
Endowment $630 million
President T. K. Wetherell
Faculty 1,677
Undergraduates 30,418
Postgraduates 7,926
Location Tallahassee, Florida
Campus 448.3 acres (1.88 km²)
Colors Garnet and Gold
Nickname Seminoles
Mascot Chief Osceola and Renegade
Website www.fsu.edu

Florida State University, also commonly referred to as FSU or Florida State, is the oldest continuous site of higher education in Florida. FSU is a comprehensive, research-intensive university founded in 1851 and located in Tallahassee, Florida. Its president is T. K. Wetherell. The university is composed of 17 colleges and institutes that offer more than 300 programs of study.

Contents

[edit] History

In 1851, the General Assembly of Florida passed an act to open two seminaries of learning, one to be located east of the Suwannee River and the other to the west of it. Tallahassee was not chosen as a site for a seminary until 1857 which was the original date of founding of the University. The University of Florida traces its founding back to 1853 and the beginning of the state's other seminary.

Florida State University - as it is known today - was officially created on May 15, 1947. The school had been an all-women's college since the Buckman Act of 1905. The transition to a co-educational university was caused by the influx of GI's returning from World War II in search of a college degree. The all-male University of Florida was extremely overcrowded so the Florida Legislature again reorganized higher education in the state and Florida State University was born.

[edit] Enrollment

Fall 2005 enrollment is 39,618 students. Women account for 56.7% of FSU's enrollment. Minorities made up 24.2% percent of total enrollment. 47.8% of the minority enrollment was Black, 38.6% Hispanic, 12.0% Asian, and 1.6% was American Indian. FSU's 2006 enrollment has now exceeded the 40,000 benchmark.

The Fall 2005 freshman class had a SAT mid-point of 1110 to 1250 with a 3.5 - 4.0 GPA. [1]

[edit] Notable programs

FSU's more notable programs include Business, Creative Writing, Criminology, Dance, Ecology, Education, Evolutionary Biology, Film, Hospitality, International Affairs, Information Technology, Meteorology, Music, Neuroscience, Oceanography, Physics, Political Science, Public Administration, Social Work, Sociology, Spanish and Portuguese, Statistics, Theatre, Traumatology, Urban and Regional Planning, Underwater Archaelogy, and Visual Art.

[edit] Academics

Florida State University has leading graduate, undergraduate, and professional programs that include Law and Medicine.

In the 2006 U.S. News & World Report of Best Colleges, Florida State was ranked 51st (from 54th in 2005) among all public research universities in the U.S, and is ranked 109th (up from 111 in 2005) among all national universities. Florida State was ranked higher than any Florida public university except the University of Florida.

[edit] Departments

Associates, Bachelors, Masters, Specialist's, Doctoral, and Professional degree programs are offered through:

  • College of Arts & Sciences
  • College of Business
  • College of Communication
  • College of Education
  • College of Engineering, jointly administered with Florida A&M University
  • College of Human Sciences
  • College of Law
  • College of Medicine
  • College of Social Sciences
  • College of Criminology & Criminal Justice
  • College of Florida State Film School|Motion Picture, Television & Recording Arts (Film School)
  • College of Information
  • College of Music
  • College of Social Work
  • College of Visual Arts, Theatre & Dance
  • School of Nursing

The School of Computational Science will begin admitting doctoral students in the Fall of 2006.

[edit] College of Arts and Sciences

The College of Arts and Sciences is the home of many academic (as opposed to professional) departments of the University, and is comprised of a variety of departments from English to Statistics. Several departments and programs have received particular acclaim.

The Department of Physics offers graduate programs that have been ranked amongst the best in the nation by U.S. News and World Report. Theoretical and experimental nuclear and particle physics are particularly strong areas. The Department has its own superconducting linear accelerator, and operates the main complex of Florida's only national lab -- the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory -- which is located near campus. John Robert Schrieffer, the Nobel Prize-winning theoretical condensed-matter physicist, is a member of the FSU physics faculty.

Also working in the field of materials and nanoscience at FSU is the Nobel laureate Sir Harry Kroto, the co-discoverer of the C-60 'buckyball', who is a member of FSU's Chemistry and Biochemistry Department. A new Chemistry building is currently under construction on the west side of campus; when complete, it will offer state-of-the-art facilities. Research in the Chemistry department currently spans fields ranging from analytical through organic, using advanced experimental techniques and equipment including advanced laser equipment and the 'Maglab' (the NHMFL).

Also well regarded in the College of Arts and Sciences are the departments of Meteorology (which offers extensive undergraduate and graduate meteorology programs, the largest in the Southeastern United States), English (which boasts one of the nation's top Creative Writing programs), Classics (which has comprehensive programs ranging from analysis of Roman literature to excavation of ancient ruins), Geography and Oceanography.

[edit] College of Business

The College of Business has consistently been ranked one of the Top 40 undergraduate business schools by U.S. News & World Report at 38th. Among public universities, it has been ranked in the Top 25 and has grown to be one of the nation's ten largest. The college is a recognized leader in graduating minority doctoral candidates. The college earned a fourth-place spot in the Black Issues' Top 100 for its success in awarding the doctorate in business to African Americans. In the Academy of Management Journal [2], the college's program in Management Information Systems was ranked 15th and is the highest ranked MIS program in the State of Florida.

[edit] College of Criminology and Criminal Justice

The College of Criminology and Criminal Justice[3] is the oldest program of its kind. It offers bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees. The College's graduate program emphasizes the importance of scientifically rigorous research that advances the knowledge of the discipline and informs public policy. The master's program prepares students for an administrative or research career in the criminal justice system and other related areas. The doctoral program trains individuals as critical scholars and prepares them for a career of teaching and research or for a higher-level research or administrative career in the criminal justice system.

Home to some of the nation's premier scholars in criminology, the College's faculty members lead the nation in funding for education and delinquency research, they conduct the most recognized research on fear and crime, they are known internationally for state-of-the-art law enforcement research, they are the most cited for national gun control research, and they are prominent scholars in the areas of self-control and crime and juvenile sentencing.

With $11 million in externally funded research projects, the College's Center for Criminology and Public Policy Research[4] conducts ground-breaking research that promotes evidence-based policy-making and practice at state and national levels. It also provides unique hands-on research opportunities for graduate students.

[edit] College of Information

The College of Information's programs in Information Science and Information Technology are consistently top-ranked programs in the nation and have held such rankings for many years in the U.S. News & World Report. The college is currently ranked 10th, the Services for Children and Youth specialization program ranked 1st, School Library Media program ranked 5nd, and the Information Systems program ranked 10th. The college has the largest on-line MLS program in the nation. The college recently added 5 tenured and 5 non-tenured positions to its faculty.

[The College website is http://ci.fsu.edu]

[edit] College of Law

The Florida State University College of Law has jumped to 53rd in the 2006 edition of the influential national rankings of law schools by U.S. News & World Report. The magazine's 2006 edition of America's Best Graduate Schools also ranks the College of Law as one of the most diverse in the country. Environmental Law Program Ranks 14th in Nation. The Law program achieved a higher passing rate on the Florida Bar than any other universities in the state in 2006.Hispanic Business magazine has ranked the College of Law among the top 10 law schools in the nation for Hispanics for the second consecutive year. Hispanics made up 9% of the school's 748-member student body and received 11% of the 205 law degrees awarded to the class of 2004.

[edit] College Of Medicine

The fully accredited College of Medicine is the first new M.D. program to be established in the United States since 1982. It is charting a new course for medical education with an emphasis on the use of interdisciplinary teams and emerging new technology. Created in June of 2000 by the Florida Legislature, its mission is educating physicians to serve the state's rural, geriatric, minority and other medically underserved populations. The medical school's regional campuses will be in Orlando, Pensacola, Sarasota, and Tallahassee with the Rural Track Medical Education Program serving the cities of Marianna and Chattahoochee in the Florida Panhandle.

[edit] College of Motion Picture, Television, and Recording Arts

See Florida State University Film School

[edit] College of Music

The College of Music has been a fully accredited member of the National Association of Schools of Music since 1930. It currently has a student body of 650 undergraduate and 350 graduate students.

[edit] College of Social Work

The School of Social Work is the oldest and most established in Florida. Degrees offered include the BSW, MSW, and PhD. The training and course of study offered is state of the art and reflects our commitment to community outreach and diversity. In U.S. News & World Report's 2001 Graduate Rankings, FSU Social Work ranked in the top 15 among public universities and 25th among public and private universities. The College maintains relationships with over 300 social service agencies through Florida and the Southeast, including 18 Veterans Administration agencies to educate students through field instruction. A limited number of students also complete internships abroad. Faculty members have national recognition attained through their scholarly contributions and their leadership positions in professional community associations.

[edit] College of Visual Arts, Theatre And Dance

The College of Visual Arts, Theatre And Dance is one of the leading comprehensive theatre training programs in the United States. U.S. News and World Report has consistently included FSU's graduate theatre programs in its top-tier rankings in the top-10, one of the few public university programs thus honored. The School is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Theatre and is a founding member of the University/Resident Theatre Association.

[edit] Computer Science

FSU's Computer Science program is a National Center of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance Education (CAE/IAE) by the National Security Agency. Florida State is the only university in Florida to achieve this status.

[edit] Dedman School of Hospitality

The Dedman School of Hospitality[5] is in the College of Business at FSU, and is located at Doak Campbell Stadium. Based on input from industry representatives, the hospitality management major's business component is what attracts companies to FSU students; as a result the school boasts a consistent 100% job placement record. The Dedman School of Hospitality also offers a major in Professional Golf Management, one of seventeen programs nationwide accredited by The Professional Golfers' Association of America (PGA), to prepare students to meet the challenges found in the world of professional golf. The state of Florida has more golf courses than any other state in the country and is the headquarters for the PGA, LPGA, PGA Tour, and National Golf Foundation and FSU has a long, distinguished history of graduating professional golfers and educating students for business and hospitality operations.

Many of FSU's academic programs consistently rank among the nation’s top twenty-five public universities, including programs in Chemistry, Creative Writing, Criminology, Dance, Ecology, Evolutionary Biology, Film, Meteorology, Oceanography, Physics, Political Science, Psychology, the Reubin O'D. Askew School of Public Administration and Policy, Statistics, Social Work, Sociology, and Traumatology. [6]

[edit] The Taxol story

A significant achievement at the university was chemistry professor and synthetic organic chemist, Robert A. Holton's synthesizing of Taxol on Dec. 9, 1993. The chemical has been used as an effective breast and ovarian cancer treatment.

Holton's and his Organic Chemistry team finished a race to develop a cheaper semisynthetic version. In 1993, Bristol Myers Squibb began marketing it. Just like other chemotherapy drugs, it had side effects, but it also prolonged lives, and in many cases, defeated cancer.

Before the drug company's exclusive license expired, Florida State made $350 million in royalties, vaulting the school into the ranks of Columbia University and California's state universities in research profits.

[edit] Traditions

The school's colors are garnet and gold. The colors of garnet and gold are a merging of the University's past. In 1904 and 1905 the Florida State College won football championships wearing purple and gold uniforms. When FSC became Florida State College for Women in 1905, the football team was forced to attend an all male school in Gainesville, thus marking the beginning of the football program at the University of Florida. The following year, the FSCW student body selected crimson as the official school color. The administration in 1905 took crimson and combined it with the recognizable purple of the championship football teams to achieve the color garnet. The now famous garnet and gold colors were first used on an FSU uniform in a 14-6 loss to Stetson on October 18, 1947. [7]

FSU is also the home of the esteemed Marching Chiefs, the largest collegiate marching band in the world. The Marching Chiefs are the force behind the famous, yet controversial "War Chant".

[edit] School songs

Alma Mater - High Over Towering Pines: High over towering pines our voices swell, Praising those Gothic spires, we love so well. Here sons and daughters stand, faithful and true, Hailing our alma mater, F.S.U.

Hymn to the Garnet and Gold: Here's a hymn to the Garnet and the Gold, ringing to the sky. Here's a song for the men and women bold. Sing with heads held high. Striving ere to seek to know, Fight for victory. Alma Mater, this our song to you. Echoes, F.S.U.

Image:Tommywright.jpg
Left Thomas Wright, Right the FSU Symbol that was based off Mr. Writes profile.

FSU Fight Song:[8] You've got to fight, fight, fight, for FSU, You've got to scalp 'em Seminoles, You've got to win, win, win, win this game, And roll on down to make those goals, For FSU is on the warpath now, and at the battle's end she's great. So fight, fight, fight, fight for victory, the Seminoles of Florida State!

The fight song was written by Thomas Wright, who owns the rights to the song. Mr. Wright allows FSU to use the Fight Song every year in exchange for 2 season tickets. [9]

According to Mr. Wright, the FSU symbol was based off his profile in honor of this song that he wrote.

[edit] Athletics

The school has an athletic department with programs for men and for women. The men's program consists of as baseball, basketball, cross country running, football, golf, swimming, tennis, and track & field. The women's program consists of basketball, cross country running, golf, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, track & field, and volleyball.

The school's athletic teams are called the Seminoles. Most FSU community members respectfully refer to the Seminole as the school "symbol"--no longer a "mascot". This Native American name is used with official sanction of the Seminole Tribe of Florida, Inc. They participate in the NCAA's Division I (Division I-A for football) and in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Their traditional rivals include the Gators of the University of Florida and the Hurricanes of the University of Miami.

Under head coach Bobby Bowden, currently in his 31st year, the Seminole football team became one of the nation's perennial powers, greatly expanding the tradition that had been virtually non-existent for the 22 years of football before Bowden. The Seminoles played in five national championship games between 1993 and 2001, and have claimed the championship twice, in 1993 and 1999. The FSU football team was one of the most successful teams in college football during the 1990s, boasting an 89% winning percentage. FSU also set an NCAA record for most consecutive Top 5 finishes in the AP football poll - the Seminoles received placement 14 years in a row, from 1987 to 2000. The Seminoles were the first college football team in history to go wire-to-wire (ranked first place from preseason to postseason) since the AP began releasing preseason rankings in 1936.

In 2005, FSU's men's football team won the Atlantic Coast Conference championship, earning them a berth in the 2006 FedEx Orange Bowl, in which the #22 ranked Seminoles lost 26-23 in triple overtime against #3 ranked Penn State University. FSU head coach Bobby Bowden is the winningest Division I college football coach in the NCAA with 360 career wins, followed by Penn State's Joe Paterno with 354. FSU football is well-known for introducing great talent into the NFL, including Deion Sanders, Terrell Buckley, Derrick Brooks, Sebastian Janikowski, Walter Jones, Corey Simon, Anquan Boldin, Javon Walker, Warrick Dunn, Peter Boulware, Laverneus Coles, Brad Johnson, Samari Rolle, and many other players in recent history.

FSU's football program has been on rough times through the 2001 - 2006 seasons. Many FSU loyalists lay blame on Jeff Bowden (son of Bobby Bowden) who has stated an intent to resign at the end of the 2006 season. Finishing 6-6 heading into the 2006 bowl season, FSU ended their season with a 21-14 defeat at the hands of the University of Florida (11-1 prior to SEC Championship) on November 25, 2006. The recent defeat extends the current UF win streak over FSU to 3 wins (1 under Ron Zook, and 2 under current coach -- Urban Meyer).

In 2005, FSU's men's track and field team won the Atlantic Coast Conference championship, the NCAA East Regional championship and the NCAA National Championship. Head Coach Bob Braman and Associate Head Coach Harlis Meaders helped lead individual champions in the 200 m (Walter Dix), the triple jump (Raqeef Curry), and the shot put (Garrett Johnson). Individual runners-up were Walter Dix in the 100 m, Ricardo Chambers in the 400 m, and Tom Lancashire in the 1500 m. Others scoring points in the National Championship were Michael Ray Garvin in the 200 m (8th), Andrew Lemoncello in the 3000 m steeplechase (4th), Raqeef Curry in the long jump (6th), and Garrett Johnson in the discus (5th).

[edit] Facilities

  • Westcott Building
  • WFSU - FSU's Public Broadcast Center
  • WVFS
  • FSU is home to a pair of cutting edge nuclear resonance magnets that are used for experimental physics research as well as for developing cures for cancer and neurological disorders. The National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (NHMFL), or "Mag Lab", is one of only nine such facilities in the world.
  • Also notable is FSU's Antarctic Research Facility, the largest repository of Antarctic sedimentary core samples in the world.

For a listing of athletic facilities please see Florida State University Seminoles.

[edit] Past Presidents

[edit] Notable Faculty

[edit] Nobel Prize

Sir Harold Kroto, Chemistry (1996)

[edit] Pulitzer Prize

  • Robert Olen Butler, Fiction
  • Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, Music

[edit] Guggenheim Fellowship

  • Robert Olen Butler, English
  • Donald L.D. Caspar, Biological Science
  • Kathleen M. Erndl, Religion
  • Richard L. Greaves, History
  • Thomas Joiner, Psychology
  • Michael Kasha, Physical Chemistry
  • John Kelsay, Religion
  • David Kirby, English
  • Bruno Linder, Chemistry
  • Dale A. Olsen, Music
  • Jill Quadagno, Sociology
  • Michael Ruse, Philosophy
  • Raymond K. Sheline, Chemistry and Physics
  • Melvin Ernest Stern, Oceanography
  • Gary Taylor, English
  • Mark Wingate, Music
  • Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, Music
  • National Academy of Sciences
  • Donald L.D. Caspar, Biophysics
  • Lev P. Gorkov, Physics
  • Michael Kasha, Chemistry 1971
  • Sir Harold Kroto, Chemistry
  • Melvin E. Stern, Geophysics

[edit] National Academy of Engineering

  • David C. Larbalestier, Superconducting Materials
  • Simon Ostrach, Space Science/Mechanical Engineering
  • American Academy of Arts & Sciences
  • Donald Caspar, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
  • Frances C. James, Evolutionary and Population Biology and Ecology
  • Michael Kasha, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
  • Melvin Stern, Astronomy and Earth Sciences
  • Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, Visual and Performing Arts

[edit] ISI Highly Cited Faculty

  • Roy F. Baumeister, Psychology/Psychiatry
  • Sir Harold Kroto, Chemistry
  • Werner Herz, Chemistry
  • Shridhar Sathe, Agricultural Sciences
  • R. Jay Turner, Social Sciences
  • Alan Zindler, Geosciences

[edit] Other Notable Faculty

  • John Dorsey, 2006 Award in Chromatography from the American Chemical Society
  • Alan Marshall, Society for Applied Spectroscopy Fellow (2004)
  • Doron Nof, Fridtjof Nansen Medal
  • Donald Robson, Tom W. Bonner Prize of the American Physical Society (1972)
  • Per Arne Rikvold, 2004 Foreign member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters
  • Pedro Schlottmann, 1982-1986 Heisenberg Fellowship of the DFG (German Science Foundation)
  • Stephan von Molnár, 1986 Alexander von Humbolt Senior U.S. Scientist Award
  • Kun Yang, 2003 Outstanding Young Researcher Award of the Overseas Chinese Physics Association
  • Mark W. Horner, 2006 NSF award winner
  • Frederick L. Jenks, 2002 TESOL Heinle & Heinle Excellence in Teaching Award

[edit] Notable alumni

[edit] Athletics

Please see: Notable Florida State Seminoles

[edit] Education

[edit] Entertainment

[edit] Government

[edit] Meteorology

[edit] Military

[edit] Social sciences

[edit] Space exploration


More distinguished/notable alumni can be found at the FSU Alumni Association, [11].

[edit] Nobel Laureates on staff

[edit] Pulitzer Prize winners on staff

[edit] Rhodes Scholars

[edit] FSView & Florida Flambeau

The FSView & Florida Flambeau is the campus paper of Florida State University in Tallahassee, Florida. The paper, as expected, focuses mainly on events that occur in and around the campus. Most national news is relegated to a "News Briefs" section on the front page, below the fold. The paper runs once per week during the summer, and twice per week during the school year. The sections include News, Sports, A&E, Lifestyles, Classifieds, and Viewpoints (which includes an editorial cartoon, "Ink Globally, Act Locally" by cartoonist Mandy Newham). Special sections include NightLife, Bon Apetite, and Dining Guide.

After changing hands three times in 13 years, the FSView was sold to the Tallahassee Democrat in late July 2006, making it part of the Gannett chain.

The FSView's production staff is also responsible for Edge Magazine. Edge Magazine consists of articles geared towards students, advertisements for local establishments, and a "Tally Girl" model (a female Tallahassee resident often scantily clad).

[edit] External links



de:Florida State University

es:Universidad Estatal de Florida ja:フロリダ州立大学

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