College of the Atlantic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Established: 1969
Type: Private
Endowment: $19,500,000
President: David Hales
Undergraduates: 300+
Postgraduates: 7
Location: Bar Harbor, Maine, USA
Campus: Rural
Avg. Class Size: 12
Website: www.coa.edu

The College of the Atlantic, founded in 1969, is an alternative liberal-arts college located on Mount Desert Island in Bar Harbor, Maine. It awards a bachelor's degree and a master's degree solely in the field of human ecology, though with a variety of emphases. The college is extremely small, with approximately 280 students and a full-time faculty of 25. Its curriculum emphasizes student-directed projects and community service, with an environmental core.

Contents

[edit] Curriculum

The school's curriculum is based on human ecology, and every freshman is required to take an introductory core course in human ecology during their first term. Other requirements include two courses in each focus area (Environmental Studies, Arts and Design, Human Studies), one quantitative reasoning course, one history course, and one writing course. The intention is for students to explore and consolidate ideas from different disciplines and to construct their own understanding of human ecology.

College of the Atlantic does not have departments and all faculty members consider themselves human ecologists in addition to their formal specialization. Currently, there are professors of anthropology, English, political science and peace studies, economics, ecology, biology, botany, environmental science, law, environmental studies, languages, philosophy, history, education, and music.

As a graduation requirement, each student must complete a final project in their last term of enrollment, in addition to a mandatory internship. Methods and content are decided by the student, and projects have included computer programs, scientific papers, ethnographic research, and compilations of music.

[edit] Students

Students come from 48 states and 40 foreign countries. College of the Atlantic has the second highest percentage of international students of any college in the country, having an international population of 17%. These students primarily graduate from United World Colleges and are awarded full tuition scholarships through the Shelby Davis Scholarship.

[edit] History

College of the Atlantic was started by Mount Desert Island residents that wanted to stabilize the island economy by forming a year-round institution bringing educational opportunities, jobs, activities and culture to the island during the seasons when tourist visitation was slim. First, the Acadia Peace College had been proposed, but the idea was quickly dropped and COA was granted temporary approval on June 23, 1969, by the Maine State Board of Education. The campus was purchased for $1 from the Oblate Fathers of Mary Immaculate Seminary, who used the site as a monastery.[citation needed]

[edit] Sustainability at COA

In 2004, COA was the first campus to make a multi-year commitment to be entirely powered by renewable energy, signing a 10-year contract with Endless Energy Corporation.[citation needed] In 2005 it was the first school to hold a zero-waste graduation. In October 2006, COA pledged to become carbon neutral, offsetting all of its carbon emissions, including those created by visiting students; they fulfilled the pledge in December 2007 by purchasing carbon offsets for their emissions through the Climate Trust of Oregon.[1]

New student housing will also be some of the most sustainable in the northeast.[citation needed]

[edit] Notable Faculty

  • William H. Drury Jr, author of Chance and Change

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Private college nation's first carbon-neutral campus from Associated Press via CNN

[edit] External links