Agnes Scott College Liberal Arts College in Decatur Georgia

Women'southward liberal arts college in Decatur, Georgia

Agnes Scott College
Agnes Scott College seal.svg

One-time names

Decatur Female person Seminary
Agnes Scott Institute
Motto In Fide Vestra Virtutem In Virtute Autem Scientiam

Motto in English language

Add to your faith virtue and to your virtue cognition
Type Private women's liberal arts college
Established 1889; 133 years ago  (1889)

Religious affiliation

Presbyterian

Bookish affiliations

APCU
Annapolis Group
Oberlin Grouping
CIC
WCC
Infinite-grant
Endowment $204.8 million (2020)[ane] [ii]
President Leocadia I. Zak

Bookish staff

117[3]
Undergraduates 1,019 (Fall 2021)[iv]
Location

Decatur

,

Georgia

,

United States

Campus Suburban; full 91 acres (37 ha)
Athletic complex 7 acres (2.8 ha)
Bradley Observatory and Delafield Planetarium 1.5 acres (0.61 ha)
Newspaper Agnes Scott Profile
Colors Imperial & white
Nickname Scotties

Sporting affiliations

NCAA Segmentation III – United states South
Mascot Scottish Terrier
Website world wide web.agnesscott.edu
Agnes Scott College logo.svg

Agnes Scott College Mission Statement

Agnes Scott College (Agnes Scott) is a private women'south liberal arts higher in Decatur, Georgia. The college enrolls approximately ane,000 undergraduate and graduate students. Agnes Scott is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church (USA) and is considered one of the Seven Sisters of the S.[5] It also offers co-educational graduate programs.

History [edit]

The college was founded in 1889 as Decatur Female person Seminary past Presbyterian minister Frank Henry Gaines. In 1890, the proper noun was inverse to Agnes Scott Constitute to honor the mother of the college'due south primary benefactor, Col. George Washington Scott. The name was changed once again to Agnes Scott Higher in 1906, and remains today a women'south higher.

Agnes Scott is considered the first college didactics institution in the state of Georgia to receive regional accreditation.[six] [7] The ninth and electric current president since July 2018 is Leocadia I. Zak, who previously worked as director of the U.S. Merchandise and Evolution Agency (USTDA).

On July 27, 1994, the campus was listed on the National Annals of Historic Places equally part of the South Candler Street-Agnes Scott Higher Celebrated District.[eight] The historic district boundaries are Due east College Ave., South McDonough St., S. Candler St., E Loma St. and East Davis St. Information technology includes the entire campus, as well as historic homes adjacent to the campus. The campus is also designated by the City of Decatur every bit a historic district.

Campus [edit]

Downtown Decatur [edit]

Agnes Scott College is located within walking distance of downtown Decatur. A MARTA subway station, located in downtown Decatur, allows students to travel to Atlanta.

Agnes Scott (Main) Hall, the oldest building on campus, was built in 1891 and one time housed the entire school. This is documented in the history of Agnes Scott by Dr. McNair entitled Lest Nosotros Forget published in 1983.

Agnes Scott occupies more than xc acres (360,000 m2) in Decatur. The college also owns the Avery Glen apartments as well as more than a dozen houses in the surrounding neighborhoods housing faculty, staff, and students. There are also six dedicated undergraduate dormitories located on campus.

The Bradley Observatory at Agnes Scott houses the Beck Telescope, a 30-inch (760 mm) Cassegrain reflector, as well equally a planetarium with lxx-seat capacity and a radio telescope. Recently Agnes Scott College and the Georgia Tech Inquiry Plant have collaborated on a projection that added a LIDAR facility to the observatory.[ix]

The college's science building contains a three-story rendering of office of the nucleotide sequence from Agnes Scott's mitochrondrial Deoxyribonucleic acid. The Dna came from a blood sample of an ASC alumna who is a directly descendant of the college'southward namesake.

American poet Robert Frost was an annual visitor at Agnes Scott from 1945 to his death in 1962.[10] During his visits, he would read poetry in Presser Hall. A statue of the poet sculpted by George W. Lundeen sits in the alumnae gardens. A collection of Robert Frost'southward poetry and letters can be viewed at McCain Library.

The campus has been a filming location for many productions.[11] Complaints by students and alumni nearly disrespectful production crews and about sexist content in nonetheless rental-income-generating projects such as Route Trip: Beer Pong led to a new policy that requires schoolhouse review of potential projects, responsibility training for crew members and extras, and at least one educational opportunity for students.[12]

Sustainability [edit]

Agnes Scott has committed to becoming a carbon-neutral establish by the higher's 150th anniversary in 2039 and has taken steps such as partnering with the Clean Air Campaign to reduce its bear upon on the local environment.[13]

As of 2015[update], the college has five solar arrays, four of which are part of Georgia Power'due south Advanced Solar Initiative. The fifth array is on the rooftop of the Bradley Observatory and is also used for student research. The renovation of Campbell Hall into a mixed use residence hall, learning eye, and office infinite was ended in 2014 and included installation of a hydro-geothermic HVAC system.[14]

The college hosts a Zipcar.[15]

Academics [edit]

Agnes Scott offers 34 undergraduate majors and 9 graduate and mail service-baccalaureate programs.[16] The undergraduate core curriculum SUMMIT focuses on leadership development, global learning, and digital literacy.[17] In 2019, Agnes Scott received the Heiskell Honour for Scholars every bit Drivers of Innovation for its Peak curriculum. Undergraduate students are able to cross-register in other ARCHE member institutions.[18]

Library [edit]

The library at Agnes Scott Higher was an original Carnegie library built in 1910. The edifice was demolished in 1986.

A new library was authorized by the Board of Trustees in 1935 and opened in the autumn of 1936. This new library was called the "Carnegie Library" and the original library was turned into a student center. It was renamed in 1951 for James McCain, on the occasion of his retirement every bit the 2nd President of the college. In 1974-1977 and again in 1999-2000, the library underwent renovations.[19]

Pupil life [edit]

Diversity [edit]

The 2020-2021 ethnicities of the undergraduate student trunk were: 34.8% African American/Black, 31% White, 14.7% Hispanic, 6.2% Asian, 3.four% non-resident International, six.9% two or more races, and ii.4% other or unknown. 63.four% of undergraduates that year were from Georgia.[20]

Housing [edit]

Not-driver students are expected to alive in on-campus housing for all four years as an undergraduate at Agnes Scott College.[21] At that place are six resident halls situated around the Northern edge of the campus: Winship, Walters, Inman, Rebekah, Campbell and Agnes Scott Hall (nicknamed "Main"). Agnes Scott also owns off-campus apartments one block from campus called Avery Glen. Winship and Walters are traditionally reserved for get-go-year students. Upperclasswomen participate in a numeric room option process, where students choose to live in loft-style dorms, belfry rooms, or apartments with their friends. Single rooms are bachelor in Inman, Main and Rebekah, while triple rooms are available exclusively in Primary.[22] Beginning in August 2014, Campbell offers students suite-style rooms for 4, with two students per room and a shared restroom.[23] Hopkins Hall was retired as a residence hall afterward the 2014–2015 academic year due to increased need for office space on campus.

Campus organizations [edit]

At that place are over 50 pupil organizations on campus.[24] Sororities are prohibited.[25]

Publications [edit]

The Silhouette is the yearbook published by the students of Agnes Scott Higher. All students are invited to join the staff.

Aurora is the Agnes Scott literary magazine. The magazine is published once a yr and includes student poetry, prose, and artwork. The magazine has as well considered publishing musical compositions.

Psychobabble is the educatee-run newsletter of Agnes Scott's Section of Psychology. The newsletter'due south goal is to create an informed and united community within the subject by promoting coordinated activities and facilitating communication and relationships amongst faculty, students and staff. Psychobabble gives psychology majors and minors an opportunity to involve themselves in their involvement and form an identity every bit undergraduate students, while benefiting the department every bit a whole and supporting the educational feel of their peers.

The Profile, the higher's independent student paper, is published at the end of every semester during the academic year. All students interested in writing, photography, editing, layout and design, cartoons, advert or circulation are encouraged to bring together the staff.

Athletics [edit]

Agnes Scott is a fellow member of the National Collegiate Able-bodied Association Division III which fields six sports teams including basketball game, cross country, soccer, softball, lawn tennis, and volleyball. All teams compete in the USA Southward Athletic Conference (USA South). The lawn tennis team is arguably Agnes Scott'due south most successful team, having won the conference championship and avant-garde to the NCAA national tournament half dozen times: 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2015. The newest team is cross country, which was restarted in 2014 after beingness cut during the 2008 schoolhouse yr.

Agnes Scott uses the tune of the Notre Dame Victory March as their fight song and to rally the students together during the annual Black True cat Spirit Week. The Agnes Scott mascot is a "Scottie", a Scottish Terrier named Victory.

Traditions [edit]

Source:[26]

Mascot and School Colors
The schoolhouse colors of Agnes Scott are regal and white and the school mascot is the Scottie, a Scottish Terrier.

Form Colors
Each incoming course is assigned a class color—reddish, yellow, blue, or greenish—and votes on a class mascot that correlates with that color. The colors and mascots are intended to establish course pride, particularly during ane calendar week of activities called Black Cat.

Black Cat
Blackness Cat occurs every fall and is Agnes Scott's version of homecoming week. The week includes a number of class-focused games and activities and culminates in a serial of skits written, directed, and performed past the junior form. Each class has the opportunity to showcase its mascot that features the class color. If at that place is dissatisfaction with a class mascot, the class is given the choice to revote and choose a different mascot their second year.

Pestle Lath
A senior-only social and philanthropic order created to lampoon the campus chapter of the bookish honor club Mortar Board. Whereas Mortar Board has strict GPA and extracurricular prerequisites for membership, Pestle Board's only entry requirement is the completion of a humorous initiation process known every bit "capping" that pairs junior "cappees" with graduating senior "cappers". Capping likewise involves Pestle Board's largest philanthropic fundraiser of the yr.[ citation needed ]

Form Ring
The form ring is given to students during the spring of their sophomore twelvemonth in a special ceremony. The ring is very distinctive with a rectangular engraved black onyx stone inscribed ASC and has remained essentially the same since its introduction in the 1920s with choices but in metallic (white or xanthous gold) and antiquing. Alumnae who habiliment the ring are recognizable to one another or those familiar with the college'due south tradition. Students and Alumnae alike dub themselves the "Blackness Ring Mafia".

Honor Code
The honor code is held in loftier regard amidst Agnes Scott students and kinesthesia. At the beginning of every bookish yr, new students must sign the honor code and recite a pledge promising to uphold the high bookish and social standards of the institution.

As a member of the student body of Agnes Scott College, I consider myself bound past honor to develop and uphold high standards of honesty and beliefs; to strive for full intellectual and moral stature; to realize my social and academic responsibility in the community. To achieve these ideals, I exercise therefore accept this Honor System as my way of life.

Students self govern and ask violators of the code to turn themselves in to Honor Court. The trust the Honour Code builds betwixt faculty and students allows for students to have self scheduled, unproctored, exams.

Senior Investiture
Senior Investiture is one of the college's most cherished traditions. During the investiture anniversary in the autumn of students' senior year, each student is capped with an bookish mortar board as a symbol of her senior status at the higher by the Dean.

Bell Ringers
Seniors at Agnes Scott traditionally band the bell in Agnes Scott Hall's bell tower upon acceptance to graduate schoolhouse or a chore offer. This tradition dates from the early on 1990s later the tower caused its bell during the administration of President Ruth Schmidt. Students who ring the bell sign their names on the walls of the tower.

Alumnae Pond
Tradition dictates that students who get engaged are thrown into the alumnae pond past their classmates.

Rankings [edit]

Academic rankings
Liberal arts colleges
U.Southward. News & World Written report [27] 66
National
Forbes [28] 427

Agnes Scott was named as one of the Colleges That Alter Lives (CTCL).[29]

U.S. News & Earth Written report 'south 2022 rankings include:[xxx]

  • No. one in Most Innovative Schools (National Liberal Arts Colleges)
  • No. 2 in Best Undergraduate Teaching (National Liberal Arts Colleges)
  • No. 40 in Best Value Schools (National Liberal Arts Colleges)
  • No. 66 amidst National Liberal Arts Colleges

Princeton Review's 2022 rankings include:[31]

  • The All-time 387 Colleges
  • No. 20 for Best Schools for Internships (Private Schools)
  • No. seven for All-time Alumni Network (Private Schools)
  • No. 8 for All-time Schools Making an Impact (Private Schools)
  • No. 25 for Top Green Colleges

Notable alumnae [edit]

  • Martha Bailey '97, professor of Economics and Scholar of how access to contraception has shaped women's lives[32]
  • Tommie Dora Barker, 1909, public librarian and founding dean of Emory Library School[33]
  • Margaret Booth (Agnes Scott Institute, d.), educational and cultural mentor for the Montgomery, Alabama expanse; Inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame posthumously in 1999
  • Mary Brown Bullock '66, president emerita and only alumna to serve as president of the college[34]
  • Jordan Casteel, '11, award-winning figure painter[35]
  • Goudyloch E. Dyer '38, Illinois land representative[36]
  • Margot Gayle '31x, American celebrated preservationist and writer who helped save the Victorian cast-fe architecture in New York City'southward SoHo district[ citation needed ]
  • Ivylyn Girardeau 1922, medical missionary in India and Islamic republic of pakistan[37]
  • Mary Norton Kratt, '58, writer of Charlotte history and Southern novels.
  • Kay Krill '77, president and chief executive officer of ANN INC., parent company of Ann Taylor and LOFT[38]
  • Anne Harris, '91 14th president of Grinnell College, PhD from the University of Chicago and medieval fine art historian[39]
  • Bertha "B" Holt '38 (d.), former North Carolina State Representative and children's rights abet
  • Anna Colquitt Hunter, founder of Historic Savannah Foundation
  • Michelle Malone '90x, musician
  • Catherine Marshall '36, author of the novel Christy, later on fabricated into a Tv set serial and A Man Called Peter
  • Joanna Cook Moore, actress and mother of Tatum O'Neal
  • Wasfia Nazreen, 2006, Bangladeshi mountaineer, activist, and writer
  • Jennifer Nettles '97, lead vocalizer of the AMA and Grammy award-winning country music band Sugarland
  • Marsha Norman '69, playwright[40]
  • Frances Freeborn Pauley '27, civil rights activist
  • Agnes White Sanford 1919, author of The Healing Light
  • Saycon Sengbloh '00,[41] extra and singer[42]
  • Martha Priscilla Shaw, mayor of Sumter, South Carolina (1952–1956), first female person mayor in Due south Carolina[43]
  • Cornelia Strong, 1901 (Agnes Scott Institute), professor, mathematician, and astronomer[44]
  • Jean H. Toal '65, Principal Justice of the Due south Carolina Supreme Courtroom
  • Leila Ross Wilburn 1904, architect[45]
  • Anna Irwin Immature 1910 (Agnes Scott Institute, d.), professor of mathematics, physics and astronomy[46]

References [edit]

  1. ^ As of June xxx, 2020. U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2020 Endowment Market place Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY19 to FY20 (Study). National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA. February 19, 2021. Retrieved February xx, 2021.
  2. ^ https://www.agnesscott.edu/most/at-a-glance/index.html/
  3. ^ "Common Information Set 2015–2016" (PDF). Agnes Scott Higher.
  4. ^ "Enrollment History".
  5. ^ Agnes Scott College. [ane], Retrieved on May 15, 2013.
  6. ^ "Agnes Scott Higher". Liberal Arts Colleges . Retrieved July 26, 2015.
  7. ^ "Fellow member List" (PDF). Southern Association of Colleges. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 22, 2011. Retrieved July 26, 2015.
  8. ^ "[2]" National Register of Celebrated Places: DeKalb County Retrieved: August 18, 2008.
  9. ^ Lidar Projects at GTRI, Georgia Tech Research Institute, archived from the original on September 29, 2011, retrieved June 15, 2010
  10. ^ "Agnes Scott Higher – Previous Guest Writers". www.agnesscott.edu . Retrieved December v, 2016.
  11. ^ "Filming Location Matching "Agnes Scott Higher - 141 E. College Artery, Decatur, Georgia, USA" (Sorted past Popularity Ascending)". IMDb . Retrieved Feb 3, 2020.
  12. ^ Gumbrecht, Jamie (June 15, 2009). "Spotlight non e'er glamorous at film-happy Agnes Scott". Atlanta Journal-Constitution . Retrieved Feb three, 2020.
  13. ^ New grant boosts Agnes Scott dark-green initiatives, Agnes Scott College, January xi, 2010, retrieved Feb 22, 2010
  14. ^ "Renewable Energy on Campus". Agnes Scott College. Agnes Scott Higher. Retrieved July 26, 2015.
  15. ^ "Zipcar". Agnes Scott Higher . Retrieved July 26, 2015.
  16. ^ "Most Us". Agnes Scott College website . Retrieved October 3, 2021.
  17. ^ "Four-Year Experience". Agnes Scott College website . Retrieved Oct three, 2021.
  18. ^ "Cross-Registration". Agnes Scott Higher website . Retrieved October 3, 2021.
  19. ^ "About the Library". Agnes Scott College website . Retrieved October 3, 2021.
  20. ^ "Enrollment History". Agnes Scott Higher website . Retrieved October 3, 2021.
  21. ^ Agnes Scott College Housing. [3], Retrieved on May fifteen, 2013
  22. ^ "Agnes Scott Higher – Primary Hall". Retrieved February 17, 2016.
  23. ^ "Agnes Scott College – Campbell Hall". Retrieved February 17, 2016.
  24. ^ "Agnes Scott College – Clubs and Organizations". world wide web.agnesscott.edu . Retrieved December 6, 2016.
  25. ^ "Agnes Scott College – Clubs and Organizations". www.agnesscott.edu . Retrieved Dec 6, 2016.
  26. ^ "Agnes Scott Traditions". Agnes Scott College website . Retrieved Oct iii, 2021.
  27. ^ "All-time Colleges 2021: National Liberal Arts Colleges". U.South. News & Earth Report . Retrieved September 24, 2020.
  28. ^ "America'due south Top Colleges 2021". Forbes . Retrieved September 9, 2021.
  29. ^ "College Profiles – Colleges That Change Lives". Retrieved October 3, 2021.
  30. ^ "Agnes Scott Higher Rankings". U.S. News. Archived from the original on May 19, 2017.
  31. ^ "Agnes Scott College - the Princeton Review College Rankings & Reviews".
  32. ^ "Martha J. Bailey Resume" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on Oct iii, 2021.
  33. ^ "Tommie Dora Barker | History and Traditions | Emory Academy". emoryhistory.emory.edu . Retrieved October 3, 2021.
  34. ^ "Agnes Scott College - Past Presidents". www.agnesscott.edu . Retrieved Oct 3, 2021.
  35. ^ "CV". Hashemite kingdom of jordan Casteel . Retrieved Apr 25, 2018.
  36. ^ 'Illinois Blue Volume 1979-1980,' biographical sketch of Goudyloch E. Dyer, pg. 149
  37. ^ Agnes Scott College (1928). Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly [1927-1928]. McCain Library Agnes Scott College. Agnes Scott College.
  38. ^ "Agnes Scott College – Kay Krill, President and CEO of ANN INC., Alum to Speak at Commencement". Agnes Scott College website . Retrieved February 17, 2016.
  39. ^ "Anne F. Harris Named Grinnell's 14th President | Grinnell College".
  40. ^ "Marsha Norman". July 20, 2008. Archived from the original on July 20, 2008. Retrieved October 26, 2021.
  41. ^ "Agnes Scott Fact Sheet" (PDF). www.agnesscott.edu. 2010.
  42. ^ "Saycon Sengbloh". IMDb . Retrieved August 3, 2017.
  43. ^ "Martha Priscilla Shaw Collection". Sumter County Museum. March 1999. Archived from the original on July 17, 2008. Retrieved November 21, 2009.
  44. ^ O'Hara, Robert James (1959-). "Biographical Sketch of Cornelia Strong by Elizabeth Ann Bowles, 1967". collegiateway.org . Retrieved Oct 26, 2021.
  45. ^ Craig, Robert M. (July 31, 2002). "Leila Ross Wilburn (1885–1967)". New Georgia Encyclopedia (18 September 2017 ed.). Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  46. ^ "Anna Irwin Young". www.agnesscott.edu . Retrieved October three, 2021.

Further reading [edit]

  • Earnshaw, Rebecca Lee. Students at Agnes Scott College During the 1930s. Decatur, GA: Agnes Scott College, 1988.
  • McNair, Walter Edward. Lest We Forget: An Account of Agnes Scott College. Decatur, GA: Agnes Scott College, 1983.
  • Noble, Betty Pope Scott. The Story of George Washington Scott, 1829–1903: A Family unit Memoir. Decatur, GA: Agnes Scott Higher, 2002.
  • Pope, Loren. "Agnes Scott College." In Colleges That Modify Lives. New York: Penguin, 2000.
  • Sayrs, Chiliad. Lee. A Full and Rich Mensurate: 100 Years of Educating Women at Agnes Scott Higher, 1889–1989. Atlanta, GA: Susan Hunter, Inc., 1990.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • National Register of Historic Places: South Candler Street—Agnes Scott College Celebrated Commune

Coordinates: 33°46′13″Northward 84°17′36″W  /  33.77016°N 84.29325°Due west  / 33.77016; -84.29325

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agnes_Scott_College

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