|
The Colleges
Cowell College | Stevenson
College | Crown College | Merrill
College | Porter College | Kresge
College | Oakes College | College
Eight | College Nine | College
Ten
The University of California,Santa Cruz is a collegiate university. All undergraduate students and most faculty are affiliated with one of the colleges, their home within the larger university. All the colleges are committed to fostering a nurturing and academically thriving environment for students of all backgrounds. Each college strives to promote the attributes of a diverse and multicultural community in its own unique way. In order of founding, the colleges are Cowell, Stevenson, Crown, Merrill, Porter, Kresge, Oakes, College Eight, College Nine, and College Ten.
Self-contained and architecturally distinct, each college is a relatively small community of 30 to 110 faculty members and between 1,200 and 1,600 students, about half of whom live on campus. Each college has its own housing, academic, and recreational facilities, and each is an integral part of the larger campus. The colleges have their own academic emphases and cultural traditions, although each seeks faculty and students from a variety of disciplines to foster broad intellectual interests. The colleges play a primary role in academic advising and are the center of student life. Students graduate from their college. At the same time, all university academic programs, resources, and student services are open to students of every college.
The information students need to rank their college preferences can come from a variety of sources—personal acquaintance, a campus visit, literature available from the colleges, and the descriptions in this section of the catalog. Entering students are asked to list several colleges in order of preference; whenever possible, students are assigned to the college of their choice.
Similarities and Differences
Each college is residential and able to house close to half of its students. Most frosh
choose to live on campus, as do a number of sophomores, juniors, and seniors. The particular style of housing varies among the colleges, ranging from fairly traditional residence halls, with a mix of single, double, and triple rooms, to apartment-style housing, where students live together in small groups and may do some of their own cooking. Faculty, staff, or graduate students, along with undergraduate resident assistants, reside in college housing units.
The faculty, or fellows, of each college come from a variety of academic disciplines. Some of the colleges have faculty from nearly all the liberal arts and sciences, while the faculty in other colleges are more concentrated in particular disciplinary interests. Many faculty have their offices in the colleges.
Each college offers its own distinctive academic program for entering frosh. Taught in the college during the fall quarter, the required course or seminar provides a significant bridge between academic and residential life, since all frosh, regardless of major, will be in the course, and most will be in residence as well. Stevenson’s core course extends over two quarters, while the other colleges offer one-quarter courses. College core course requirements for transfer students vary (see the College
Requirements section for more information). The colleges also offer selected courses in their area of interdisciplinary emphasis and host events and speakers that enhance this focus.
All the colleges provide academic advising and academic and general campus orientations to help you plan your academic program. In addition, each college has academic preceptors who can provide advice on academic matters. (See Advising: From
Course Selection to Careers for further information on academic
advising.) Psychological and personal counseling is also available in each college, and many colleges have well-developed peer advising and tutoring.
The colleges differ in architecture; each was planned by a different architect, who was
encouraged to convey the distinct personality of that college through the design of its buildings and their placement in the natural environment. Above all, the colleges differ in subtle ways having to do with their intellectual and social traditions, the different designs of their student governments, and the predominant interests of their students and faculty.
Changing Colleges
Most students, having affiliated with a particular college, develop friendships and intellectual attachments there, and they remain members of that college throughout their undergraduate years. Some students find that changing academic interests draw them to a different college. During the specified filing period, students may request a change of college with the approval of both college administrations.
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Cowell College
Cowell College inaugurated the Santa Cruz campus when it opened with a pioneer class of 600 students in 1965. The founding faculty shaped an educational program that challenged and enriched students through wide-ranging inquiry and disciplined study. Today, Cowell has nearly 1,500 affiliated students and 90 faculty fellows. Its motto—The Pursuit of Truth in the Company of Friends— expresses a continuing commitment to create a serious academic environment within a humane and broadly inclusive community. The college is named for the S. H. Cowell Foundation, which endowed the college at its founding.
Academic Emphases
The academic theme of the college encourages students to pursue their general and disciplinary study with attention to the values of liberal arts education: understanding one’s individual perspective by exploration of its historical background and world context. Students affiliated with the college pursue majors from all departments on campus.
The faculty fellows affiliated with the college represent all academic divisions (arts, engineering, humanities, physical and biological sciences, and social sciences). The faculty
fellows guide the college academic programs and serve as academic mentors to the students, supplementing the advising provided by the college academic advisers and departmental advising.
The Cowell core course is required of all first-year students and many transfer students during the first fall quarter they spend at UCSC. Students admitted as lower-division transfer students who prior to enrolling have completed at least one UC-transferable college English composition course with a minimum grade of C (2.0) or better are exempt from the core course requirement. The core course (Cowell
80), taught in small seminar sections, seeks to develop critical reading, analytical writing, and seminar discussion skills by reading a selection of classic and contemporary texts.
The college academic buildings house humanities faculty, with notable concentrations in philosophy, classics (study of ancient Greek and Latin language and civilization), and modern foreign languages, especially Chinese, French, Italian, and Japanese. The interdisciplinary faculty group in pre- and early modern studies is centered at Cowell College.
Students who develop ideas for research, creative projects, community service, or internship experiences may apply to the college provost for financial support. The college sponsors prizes for outstanding academic work and acknowledges students who graduate with overall academic excellence in a breadth of study with College Honors.
The college enriches the intellectual and cultural life of the campus by sponsoring events of various kinds: lectures and presentations by local faculty and visiting scholars, theatrical and musical performances, and forums and debates on topics of current interest.
College Community and Facilities
Cowell’s seven residence halls and three apartment buildings are arranged in three quadrangles on a hillside overlooking the city of Santa Cruz and Monterey Bay. About 650 students are housed in the college. Each residence hall houses from 40 to 60 students and is divided into two wings, with seven to 11 residents on each floor. Most floors are coed, with men and women sharing common lounges and other facilities, but single-gender floors are provided for those who prefer this arrangement. Apartments house 185 continuing students in six-person units. The residential staff members facilitate diverse educational, social, and recreational programming to enhance the living and learning environment.
Arranged around the college’s central plaza are the dining hall, Page Smith Study Library, the fireside lounge, the coffee shop, and conference rooms and classrooms. Unique to Cowell College are the Eloise Pickard Smith Gallery, which regularly mounts exhibits, and the Cowell Press, where students can learn the fine technique of hand-operated letterpress printing.
Since the college’s founding, regularly scheduled College Nights in the dining hall have offered students, staff, and faculty a special meal and a rich mix of after-dinner programs presented by students and professional artists. Community life is enlivened by many other scheduled and impromptu intellectual, cultural, and social events.
The Student Senate meets weekly to discuss campus issues and student government. The Senate advises the college on the allocation of funds for student activities and programs. Members of the Senate are selected each year by lot, but any student may become a voting member by steady attendance at meetings. The college’s multicultural advisory board works with staff to create a supportive community for students of color affiliated with the college and to increase awareness of the many dimensions of diversity in the community.
For more information on the college, see www2.ucsc.edu/cowell
or call (831) 459-2253.
| Cowell
Faculty and Staff |
| Provost |
| Tyrus H. Miller |
Literature |
| Deanna Shemek |
Italian Literature |
| Fellows |
|
Karen
Bassi |
Classics |
|
Tammi
Benjamin |
Hebrew Language |
|
James
H. Bierman |
Theater Arts (Drama) |
|
John
Bowin |
Philosophy |
|
Donald
Brenneis |
Anthropology |
|
Jean
P. Brodie |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
|
Margaret
R. Brose |
Italian and Comparative Literature |
|
Giulia
Centineo |
Italian Language |
|
Sandra
Chung |
Linguistics |
|
Philip
Crews |
Chemistry |
|
Jonathan
Ellis |
Philosophy |
|
Angela
Elsey |
French Language |
|
Carol
M. Freeman |
Writing |
|
Sakae
Fujita |
Japanese Language |
|
Mary-Kay
Gamel |
Classics and Comparative Literature |
|
Raymond
W. Gibbs Jr. |
Psychology |
|
Wlad
Godzich |
Literature |
|
Daniel
Guevara |
Philosophy |
|
Gildas
Hamel |
French Language and Classical Studies |
|
Susan
Harding |
Anthropology |
|
Ellen
Louise Hart |
Writing |
|
Charles
W. Hedrick Jr. |
History |
|
Margo
Hendricks |
Literature |
|
Theodore
Holman |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
|
Theo
Honnef |
Literature |
|
David
C. Hoy |
Philosophy |
|
Jocelyn
Hoy |
Philosophy |
|
Greta
Hutchison |
French Language |
|
Michael
M. Hutchison |
Economics |
|
Kevin
Karplus |
Computer Engineering |
|
David
Keenan |
Chinese Language |
|
Jacqueline
Ku |
Chinese Language |
|
William
A. Ladusaw |
Linguistics |
|
Campbell
Leaper |
Psychology |
|
Gary
L. Lease |
History of Consciousness |
|
Thomas
A. Lehrer |
American Studies and Mathematics |
|
H.
M. Leicester Jr. |
English Literature |
|
Hervé
Le Mansec |
French Language |
|
John
P. Lynch |
Classics |
|
Patrice
L. Maginnis |
Music |
|
Nora
Megharbi |
French Language |
|
Glenn
L. Millhauser |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
|
Jerome
Neu |
Philosophy |
|
Richard
E. Otte |
Philosophy |
|
Daniel
Palleros |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
|
Maria
(Tonia) Prencipe |
Italian Language |
|
Geoffrey
K. Pullum |
Linguistics |
|
S.
Ravi Rajan |
Environmental Studies |
|
Frank
A Ramirez |
Spanish Language |
|
Beth
Remak-Honnef |
Librarian |
|
Paul
Ritscher |
Art |
|
Cowell Press |
|
Tammi
Rossman-Benjamin |
Hebrew Language |
|
Paul
Roth |
Philosophy |
|
Zack
Schlesinger |
Physics |
|
Susan
Y. Schwartz |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
|
Catherine
M. Soussloff |
History of Art and Visual Culture |
|
Abraham
D. Stone |
Philosophy |
|
Joshua
M. Stuart |
Biomolecular Engineering |
|
Ellen
Kappy Suckiel |
Philosophy |
|
Nina
Treadwell |
Music |
|
Anthony
J. Tromba |
Mathematics |
|
Paul
Whitworth |
Theater Arts |
|
James Wilson |
Writing, College Academic Preceptor |
|
Emeriti Fellows |
|
W.
Emmanuel Abraham |
Philosophy, Emeritus |
|
George
T. Amis |
English Literature,
Emeritus |
|
Harry
Berger Jr. |
English Literature and
Art History, Emeritus |
|
Ralph
J. Berger |
Ecology and
Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus |
|
Gabriel
Berns |
Spanish Literature,
Emeritus |
|
Charles
W. Daniel |
Molecular, Cell, and
Developmental Biology, Emeritus |
|
John
Dizikes |
American Studies,
Emeritus |
|
Robert
M. Durling |
Italian and English Literature,
Emeritus |
|
Miriam
Ellis |
French Language,
Emerita |
|
Patricia
Fitchen |
French Language,
Emerita |
|
Robert
Goff |
Philosophy,
Emeritus |
|
Chiyoko
Ishibashi |
Japanese Language,
Emerita |
|
Virginia
Jansen |
History of Art and
Visual Culture, Emerita |
|
George
Kane |
Art,
Cowell
Press, Emeritus |
|
S.
Paul Kashap |
Philosophy, Emeritus |
|
Bruce
D. Larkin |
Politics, Emeritus |
|
Richard
Mather |
History, Emeritus |
|
Melanie
J. Mayer |
Psychology, Emerita |
|
Gary
B. Miles |
History, Emeritus |
|
Peggy
Miles |
Writing, Emerita |
|
Andrew
Todd Newberry |
Ecology and
Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus |
|
David
A. Orlando |
French Language,
Emeritus |
|
Charles
L. (Leo) Ortiz |
Ecology and
Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus |
|
Richard
R. Randolph |
Anthropology,
Emeritus |
|
Audrey
E. Stanley |
Theater Arts, Emerita |
|
Thomas
A. Vogler |
English and American
Literature, Emeritus |
|
Michael
J. Warren |
English Literature,
Emeritus |
|
Hayden
White |
History of
Consciousness, Emeritus |
|
John
Wilkes |
Science Communication,
Emeritus |
|
M. Williamson |
Chemistry and Biochemistry, Emeritus |
| College Administrative Officer |
| E. James Carter |
|
| Staff |
|
Deborah Alexander |
Dining
Hall Manager
|
|
Lisa Birney |
College
Assistant
|
|
Elizabeth Cowan |
Financial/Budget
Specialist
|
|
Debra Ellis |
Judicial/Project
Coordinator
|
|
Francis |
Senior
Building Maintenance Worker
|
|
Oscar Guillen |
Senior
Building Maintenance Supervisor
|
|
Wayne Hendrickson |
Community
Safety Officer
|
|
Karen Hilker |
Associate
College Programs Coordinator
|
|
Jay Minert |
Coordinator
for Residential Education
|
|
Dan Monko |
Facilities
Assistant Coordinator
|
|
Mary Jan Murphy |
Counseling
Psychologist
|
|
Linda Pope |
Gallery
Curator
|
|
Gary Roe |
Groundskeeper
|
|
Sarah Rogerson |
Academic
Adviser
|
|
Catherine Shender |
Advising
and Records Coordinator
|
|
S. Jaden Silva-Espinoza |
Assistant
to the Provost and the College Administrative Officer
|
|
Kara Snider |
College
Programs Coordinator
|
|
Mandie Stout |
Coordinator
for Residential Education
|
|
Minh Tran |
Coordinator
for Residential Education
|
|
Adrianne Waite |
Associate
College Administrative Officer
|
|
Ryan Watt |
Housing
Coordinator
|
|
Lynne
Wolcott |
Academic Preceptor
|
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Stevenson
College
We are Stevensonians; we are free agents of history and masters
of our own destinies. Every one of us is important, and we cherish
our differences as much as we cherish our shared values of love,
chivalry, honesty, hard work, and responsibility.
Seung Kyun Joseph Mok, Stevenson Alumnus/Regents
Scholar
Stevenson College is named after former statesman and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Adlai E. Stevenson. Our faculty, students, and staff take pride in intellectual critical inquiry, academic and civic leadership, and respect for students’ concerns about shared student governance, human rights, and social justice.
Stevenson College has a long-standing reputation for excellence in liberal education. The college strives to provide an academically, culturally, and socially supportive environment for all its members, fostering social responsibility and academic achievement. Stevenson has brought to the campus distinguished individuals such as Senator George McGovern, Congresswoman Bella Abzug, Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel, Chief of the Miwok Tribe Greg Sarris, Producer Lourdes Portillo, and Associate Director-Counsel Theodore M. Shaw of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund.
The college’s faculty and staff offer professional and personal service for the diverse needs of students. Faculty and staff assist students in all areas of their academic and social experience at Stevenson College, and are committed to instilling respect for the diverse backgrounds of Stevenson students.
Academic Emphases
- Faculty drawn from social sciences, humanities, natural sciences
- Two-quarter frosh core course
- Writing Assistants
- Junior Fellows Program
Stevenson distinguishes itself as the only college with a two-quarter core course intended to provide all first-year students with a common academic experience. The core course allows for more rigorous development of students’ critical, writing, and analytical skills. It provides a unique learning environment and a supportive intellectual community for all Stevenson first-year students. Students admitted as lower-division transfer students who prior to enrolling have completed at least one UC-transferable college English composition course with a minimum grade of C (2.0) or better are exempt from the core course requirement.Stevenson alumni can be found in legal, political, educational, engineering, medical, computer and information sciences, business, and public administration careers, among others.
The faculty at Stevenson, drawn from a variety of disciplines in the social sciences, humanities, and physical and biological sciences, share a common concern for the study of social processes that shape modern society and determine the quality of our individual lives throughout various global regions and periods of world history. Linguistics, sociology, history, politics, psychology, biology, chemistry, and computer science are strongly represented in the college.
The Stevenson core course, Self and Society
enables students to examine the nature of the self and the relationship of the individual to society. In addition, the course fosters an intellectual commitment to the general philosophy which has helped to define Stevenson College since its inception: preservation of human dignity, the social cultivation of individual creativity and citizenship, and a belief in ethical responsibility. The core course reflects the college’s long-standing commitment to interdisciplinary and culturally diverse readings, while at the same time it affords students an opportunity to develop research interests, to acquire greater understanding of the role of research universities in contemporary societies, and to acquire the requisite skills to engage in increasingly more sophisticated intellectual work while at UCSC.
The Stevenson College Junior Fellows Program offers juniors and seniors an opportunity to serve as teaching and research assistants for Self and Society. Junior fellows, who must have completed outstanding work in Self and Society during their first year, undergo a rigorous application and selection process. Junior fellows (enrolled in Stevenson 120, Teaching Practicum) earn 5 course credits.
Stevenson provides writing assistance for all of its students. Stevenson Writing Assistantships are paid student positions open to juniors and seniors with excellent academic records.
College Community
- College Nights
- Stevenson Student Council
- Multicultural Advisory Council
- Fellows-in-Residence Program
- Social and Multicultural Programs/Activities
- Rainbow Theater and Stevenson Theater Guild
Stevenson holds regular College Nights, where joining together for a special dinner presents an opportunity for Stevenson faculty, staff, and students to get together in a social context. College Nights—such as Cinco de Mayo, Chinese New Year, Vietnamese College Night—provide the opportunity to celebrate many different cultures. Dinner is followed by entertainment.
The Stevenson Student Council meets on Thursday evenings. This group of 16 elected representatives (eight resident students, eight living off campus) is responsible for allocating college membership fees to student activities. The council also serves as a forum for the discussion of college and campuswide issues and appoints student representatives to college and campuswide committees.
Facilities
- Eight small residence halls
- Three apartment buildings
- Theme floors in residence halls
- Multicultural House
- Coffee house
- Wagstaff Fireside Lounge
- Writers Center
- Stevenson Library
- Stevenson Event Center
- Silverman Conference Room
- The Knoll
- Recreation room
Stevenson has a wide variety of facilities and activities to appeal to many tastes. The college, designed by San Francisco architect Joseph Esherick, has won many architectural awards. The buildings are situated amid redwood trees and sprawling lawns, and the main quad overlooks Monterey Bay. Stevenson is situated close to the campus bookstore, restaurants, McHenry Library, gym, and pool. There are eight small residence houses at the college providing a choice of single-sex or coed floors; each house accommodates about 60 undergraduates. The apartments provide space for 132 continuing students. Nearby are a picnic area, playing fields, and a garden.
The Stevenson Coffee House, which has become the gathering place in the college, is a friendly and inviting spot to enjoy lunch or an espresso and pastry—indoors or out on the patio. It is the scene of lively conversation, occasional musical entertainment, and chess matches. Adjoining the coffee house is a recreational wing, with Ping-Pong, foosball, pool tables, and color television. This area is also the site of much socializing and spontaneous group activity.
In contrast, the Stevenson Library is a striking building designed for quiet reading and study. The Wagstaff Fireside Lounge, a retreat for relaxed discussion, is also used for recitals, special lectures, meetings, and residence house activities. Art exhibits (both student and professional) are on display throughout the year in the lounge, library, and coffee house.
For more information, call (831) 459-4930 or visit the web site:
stevenson.ucsc.edu.
| Stevenson
Faculty and Staff |
| Provost |
|
Ellen Kappy Suckiel |
Philosophy |
|
Fellows |
|
|
Judith Aissen |
Linguistics |
|
Dane Archer |
Sociology |
|
Elliot Aronson |
Psychology, Emeritus |
|
Jonathan F. Beecher |
History |
|
Ilan Benjamin |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
|
Peter H. Bodenheimer |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
|
Rebecca Braslau |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
|
Frank G. Bridges |
Physics |
|
Mark Cioc |
History |
|
Catherine R. Cooper |
Psychology and Education |
|
W. Jackson Davis |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology |
|
Michael Dine |
Physics |
|
G. William Domhoff |
Psychology, Emeritus |
|
Donka Farkas |
Linguistics |
|
Hiroshi Fukurai |
Sociology |
|
Robert E. Garrison |
Earth and Planetary Sciences, Emeritus |
|
Marvin J. Greenberg |
Mathematics, Emeritus |
|
Isebill V. Gruhn |
Politics, Emerita |
|
Howard E. Haber |
Physics |
|
Craig W. Haney |
Psychology |
|
Jorge Hankamer |
Linguistics |
|
David M. Harrington |
Psychology |
|
Aida Hurtado |
Psychology |
|
Junko Itô |
Linguistics |
|
Michael Kahn |
Psychology, Emeritus |
|
Al Kelley |
Mathematics, Emeritus |
|
Peter Kenez |
History |
|
Kenneth Kletzer |
Economics |
|
Joseph P. Konopelski |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
|
Robert P. Kraft |
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Emeritus |
|
Jean H. Langenheim |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emerita |
|
Robert A. Levinson |
Computer Science |
|
Ronnie D. Lipschutz |
Politics |
|
Marc S. Mangel |
Environmental Studies |
|
James McCloskey |
Linguistics |
|
Dennis C. McElrath |
Sociology, Emeritus |
|
R. Armin Mester |
Linguistics |
|
Carlos G. Noreńa |
Philosophy, Emeritus |
|
Jaye Padgett |
Linguistics |
|
Thomas F. Pettigrew |
Psychology, Emeritus |
|
Ira Pohl |
Computer Science |
|
Cynthia Polecritti |
History |
|
Anthony R. Pratkanis |
Psychology |
|
Ralph H. Quinn |
Psychology |
|
Donald T. Saposnek |
Psychology |
|
Theodore R. Sarbin |
Psychology and Criminology, Emeritus |
|
Peter L. Scott |
Physics, Emeritus |
|
Buchanan Sharp |
History |
|
Priscilla W. Shaw |
English and Comparative Literature, Emerita |
|
William F. Shipley |
Linguistics, Emeritus |
|
Greta Slobin |
Russian Literature, Emerita |
|
M. Brewster Smith |
Psychology, Emeritus |
|
Marshall Sylvan |
Mathematics, Emeritus |
|
Hirotaka Tamanoi |
Mathematics |
|
Kip Téllez |
Education |
|
David J. Thomas |
Politics, Emeritus |
|
Bruce Thompson |
History |
|
John N. Thompson |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology |
|
Avril Thorne |
Psychology |
|
Mark Traugott |
History |
|
Michael E. Urban |
Politics |
|
Howard H. Wang |
Molecular Cell and Developmental Biology, Emeritus |
|
Manfred K. Warmuth |
Computer Science |
|
Richard A. Wasserstrom |
Philosophy, Emeritus |
|
Harold Widom |
Mathematics, Emeritus |
|
Honorary Fellows |
|
|
Jack Baskin |
|
|
Boris Keyser |
|
|
Norman Lezin |
|
|
Eleanor McGovern |
|
|
Charles Neider |
|
|
Charles H. Page |
|
|
William M. Roth |
|
|
Alma Sifuentes |
|
|
F. M. Glenn Willson |
|
|
Stevenson Fellows-in-Residence |
|
George McGovern (1982) |
|
|
Bella Abzug (1983) |
|
|
Paul Sarbanes (1983) |
|
|
Arthur S. Flemming (1984) |
|
|
Carole King (1985) |
|
|
Clark Kerr (1987) |
|
|
Peter Shaffer (1987) |
|
|
Donald McHenry (1988) |
|
|
Pat Conroy (1990) |
|
|
Moctesuma Esparza (1992) |
|
|
Lourdes Portillo (1992) |
|
|
Greg Sarris (1997) |
|
|
Jesse Jackson (1998) |
|
|
Amiri Baraka (1999) |
|
|
Ron Dellums (1999) |
|
|
Theodore M. Shaw (2002) |
|
|
College Administrative Officer |
|
E. James Carter |
|
|
Staff |
|
|
Mary Alvarez |
Academic Adviser |
|
Sadek Chakib |
Community Safety Officer |
|
Elizabeth Cowan |
Financial/Budget Specialist |
|
Darlene Denny |
Groundskeeper |
|
Elida Erickson |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
|
Candace Freiwald |
Academic Services Supervisor |
|
John Hadley |
Coffee House Manager |
|
Wayne Hendrickson |
Community Safety Officer |
|
Gina Hernandez |
Assistant College Programs Coordinator |
|
David Hoopes |
Maintenance Officer |
|
Rachel Jablon |
Associate College Administrative Officer for Student Life |
|
Kristha Lima |
College Programs Coordinator |
|
Gustavo Nolazco |
College Assistant/Records Coordinator/Mail Services
Supervisor |
|
Juanita Reyes |
Housing Coordinator |
|
Paul Richter |
Community Safety Officer |
|
Sonia Rosado |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
|
Ava Snyder |
Police Sergeant/Liaison |
|
Gregory Speed |
Community Safety Officer |
|
Michael Tassio |
Provost Assistant |
|
Michelle Taylor |
Academic Programs Coordinator/Academic Adviser |
|
Amy Weaver |
Writing Program Coordinator |
|
Sarma Williams |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
|
Marie Yoo |
Senior Academic Preceptor |
Crown College
Crown College faculty (the college fellows) and students represent a wide variety of academic disciplines. The majority of fellows are in the physical and biological sciences
and the social sciences. There are more science and engineering students at Crown than at any other college. However, the majority of Crown students major in the social sciences, humanities, and arts. This diversity of inter-ests and thinking enriches our intellectual environment.
An important goal of the college is to foster an appreciation for the contributions of diverse cultural groups and to provide an atmosphere in which issues of both diversity and common social purpose are integrated into a wide range of programs and discussions.
From the time of its founding in 1967, issues pertaining to the role of science and technology in society have been a focus of special interest at Crown College. Recently, we have approached these issues from an interdisciplinary perspective that recognizes the influence of social and cultural factors on scientific enterprise, as well as the ways in which science and technology influence society.
Crown is located on a hilltop surrounded by a redwood forest. The core buildings consist of an administration office, dining commons, lounge spaces, recreation facilities, study spaces, faculty offices, and classrooms built around a large patio and central fountain. The award-winning architecture with its white walls and high-pitched tiled roofs suggests a hillside Mediterranean village. The college’s residential facilities are made up of eight traditional residence hall buildings and eight apartment buildings housing approximately 700 students. The facilities at Crown College were built through a partnership of public funds and a gift from the Crown Zellerbach Foundation.
Academic Emphases
Ethical Issues in Emerging Technologies: Transgenics, Clones, Cyborgs, and Artificial Intelligence is an interdisciplinary seminar concerning the effects of these world-changing technologies and encourages students to develop decision-making strategies to ethically steer these technologies. The course examines these debates using a variety of disciplinary approaches that engage the perspectives of both humanists and scientists. The fall-quarter core course is required of all first-year students and many transfer students during their first quarter at UCSC. Students admitted as lower-division transfer students who prior to enrolling have completed at least one UC-transferable college English composition course with a minimum grade of C (2.0) or better are exempt from the core course requirement. (See the Crown College Course
Descriptions section for a full description.)
The Crown-Merrill Science and Technology Learning Community is an innovative program to support first-year students who are interested in pursuing a major in the sciences. Students enrolled in this program live together, forming a supportive community that promotes collaborative learning and group problem solving. To facilitate this process, students are placed in a special section of Chemistry 1A and participate in a residentially based study group. The program is designed especially for students who have a strong interest in the sciences but feel slightly underprepared for university-level course work. It often acts as a bridge to the ACE Program in the physical and biological sciences and engineering (see the Academic
Excellence Program section). Participation—limited to first-year students at Crown and Merrill Colleges—requires a commitment to succeed, a willingness to work hard, and a positive attitude.
The Crown Undergraduate Seminar in Science, Technology, and Society provides highly motivated students the opportunity to work closely with ladder-rank research faculty in a small seminar environment. Topics have included California Climate Change: Past, Present, and Future; Food Matters: Science, Technology, and Society; and an honors seminar on introductory computer architecture.
Juniors and seniors can participate in the college’s new Undergraduate Research Fellowship Program, which awards $800 fellowships to student-faculty teams and encourages their interaction through undergraduate research.
College Community and Facilities
Crown sponsors a wide variety of cocurricular events spanning cultural, educational, and social areas of interest. One popular series is the Science/Public Affairs Tables, informal dinners at the Provost’s House that offer students an opportunity to socalize with a faculty member outside the classroom and hear about his or her research.
Students become involved in Crown life by both initiating and participating in a wide range of activities. Social activities vary each year according to the interests of students. At the monthly College Night in the dining commons, a special dinner is followed by entertainment, both often sharing a common cultural theme. Some major events have become traditional: for example, Karaoke College Night, Hypnotist, Crown Formal, and Regression Night. Crown activities and dances draw students from all over campus. Outdoor activities organized by the student government, College Programs Office, or residential staff range from whale watching on the Monterey Bay to atomic bowling and from backpacking to stargazing.
The Crown Student Senate (CSS), the elec-ted student government at Crown, holds open weekly meetings to recommend fund allocations for student activities and to discuss issues of concern to students and the college. CSS also sponsors events to enhance the college experience, including the very popular pelagic shark lecture and Casino Night.
Crown offers two types of residential facilities: residence halls and apartments. Eight traditional residence halls each house 60 students in single, double, and triple rooms in a coed environment (single-sex bedrooms with unisex bathrooms) or on all-female floors. For students particularly interested in living with and learning about a special-interest environment, Crown provides transfer floors, Substance-Free Houses, and a Science and Technology Learning Community.
In addition, the college has apartments for 230 students above the first-year level. Like the residence halls, the apartments are built on a small scale. Each three-story building has two or three apartments per floor that house four or five students in a combination of single, double, and triple rooms and include a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and outside deck.
Other facilities in the college include the Crown Library study space; a modern computer laboratory housing Sun workstations, which provides students with access to several kinds of systems and an array of applications and instructional software selected to support academic course work; the Fireside Lounge with widescreen television; the Music Practice Room; and the Crown-Merrill Community Room, which has a television, pool table, foosball, and ping-pong table, and provides an informal place to study, hold meetings, or just visit with friends. Recently renovated dining facilities boast continuous dining, late-night dining, and Banana Joe’s coffee shop.
For general information, call the college assistant at (831) 459-2665
or visit the web site: www2.ucsc.edu/crown/.
For residential or college programs information, call the Student
Life Office manager at (831) 459-4656.
| Crown
Faculty and Staff |
| Provost |
| F. Joel Ferguson |
Computer Engineering |
| Fellows |
| Robert F. Adams |
Economics, Emeritus |
| Scott Brandt |
Computer Science |
| Kenneth W. Bruland |
Ocean Sciences, Emeritus |
| Joseph F. Bunnett |
Chemistry and Biochemistry, Emeritus |
| Maureen Callanan |
Psychology |
| Kenneth L. Cameron |
Earth and Planetary Sciences, Emeritus |
| Sue A. Carter |
Physics |
| Nancy N. Chen |
Anthropology |
| Yin-Wong Cheung |
Economics |
| Eugene H. Cota-Robles |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, Emeritus |
| Margaret L. Delaney |
Ocean Sciences |
| Chongying Dong |
Mathematics |
| Michael P. Dooley |
Economics |
| William T. Doyle |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus |
| Robert S. Edgar |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, Emeritus |
| Ólöf Einarsdóttir |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| John M. Ellis |
German Literature, Emeritus |
| Sandra M. Faber |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| John Faulkner |
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Emeritus |
| Jerry F. Feldman |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, Emeritus |
| Anthony L. Fink |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| Arthur E. Fischer |
Mathematics, Emeritus |
| Timothy Fitzmaurice |
Writing |
| Stanley M. Flatté |
Physics, Emeritus |
| A. Russell Flegal |
Environmental Toxicology |
| Laurel R. Fox |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology |
| Maria Cecilia Freeman |
Writing |
| Daniel Friedman |
Economics |
| Kwok-Chiu Fung |
Economics |
| Alison Galloway |
Anthropology |
| J. J. García-Luna-Aceves |
Computer Engineering |
| Judith A. Habicht-Mauche |
Anthropology |
| David Haussler |
Computer Science |
| Ralph T. Hinegardner |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus |
| Richard P. Hughey |
Computer Engineering |
| Harold A. Hyde |
Vice Chancellor, Emeritus |
| Garth D. Illingworth |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| Burton F. Jones |
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Emeritus |
| David E. Kaun |
Economics |
| Alan H. Kawamoto |
Psychology |
| Paul L. Koch |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
| Nancy Krusoe |
Writing Program |
| Jonathan M. Krupp |
Biology; Coordinator, Microscopy and Imaging Laboratory |
| Edward M. Landesman |
Mathematics, Emeritus |
| Jean H. Langenheim |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emerita |
| Léo F. Laporte |
Earth and Planetary Sciences, Emeritus |
| Burney J. Le Boeuf |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus |
| Max M. Levin |
Psychology, Emeritus |
| Debra Lewis |
Mathematics |
| Douglas N. C. Lin |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| Darrell D. E. Long |
Information Systems Management |
| Robert A. Ludwig |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology |
| Phillip McCalman |
Economics |
| Margaret McManus |
Ocean Sciences |
| Jacob B. Michaelsen |
Economics, Emeritus |
| Ethan Miller |
Computer Science |
| Joseph S. Miller |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| Richard Montgomery |
Mathematics |
| J. Casey Moore |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
| Judit N. Moschkovich |
Education |
| Peggy B. Musgrave |
Economics, Emerita |
| Richard A. Musgrave |
Economics, Retired |
| Michael Nauenberg |
Physics, Emeritus |
| Harry F. Noller |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology |
| Loisa Nygaard |
German Literature |
| Donald E. Osterbrock |
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Emeritus |
| Karen Ottemann |
Environmental Toxicology |
| Triloki N. Pandey |
Anthropology |
| Grant H. Pogson |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology |
| Donald C. Potts |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology |
| Joel R. Primack |
Physics |
| Jie Qing |
Mathematics |
| Tudor S. Ratiu |
Mathematics, Emeritus |
| Gertrud Reutter |
German Language, Emerita |
| Gerhard Ringel |
Mathematics, Emeritus |
| Hartmut F.-W. Sadrozinski |
Physics |
| Thomas W. Schleich |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| Maria Schonbek |
Mathematics |
| Judith A. Scott |
Education |
| Abraham Seiden |
Physics |
| Eli A. Silver |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
| Nirvikar Singh |
Economics |
| Lisa C. Sloan |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
| Donald R. Smith |
Environmental Toxicology |
| William T. Sullivan |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology |
| David Swanger |
Education and Creative Writing, Emeritus |
| Eugene Switkes |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| Kip Téllez |
Education |
| Roland G. Tharp |
Education and Psychology, Emeritus |
| Stephen E. Thorsett |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| John F. Vesecky |
Electrical Engineering |
| Steven S. Vogt |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| Carl E. Walsh |
Economics |
| Manfred K. Warmuth |
Computer Science |
| Gerald E. Weber |
Earth and Planetary Sciences, Emeritus |
| Margaret L. Wilson |
Psychology |
| W. Todd Wipke |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| Stanford E. Woosley |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| Fitnat Yildiz |
Environmental Toxicology |
| A. Peter Young |
Physics |
| James Zachos |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
| Jin Z. Zhang |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| Honorary Fellows |
| Sandy Lydon |
|
| Robert L. Sinsheimer |
|
| Vivian (Mrs. Ivan) Vallier |
|
| College Administrative Officer |
| Alex Belisario |
|
| Staff |
| Maria Acosta-Smith |
Senior Academic Preceptor |
| Cindy Blake |
Groundskeeper |
| Allen Bushnell |
Special Projects Coordinator |
| Serena Dionysus |
College Programs Coordinator |
| Ben Doniach |
Senior Building Maintenance Worker |
| Sally Gaynor |
Academic Programs and Development Coordinator |
| Jeanne Johnson |
Academic Adviser |
| Joe Johnson |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Jerry Lee |
Counseling Psychologist |
| Darlene Miyakawa |
Housing Coordinator |
| Ursula Orberg |
Academic Adviser |
| Andrew Park |
College Assistant |
| Imani Rupert |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Joao Simas |
Student Life Office Manager/Assistant |
| Curtis Swain |
Community Safety Officer Supervisor |
| Joanie Webber |
Assistant Budget Analyst |
| Carly White |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Sarah Woodside |
Associate College Administrative Officer for Student Life |
[Return to top]
Merrill College
Merrill College seeks to expand its students’ awareness of their own heritage and of the diversity of cultures around the world, past and present. Drawn largely from history as well as the social sciences, literature, and foreign languages, many Merrill faculty specialize in social theory, international affairs, and social change. The college makes a special effort to be a home for students from different cultural backgrounds and for international students; it presents unusual opportunities to those who value multicultural perspectives. Merrill is a center for Spanish language and Latin American and Latino studies and has been active in sponsoring American Indian cultural and academic activities.
Academic Emphases
Merrill College has as its theme Cultural Identities and Global Consciousness. In Merrill’s core course, with this same title, students read books by Sherman Alexie, Le Le Hayslip, Zora Neale Hurston, Luis Rodriguez, and John Isbister, among others. These texts increase students’ awareness of cultural and ethnic diversity and of women’s concerns in different cultural settings. More specifically, these writings deepen students’ appreciation of the complexities involved in cultural struggles for the right to live, with respect, in peace and harmony in one’s own community and elsewhere. In addition, the course presents the crisis of world poverty and proposes theoretical solutions, while also investigating the fundamental international forces of imperialism and nationalism. (For the course description,
see the Merrill College Course
Descriptions section) Students admitted as lower-division transfer students who prior to enrolling have completed at least one UC-transferable college English composition course with a minimum grade of C (2.0) or better are exempt from the core course requirement.
Merrill is in the 10th year of its Freshman Scholars Program. Roughly 22 students are selected by Merrill College to participate in the Freshman Scholars Program. Participants will take two 5-credit seminar courses—one in the fall (a designated section of the core course) and one in the spring quarter (a freshman seminar), do service work in a nearby elementary school or with the Santa Cruz County Immigration Project throughout the academic year, and take part in extracurricular activities organized by the college provost during the winter quarter. Interested high school seniors apply by writing directly to the Merrill provost, after admission.
Now in its sixth year, the winter Merrill American Indian Colloquium Series hosts public and class presentations by noted American Indian professionals and cultural practitioners, from a variety of tribes and pursuits.
Merrill also sponsors a variety of 2- and 5-credit courses on topics that change from year to year, recently ranging from the benefits of re-evaluation counseling, to personal empowerment, to white racial identity in a multicultural society. All are kept to a size that facilitates discussion, and many are designed for first-year students. In addition, students can participate in a variety of service-learning opportunities in the surrounding community.
Recognizing the increasingly rigorous requirements for science majors, Merrill—in collaboration with Crown—has developed the Science Learning Community to support students majoring in the sciences. Students participating in the program live in close proximity to each other and are encouraged to develop a collaborative learning approach.
Merrill is the home of Casa Latina, which houses the Latin American and Latino Studies Department, the Chicano/Latino Research Center, La Galería, and the CineMedia Project. The Ming Ong Computer Center houses 40 modern personal computers.
Merrill serves as the administrative home
for the Departments of History and Politics, in addition to Latin American and Latino Studies. Merrill is also the home of a Peace Corps satellite office. The office helps the many UCSC students who are interested in working overseas with the Peace Corps after graduation.
College Community and Facilities
Located on a hilltop, Merrill’s dramatic and award-winning buildings thread upward through the edge of a redwood forest. The brick patios, gardens, outdoor café, and mission bell tower suggest California’s Latino heritage, while the striking architecture of the residence halls is modern.
Merrill has four residence halls offering students both coed and single-sex floors. Two high-rise structures house 361 students, and two smaller buildings provide housing for about 70 students. In the residence halls, small groups of about 14 students share common bathroom and lounge facilities. Residents eat their meals in the Crown–Merrill Dining Hall.
Apartments, which are located a short distance from the central part of the college, house 160 continuing Merrill students. Grouped amid winding pathways and redwood trees, these three-story buildings have three apartments per floor. Each apartment houses four or five students and comes fully equipped with kitchen and bath, large living area, and outside deck. Facilities at the apartment complex include common lounges, a large community room, and a laundry room.
With the help of the Merrill coordinators for residential education, an enthusiastic residential staff plans recreational activities that include potluck dinners, intramural sports competitions, dances, musical events, film series, and a yearly outdoor mural-painting party. Many of these social and educational activities focus on building a multicultural community. Informal discussions, to which faculty are invited, take place throughout the year. In addition to the dining hall, the college has an attractive outdoor/indoor taqueria. A variety of college and campuswide events take place at the Merrill Cultural Center. For the artistically inclined, Merrill is the only college that has a student-run pottery co-op. Students can throw, fire, and glaze their works in the workshop space, which is open to Merrill students on a first-come first-served basis. The entire college is wired so that students can bring computers from home and connect directly into the Internet from their rooms without the use of a modem—or take advantage of the many wireless hot spots around Merrill.
The physical facilities of Merrill College were provided through a partnership of public funds and gifts from the Charles E. Merrill Trust and the family of Ming Ong. The Joel Frankel Fund, a Merrill scholarship, supports students pursuing fieldwork in Latin America.
For more information, call (831) 459-2144 or visit the web site:
www2.ucsc.edu/merrill/.
|
Merrill
Faculty and Staff |
| Provost |
| Lourdes Martínez-Echazábal |
Latin American Literature |
| Fellows |
| Jorge Aladro Font |
Spanish Literature |
| Sonia E. Alvarez |
Politics |
| Mark D. Anderson |
Anthropology |
| Frank C. Andrews |
Chemistry and Biochemistry, Emeritas |
| Gabriela Arredondo |
Latin American and Latino Studies |
| Noriko Aso |
History |
| Brenda Barceló |
Spanish Language |
| Dilip K. Basu |
History |
| Robert F. Berkhofer Jr. |
History, Emeritus |
| Claude F. Bernasconi |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| John G. Borrego |
Latin American and Latino Studies |
| Michael K. Brown |
Politics |
| Wayne B. Brumbach |
Physical Education, Emeritus |
| Edmund Burke III |
History |
| Julianne Burton-Carvajal |
Literature |
| Carlos Calierno |
Spanish Language |
| Max Camarillo |
Counseling and Psychological Services |
| Benjamin Carson |
Music |
| Pedro G. Castillo |
History |
| Alan S. Christy |
History |
| Annette Cleer |
Politics |
| Rena V. Cochlin |
Physical Education |
| Guillermo Delgado-P. |
Latin American and Latino Studies |
| Joshua M. Deutsch |
Physics |
| María Elena Diaz |
History |
| May N. Diaz |
Anthropology, Emerita |
| Joel Domhoff |
Core Course |
| Bernard L. Elbaum |
Economics |
| Jonathan Fox |
Latin American and Latino Studies |
| Dana Frank |
History |
| Rosa Linda Fregoso |
Latin American and Latino Studies |
| William H. Friedland |
Community Studies and Sociology, Emeritus |
| Hardy T. Frye |
Sociology, Emeritus |
| Carole Gerster |
Core Course; Film and Digital Media |
| Margaret (Greta) A. Gibson |
Education |
| Diane P. Gifford-González |
Anthropology |
| Walter L. Goldfrank |
Sociology |
| María Victoria González-Pagani |
Spanish Language |
| M. Lisbeth Haas |
History |
| Judith Harris-Frisk |
German Language and Core Course |
| Ellen Louise Hart |
Writing |
| Gail B. Hershatter |
History |
| Karlton E. Hester |
Music |
| Minghui Hu |
History |
| John W. Isbister |
Economics, Emeritus |
| Robert P. Johnson |
Physics |
| Susanne Jonas |
Latin American and Latino Studies |
| Noel Q. King |
History and Comparative Religion, Emeritus |
| Norma Klahn |
Latin American Literature |
| Lori G. Kletzer |
Economics |
| Gary L. Lease |
History of Consciousness |
| Paul M. Lubeck |
Sociology |
| Patrick E. Mantey |
Computer Engineering |
| Dean Mathiowetz |
Politics |
| Maria Eugenia Matute-Bianchi |
Education, Emerita |
| Barry McLaughlin |
Psychology, Emeritus |
| Marta Morello-Frosch |
Literature, Emerita |
| Maria Morris |
Spanish Language |
| Olga NÁjera-Ramírez |
Anthropology |
| Ellen Newberry |
Writing |
| Alex T. Pang |
Computer Science |
| Sherri Paris |
Writing |
| Sarah-Hope Parmeter |
Writing |
| Eleonora Pasotti |
Politics |
| Manuel Pastor Jr. |
Latin American and Latino Studies |
| Juan Poblete |
Literature |
| Clifton A. Poodry |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, Emeritus |
| Alan R. Richards |
Environmental Studies |
| Pamela A. Roby |
Sociology |
| Barbara Rogoff |
Psychology |
| John M. Schechter |
Music |
| Stuart A. Schlegel |
Anthropology, Emeritus |
| Roger Schoenman |
Politics |
| Ana Maria Seara |
Portuguese Language |
| Vanita Seth |
Politics |
| Bakthan Singaram |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| Graeme H. Smith |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| David G. Sweet |
History, Emeritus |
| Megan Thomas |
Politics |
| Larry Trujillo |
Community Studies |
| George E. Von der Muhll |
Politics, Emeritus |
| Marilyn J. Westerkamp |
History |
| Daniel J. Wirls |
Politics |
| Donald A. Wittman |
Economics |
| Alice Yang Murray |
History |
| Patricia Zavella |
Latin American and Latino Studies |
| Martha C. Zúñiga |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology |
| Honorary Fellows |
| Zina Jacque |
|
| Clark Kerr (deceased) |
|
| John Laird |
|
| Alice Lytle |
|
| Charles E. Merrill Jr. |
|
| John Vasconcellos |
|
| Yori Wada |
|
| Rev. Cecil Williams |
|
| Mardi Wormhoudt |
|
| Class Honorary Fellows |
| Robert Taylor, 1991, 1992, 1993 |
| Leilani Farm, 1994 |
|
| Michael Paul Wong, 1995 |
|
| David Silvera, 1996 |
|
| Ziesel Saunders, 1997 |
|
| Victor Hernandez, 1998 |
|
| María Mata, 1999 |
|
| Wendy Baxter, 2000 |
|
| Larry Trujillo, 2001 |
|
| Gina Diaz, 2002 |
|
| Maria Mata, 2003, 2004 |
|
| College Administrative Officer |
| Alex Belisario |
|
| Staff |
| Rebecca Aguirre-Garcia |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Gabriela Alaniz |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Tim Barbour |
Assistant College Programs Coordinator |
| Allen Bushnell |
Special Projects Coordinator |
| Valerie Chase |
Associate College Administrative Officer |
| Connie Creel |
Provost’s Assistant |
| Allison Layfield |
College Assistant |
| Eddie Lomboy |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| María Mata |
Senior Academic Preceptor |
| Marilyn McGrath |
Groundskeeper |
| William Miller |
Senior Building Maintenance Worker |
| Ursula Oberg |
Academic Adviser |
| Bill Pool |
Senior Building Maintenance Worker |
| Kirsten Roehler |
Peace Corps Coordinator |
| Patricia Sanders |
Faculty Services |
| Gary Shoemaker |
Psychologist |
| Curtis Swain |
Community Safety Officer |
| Lynda Tanaka |
College Programs Coordinator |
| Kristen Weaver |
Housing Coordinator |
| Joanie Webber |
Financial Analyst |
| Elizabeth Wellik |
Academic Adviser |
[Return to top]
Porter College
The Porter College theme, Arts in a Multicultural Society, reflects the consensus among Porter College fellows that the creative process is an inseparable aspect of a broad-minded and rigorous education. The seminars, cocurricular activities, and cultural environment at Porter encourage creativity in all fields—from composition to community studies to computer programming.
Academic Emphases
Porter’s faculty includes most of the campus’s practicing artists and art scholars, though some of the college’s faculty (and half of its students) specialize in the humanities or in the physical and biological or social sciences. The college is the administrative home of the Division of the Arts and the History of Art and Visual Culture Department. The Institute for Humanities Research also has offices here.
Porter 80, the core course (see the Porter College Course
Descriptions section) focuses on writing across the arts, with concentration on literature and arts of California and the Pacific Rim. Students admitted as lower-division transfer students who prior to enrolling have completed at least one UC-transferable college English composition course with a minimum grade of C (2.0) or better are exempt from the core course requirement. Students meet with their faculty member in a seminar, attend regular lecture/performances, and participate in writing groups, advising, and other sessions that introduce some of the academic issues they will confront at the university. The course emphasizes critical reading, writing, and close intellectual contact with faculty and other students.
The college also offers 2-credit courses in a variety of areas connected to the arts. These are small classes in the practice or theory of the arts; they may include investigation of a particular style of music or dance, visits to Bay Area theaters and museums, working in the arts, or creation of a show in one of the college galleries. These diverse offerings allow Porter students to understand the significance of creativity in a university education.
The college provides fellowship funds each year to talented students pursuing original research and creative projects.
College Community and Facilities
The traditional residence halls and apartments play an important role in bringing the college community together. Students are encouraged to spend their beginning years in residence in the college, where housing is available for 845 students. The residence halls are divided into smaller units, with from 14 to 40 students sharing common lounges and other facilities. Theme halls include Performing Arts, Film and Digital Media, Gender Studies, Visual Arts, and Outdoors Experiences. Students also have a choice of quiet/intensive study, same gender, or substance-free halls. The six-person apartments are reserved for upper-division students.
In addition to traditional classrooms, Porter has many specialized facilities such as a fireside lounge, darkroom, galleries, and a dining hall that converts to a theater space. The Arts Instructional Computing Laboratories, located at Porter College, consist of two high-end labs oriented toward the arts (see page 57). Porter also has a study center with an adjoining computer lab for Porter students only. This lab has eight workstations for word processing, graphics production, Internet capabilities, and printing.
Adjacent to the college are the campuss Theater Arts Center
(see the Theater Arts program
description section), the Elena Baskin Visual Arts Center (see
the Art program description
section), and the Music Center (see the Music program
description section).
Porter provides constructive opportunities for relaxation and recreation to balance the intellectual demands of a university education. The Student Activities Office, in conjunction with the Porter Student Senate, organizes formal and informal events, including dances and recreational activities, which augment campuswide activities in these areas. For relaxing, Porter students and faculty gather at the college’s coffeehouse—the Hungry Slug.
Many students and faculty perform or exhibit their work at Porter, and cultural events are a constant feature of life at the college. The dining commons has been the site of performances by artists such as El Teatro Campesino, lectures and readings by contemporary authors such as Amiri Baraka, and performances by artists such as Komar & Melamid and Nina Wise.
Porter College facilities were constructed through a partnership of public funds and a gift from the Porter-Sesnon family of Santa Cruz. Part of the gift was used to establish an endowment for the college.
For more information, call (831) 459-2273 or visit the web site:
www2.ucsc.edu/porter.
| Porter
Faculty and Staff |
| Provost |
| David Evan Jones |
Music |
| Fellows |
| Elizabeth S. Abrams |
Writing |
| Ken Alley |
Art |
| Elliot W. Anderson |
Art |
| Roger W. Anderson |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| Lawrence Andrews |
Film and Digital Media |
| Manuel Ares Jr. |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology |
| Doris B. Ash |
Education |
| Charles Atkinson |
Writing |
| Amy C. Beal |
Music |
| Tandy Beal |
Theater Arts |
| James H. Bierman |
Theater Arts |
| Roberto A. Bogomolni |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| Joyce Brodsky |
Art, Emerita |
| George S. Brown |
Physics |
| Linda C. Burman-Hall |
Music |
| Elisabeth Cameron |
History of Art and Visual Culture |
| Benjamin L. Carson |
Music |
| Martin M. Chemers |
Psychology |
| Robert S. Coe |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
| Ray T. Collett |
UCSC Arboretum, Emeritus |
| David H. Cope |
Music |
| William D. Coulter |
Music |
| Donald Coyne |
Physics |
| David Crane |
Film and Digital Media |
| E. G. Crichton |
Art |
| David Cuthbert |
Theater Arts |
| Sharon Daniel |
Film and Digital Media |
| Carolyn S. Dean |
History of Art and Visual Culture |
| Sherwood Dudley |
Music, Emeritus |
| Peter Q. Elsea |
Music |
| Harland W. Epps |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| Shelly E. Errington |
Anthropology |
| Maria V. Ezerova |
Music |
| M. Kathleen Foley |
Theater Arts |
| Doyle Foreman |
Art, Emeritus |
| Jean Fox Tree |
Psycholinguistics |
| Mark Franko |
Theater Arts |
| Susan Friedman |
Art |
| Gregory Fritsch |
Theater Arts |
| Patty Gallagher |
Theater Arts |
| Frank Galuszka |
Art |
| Ingeborg Gerdes |
Art |
| Robert Giges |
Core Course |
| Jennifer A. González |
History of Art and Visual Culture |
| Irene Gustafson |
Film and Digital Media |
| Melissa Gwyn |
Art |
| James B. Hall |
Literature, Emeritus |
| Susan Harding |
Anthropology |
| David Harrington |
Psychology |
| Amelie Hastie |
Film and Digital Media |
| John Hay |
History of Art and Visual Culture |
| Irene Herrmann |
Music |
| Karlton E. Hester |
Music |
| Clemens A. Heusch |
Physics |
| Dee Hibbert-Jones |
Arts |
| Eli E. Hollander |
Film and Digital Media |
| Edward F. Houghton |
Music |
| Donna Hunter |
History of Art and Visual Culture |
| Kimberly Jannarone |
Theater Arts |
| Stacy Kamehiro |
History of Art and Visual Culture |
| Hi Kyung Kim |
Music |
| L. S. Kim |
Film and Digital Media |
| Thorne Lay |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
| Jimin Lee |
Art |
| Anatole Leikin |
Music |
| Fredric Lieberman |
Music |
| Peter Limbrick |
Film amd Digital Media |
| Norman Locks |
Art |
| Suresh Lodha |
Computer Science |
| Charles (Chip) L. Lord |
Film and Digital Media |
| Pavel Machotka |
Psychology, Emeritus |
| Alma R. Martínez |
Theater Arts |
| Dominic W. Massaro |
Psychology |
| William G. Mathews |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| Jennie Lind McDade |
Art |
| Charles E. McDowell |
Computer Science |
| Leta E. Miller |
Music |
| Margaret Morse |
Film and Digital Media |
| Peter Mosktoff |
Theater Arts |
| Paul Nauert |
Music |
| Nicole A. Paiement |
Music |
| Jennifer A. Parker |
Art |
| Kenneth Pedrotti |
Electrical Engineering |
| Paul Rangell |
Art |
| Barbara Rogoff |
Psychology and Education |
| Elaine Yokoyama Roos |
Theater Arts, Emerita |
| Norvid J. Roos |
Theater Arts, Emeritus |
| Bruce Rosenblum |
Physics, Emeritus |
| Warren Sack |
Film and Digital Media |
| John M. Schechter |
Music |
| Danny Scheie |
Theater Arts |
| Catherine M. Soussloff |
History of Art and Visual Culture |
| Shelley Stamp |
Film and Digital Media |
| Audrey E. Stanley |
Theater Arts, Emerita |
| Brian J. Staufenbiel |
Music |
| Elizabeth Stephens |
Art |
| Undang Sumarna |
Music |
| David Swanger |
Education and Creative Writing, Emeritus |
| John W. Tamkun |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology |
| Othmar T. Tobisch |
Earth and Planetary Sciences, Emeritus |
| Judith Todd |
Writing |
| Andrey Todorov |
Mathematics |
| Nina Treadwell |
Music |
| Allen Van Gelder |
Computer Science |
| Gustav O. Vazquez |
Film and Digital Media |
| Lewis Watts |
Art |
| C. Gordon Wells |
Education |
| Linda Werner |
Computer Science |
| James Whitehead |
Computer Science |
| Paul Whitworth |
Theater Arts |
| Quentin C. Williams |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
| College Administrative Officer |
| Michael Yamauchi-Gleason |
| Staff |
| Susan J. Beach |
Assistant to the Provost |
| Jimmy Brown |
Community Safety Officer Supervisor |
| Kathy Cooney |
Associate College Administrative Officer for Student Life |
| Vanessa Garcia |
Housing Coordinator |
| Robert Giges |
Academic Preceptor |
| Megan Gnekow |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Brian Holtz |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Deva Hymen |
College Programs Coordinator |
| Keith Landrum |
Senior Building Maintenance Worker |
| Eddie Machado |
Community Safety Officer |
| Megan McElroy |
Assistant College Programs Coordinator |
| Kalin McGraw |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Andrew Pierson |
Counseling Psychologist |
| Scott Randle |
Community Safety Officer |
| Sue Roth |
Assistant to the College Administrative Officer |
| Dave Rovick |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Mary Sierra |
Budget and Planning Specialist |
| Mary Spafford |
College Academic Adviser |
| Steve Strickley |
Groundskeeper |
[Return to top]
Kresge College
Kresge is an experience that will allow you to learn a lot
about yourself, be independent and learn to take responsibility
for yourself.
Yvette Keller, Psychology and Modern Literature (double
major)
Academic Emphases
Kresge faculty are primarily from the humanities, but they include anthropologists, artists, writers, dramatists, journalists, and political theorists. The college houses the Departments of Literature and Women’s Studies, the Writing Program, the journalism minor, and the Dickens Project.
Kresges core course, Power and Representation (see the Kresge
College Course
Descriptions section), invites active participation in the creation of new social possibilities. The Kresge core course is an examination of key moments at the middle and end
of the 20th century. The class focuses on Hiroshima and the dawn of the atomic age; and the social movements of the late 1950s, 1960s, and early 1970s, including civil rights, the Vietnam War, the women’s movement, and the gay and lesbian movement. Each instructor has a special two-week period to examine topics the instuctor is well versed in, and which reflect the overall focus of the core curriculum. The last part of the course deals with the economic downturn of the 1990s. In addition to section meetings, on Tuesday nights all students come together to watch core-related films or performers or listen to lectures.
The core course seeks to open avenues to new ways of thinking and to various academic disciplines at the university, as it integrates the student’s intellectual, social, and personal lives in a stimulating and supportive environment. The core course develops critical writing and thinking skills that prepare students for the rapidly changing multicultural world of the year 2006 and beyond. Special sections of the core course are designed specifically for transfer students, who can enroll in this course as an elective. These sections emphasize the same issues and skills development within a context that explores a transfer student’s particular concerns on entering the university. Students admitted as lower-division transfer students who prior to enrolling have completed at least one UC-transferable college English composition course with a minimum grade of C (2.0) or better are exempt from the core course requirement.
In addition to the core course, Kresge offers a series of courses taught by faculty affiliated with the college. These courses give students a chance to study in small groups with faculty on topics close to faculty research interests and provide training in skills helpful to students as they begin their majors. A new array of classes is offered each year. Some of the courses in the past have been taught by senior faculty in mathematics, anthropology, history, literature, and journalism.
Residential Life
Kresge was the sixth college to be built on the UCSC campus. The college was founded on the principle of participatory democracy as a means of encouraging a strong sense of community. Architecturally renowned, Kresge has apartments rather than residence halls.
The Kresge apartments attract students with a strong sense of independence and community participation. Distinctively designed, the apartments are configured for four or seven people. Kitchen and living areas look out onto the street, with other rooms facing the surrounding redwood forest. At Kresge East, apartments are folded into the forest for greater quiet. These apartments with four single bedrooms are typically reserved for continuing upper-division students. The Kresge two-person “in-fill” apartments are reserved for continuing upper-division students. These two-bedroom apartments have an efficiency-style kitchen/living area.
The residential life staff at Kresge work to bring students of similar interests and diverse backgrounds together academically and socially by designing special programming based on student interest. The programs focus on celebrating the diversity of the residential community, on multicultural community-building, and on enhancing academic success, through film series, music events, career and graduate school advising, mural painting, food-centered events, field trips, and other creative programming ideas.
[Living at Kresge] takes a person who is confident with who they
are . . . someone who is independent. You cook your own meals, live in a house environment with others who don’t necessarily share the same view as you. It is a lot of work, but it has a big payoff. The people I lived with are still my best friends today.
— Samantha Vincent, Psychology
Community
Life
There are a wide variety of events and activities at the college that shape community life: Lectures, workshops, trips, plays, dances, concerts, and films are a regular part of student life at the college. The nature and tenor of these events are a reflection of the interests and dedication of students and staff, who are committed to providing voice and opportunity for all community members.
Students actively shape the college community through participation in Kresge Parliament, an openly structured student organization responsible for voting the allocation of all college membership fees in support of activities and events. Parliament and monthly Town Meetings also serve as a forum for the discussion of college and campuswide issues with college staff and faculty.
Transfer Students
In recognition of the wealth of diversity that transfer students bring to the community—in terms of culture and experience—Kresge is the home of the Transfer Center for campuswide transfer students regardless of college affiliation. This is a staffed facility where students can gather to relax, socialize, hold meetings, and obtain campus information and resource support in a central location. The resource center offers workshops, social evenings, and special events that are tailored to meet the needs of transfer students.
Kresge has provided a place for me, as a transfer student,
where my questions and concerns have been addressed. As a Peer
Adviser, it has become my commitment to work with the Kresge community
to provide students with an environment where they can experience
the richness of university life.
Julie Taylor, Literature; Chancellors Undergraduate
Internship Program
Kresge also offers special advising workshops and 2- and 3-credit courses designed to help transfers in the process of entering the university and moving forward in their careers from here.
Facilities
Kresge’s unique style is also evident in its physical structures. At the entrance to the college is the restful Piazetta with its “un-fountain.” Spinning off from the Piazetta are the Transfer Center, the Commuter Lounge, and a student lounge, equipped with television and VCR. In addition to the Transfer Center, as a unique facility on the campus, the Commuter Lounge is a place for off-campus students who want to use a kitchen, shower, or lockers while on campus. The Photo Lab Co-op is above the Piazetta and offers 24-hour accessibility to darkroom equipment. Adjacent to the nearby meadow are a racquetball court and an outdoor basketball court. The center of the college includes a beautiful study center with soaring ceilings and walls of glass overlooking the forest. College facilities include a computer lab equipped with PCs for student use. Kresge also has the student-run Food Co-op, where healthful and organic produce is sold and working memberships are available. At the top of the college are the Town Hall performance facility, the Music Co-op, and a restaurant.
If people are looking for an atmosphere that is accepting
to different personalities and mind frames, and want the independence
to work with other students, Kresge offers that. Kresge really
strives to have a community of people, but leaves space to assert
your independence.
Diem Do, Community Studies
For more information, call (831) 459-2071 or visit the web site:
www2.ucsc.edu/kresge.
|
Kresge
Faculty and Staff |
| Provosts |
| Micah Perks |
Literature |
| Juan Poblete |
Latin American Literature |
| Members |
| Ralph H. Abraham |
Mathematics, Emeritus |
| Bettina Aptheker |
Feminist Studies and History |
| Murray Baumgarten |
English and Comparative Literature |
| Raoul Birnbaum |
History of Art and Visual Culture |
| Shelly E. Errington |
Anthropology |
| J. Peter Euben |
Politics, Emeritus |
| Marge Frantz |
American Studies and Feminist Studies, Emerita |
| Carla Freccero |
Literature |
| Pascale Gaitet |
French Literature and Language |
| Jody Greene |
English Literature |
| Conn Hallinan |
Journalism, Retired |
| Henry R. Hilgard |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, Emeritus |
| Emily Honig |
Feminist Studies and History |
| Akasha Hull |
Feminist Studies and Literature, Emerita |
| Earl Jackson Jr. |
Japanese Literature |
| John O. Jordan |
English Literature |
| Elise Knittle |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
| Diane K. Lewis |
Anthropology, Emerita |
| Nathaniel E. Mackey |
20th-Century Literature, Afro-American Literature, Creative
Writing |
| Mary Kay Martin |
Writing, Emerita |
| Alma R. Martínez |
Theater Arts |
| Carolyn Martin Shaw |
Anthropology |
| Geoffrey Mason |
Mathematics |
| Karen C. McNally |
Earth and Planetary Sciences, Emerita |
| Robert L. Meister |
Politics |
| Helene Moglen |
Literature and Feminist Studies |
| Madeline Moore |
English Literature, Emerita |
| Lisa Rofel |
Anthropology |
| Matthew Sands |
Physics, Emeritus |
| John H. Schaar |
Politics, Emeritus |
| Danny Scheie |
Theater Arts |
| Paul N. Skenazy |
American Literature, Emeritus |
| Roswell (Roz) Spafford |
Writing, Emerita |
| Richard Terdiman |
Literature |
| Anna Tsing |
Anthropology |
| Karen Tei Yamashita |
Literature |
| College Administrative Officer |
| Michael Yamauchi-Gleason |
| Staff |
| Jimmy Brown |
Community Safety Officer |
| Kawami Craig Evans |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Amy Lock |
College Assistant |
| Helen Mayer |
Academic Preceptor |
| Kalin McGraw |
Special Assistant to the College Administrative Officer |
| Ian Mitchell |
Maintenance Supervisor |
| Molly O’Brien |
College Programs Coordinator |
| Claudia Parrish |
Transfer Center Coordinator |
| Charles Perry |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Darien Rice |
Groundskeeper |
| Karen Rosewood |
Associate College Administrative Officer |
| Peg Shemaria |
Counseling Psychologist |
| Mary Sierra |
Financial Coordinator |
| Stacey Sketo-Rosener |
Academic Preceptor |
| Dave Sulser |
Maintenance Assistant |
| John Thompson |
Housing Coordinator |
| Mindy Yaninek |
Assistant to the Provost |
| Ramona Zeno |
Frontline Adviser/Advising Services Coordinator |
[Return to top]
Oakes College
Oakes was founded in 1972 to provide high-quality education to students from diverse cultural and social backgrounds. Students, staff, and faculty associated with the college believe that learning takes place not only in the classroom but also in residential settings. For that reason, they work hard to create a multicultural community whose members strive together toward certain universal goals—including equal access to educational opportunity and freedom from oppression—while simultaneously affirming and celebrating some of the distinctive aspects of the different backgrounds from which they come.
Academic Emphases
Oakes faculty members represent a variety of disciplines in the humanities, social sciences, and physical and biological sciences. Since its founding, Oakes has made a special effort to provide academic programs and experiences for underrepresented groups, including women. These programs and experiences are enriched by the presence of core faculty from disciplines housed in the college: American studies, American literature, writing, world literature, and history of consciousness. Oakes graduates have gone on to successful careers in fields such as medicine, law, education, medical research, and community service.
The Oakes core course 80, Values and Change in a Diverse Society, is required of all first-year students. The course is writing intensive and examines individual and collective responses to issues of culture, gender, sexuality, race, and class. (See the Oakes College Course
Descriptions section for a description of the course.) Students admitted as lower-division transfer students who prior to enrolling have completed at least one UC-transferable college English composition course with a minimum grade of C (2.0) or better are exempt from the core course requirement.
Students at Oakes are challenged in many ways. Not only do they have the opportunity to live and work with people from different backgrounds, but they are also expected to demonstrate academic excellence in their chosen fields of study. To enable all students to do well—regardless of their level of high school preparation—a variety of services are available:
- The Learning Center at Oakes College offers a study center as well as tutoring and advising. Special assistance in writing and tutoring in a variety of subjects are offered to Oakes students and EOP students.
- The Oakes Computer Lab provides access to 20 PC computers for Oakes students.
- Oakes Community Service provides students with information about and assistance in making contact with a wide variety of community service organizations. All Oakes students are encouraged to contribute service to public agencies, schools, and community organizations in the city of Santa Cruz and in economically deprived areas of Santa Cruz and Monterey Counties. Oakes students serve as tutors, teachers, mentors, and community builders. Academic credit is available through the Oakes community service course.
- Academic and psychological counselors work with students to help them overcome obstacles to learning and realize their full potential.
College Community and Facilities
Oakes College, located on the west side of the UCSC campus, commands a sweeping view of Monterey Bay. Students may choose between apartment and residence hall living. The residence halls have lounges on each floor, attractive courtyards, and views of the ocean and the city of Santa Cruz. The college’s residence halls and apartments are arranged into “blocks.” Five students share an apartment, along with the responsibilities for maintaining it and cooking their own meals. Residence halls are coed and provide space for students in double and single rooms. Restroom facilities for each gender are located on each floor.
Full-time coordinators for residential education and neighborhood assistants help residents develop cooperative ways of living together. As one student put it, “Oakes is a community where people of many different colors, backgrounds, interests, and goals form a friendly neighborhood. We share our cultures and adapt to the different lifestyles of our neighbors.” The residential program is designed to assist all students in integrating their academic and social needs. The residential staff hosts activities such as brunches, study breaks, and block dinners, each with a different theme and often reflecting the various cultures represented by Oakes students. Other events include College Night programs in the dining hall, celebrations of cultural traditions such as Kwanzaa and Dia de los Muertos, an annual Harvest Dinner for the Oakes community, a Valentine’s Day party, and a spring block party.
The college staff seeks to nurture and sustain a community in which mutual respect, understanding, and concern for others are the norm. Within that atmosphere of community expectations, students are also supported and encouraged to find room for their own creative personal expression.
The other physical facilities at Oakes further support the special programs of the college and provide recreational opportunities for the students. College facilities include the Learning Center; a multipurpose room for lectures, movies, and small theater productions; a college library; a lounge used for college dinners and meetings; a dining facility shared with College Eight; TV lounges in the residences and adjacent to the coffee shop; and a small basketball court, the “Underdome.” Additional recreational facilities located close to the college include tennis courts, a large soccer field, and an indoor basketball court.
A grant from the San Francisco Foundation—from Roscoe and Margaret Oakes Foundation funds—was used in partnership with public funds for the construction of Oakes. Part of the grant was used to establish an endowed fund for the college.
For further information, call (831) 459-2558 or visit the web site:
oakes.ucsc.edu.
| Oakes
Faculty and Staff |
| Provost |
| Pedro G. Castillo |
History |
| Fellows |
| David H. Anthony III |
History |
| George R. Blumenthal |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| Barry Bowman |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology |
| Victor Burgin |
History of Consciousness, Emeritus |
| Max Camarillo |
Counseling and Psychological Services |
| James T. Clifford |
History of Consciousness |
| Christopher Connery |
Chinese Literature |
| Vilashini Cooppan |
Literature |
| Michael H. Cowan |
Literature and American Studies |
| Angela Y. Davis |
History of Consciousness |
| Teresa de Lauretis |
History of Consciousness |
| David E. Dorfan |
Physics, Emeritus |
| Barbara L. Epstein |
History of Consciousness |
| James B. Gill |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
| Susan Gillman |
American Literature |
| Kirsten Gruesz |
Literature |
| Donna J. Haraway |
History of Consciousness |
| Yvette Huginnie |
American Studies |
| Sharon Kinoshita |
Literature and Language Studies |
| David S. Kliger |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| Ann M. Lane |
American Studies, Emerita |
| Diane K. Lewis |
Anthropology, Emerita |
| David S. Marriott |
History of Consciousness |
| Pradip K. Mascharak |
Chemistry and Biochemistry |
| Eric Porter |
American Studies |
| Catherine Ramirez |
American Studies |
| Renya Ramirez |
American Studies |
| A. Christina Ravelo |
Ocean Sciences |
| Forrest G. Robinson |
American Studies |
| Donald L. Rothman |
Writing |
| Daniel Selden |
Literature |
| Mary W. Silver |
Ocean Sciences |
| Neferti Tadiar |
History of Consciousness |
| Frank J. Talamantes |
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, Emeritus |
| Hayden White |
History of Consciousness, Emeritus |
| Rob Wilson |
Literature |
| Judy Yung |
American Studies, Emerita |
| Adrienne L. Zihlman |
Anthropology |
| Honorary Associates |
| J. Herman Blake |
|
| Bruce N. Cooperstein |
|
| David Dodson |
|
| Allen B. Fields |
|
| Dolores Huerta |
|
| Elba R. Sánchez |
|
| College Administrative Officer |
| Susan Welte |
|
| Staff |
| Michael Bartee |
Counseling Psychologist |
| Cher Bergeon |
Academic Preceptor |
| Ira Beyah |
Relief Proctor |
| Antoine Bracy |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Terry Cohelan |
Senior Maintenance Assistant |
| Kathy Durcan |
Academic Services Assistant |
| Gabrielle Filip-Crawford |
Assistant to Provost and to College Administrative Officer |
| Valerie Guerrero |
Student Life and Housing Assistant |
| Bill Heinrich |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Elaine Kihara |
Academic Preceptor |
| Adriana Lopez |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Sandy Lord Craig |
Assistant Budget Analyst |
| Gwendolyn Mathieu |
Housing Coordinator |
| Marie Morones |
College Assistant |
| Emilio Navarro |
Senior Building Maintenance Worker |
| Mari Ortiz-McGuire |
Associate College Administrative Officer |
| Susan Parrish |
Academic Services Assistant |
| Patti Traugott |
Advising and Records Coordinator |
| Nick Yukich |
Community Safety Officer/Supervisor |
[Return to top]
College Eight
The theme of College Eight—Environment and Society—is concern for social, political, scientific, and ethical issues, recognizing the essential interconnections among human beings and between humans and all other forms of life. College Eight faculty are drawn primarily from the Environmental Studies, Sociology, and Community Studies Depart-ments, but also include faculty from other disciplines, such as Biology, Computer Engineer-ing, Computer Science, Earth Sciences, Mathematics, Physics, and Psychology.
The students who come to College Eight bring with them a wide variety of life, work, and educational experiences. They represent all the disciplines in their choices of major. They also represent a rich diversity of cultural backgrounds. A large number of transfer students attend College Eight and tend to have a clear sense of their educational and professional objectives. For first-year students, the college fosters an exciting, interdisciplinary intellectual atmosphere in which to explore their academic interests and potential. This mix of ages and backgrounds creates a refreshingly easy fellowship among faculty, staff, and students.
Academic
Emphases
The College Eight core course 80, Environment and Society, examines different perspectives on environment and community in the contemporary world. (See the College Eight Course
Descriptions section for the course description.) Through a series of lectures, films, readings, and small-group discussions, the course provides an opportunity for first-year students to study issues of vital importance and to share their diverse backgrounds, cultural heritage, and points of view. The course, which is required of all first-year students, features guidance and practice in the critical reading and writing skills necessary for successful study at the university level. Students admitted as lower-division transfer students who prior to enrolling have completed at least one UC-transferable college English composition course with a minimum grade of C (2.0) or better are exempt from the core course requirement.
College Eight students and faculty are encouraged to develop courses, conferences, and field projects. Internships and field studies offer an opportunity to link classroom theory with action in the community.
College Community and Facilities
College Eight is located on a sunny, terraced hillside on the west side of the UCSC campus, a site that offers a spectacular view of Monterey Bay and the California coastline. The college is designed to encourage interaction among resident and commuter students, faculty, and staff. Outdoor spaces allow for relaxing and informal opportunities to converse and socialize; they include small residence hall patios, grass quadrangles, and a large plaza—the heart of the college—where pedestrian traffic converges. Adjacent to the college are recreational facilities including the West Field House, tennis courts, basketball and sand volleyball courts, and playing fields. The Theater Arts and Music Centers, McHenry Library, and Porter and Oakes Colleges are a short distance from the college.
College Eight’s facilities include an academic building that accommodates the college office, the Sociology and Community Studies Departments and associated research centers, a computer lab with printers, five classrooms, and faculty offices.
Approximately 390 students live in a community of two- and three-story residence halls with single and double rooms and suites. The residence halls include designated study lounges, laundry facilities, and lobbies that serve as living rooms—favorite places where residents gather to relax, watch television, and catch up on the news of the day. Another 260 students are housed in College Eight’s two-, three-, and four-bedroom apartments, which are generally reserved for students at the sophomore level and above.
The college’s enthusiastic residential staff is composed of coordinators for residential education, who are full-time live-in professionals, along with undergraduate resident assistants. The residential staff plans a variety of educational and recreational events including community barbecues, outdoor movies, and a quarterly cultural festival celebrating the diversity of our community. More intimate gatherings include study breaks, coffee talks, brunches, and potlucks. The residential staff is available to ease the transition to college life, making the college a comfortable new home for our residents.
The Student Commons building contains the office of College Eight’s college programs coordinator and a large meeting room for student use. The study center is located across the plaza. The lively College Eight Café features a pool table and a quiet, comfortable corner with couches. The café is a favorite haven and gathering place for students, faculty, staff, and other members of the campus community.
The College Eight Student Programs Office, in conjunction with the student government and student organizations, plans social, multicultural, and educational events for the college community. Weekly Café Nights—featuring open mikes, music, art shows, and guest speakers—accommodate the diverse spectra of cultural and artistic interests of the students. College Night, a monthly cultural event, provides an opportunity for students to learn about a variety of cultures through entertainment and delicious cuisine. In addition, the College Eight Student Programs Office works closely with the Student Environmental Center to bring programs that educate and build long-lasting networks, which aim to address the environmental issues affecting our world today.
Above all, College Eight seeks to create a community of inclusion, in which each person is encouraged to share and explore beliefs, worldviews, values, and ideas in an atmosphere of mutual support and trust.
For more information, contact the college at (831) 459-2361, e-mail
8housing@ucsc.edu or crmeusel@ucsc.edu,
or visit the web site: www2.ucsc.edu/eight/.
| College Eight
Faculty and Staff |
| Provost |
| S. Ravi Rajan |
Environmental Studies |
| Fellows |
| Jennifer K. Anderson |
Environmental Studies |
| David P. Belanger |
Physics |
| Julie Bettie |
Sociology |
| John G. Borrego |
Latin American and
Latino Studies |
| Bruce Bridgeman |
Psychology |
| David T. Brundage |
Community Studies |
| Bruce N. Cooperstein |
Mathematics |
| Daniel P. Costa |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology |
| Ben Crow |
Sociology |
| Robert R. Curry |
Environmental Studies, Emeritus |
| Daniel F. Doak |
Environmental Studies |
| Bryan H. Farrell |
Environmental Studies, Emeritus |
| F. Joel Ferguson |
Computer Engineering |
| Andrew Fisher |
Earth and Planetary Sciences |
| William H. Friedland |
Community Studies and Sociology, Emeritus |
| Hiroshi Fukurai |
Sociology |
| Margaret H. Fusari |
Environmental Studies; Natural Reserve Director |
| J. J. García-Luna-Aceves |
Computer Engineering |
| Viktor Ginzburg |
Mathematics |
| Stephen R. Gliessman |
Environmental Studies |
| Walter L. Goldfrank |
Sociology |
| David E. Goodman |
Environmental Studies |
| Gary B. Griggs |
Earth and Planetary Sciences; Director, Institute of Marine Sciences |
| Brent Haddad |
Environmental Studies |
| David P. Helmbold |
Computer Science |
| Phokion G. Kolaitis |
Computer Science |
| David C. Koo |
Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| Tracy Larrabee |
Computer Engineering |
| Deborah K. Letourneau |
Environmental Studies |
| Paul M. Lubeck |
Sociology |
| Patrick McKercher |
Writing |
| Paul Niebanck |
Environmental Planning, Emeritus |
| James R. O’Connor |
Sociology, Emeritus |
| Art Pearl |
Education, Emeritus |
| John S. Pearse |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus |
| James E. Pepper |
Environmental Planning, Emeritus |
| Daniel M. Press |
Environmental Studies |
| Mary Beth Pudup |
Community Studies |
| Peter T. Raimondi |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology |
| David M. Rank |
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Emeritus |
| Craig Reinarman |
Sociology |
| Michael Rotkin |
Community Studies |
| Martine D. F. Schlag |
Computer Engineering |
| Daniel Scripture |
Writing |
| Michael Soulé |
Environmental Studies, Emeritus |
| Roswell (Roz) Spafford |
Writing, Emerita |
| Nancy Stoller |
Community Studies |
| Andrew Szasz |
Sociology |
| Anujan Varma |
Computer Engineering |
| Candace West |
Sociology |
| Terrie M. Williams |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology |
| Deborah A. Woo |
Community Studies |
| Affiliate Fellows |
| William Jackson (Jack) Davis |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus |
| Sylvia Jenkins |
Music |
| Burney Le Boeuf |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus |
| Joel R. Primack |
Physics |
| Brian Walton |
Environmental Studies; Coordinator, Predatory Bird Research Group |
| College Administrative Officer |
| Susan Welte |
| Staff |
| Angela Aguilar |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Theresa Beasley |
Housing Coordinator |
| Paul Bianchini |
Facilities/Maintenance Supervisor |
| Jan Burroughs |
Academic Preceptor |
| Jody Croce |
Café Manager |
| Travis Douglas |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Wendy Gittings |
Café Assistant Manager |
| Heidi Lewin |
College Programs Coordinator |
| Sandra Lord Craig |
Assistant Budget Analyst |
| Mary McKinnon |
Associate College Administrative Officer |
| Charles Meusel |
College Assistant |
| A. Patrice Monsour |
Counseling Psychologist |
| Lauren Reed |
Academic Preceptor |
| Sara Walsh |
Assistant to the Provost and Coordinator of Advising and
Records |
| Nate Westrup |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Nick Yurich |
Community Safety Officer/Supervisor |
| Baldo Zaragoza |
Senior Building Maintenance Worker |
[Return to top]
College Nine
At College Nine, we introduce students to our increasingly
interconnected world. Students can learn about the impact of economic
globalization. We also expect them to come to appreciate the diversity
of cultural traditions.
Campbell Leaper, College Nine Provost
Academic Emphases
College Nine’s theme of International and Global Issues emphasizes the impact of our increasingly interconnected world. We consider how people across the world affect one another through global economies, education, mass media, jet travel, and computers. Some specific issues that our academic and cocurricular programs consider are economic and cultural globalization, immigration, ethnic conflicts, genocide, and human rights. Our programs seek to respect both diversity and unity in understanding individuals and societies. Students interested in these issues either as their major focus or as part of their general education are invited to join the College Nine community.
Writing Seminar
In the first-quarter frosh course, International and Global Perspectives:
A Writing and Discussion Seminar (see the College Nine Course
Descriptions section), students examine current issues pertinent to the college’s intellectual theme. Topics address issues such as globalization, inequities in wealth and poverty across the world, human rights, and regional conflicts.
The seminar emphasizes the development of students’ writing skills. Being able to write well is a valuable asset for success in college and later in most careers. Students write several reflective and analytical papers during the quarter. Each paper undergoes at least one revision after the student receives constructive feedback from the instructor. Thus, the instructors work closely with each student throughout the quarter.
All students who enter as frosh are required to pass the college writing seminar with a grade of C or better. Students admitted as lower-division transfer students who prior to enrolling have completed at least one UC-transferable college English composition course with a minimum grade of C (2.0) or better are exempt from the core course requirement.
Model United Nations Workshop
College Nine students have the option of enrolling in a Model United Nations Workshop. This 2-credit course meets once a week and can be taken in addition to the regular 15-credit academic load. Students simulate the United Nations. Delegates work together to solve global problems through interactive methods that include role playing, a mock UN session, and faculty presentations. The course is offered to both first-year and upper-division students.
Global Issues Colloquium Series
Through weekly presentations by leading experts, students learn about global challenges and also consider possible solutions. There is often an informal dinner following the presentation that allows for discussion with the speaker. Students have the option of taking this as a 1-credit class or of occasionally attending the presentations on a drop-in basis.
Special Academic Programs
Optional programs are available to involve College Nine students in academic and cocurricular activities beyond the first-quarter course. They are designed to promote students’ academic achievement and success by connecting them with faculty mentors and helping them pursue leadership experiences in particular contexts.
Service Learning
Students can extend their learning beyond the classroom by getting practical experience and course credit working as an intern for a community or business organization. This type of practical experience is known as service learning or field study. Examples include assisting in a classroom or at a homeless shelter. College Nine has its own service-learning program. The service-learning supervisor guides the student at the practicum site and helps the student develop a reading list and paper topic related to the placement.
Students as Teachers and Mentors
College Nine students have special opportunities to become course assistants, tutors, and student mentors for course credit. Students gain independent experience as teachers leading their own discussion sections of a College Nine course. They receive close supervision that emphasizes a collaborative approach to developing and enhancing teaching, communication, and leadership skills. The College Nine academic advisers can also direct students to other opportunities for student-teaching and peer-mentoring programs on campus. These are excellent opportunities to work closely with a faculty member and to develop one’s own skills as a teacher and a leader.
Global Information Internship Program
The Global Information Internship Program (GIIP) places highly motivated students—trained in social science and information technology—in internships with nongovernmental organizations and community groups. Students in GIIP help these organizations and groups in the use of Internet-based information and communications technologies. Interns acquire leadership and organizational skills through the “learning-by-doing” method. For more information, see
the Global Information Internship
Program section and visit the web site at www2.ucsc.edu/giip/.
Practical Activism: Lessons in Local and Global Change
This annual one-day conference focuses on international social justice concerns in the local context. Students gain valuable leadership skills in developing and implementing this exceptional program, which involves collaboration among faculty, staff, and the local community.
Education Abroad
The UC Education Abroad Program (see Education
Abroad Program section) places students at a university in another
country for one or more quarters. Studying abroad can be a valuable
way to expand ones understanding of the world. Given the international
focus at College Nine, students are encouraged (but not required)
to develop a second language or to study abroad.
Research Opportunities
The faculty at UC Santa Cruz are ranked high in their quality of research. College Nine students are encouraged to take advantage of the many excellent opportunities available to work closely with faculty as research apprentices. Students will find many internship, independent study, or senior thesis programs in the departments of most majors. The College Nine academic advisers will help link students with these programs.
College Nine Scholars Program
Eligible College Nine frosh may apply to the Scholars Program. This may include enrolling in an honors section of the frosh writing seminar in the fall quarter, the 2-credit workshop in the winter, and a special seminar with a social sciences faculty member in the spring.
College Nine Pathways to Distinction
Another feature of College Nine is that qualified students may graduate with College Nine Distinction. This recognition is intended to serve as an incentive for students to pursue activities that are especially apt to help them succeed in college and beyond. Two pathways are possible:
Research and scholarship. In this pathway, students pursue research with faculty by completing three quarters (15 credits) of work on a senior thesis or a research internship. Students may be recognized with College Nine Distinc-tion if they do a thesis or a research internship in their major on a topic related to international or global issues.
Language and culture. Students who enroll in at least three quarters (15 credits) in either Education Abroad or a foreign language (or a combination) may qualify for College Nine Distinction.
College Community and Facilities
Founded in fall 2000, College Nine is one of the newest colleges at UCSC. Consistent with UCSC’s founding vision, College Nine creates an integrated living and learning environment through engaging academic and extracurricular programs focusing on the theme of International and Global Perspectives. Students and staff collaborate to develop an array of programs exploring the many aspects of the college’s theme. Some of the programs include faculty presentations, guest speakers, debates, films, arts events, and interactive workshops. These programs bring together members of our community to learn, debate, and challenge ourselves about important issues facing us today in an atmosphere of mutual respect and engagement.
College Nights
Each month, the college community comes together to plan a College Night, which is a large-scale community celebration held in the dining commons and open to all College Nine students whether or not they live on campus. These events are planned by students and focus on particular regions of the world. College Nights include food, entertainment, and educational materials related to the theme. Some past College Nights have been Winter Holidays from Around the World, Carnival, and Asian Traditions.
International Living Center
The International Living Center (ILC) at College Nine offers a unique living environment fostering understanding, cooperation, and friendship among upper-division students from different nations, cultures, and backgrounds. Half of the residents are students from the United States, and the other half are students from various countries around the world. Students reside in the College Nine Apartments.
Cocurricular Programs and Opportunities
Getting involved in cocurricular activities is a predictor of college success. Not only do college activities help students make friends, they foster leadership and group cooperation skills. There are many opportunities at College Nine for student involvement. These include the following groups as well as many other programs, activities, and clubs.
Student leadership and involvement are key to successfully building the new College Nine community. The Fall Leadership Institute offers students the opportunity to develop leadership skills and to develop efficacy as world citizens and leaders at College Nine. The institute meets weekly throughout fall quarter, providing a wide range of exercises, guest speakers, discussions, and debates.
Student Government represents the students in the college. It appoints students to campus and college committees, consults with college administration on policy development, and provides monetary support to student organizations.
CREATE (Cultural Resources to Educate and to Empower) offers a community at College Nine for students of color to find support and empowerment through mentorship and friendship.
PHAT (Programming House Activities Team) is a planning committee for the apartment residents who are interested in getting people out of their rooms and into their communities. Programs include the annual Haunted House and the Battle of the Buildings.
WATER (White Allies To End Racism) tackles issues of diversity and racism through the exploration of white racial identity. The group provides a safe and open space for dialogue and the opportunity to work with students of color groups on collaborative action projects.
The Rainbow Club provides opportunities for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer, and questioning students and their allies to join together for self-awareness and social activities in a fun, relaxed atmosphere.
Students may apply to this program, in which participants spend part of their spring break in Mexico building a house and helping in the community.
This two-day retreat provides international and American students from diverse backgrounds the opportunity to explore various components of intercultural communication. Through a series of structured exercises and small-group discussions, students share perspectives on issues such as multiculturalism, values orientation, and diversity. The goal of the workshop is to build community and friendship among international and American students as well as to increase students’ understanding of the complexity of communicating across cultures. The Intercultural Communication Retreat is optional; students apply for this opportunity in the fall.
College Nine is situated in a redwood grove next to the Social Sciences 1 and 2 Buildings near the heart of campus. One of the campus’s Instructional Computing Labs is conveniently located in the Social Sciences 2 Building.
A nature preserve serves as College Nine’s “backyard.” College Nine students have immediate access to hiking, running, and mountain bike trails in the adjacent forest.
Residence halls with 400 single and double bedrooms opened in fall 2002. These fully furnished residence halls include student lounges, recreational spaces, and Internet connections. In addition, a state-of-the-art dining hall with an adjoining game room and student lounge for both Colleges Nine and Ten opened in fall 2002.
Colleges Nine and Ten also house approximately 300 upper-division students in apartments, with 190 students in single bedrooms and the balance in double and triple rooms. All apartments have full kitchens, living rooms, bathrooms, and Internet connections. Ground-floor apartments have decks, and most upper apartments have private balconies.
For more information about academic or general college programs,
call (831) 459-5034, e-mail dslater@ucsc.edu,
or visit the web site: collegenine.ucsc.edu.
| College Nine
Faculty and Staff |
| Provost |
| Helen Shapiro* |
Division of Social Sciences; Sociology |
| Fellows |
| Charter Fellows* |
| Joshua Aizenman* |
Economics |
| Dilip Basu* |
History |
| Donald Brenneis* |
Anthropology |
| George Bunch* |
Education |
| Edmund Burke III* |
History |
| Catherine Byrne |
Psychology |
| Melissa Caldwell |
Anthropology |
| Nancy Chen* |
Anthropology |
| Weixin Cheng* |
Environmental Studies |
| Mark Cioc* |
History |
| Annette Clear* |
Politics |
| Catherine R. Cooper* |
Psychology and Education |
| Ben Crow* |
Sociology |
| Bernard Elbaum |
Economics |
| Jonathan A. Fox* |
Latin American and Latino Studies |
| K. C. Fung* |
Economics |
| Margaret A. Gibson* |
Education and Anthropology |
| Per F. Gjerde* |
Psychology |
| Stephen R. Gliessman* |
Environmental Studies |
| Walter L. Goldfrank* |
Sociology |
| June A. Gordon* |
Education |
| Isebill V. Gruhn* |
Politics, Emerita |
| Julie Guthman |
Community Studies |
| Michael M. Hutchison* |
Economics |
| David E. Kaun* |
Economics |
| Kenneth Kletzer* |
Economics |
| Campbell Leaper* |
Founding College Provost; Psychology |
| Daniel T. Linger* |
Anthropology |
| Ronnie D. Lipschutz* |
Politics |
| Suresh K. Lodha* |
Computer Science |
| Paul M. Lubeck* |
Sociology |
| Jaye Padgett* |
Linguistics |
| Ingrid Parker |
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology |
| Jerome Shaw |
Education |
| Nirvikar Singh* |
Economics |
| Michael E. Urban* |
Politics |
| Carter Wilson* |
Community Studies, Emeritus |
| College Administrative Officer |
| Deana Slater |
|
| Senior Academic Preceptor |
| Robert Taylor |
|
| Staff |
| Eeman Agrama |
Coordinator for Residential Education |
| Abbey Asher |
Service Learning Coordinator |
| Wendy Baxter |
Associate College Administrative Office for Cocurricular
and College Programs |
| Alyson Diebert |
Assistant to the Provost |
| Jane Hartman |
Assistant to the College Administrative Officer |
| Hashim Jibri |
Coordinator of Residential Education |
| Jay Johnson |
Proctor |
| Briza Juarez |
College Programs Coordinator |
| Audrey Kim |
Psychologist |
| Grace Kim |
Assistant College Programs Coordinator |
| Robin Kirskey |
Financial Analyst |
| Marcia Levitsky |
Academic Adviser |
| Maurício Magdalena |
Senior Building Maintenance Supervisor |
| Eric Peterson |
Maintenance Supervisor |
| Emily Puckett |
Housing/Student Life Assistant |
| Erin Ramsden |
Cocurricular Programs Coordinator |
| Bill Reid |
Groundskeeper |
| Brett Riale |
Senior Building Maintenance Supervisor |
| Matthew Sernaker |
Events and Facilities Coordinator |
| Kelley Starnes |
Housing Coordinator |
| Anna Stuart |
Cocurricular Programs and College Programs Assistant |
| Julían Verlarde |
Coordinator of Residential Education |
| Rod Waters |
Associate College Administrative Officer for Residential
Life and Housing |
| Cynthia Welle |
Coordinator of Residential Education |
[Return to top]
College Ten
Our goal at College Ten is to foster students concerns
for social justice and their respect for diversity. This appreciation
develops through both understanding and practice. Students can
study the roots of social problems such as prejudice, ethnic hatreds,
poverty, and political oppression. Another form of learning can
occur through involvement in community organizations and other
agencies. In these ways, we hope our students can contribute to
the makings of a better world.
Campbell Leaper, College Ten Provost
Academic Emphases
College Ten’s theme of Social Justice and Community addresses a range of social problems and their impact on all members of society. In particular, the academic and cocurricular programs consider the injustices that many people confront in their lives. Possible community and governmental policies for addressing social, political, and economic inequalities are also examined. In addition, the college provides students with opportunities to make their own positive contributions to social change through community involvement or scholarly research.
The college curriculum will explore the causes and consequences of social injustice in several ways. Students will examine the roots of prejudice, discrimination, and violence directed toward groups based on their ethnicity, skin color, gender, sexual orientation, religious beliefs, or political views. They will also consider the causes and consequences of poverty both within the United States and across the world.
Writing Seminar
In the first-quarter frosh course, Social Justice and Community:
A Writing and Discussion Seminar (see the College Ten course
descriptions section), students examine current issues pertinent to the college’s intellectual theme. Topics address issues such as poverty, discrimination, and economic injustice. Ways that communities, governments, and businesses can address inequities in society are also examined.
The seminar emphasizes the development of students’ writing, reading, and speaking skills. Being able to write well is a valuable asset for success in college and later in most careers. Students write several reflective and analytical papers during the quarter. Each paper undergoes at least one revision after the student receives constructive feedback from the instructor. Thus, the instructors work closely with each student throughout the quarter.
All students who enter as frosh are required to pass the college writing seminar with a grade of C or better. Students admitted as lower-division transfer students who prior to enrolling have completed at least one UC-transferable college English composition course with a minimum grade of C (2.0) or better are exempt from the core course requirement.
Special Academic Programs
Optional programs are available to involve College Ten students in academic and cocurricular activities beyond the first-quarter core course. They are designed to promote students’ academic achievement and success by connecting them with faculty mentors and helping them pursue leadership experiences in particular contexts.
Social Justice Issues Workshop
College Ten students have the option of enrolling in the Social Justice Issues Workshop in winter quarter. This 2-credit course meets once per week and can be taken in addition to a regular 15-credit academic load. The workshop offers a small, dynamic learning community in which members explore important issues of personal and cultural identity; social, political, and environmental concerns; and community-mindedness. The class emphasizes small-group experiential learning through structured exercises and group activities, and also includes discussions, film presentations, and guest speakers. The course is offered to both first-year and upper-division students.
Service Learning
Students can extend their learning beyond the classroom by getting practical experience and course credit working as an intern for a community or business organization. This type of practical experience is known as service learning or field study. Examples include assisting in a classroom or a homeless shelter. College Ten has its own service-learning program. The service-learning supervisor guides the student at the practicum site and helps the student develop a reading list and paper topic related to the placement.
Practical Activism: Lessons in Local and
Global Change
This annual one-day conference focuses on international social justice concerns in the local context. Students gain valuable leadership skills in developing and implementing this exceptional program, which involves collaboration among faculty, staff, and the local community.
Students as Teachers and Mentors
College Ten students have special opportunities to become course assistants, tutors, and student mentors for course credit. Students gain independent experience as teachers leading their own discussion sections of a College Ten course. They receive close supervision that emphasizes a collaborative approach to developing and enhancing teaching, communication, and leadership skills. The College Ten academic advisers can also direct students to other opportunities for student-teaching and peer-mentoring programs on campus. These are excellent opportunities to work closely with a faculty member and to develop one’s own skills as a teacher and a leader.
Research Opportunities
The UC Santa Cruz faculty are ranked high in their quality of research. College Ten students are encouraged to take advantage of the many excellent opportunities available to work closely with faculty as research apprentices. Students will find many internship, independent study, or senior thesis programs in the departments of most majors. The College Ten academic advisers will help link students with these programs.
College Ten Scholars Program
Eligible College Ten frosh may apply to the Scholars Program. This may include enrolling in an honors section of the frosh writing seminar in the fall, the 2-credit workshop in the winter, and a special seminar with a social sciences faculty member in the spring.
College Ten Pathways to Distinction
Another feature of College Ten is that qualified students may graduate with College Ten Distinction. This recognition is intended to serve as an incentive for students to pursue activities that are especially apt to help them succeed in college and beyond. Two pathways are possible:
Research and scholarship. In the first pathway, students are encouraged to pursue research opportunities with faculty by completing three quarters (15 credits) of work on a senior thesis or a research internship. Students may be recognized with College Ten Distinction if they do a thesis or a research internship in their major on a topic related to the theme of social justice and community.
Service and leadership. The second route to graduating with College Ten Distinction is through completing three quarters (15 credits) of service-learning internships, teaching, or other forms of community service.
College Community and Facilities
Founded in fall 2002, College Ten is the newest college at UCSC. Consistent with UCSC’s founding vision, College Ten creates an integrated living-and-learning environment through engaging academic and extracurricular programs focusing on the theme of Social Justice and Community. Students and staff collaborate to develop an array of programs exploring the many aspects of social justice. Some of the programs include faculty presentations, guest speakers, debates, films, arts events, and interactive workshops. These programs bring together members of our community to learn, debate, and challenge ourselves about important issues facing us today in an atmosphere of mutual respect and engagement.
College Nights
Every quarter, students and staff work together to plan College Nights, which are large-scale community celebrations held in the dining commons and open to all College Ten students whether or not they live on campus. College Nights include food, entertainment, and educational materials related to a theme.
Student Government
Student Government represents the students in the college. It appoints students to campus and college committees, consults with college administration on policy development, and provides monetary support to student organizations.
Cocurricular Programs and Opportunities
Getting involved in cocurricular activities is a predictor of college success. Not only do college activities help students make friends, they foster leadership and group cooperation skills. There are many opportunities at College Ten for student involvement. These include the following groups as well as many other programs, activities, and clubs.
CREATE
The purpose of CREATE (Cultural Resources to Educate and to Empower) is to facilitate the ongoing discussion of diversity issues at College Ten and in our living communities, learn about and promote multiculturalism, plan activities, and help students and staff have a resource for inclusiveness and training.
ENGAGE
ENGAGE (Explore New Growth and Gain Experience) offers students the opportunity to explore and develop their own beliefs, values, and feelings about current issues and social concerns through a wide range of exercises, guest speakers, discussions, and debates. Participants develop leadership skills and increase their efficacy as world citizens and leaders at College Ten. ENGAGE meets weekly throughout fall quarter.
PHAT
PHAT (Programming House Activities Team) is a planning committee for the apartment residents who are interested in getting people out of their rooms and into their communities. Programs include the annual Haunted House and the Battle of the Buildings.
WATER
WATER (White Allies To End Racism) tackles issues of diversity and racism through the exploration of white racial identity. The group provides a safe and open space for dialogue and the opportunity to work with students of color groups on collaborative action projects.
Rainbow Club
The Rainbow Club provides opportunities for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer, and questioning students and their allies to join together for self-awareness and social activities in a fun, relaxed atmosphere.
Alternative Spring Break
Students may apply to this program, in which participants spend part of their spring break in Mexico building a house and helping in the community.
Multicultural Community Weekend
This two-day retreat provides students from diverse backgrounds the opportunity to explore various components of multicultural communication. Through a series of structured exercises and small-group discussions, students share perspectives on issues such as multiculturalism, values orientation, and diversity. The goal of the workshop is to build community and friendship among students as well as to increase students’ understanding of the complexity of communicating across diverse backgrounds. The Multicultural Community Weekend is optional; students apply for this opportunity in the fall.
Café Revolución
Located at College Ten, Café Revolución is a favorite gathering place. It is open nightly for social justice performances, music, and social interaction.
Physical Surroundings
College Ten is situated in a redwood grove next to the Social Sciences 1 and 2 Buildings near the heart of campus. One of the campus’s Instructional Computing Labs is conveniently located in Social Sciences 2.
A nature preserve serves as College Ten’s “backyard.” College Ten students have immediate access to hiking, running, and mountain bike trails in the adjacent forest.
Residence halls with 400 single and double bedrooms opened in fall 2002. These fully furnished residence halls include student lounges, recreational spaces, and Internet connections. In addition, a state-of-the-art dining hall with an adjoining game room and student lounge for both Colleges Nine and Ten opened in fall 2002.
Colleges Ten and Nine also house approximately 300 upper-division students in apartments, with 190 students in single bedrooms and the balance in double and triple rooms. All apartments have full kitchens, living rooms, bathrooms, and Internet connections. Ground-floor apartments have decks, and most upper apartments have private balconies.
For more information about academic or general college programs,
call (831) 459-5034, e-mail dslater@cats.ucsc.edu,
or visit the College Ten web site: collegeten.ucsc.edu.
| College Ten
Faculty and Staff |
| Provost |
| Helen Shapiro |
Division of Social Sciences; Sociology |
| Fellows |
| Charter Fellows* |
| Nameera Akhtar |
* Psychology |
| Jennifer Anderson |
* Environmental Studies |
| Bettina Aptheker |
Feminist Studies and History |
| Margarita Azmitia |
Psychology |
| Heather Bullock |
* Psychology |
| George C. Bunch |
Education |
| Maureen Callanan |
Psychology |
| Martin M. Chemers |
* Psychology |
| John Brown Childs |
* Sociology |
| Faye Crosby |
* Psychology |
| Robert Fairlie |
* Economics |
| Paul Frymer |
* Politics |
| John Isbister |
* Economics! Emeritus |
| Lori Kletzer |
* Economics |
| Campbell Leaper |
* Founding College Provost, Psychology |
| Rodney Ogawa |
Education |
| Paul Ortiz |
* Community Studies |
| Manuel Pastor Jr. |
* Latin American and Latino Studies |
| Pamela Perry |
* Community Studies |
| Daniel Press |
* Environmental Studies |
| S. Ravi Rajan |
* Environmental Studies |
| Jennifer Reardon |
Sociology |
| Craig Reinarman |
* Sociology |
| Michael Rotkin |
* Community Studies |
| Gabrielle Sandoval |
Sociology |
| Roger Schoenman |
Politics |
| Travis Seymour |
Psychology |
| Nancy Stoller |
* Community Studies |
| Dana Takagi |
* Sociology |
| Eileen Zurbriggen |
* Psychology |
| College Administrative Officer |
| Deana Slater |
|
| Senior Academic Preceptor |
| Robert Taylor |
|
| Staff |
| Eeman Agrama |
Coordinator of Residential Education |
| Lupe Allen |
Academic Adviser |
| Abbey Asher |
Service-Learning Coordinator |
| Dave Barry |
Proctor |
| Wendy Baxter |
Associate College Administrative Officer for Cocurricular
and College Programs |
| Olivia Chan |
Academic Adviser |
| Alyson Diebert |
Assistant to the Provost |
| Jenni Gullen |
Coordinator of Residential Education |
| Jane Hartman |
Assistant to the College Administrative Officer |
| Jay Johnson |
Proctor |
| Briza Juarez |
College Programs Co-coordinator |
| Audrey Kim |
Psychologist |
| Grace Kim |
Assistant College Programs Coordinator |
| Robin Kirksey |
Financial Analyst |
| Mauricio Magdaleno |
Senior Building Maintenance Worker |
| Eric Peterson |
Maintenancy Supervisor |
| Emily Puckett |
Housing/Student Life Assistant |
| José Reyes-Olivas |
Cocurricular Programs Coordinator |
| Brett Riale |
Senior Building Maintenance Supervisor |
| Michelle Sasse |
Groundskeeper |
| Matthew Sernaker |
Events and Facilities Coordinator |
| Kelley Starnes |
Housing Coordinator |
| Anna Stuart |
Cocurricular and College Programs Assistant |
| Julían Verlarde |
Coordinator of Residential Education |
| Rod Waters |
Associate College Administrative Officer for Residential
Life and Housing |
| Cynthia Welle |
Coordinator of Residential Education |
|