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University of Massachusetts Lowell: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 42°38′34″N 71°20′04″W / 42.642716°N 71.334530°W / 42.642716; -71.334530
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m Changed link for team from "osprey" (literal river hawk) to "UMass Lowell River Hawks" (actual team)
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|coor = {{Coord|42.642716|-71.334530|display=inline,title}}
|coor = {{Coord|42.642716|-71.334530|display=inline,title}}
|campus = [[urban area|Urban]]<br />150 [[acre]]s
|campus = [[urban area|Urban]]<br />150 [[acre]]s
|nickname = [[Osprey|River Hawks]]
|nickname = [[UMass Lowell River Hawks|River Hawks]]
|conference = Division I [[America East]]
|conference = Division I [[America East]]
|mascot = Rowdy the [[Osprey|River Hawk]]
|mascot = Rowdy the [[Osprey|River Hawk]]

Revision as of 01:45, 31 July 2013

University of Massachusetts Lowell
TypPublic
Established1894
ChancellorMarty Meehan
ProvostAhmed Abdelal
Academic staff
644 Full and Part-Time (Fall 2009)
Students16,330 (2012)[1]
Standort, ,
42°38′34″N 71°20′04″W / 42.642716°N 71.334530°W / 42.642716; -71.334530
CampusUrban
150 acres
ColorsPersian Red  
Pigment Blue 
White  
NicknameRiver Hawks
MascotRowdy the River Hawk
Websitewww.uml.edu

The University of Massachusetts Lowell (also known as UMass Lowell or UML) is a public university in Lowell, Massachusetts, United States, and part of the University of Massachusetts system. With more than 1,100 faculty members and more than 16,000 students, it is the largest university in the Merrimack Valley and the second-largest public institution in the state behind UMass Amherst.[2]

The university offers more than 120 degree choices, internships, bachelor’s to master’s programs and doctoral studies in the College of Fine Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences; College of Health Sciences; College of Sciences; the Francis College of Engineering; the Graduate School of Education; and the Manning School of Business.[3]

Founding

Coburn Hall in 1899

The University of Massachusetts Lowell began as the Lowell Normal School, a teaching college founded in 1894, and the Lowell Textile School, founded in 1895 to train technicians and managers for the textile industry. Over the next 75 years, both institutions extended their offerings to meet the growing needs of the region. Lowell State College and Lowell Technological Institute, as they were then known, merged in 1975 to form the University of Lowell. The campus became part of the University of Massachusetts system in 1991 and was renamed as the University of Massachusetts Lowell. [4]

Academics

UMass Lowell is well known for its science and engineering programs, including several "on the rise" technologies (e.g., the field of nanotechnology). It is the first university in the United States to offer a bachelor's degree in plastics engineering, and it is one of a few public universities in the United States to offer degrees in meteorology and sound recording technology. UMass Lowell has a radiation laboratory with a research reactor and Van De Graff accelerator that provides students with real-world experience in particle physics, nuclear engineering and health physics. The university also boasts a baseball research center that is the official baseball bat testing center for Major League Baseball. The UMass Lowell Doctorate of Physical Therapy program is the only DPT program offered by a public institution in Massachusetts.

UMass Lowell's Manning School of Business has a diverse curriculum in the fields of finance, marketing, management information systems, operations and more. The College of Health Sciences is a leader in fields such as work environment and clinical lab sciences, and includes the School of Nursing, elevated from a department as of June 1, 2013. The College of Fine Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences includes the School of Criminology and Justice Studies.

The freshman retention rate is 78.2 percent and four-year graduation rate is 29 percent(U.S. News & World Report). Since 2007, UMass Lowell’s six-year graduation rate, the standard measurement in higher education, has increased from 44 to 54 percent. Enrollment has increased 40 percent since 2007, and the average SAT scores for incoming freshmen have climbed 56 points.

Rankings

UMass Lowell specifically was ranked 170th on the Tier 1 National University Ranking of the Best Colleges of 2013 by the U.S. News & World Report.[5]

In the same report, UMass Lowell ranked 94th in the Top Public National Universities Ranking, and second among public universities in Massachusetts.[6]

UMass Lowell's Graduate School of Education is ranked No. 103 in the country, according to U.S, News & World Report. [7]

UMass Lowell's online program ranked sixth in the U.S. overall among online colleges on Guide to Online Schools’ 2013 Online College Rankings.[8]

In June 2013, Businer Insider magazine named the university the most underrated university in the country.

Student life

The Big Seven

The Big Seven are the main organizations on campus funded directly from the student activities fee (other student organizations have budgets granted through the Student Government Association). They are:

Greek life

Fraternities

Sororities

Athletics

Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell
LeLacheur Park, with the Merrimack River in the background, taken from the top of Fox Hall

UMass Lowell athletic teams compete in a variety of sports, men and women compete in Division I. As of July 1, 2013, 14 of UMass Lowell's Division II teams moved up to Division I, joining the America East Conference. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, ice hockey, track and field, and soccer. Women's sports are basketball, cross country, track and field, field hockey, soccer, rowing, softball, and volleyball. [9]

The university's men's hockey team plays in the Hockey East Association and plays its home games at the Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell. Past champions include the 1988 men's basketball team, the 1991 men's cross country team, the ice hockey team (three times), and the field hockey team twice (2005, 2010). The 2010 field hockey team finished its season with a perfect 24-0 record. In 2013,the men's hockey team won the Hockey East regular-season and tournament championships and advanced to the NCAA Division I Championship "Frozen Four," all for the first time in the university's history.

The nickname "River Hawks" came about during the school's transition from the University of Lowell to UMass Lowell and was inspired by the campus's location by the Merrimack River. The University of Lowell's nickname was the Chiefs, which was abandoned in favor of the current name. A campus-wide poll was conducted for student input and final candidates included the Ospreys and the Raging Rapids, according to the Connector student newspaper.

University demographics

Total enrollment for the 2012-2013 academic year is 16,330. In-state enrollment totals 92 percent of undergraduates and 71 percent of graduate students. International students are 1 percent of the undergraduate population and 14 percent of the graduate population. Students of color represent 21 percent of the total undergraduate population and 18 percent of the graduate population. The male-female ratio is 60/40 for undergraduates and 52/48 for the graduate population. The total enrollment is up by 40 percent from 2007 and UMass Lowell is now the second-largest campus in the University of Massachusetts system.[10]

Located in the historic industrial city of Lowell, 25 miles (40 km) northwest of Boston, the campus is located on both sides of 150 acres (0.61 km2) the Merrimack River. UMass Lowell has four campus clusters – North, South and East, the fourth, West, is not in Lowell, but instead in neighboring Chelmsford. Of the 16,330 students at UMass Lowell, approximately 60 percent are commuters. The university has increased student housing by more than 800 beds in the last three years and will add 1,000 more in Fall 2013 with the opening of two new residence halls.

Recent developments

UMass Lowell and the city reached an agreement in 2009 for the school to acquire the Tsongas Arena and the 3 acres (12,000 m2) of land adjacent to it. The transfer was finalized in February 2010 and the venue was renamed the Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell. The university bought the DoubleTree Hotel in downtown Lowell in 2009. Now called the UMass Lowell Inn & Conference Center, the building includes student housing, year-round lodging for the public and is home to events for the university and community, a restaurant called 50 Warren that is open to the public year-round, business and cultural programs, conferences and more.

The university broke ground in June 2010 on the Mark and Elisia Saab Emerging Technologies and Innovation Center, the first new academic building built from the ground up on campus in 30 years. The building, originally called just the "Emerging Technologies and Innovation Center" or "ETIC," is located on the former site of Smith Hall (demolished in July 2010), cost $80 million to construct with funding from a variety of sources including the state, federal government, alumni and other private donors. On March 30, 2011, the university held a topping-off ceremony marking the completion of the ETIC's steel frame. The ceremony also included the opening of a time capsule that was placed in the cornerstone of Smith Hall during its 1947 construction, as well as the compilation of a new time capsule to be included in the ETIC. The building's grand opening was on October 11, 2012.[11] The center was renamed as the Mark and Elisia Saab Emerging Technologies and Innovation Center in December 2012 in honor of the Lowell couple's generous support for the building and the university overall. [12]

In January 2011, the university announced that it had acquired the former St. Joseph's Hospital in Lowell for $6.3 million. The complex, renamed University Crossing, consisted of six buildings and approximately 300,000 square feet (28,000 m2) of developable space. The university is constructing a new student center at the site that will include a food court, bookstore and more, and is set to open in 2014. The University Police and some administrative functions have relocated to other buildings at University Crossing. The complex is located near the university's North, South and East campuses and will serve as a central point uniting all three. [13][14][15]

The university broke ground in April 2011 on the new Health and Social Sciences Building on South Campus. Construction of the building was completed in spring 2013 and it officially opened with a ceremony on April 18, 2013. The 69,000-square-foot (6,400 m2) building, construction of which was funded by the state's Higher Education Bond Bill of 2008, is home to the School of Criminology and Justice Studies, School of Nursing and Department of Psychology, which include some of the university's most popular majors.[16]

In November 2011, the university broke ground on a $16 million parking garage on North Campus. The garage is a six-story, 650-space parking facility that opened in Fall 2012.[17] A second new garage is under construction on South Campus and will open for the Fall 2013 semester.

In January 2012, construction of a new residence hall on East Campus, to be named University Suites, began with the demolition of the former Institute of Plastics Innovation Building. The suite-style residence hall is scheduled to open in August 2013 and will house more than 400 students. The building will also have a cafe, a multipurpose room, learning commons and other amenities. A second suite-style residence hall, Riverview Suites, also scheduled to open for the Fall 2013 semester, is being constructed by a developer on private property adjacent to the university's South Campus.

In May 2012, it was announced that a new building to house the Manning School of Business will be erected in the name of alumnus John Pulichino '67 and his wife, Joy Tong, who donated $4 million for student scholarships. The new Pulichino Tong Business Building will offer students a world-class business education with the best facilities, including a trading room.[18]

Notable alumni

Notable faculty

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.uml.edu/About/quick-facts.aspx
  2. ^ http://www.umb.edu/the_university/facts
  3. ^ http://www.uml.edu/Academics/colleges.aspx
  4. ^ Paul W. Rahmeier (1998). "A University's Mission: Responding to Community Needs". Education. 118.
  5. ^ [1]
  6. ^ [2]
  7. ^ [3]
  8. ^ "2013 Online College Rankings". Guide To Online Schools. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
  9. ^ Whitmer, Michael (February 13, 2013). "UMass-Lowell joining America East". The Boston Globe. Retrieved February 21, 2013.
  10. ^ Lowell (link inactive)
  11. ^ http://www.uml.edu/News/stories/2011-12/ETIC-opening.aspx
  12. ^ http://www.uml.edu/News/newsline/saab-etic.aspx
  13. ^ Boston Globe article
  14. ^ Boston Globe article
  15. ^ Boston Business Journal article
  16. ^ http://www.uml.edu/Facilities/Capital-Improvements/HSS/default.aspx
  17. ^ http://www.uml.edu/Facilities/Capital-Improvements/North-Campus-Garage.aspx
  18. ^ http://www.uml.edu/Facilities/Capital-Improvements/Pulichino-Tong-Business-Building.aspx