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Northampton Community College is a community college with campuses in Bethlehem Township, Northampton County, Pennsylvania, USA, just outside the city of Bethlehem in the Lehigh Valley region of the state, and in Tannersville, Pennsylvania in neighboring Monroe County. The college, founded in 1967, also has satellite locations in the south side of Bethlehem and Hawley.

Northampton grants associate degrees, certificates and diplomas in more than 100 fields including arts and humanities, business and technology, education and allied health. It is one of the largest employers in the Lehigh Valley and a major educator of registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, emergency responders, radiologic technologists, dental hygienists, veterinary technologists, funeral service directors, chefs and early childhood educators for the region.

The college is also one of the largest providers of workforce training, adult literacy programs, and non-credit classes in a four-county region and the only community college in Pennsylvania to offer on-campus housing.

Although the college now serves more than 34,000 students a year in credit and non-credit programs, it has maintained a low student/faculty ratio (21/1). An online learning program makes it possible for students to earn degrees at Northampton from anywhere in the world. International students also study on campus, and the college offers students and faculty the opportunity to study abroad.

One in four graduates of public high schools in Northampton County and one in six graduates of public high schools in Monroe County choose to begin their higher education at NCC, or "NACC" (pronounced 'Nack'), as some students call it in reference to the college's original name, Northampton County Area Community College. The student body is diverse in terms of age, ethnicity, income and academic interest.

Approximately 65% of students continue their education immediately after graduation. The rest enter the workforce. The college's placement rate almost always tops 90%.

Full-time students taking between 12 and 18 credit hours are charged a flat rate for tuition and fees ($1995 for residents of Northampton County.) Students registered for fewer than 12 credit hours are charged a per-credit hour rate ($133 for residents of Northampton County.) The college awards more than $36 million in financial aid each year and disburses more private scholarship aid than any other community college in Pennsylvania.

Northampton Community College's participation in the national Achieving the Dream initiative reflects the College's commitment not only to improve access to higher education for first-generation college students, but also to improve college completion rates. NCC is proud to be among the "leader colleges" in Achieving the Dream.

NCC is also recognized as a leader in the workplace. In March 2013 Northampton was ranked as the top workplace among large employers in the Lehigh Valley based on results of employee surveys conducted by the national research firm WorkplaceDynamics.

NCC was ranked among the top ten community colleges in the country in advances in the use of technology (2014) by the Center for Digital Education (2014, 2015) NCC was also one of 150 community colleges (out of a field of 1200) nominated for the (2014) Aspen Prize


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History

The seeds for what became Northampton Community College were planted in the 1960s by business leaders and educators from Northampton County who saw the need for a college that could provide a well-trained workforce for local employers and give area residents an opportunity to get an affordable college education without leaving the area. Early advocates for the community college included Dr. Glenn Christensen, provost and vice-president of Lehigh University; Charles Fuller, president of Fuller Paper Company and a member of the Easton Area School Board; and State Senator Jeanette Reibman.

The college took root on 165 acres (0.67 km2) of farmland in Bethlehem Township in eight modular classrooms that affectionately came to be known as "the barracks." Credit classes began on October 2, 1967. Four hundred and fifty students were expected. Eight hundred and forty-six showed up. By the following year enrollment had grown to 1,442. In 1969-70 the College earned accreditation from the Middle States Association and broke ground for five permanent buildings, which were completed in 1972. These included the College Center, a Science and Technology Center (Penn Hall), a classroom building (Founders Hall), a Business and Engineering Center (Richardson Hall) and an Arts Center (Kopecek Hall) which housed the College Theatre. In 1977, the Funeral Service and Radiologic Technologies Building opened on South Campus. It is now called Commonwealth Hall. An extensive renovation project occurred between 1986-1988, expanding the amount of classrooms and renaming all of the buildings on the South Campus. In 1992, The Child Development Center opened and was named in honor of State Senator Jeanette Reibman. Also in 1992 Communications Hall was built to house the departments of Radio/TV, Art, Photography and Communications/Theatre.

In its history, Northampton has had only four presidents. Dr. Richard C. Richardson was only 33 years old when he was tapped to become the College's first president. He guided the College's growth for the first ten years. He was succeeded by Dr. Robert Kopecek in 1977. The College's academic programs, enrollment and facilities grew dramatically during Dr. Kopecek's 26-year tenure. When Dr. Kopecek retired, the trustees chose Dr. Arthur Scott, an administrator who had been on the staff for over 25 years, as the College's next leader. During Scott's nine years as president, Northampton opened a site on the southside of Bethlehem, broke ground for a new campus in Monroe County and became known for a collaborative student-centered culture affectionately described as "The Northampton Way. His successor, Dr. Mark Erickson, has strong ties to the region the College serves, having served on the staff of Lehigh University before becoming president of Wittenberg University from 2005 through June of 2012. Erickson has adopted a strategic initiative called Trek to the Top that will focus on student outreach, a completion agenda, diversity and global engagement, community engagement and leadership in technology. Although different in leadership styles, all of Northampton's presidents have shared an entrepreneurial spirit and a fervent commitment to open access to education.


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Fowler Family Southside Center

Named for the family of a well-known local philanthropist, the late Marlene ("Linny") Fowler, the building that now houses Northampton's educational center on the south side of Bethlehem was once the plant offices for The Bethlehem Steel Corporation, one of the nation's largest steel producers. The College purchased the building and began renovating it in 2005, four years after the company went bankrupt. Now more than 31,000 people each year take classes, access medical care, or attend meetings, seminars, conferences, performances, exhibits, public hearings and other events in the building. The Fowler Family Southside Center houses a workforce development center, the Northeast Forensics Training Center, a dental hygiene clinic, a mock casino for training, a 3-D fabrication studio, the Cops 'n' Kids Reading Room, a demo kitchen, dance studios and St. Luke's Southside Medical Center.


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New Campus in Monroe County

In 1988 at the request of local citizens, Northampton Community College began offering classes in neighboring Monroe County. The first classes were taught in space provided by the Monroe County Vocational-Technical School. In 1992 the College moved to Old Mill Road in Tannersville, "recycling" a 10,000-square-foot (930 m2) building that had previously been a garment factory. It was also in 1992 that the site gained "branch campus" status from the Pennsylvania Department of Education. Rapid growth in enrollment necessitated the addition of two modular buildings in 1996 and additional expansions in 2000 and 2003, as well as utilization of supplemental space at Fountain Court, Pocono Corporate Center East, the Monroe County Vocational-Technical School, Pocono Mountain West High School, and Pocono Medical Center to meet the demand for education and workforce training.

With enrollment nearing 2000 students and no room for significant additions on Old Mill Road, in February 2006 the College purchased 72 acres (290,000 m2) of land suitable for the creation of a new full-service campus close to Routes 80, 715 and 611 in the geographic center of Monroe County.

The new campus opened in the summer of 2014. In addition to classrooms, the facilities include state-of-the-art science and computer labs, a full-service library, a child care center, public meeting rooms, a food court, and athletic fields. All buildings were designed to meet LEED gold standards as models of green construction


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Other Special Facilities

In addition to traditional and high tech classrooms, science and computer labs, art and dance studios, media resource centers, athletic facilities, meeting space and offices, Northampton Community College is also home to applied research facilities like the Emerging Technologies Application Center (ETAC), a television studio, an Innovation Lab, a "Fab Lab", nationally accredited child care centers, and a restaurant called Hampton Winds that showcases the talents of the College's culinary arts students.


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Community Engagement

NCC has a strong commitment to civic engagement and encourages, faculty, staff, and students to become involved in the community. Funding for student clubs and organizations at NCC is based in part on their community service record. A growing number of faculty members incorporate service learning in their classes, encouraging students to participate in service projects that meet community needs in areas related to course content. The College is consistently listed on the President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll.

NCC's community service initiatives have also been recognized by the Carnegie Foundation for The Advancement of Teaching and by the Jenzabar Foundation and by State Farm.

In the spring of 2015, the College opened a Center for Civic and Community Engagement to deepen the College's relationship with the communities it serves, and to empower students to become community problem solvers throughout their lives.


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Athletics

Northampton Community College athletics is affiliated with the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA), Region XIX, and the Eastern Pennsylvania Collegiate Conference (EPCC).

Intercollegiate sports include men's soccer, women's volleyball, men's basketball, women's basketball, baseball, softball, men's golf, women's tennis, women's cross country, men's cross country, men's lacrosse and women's soccer. Club sports and intramurals are also popular.

In 2015, Northampton hosted the national women's basketball championships for the NJCAA. The women's basketball, tennis, softball and volleyball teams have been ranked in the top ten nationally in the NJCAA, as have the men's basketball and baseball teams. Ten NCC athletes have been named NJCAA All-Americans.


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Grants

In 2008 Northampton Community College was chosen by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) to receive the largest grant awarded in a highly selective national grant competition. The College's NEH grant was also given "We the People" designation, placing it among an elite group of projects associated with an NEH initiative aimed at strengthening the teaching, study and understanding of American history and culture.

The $800,000 award was a challenge grant. It required the College to raise an additional $1.6 million from other donors to create an endowment that now enables public school students, college students, and the community at large to explore a different humanities-related theme each year. Exploration of the themes will include credit and non-credit course offerings, as well as public programming such as a film series, panels and visits by nationally known speakers. The challenge was met. Programming began with a year-long focus on "The Civil War -- The Meaning of Freedom," culminating in an address by the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Doris Kearns Goodwin.

Since 2005, Northampton Community College has also received grants from the U.S. Department of State, the National Science Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and from the U.S. departments of education, labor and energy, as well as from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.


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Notable faculty

  • Vasiliki Anastasakos, a political science professor from NCC, was named the Pennsylvania Professor of the Year at a luncheon in Washington, DC, on November 19, 2009, by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for the Advancement of Education. She and other honorees were selected from nominees from public and private colleges and universities all over the United States on the basis of their impact on and involvement with undergraduate students; scholarly approach to teaching and learning; contributions to undergraduate education; and support from colleagues and current and former undergraduate students.
  • Javier Avila, professor of English at NCC, was named the Pennsylvania Professor of the Year on November 19, 2015, by the Carnegie Foundation for the advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. Avila also won the Puertorriquena Poetry Award given by the Puerto Rico Institute of Culture for his book of poetry, El papel de difunto (The Dead Man's Position). The international poetry prize is the most prestigious in Puerto Rico and among the most acclaimed in Latin America. Avila has won honors for each of his four poetry collections. La simetria del tiempo (The Symmetry of Time) garnered the Puerto Rico PEN Club Book of the Year Award in 2006, as did the Criatura del olvido (Creature of Oblivion) in 2008. The Olga Nolla Poetry Award went to Vidrios ocultos en la alfombra (Broken Glass under the Carpet) in 2003. Two years later, Avila became the only writer to ever receive a second Olga Nolla Poetry Award, this time for La simetria del tiempo. Avila is also the author of two novels, Different, published in 2001 and reprinted in 2006 by Wiley, and The Professor in Ruins, published by Wiley in 2006. Different was made into a movie titled Miente. Hailed as "a Latino psychological thriller with a unique visual style," the film is directed by Rafi Mercado. It has been shown both in Puerto Rico and in the continental United States. In 2008, Avila was recognized by the American Association of Hispanics in Higher Education with the 2008 Outstanding Latino/a Cultural Award in Literary Arts or Publications. In addition to writing poetry and novels, Avila has been a satirical columnist and literary critic at Puerto Rico's leading newspaper, El Nuevo Día, as well as a textbook writer and an editor for Ediciones Santillana and La Editorial UPR
  • John Leiser, assistant professor of biology, was named the Pennsylvania Professor of the Year on November 17, 2011, by the Carnegie Foundation for the advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. In 2010, Leiser received the U.S. Secretary of the Interior's Partners in Conservation Award. Leiser graduated summa cum laude from East Stroudsburg University with a bachelor's degree in environmental studies, with concentrations in chemistry and German, and a Ph.D. in biology from Lehigh University.
  • Douglas Heath, a geography and geology professor at NCC, is an expert on physical geography, international affairs and war ethics, and environmental management. He received the Distinguished Teaching Award from the National Council for Geographic Education and is included in Who's Who Among American Teachers. He has lectured on American Reporting on the War in Georgia and US-Russian Relations, and George W. Bush Administration's policies in Iraq. He is widely published in various journals including Professional Geographer, Journal of Geography and Journal of the Water Pollution Control Federation. Heath is a member of the Association of American Geographers, the National Council for Geographic Education and the National Association of Geoscience Teachers. He received his bachelor's degree in geology from Bucknell University, his master's degree in geology from Syracuse University and his Ph.D. in geography from Syracuse University.
  • Sholomo Levy, a history professor at NCC, was a research editor and contributor to the most recent edition of the African American National Biography, published by Oxford University Press. In addition to teaching at Northampton, he is an ordained rabbi who leads the Beth Elohim congregation in St. Albans, New York. He is also the president of the Israelite Board of Rabbis, which prepares rabbis for service in black communities through the United States and the Caribbean. His areas of expertise include Black Jews in America and Black Jewish relations. He earned his bachelor's degree in political science from Middlebury College, a master's degree in African American history from Yale University and a master's of philosophy degree in history from Columbia University.
  • James Von Schilling, an English professor at NCC, is a nationally known expert on the history and sociological impact of television. He authored the book, The Magic Window: American Television from 1939-1953. He is also an expert on other aspects of popular culture. He has written or presented on baby boomers (including boomers as grandparents), the Boswell Sisters singing group, Muhammad Ali, and actor James Dean. He earned his bachelor's degree from Princeton University, his master's degree in education from New York University, and his Ph.D. in American culture from Bowling Green State University.



Notable alumni

  • Brian Ajhar, whose illustrations have been featured in U.S. News & World Report, Newsweek, Sports Illustrated, and Rolling Stone
  • Michael Andretti, race car driver and team owner
  • Dr. Michael Babyak, faculty member, Duke University Medical Center.
  • Michael Bentt, actor and five-time US amateur national heavyweight boxing champion, former WBO world heavyweight champion, and co-star in Ali as Sonny Liston, Public Enemies as Herbert Youngblood and State Property 2 as Biggis (El Plaga)
  • Carol Guzy, a four-time Pulitzer Prize winning photographer and three time Photographer of the Year award-winner in the National Press Photographers' annual contest. Guzy is a photographer at The Washington Post.
  • Chris Martin, CEO of C. F. Martin & Company, manufacturer of Martin guitars
  • David Shaffer, co-CEO of Just Born candies
  • Andy Thom, award-winning animator whose credits include Jumanji, Godzilla and Little Einsteins
  • Jordan White, rock musician
  • Roger Ross Williams, television writer and producer whose work has appeared on ABC, CBS, CNN, PBS, VH1 and Comedy Central. In 2010 Williams won an Oscar for his short documentary "Music by Prudence".
  • Rudy Ferraz, CEO and Chairman of Boks Kar, Inc., notable automotive financial startup in Lehigh Valley

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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