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College of the Atlantic

Coordinates:44°23′47.17″N68°13′25.27″W / 44.3964361°N 68.2236861°W /44.3964361; -68.2236861
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Liberal arts college in Bar Harbor, Maine
This article is about the liberal arts college in Maine. For the international school in Wales, seeAtlantic College.
College of the Atlantic
TypePrivateliberal arts college
Established1969; 56 years ago (1969)
AccreditationNECHE
Endowment$46.5 million
PresidentSylvia Torti
Undergraduates377
Postgraduates3
Location,,
United States
CampusRural
ColorsBlue and Green
  
AffiliationsEco League
Council of Independent Colleges
Annapolis Group
Websitewww.coa.edu

College of the Atlantic (COA) is aprivateliberal arts college inBar Harbor onMount Desert Island,Maine. Founded in 1969, it awards bachelors and masters (M.Phil.) degrees solely in the field ofhuman ecology, an interdisciplinary approach to learning. Focus areas include arts and design,environmental sciences, humanities, international studies,sustainable food systems, teacher certification and educational studies, and socially responsible business. The College of the Atlantic isaccredited by theNew England Commission of Higher Education.[1]

The campus consists of 37 acres (15 ha) onFrenchman Bay, two organic farms, two off-shore island research stations, and a 100-acre (40 ha) protected area. The farms, Beech Hill Farm and Peggy Rockefeller Farms, are living laboratories for classes and student research. Peggy Rockefeller Farms includes livestock, crops, orchards. Beech Hill Farm provides produce. Both supply the dining hall with organic produce, eggs, and meat. The off-shore island properties include the Alice Eno Field Research Station onGreat Duck Island where students conduct studies onLeach's storm petrels, guillemots, gulls, sparrows and other fields of natural history. The Edward McCormick Blair Research station onMount Desert Rock is a center for the study ofmarine mammals andoceanographic issues.

History

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The College of the Atlantic was conceived byMount Desert Island residents who wanted to stimulate the island'seconomy during the off-season, when revenue fromtourism declined, by forming a year-round, four-year institution of higher education.[2]

In 1968, FatherJames Gower, a Catholic priest and peace activist, and his formerfootball teammate from Bar Harbor High School, businessmanLes Brewer, conceived the idea for the College of the Atlantic.[3] Brewer and Gower founded the school in 1969,[2] when the school of human ecology was granted temporary approval on June 23, 1969, by the Maine State Board of Education. Three other Mount Desert residents helped establish the college: Bernard K. "Sonny" Cough, Richard Lewis and Robert Smith.[2] Edward Kaelber, then assistant dean at Harvard Graduate School of Education, became the first president and was joined in 1970 by Melville P. Cote as assistant to the President and Director of Admissions and Student Affairs.

Father James Gower proposed "Acadia Peace College" as the original name for the school, though this was rejected in favor of the College of the Atlantic.[3][2] The College of the Atlantic began offering its first classes in 1972 with an enrollment of just 32 students.[3][2] The institution had about 300 students for the 2012–13 school year.[2] The College of the Atlantic offers only oneacademic major:human ecology.[3] Gower helped create the curriculum for the college and its academic programs.[2]

The majority of the campus was purchased for $1 from theOblate Fathers of Mary Immaculate Seminary, who used the site as amonastery.[4] Parts of the campus were also donated by the family of co-founder Bernard Cough.

Academics

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The school's curriculum is based onhuman ecology, and all first-year students are required to take an introductory course in human ecology. Other requirements include two courses in each focus area (Environmental Studies, Arts and Design, Human Studies), one quantitative reasoning course, one history course, and one course that involves extensive writing. The intention is for students to explore and integrate ideas from different disciplines and to construct their own understanding of human ecology. With its focus on interdisciplinary learning, College of the Atlantic does not have distinct departments, and all faculty members consider themselves human ecologists in addition to their formal specialization.

As a graduation requirement, all students must complete a term-long senior project and a human ecology essay in their final year, in addition to a mandatory internship sometime within their four years. For this senior project, students decide the methods and content which are then submitted for approval by their academic advisors. Projects are diverse and have included computer programs, scientific papers, ethnographic research, theatrical productions, educational curricula, novels, art exhibits, books of letters, garden renovations, and music compilations.

Students

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With international students comprising an average of 17 percent of the student body, College of the Atlantic is among the five liberal arts colleges with the highest proportion of international students.[5] These students primarily graduate fromUnited World Colleges and are awarded significant scholarships through theDavis United World College Scholars Program.

Sustainability

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In 2004, COA was the first campus to make a multi-year commitment to be powered entirely byrenewable energy, signing a 10-year contract withEndless Energy Corporation.[citation needed] In 2005 it was the first school to hold a zero-waste graduation. In October 2006, COA pledged to becomecarbon neutral, offsetting all of its carbon emissions, including those created by visiting students; COA fulfilled the pledge in December 2007 by purchasing carbon offsets for their emissions through theClimate Trust of Oregon.[6] The college currently offsets those emissions it cannot reduce or avoid viatruck stop electrification through Carbonfund.org. In 2016, COA was ranked as the #1 green college by ThePrinceton Review.[7]

New student housing is also touted as being some of the most sustainable in the northeast, built partially from recycled materials and featuringcomposting toilets, wood pellet heat, and superior insulation.[citation needed]

Notable alumni

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See also

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References

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  1. ^Maine Institutions – NECHE,New England Commission of Higher Education,archived from the original on June 18, 2021, retrievedMay 26, 2021
  2. ^abcdefgTrotter, Bill (2012-12-17)."COA co-founder, priest, James Gower, dies at age 90".Bangor Daily News.Archived from the original on 2015-08-07. Retrieved2013-01-06.
  3. ^abcd"College of the Atlantic co-founder dies at 90".WMTV. 2012-12-16. Archived fromthe original on 2013-02-09. Retrieved2013-01-06.
  4. ^"COA Campus History"(PDF). Retrieved2009-05-13.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^Liberal arts colleges usnews.comArchived 2010-04-11 at theWayback Machine
  6. ^Private college nation's first carbon-neutral campusArchived 2007-12-22 at theWayback Machine fromAssociated Press viaCNN
  7. ^"College of the Atlantic Ranked #1 Green College".www.coa.edu. No. 2016–10–06.

External links

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Private institutions
University of
Maine System
Public maritime college
Maine Community
College System
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