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College of Creative Studies

Coordinates:34°24′40″N119°50′43″W / 34.411172°N 119.845363°W /34.411172; -119.845363
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Undergraduate college at the University of California, Santa Barbara
This article is about the college at UC Santa Barbara in California. For the private art school in Detroit, Michigan, seeCollege for Creative Studies.

This articlemay rely excessively on sourcestoo closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from beingverifiable andneutral. Please helpimprove it by replacing them with more appropriatecitations toreliable, independent sources.(January 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
College of Creative Studies
MottoA Graduate School for Undergraduates
TypePublic
Established1967[1]
Parent institution
University of California, Santa Barbara
Undergraduates350[2]
Location,,
Websiteccs.ucsb.edu
Map

TheCollege of Creative Studies (CCS) is the smallest of the threeundergraduate colleges at theUniversity of California, Santa Barbara, unique within the University of California system in terms of structure and philosophy.[3] Its small size, student privileges, and grading system are designed to encourage self-motivated students with strong interests in a field to accomplish original work as undergraduates. A former student has called it a "graduate school for undergraduates". The college has roughly 350 students in ninemajors and approximately 60 professors and lecturers.[3] There is an additional application process to the standard UC Santa Barbara admission for prospective CCS students, and CCS accepts applications for admissions throughout the year.

The college only offers 9 majors:Art,Biology,Chemistryand Biochemistry,Computing,Marine Science,Mathematics,Music Composition,Physics, andWritingand Literature.[4]

History

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In the late 1960s, the second chancellor of UC Santa Barbara,Vernon I. Cheadle, was looking for analternative education program for undergraduate students which could embody the new thinking of the 60s and also attract attention to his growing university. He contacted a professor in theEnglish department,Marvin Mudrick, to come up with ideas for this new program. In 1967 the University of California allowed funding for Mudrick to start up the most promising of those ideas, the College of Creative Studies.

The program started with approximately 50 students in 7 majors: Art, Biology, Chemistry, Mathematics, Music Composition, Literature, and Physics. Theexperimental program struck a chord with its students and faculty, and along with the powerful pushing of Mudrick as itsprovost, it secured its place at UC Santa Barbara. The program grew over the years in student and faculty size and in 1975 found its home in a building at UC Santa Barbara that dates from when the campus was aWorld War IImarine base. In 1995, the college added the major ofComputer Science. In 2005, with the retirement of Provost William Ashby, the title of the Provost was changed toDean and the College was placed under the leadership of Dr.Bruce Tiffney. In fall 2020, the college added the Marine Science major.[5]

The Art department includes the only undergraduatebook arts program in the University of California system. Recently, the Physics program has become regarded as one of the best undergraduate Physics programs in the nation; its students attend graduate schools with percentages resembling those ofIvy Leagues. CCS students have won the UC Santa Barbara Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Research several times in recent years. Literature students runSpectrum, a literary magazine, andInto the Teeth of the Wind, a poetry review.

Philosophy

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Thephilosophy of the College of Creative Studies is that certain undergraduate students are capable of rigorously exploring and adding to their chosen field of knowledge. Students skip introductory courses as appropriate and are encouraged to accomplish original work throughout their time at the College: Writing & Literature students compile a portfolio of writing, art students put on a minimum of two shows displaying their work, music students perform their own compositions, and science students enter labs early in their undergraduate career to conduct research and write scholarly papers for publication.

The College considers students to be the most important people involved, not the faculty or administration. It has a low student-teacher ratio, and each student is paired with a faculty adviser with whom they meet at least once aquarter.

Privileges and grading system

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CCS students have fewgeneral education requirements and may take almost any course in the entire university, including graduate classes, provided they have permission from the instructor. They can drop classes up to the last day of instruction in the quarter, a privilege intended to encourage students to attempt taking many units and advanced classes without being penalized, in the event that they are unable to fulfill these commitments.

In CCS classes, students do not receive letter grades. Instead, the College uses a slidingunit scale where if a student completes all the work for a class at a satisfactory level, the student receives a full 4 units for most classes. If the student completes less work, he/she would receive fewer units, and if the student goes beyond expectations, a professor may give student more units. This system aims to promote a non-competitive atmosphere that focuses more on the student learning the material rather than learning how to take a test.

CCS students are afforded many privileges to help in the pursuit of their education.

  • Fewer prerequisites: If a CCS student can show a capability of taking an upper division or graduate class, even without the prerequisites, the college greatly facilitates the process of getting the student in that class.
  • Drop class and change grading: CCS students may drop any class up until the last day of instruction. This privilege is given as a backup if a student happens to try taking advanced classes or more classes than the usual student. They may also change their grading between letter grade or pass/no-pass for classes outside CCS.[6]
  • Priority registration: CCS students are among the first students at UC Santa Barbara to sign up for classes each quarter. They sign up at the same time ashonors students andathletes.
  • Higher unit cap: CCS students have a unit cap of 95.5 units per quarter. However, most students take between 15 and 25 units a quarter.[6]
  • Building access: All CCS students have their access card registered at the CCS Advising Office and can enter the building with a registered card through theelectronic locks at side entrances from 7:30 AM to 10:00 PM.
  • Computer Lab: CCS students have a computer lab in the building where they have freeInternet access,printing andphotocopying.
  • Library checkout: CCS students get quarter-long check-out from the UC Santa Barbara library and may renew materials up to five times.
  • SURF: All CCS students are eligible to apply for the college's summer undergraduate research fellowships. The standard package for one student is a stipend supporting a 10-12-week project.[7]

The building

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Old Little Theatre

The College of Creative Studies is housed in its own single story building, number 494, located between campusdorms, a dining commons, and the University Center. The building was built during World War II and shares the title as the oldest building at UC Santa Barbara with the other buildings left from when the campus was a marine base.

The building contains classrooms, art studios, faculty and administrative offices, an art gallery, computer labs, print and wood shops and a small 100 person theater. For most of its life it was painted brown, but in early 2005 the administrative offices were painted yellow, the college proper was painted green and the Old Little Theatre was painted red.

The building acts as a "home base" for its students, who spend time in the building studying and socializing. Students are allowed to personalize the building, so the walls have stickers and art, classrooms contain couches and modified desks and there are a few roaming stuffed animals.

Although many students and staff members are fond of the building, the college has outgrown it and is looking for funds to renovate it and/or build new facilities.

Notable alumni and faculty

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CCS alumni include:

CCS faculty have included:

References

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  1. ^"History of the College of Creative Studies"Archived 2010-06-17 at theWayback Machine, College of Creative Studies
  2. ^"Welcome to CCS"Archived 2006-05-03 at theWayback Machine, College of Creative Studies
  3. ^abGolay, Annie (May 18, 2016)."Students Talk Life in UCSB's Smallest College".Daily Nexus. RetrievedMay 19, 2016.
  4. ^"Majors | UCSB College of Creative Studies".ccs.ucsb.edu. Retrieved2024-01-05.
  5. ^"CCS Announces Marine Science as the College's Ninth Major | UCSB College of Creative Studies".
  6. ^abRegistrationArchived 2008-05-16 at theWayback Machine, College of Creative Studies
  7. ^CCS Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowships (SURF)Archived 2022-08-06 at theWayback Machine, College of Creative Studies
  8. ^UCSB Alumna Carol W. Greider: Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, UCSB
  9. ^"The 2003 Scientific American 50 List of Winners".Scientific American. Retrieved2018-04-22.
  10. ^"CCS Alumna Elected to the National Academy of Sciences".
  11. ^"Autobiography of Ronald D Vale | The Shaw Prize".www.shawprize.org. Retrieved2022-09-30.
  12. ^"Assistant Teaching Professor of Music Composition Sarah Gibson to receive performance of work "warp & weft" by Seattle Symphony".music.ucsb.edu. Retrieved2024-07-26.
  13. ^"UC Santa Barbara Faculty Awarded 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics".ccs.ucsb.edu. Retrieved2025-10-10.

External links

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