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West Virginia University

Coordinates:39°38′45″N79°58′11″W / 39.6458°N 79.9697°W /39.6458; -79.9697
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Public university in Morgantown, West Virginia, US

West Virginia University
Former name
Agricultural College of West Virginia (1867–1868)[1]
MottoΠίστει τὴν ἀρετήν, ἐν δὲ τῇ ἀρετῇ τὴν γνῶσιν (Koine Greek)
Motto in English
"Add to your faith virtue; and to virtue, knowledge" (2 Peter 1:5KJV)
TypePublicland-grantresearch university
EstablishedFebruary 7, 1867; 158 years ago (1867-02-07)
AccreditationHLC
Academic affiliations
Endowment$843.62 million (2023)[2]
PresidentMichael T. Benson[3]
ProvostPaul Kreider[4]
Academic staff
1,870
Administrative staff
7,566
Students24,200 (fall 2023)[5]
Undergraduates18,616 (fall 2023)[5]
Postgraduates5,584 (fall 2023)[5]
Location,,
United States

39°38′45″N79°58′11″W / 39.6458°N 79.9697°W /39.6458; -79.9697
CampusSmall city[6], 1,892 acres (7.66 km2)
Other campuses
NewspaperThe Daily Athenaeum
ColorsOld Gold and Blue[7]
   
NicknameMountaineers
Sporting affiliations
MascotThe Mountaineer
Websitewww.wvu.edu
Map

West Virginia University (WVU) is apublicland-grantresearch university with its main campus inMorgantown, West Virginia, United States. Its other campuses are those of theWest Virginia University Institute of Technology inBeckley,West Virginia University Potomac State College inKeyser, and clinical campuses for the university's medical school at theCharleston Area Medical Center and Eastern Campus inMartinsburg. WVU Extension Service provides outreach with offices in all 55 West Virginia counties.

Enrollment for the fall 2023 semester was 24,200 for the main campus, while enrollment across all three non-clinical campuses was 26,791.[5] The Morgantown campus offers more than 350 bachelor's, master's, doctoral, and professional degree programs throughout 13 colleges and schools, including that state's only law and dental schools.[8] Faculty and alumni include 27Truman Scholars, 53Goldwater Scholars, 116 Gilman Scholars, 82Fulbright Scholars, 29Boren Scholars, and 25Rhodes Scholars, along with 41National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships.

History

[edit]
Main article:History of West Virginia University
WVU's Cadet Corps, c. 1880, from the site of where Oglebay Hall is today, Martin Hall (center) and Woodburn Hall (right) are in the background.

Establishment

[edit]

Under the terms of the 1862Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Act, theWest Virginia Legislature created theAgricultural College of West Virginia on February 7, 1867, and the school officially opened on September 2 of the same year.[9][10] On December 4, 1868, lawmakers renamed the college West Virginia University to represent a broader range of higher education.[11] It's built on the grounds of three former academies, the Monongalia Academy of 1814, the Morgantown Female Academy of 1831, and Woodburn Female Seminary of 1858.[12] Upon its founding, the local newspaper claimed that "a place more eligible for the quiet and successful pursuit of science and literature is nowhere to be found".[10]

The first campus building was constructed in 1870 as University Hall and was renamed Martin Hall in 1889 in honor of West Virginia University's first president, the Rev. Alexander Martin ofScotland.[13] After a fire destroyed the Woodburn Seminary building in 1873, the centerpiece of what is now Woodburn Hall was completed in 1876, under the name New Hall. The name was changed to University Building in 1878 when the College of Law was founded as the first professional school in the state of West Virginia.[14] The precursor toWoodburn Circle was finished in 1893 when Chitwood Hall (then Science Hall) was constructed on the bluff's north side. In 1909 a north wing was added to University Building, and the facility was renamed Woodburn Hall. Throughout the next decade, Woodburn Hall underwent several renovations and additions, including the construction of the south wing and east tower (in 1930) housing theSeth Thomas clock.[15] The three Woodburn Circle buildings were listed on theNational Register of Historic Places in 1974.[16][17] In 1899, theVance Farm was acquired for the West Virginia University Experiment Station. The Reymann Memorial Farm was given to West Virginia University in 1917 by the family of Anton Reymann of Wheeling in memory of Lawrence A. Reymann. The farm consisting of 990 acres located in Wardensville in Hardy County, comes until the Davis College of Agriculture.[18]

WVU was required to have a Cadet Corps under the terms of the Morrill Act of 1862, which allowed for the creation ofland-grant colleges. TheUnited States Department of War—a predecessor of theU.S. Department of Defense—offered military equipment to the university at no charge, forming the basis of the school's Military Tactics department. The heavy military influence led to opposition of female enrollment that lasted through the first decade of the university.[19] The trend changed in 1889 when ten women were allowed to enroll and seek degrees at the university. In June 1891, Harriet Lyon became the first (white) woman to receive a degree from West Virginia University, finishing first in the class ahead of all male students.[19] Lyon's academic success supported the acceptance of women in the university as students and educators.[20]

West Virginia University's first football team, formed in 1891

During the university's early years, daily chapel services and roll call for all students were mandatory, limiting time for student recreation. Following the removal of these obligations, students became active in extracurricular activities and established many of the school's first athletic and student organizations. The first edition of the student newspaper known as theAthenaeum, nowThe Daily Athenaeum, was published in 1887, and theWest Virginia Law Review became the fourth-oldest law review in the United States when it was founded in 1894. In 1897, E. Eva Hubbard (1858–1947) became the first head of WVU's new Department of Art.[21] Of Hubbard's students was renowned ModernistBlanche Lazzell.[21]Phi Kappa Psi was the firstfraternity on campus, founded May 23, 1890, whileKappa Delta, the firstsorority at WVU, was established in 1899.[19] The firstfootball team was formed in 1891, and the first basketball team appeared in 1903.[22]

Early 20th century

[edit]
Boyd "Slim" Arnold, the first Mountaineer mascot to don the traditional buckskin uniform. His selection in 1937 marked the beginning of an official process to name the mascot annually.

The university's outlook at the turn of the 20th century was optimistic as the school constructed the first library in present-dayStewart Hall in 1902.[23]

The campus welcomed U.S. PresidentWilliam Howard Taft to the campus for WVU President Thomas Hodges's inauguration in 1911.[19] Taft delivered the address "World Wide Speech" from the front porch ofPurinton House on November 2, 1911.[24] However, the university's efforts to attract more qualified educators, increase enrollment, and expand the campus was hindered during a period that saw twoWorld Wars and theGreat Depression. With a heavy military influence in the university, many students left college to join the army duringWorld War I, and the localROTC was organized in 1916.[25] Women's involvement in the war efforts at home led to the creation of Women's Hall dormitory, nowStalnaker Hall, in 1918.[26]

Despite its wartime struggles, the university established programs in biology, medicine, journalism, pharmacy, and the first mining program in the nation. In 1918,Oglebay Hall was built to house the expanded agriculture and forestry programs.[25] Additionally, the first dedicated sports facilities were constructed including "The Ark" for basketball in 1918 and the originalMountaineer Field in 1925. Stansbury Hall was built in 1928 and included a new basketball arena named"The Fieldhouse" that held 6,000 spectators.[27]Elizabeth Moore Hall, the woman's physical education building, was also completed in 1928.[28]Men's Hall, the first dormitory built for men on campus, was built in 1935 and was funded in part by theWorks Progress Administration.[29]The Mountaineer mascot (based on themountain man) was adopted during the late 1920s, with an unofficial process to select the Mountaineer through 1936. An official selection process began naming the mascot annually in 1937, with Boyd "Slim" Arnold becoming the first Mountaineer to wear thebuckskin uniform.[30]

On March 16, 1922, West Virginia University was issued the state's first radio broadcasting license, for stationWHD.[31] The person primarily responsible for its establishment was Dr. Chauncey W. Waggoner, the head of the physics department.[32] In late April, the projected schedule was announced as evenings, daily from 4 to 6 and 7 to 7:30 p.m., except for Sundays, when the schedule would be 10:45 to noon.[33] The station was mainly used for experimental purposes, and made few entertainment and informational broadcasts. The university soon determined that the cost of running a broadcasting station exceeded its benefits,[32] so WHD's license was allowed to expire, and it was deleted on November 19, 1923.[34] In the early 1930s, a local commercial station,WMMN, established a studio in Morgantown, and assigned a daily 20 minute time slot to the university for its School of the Air programs.[32]

Campus expansion

[edit]
A view of the Evansdale campus and many new facilities constructed around 1970, including the iconicWVU Coliseum

As male students left forWorld War II in 1941–42, women became more prominent in the university and surpassed the number of men on campus for the first time in 1943.[19] Soldiers returning from the war qualified for theG.I. Bill and helped increase enrollment to over 8,000 students for the first time but the university's facilities were becoming inadequate to accommodate the surging student population.Preparation for thebaby boomer generation and plans for curriculum expansion led to the purchase of land for the Evansdale and Medical campuses. The growth of downtown Morgantown limited the space available on the original campus; the new site was nearly two miles north on what had been farmland.[19] Beginning in the late 1950s the university experienced the most rapid period of growth in its history. In 1957, WVU opened a Medical Center on the new campus and founded the first school of dentistry in West Virginia. The basketball program reached a new level of success when the university admitted future 14‑timeNBA All-Star andHall of Fame playerJerry West, who led the team to the national championship game in 1959.[35] As enrollment approached 14,000 in the 1960s, the university continued expansion plans by building the Evansdale Residential Complex to house approximately 1,800 students, the Mountainlair student union, and several engineering and thecreative arts facility on the Evansdale campus. In 1970, theWVU Coliseum, a basketball facility with a capacity of 14,000, opened near the new campus.[27] As the facilities expanded, the university researched ways to move its growing student population across the split campuses and to solve its worsening traffic congestion. The resultingPersonal Rapid Transit system opened in 1973 as the world's first automated rapid transit system.[36]

Post-expansion and 21st century

[edit]
Stewart Hall is home to university administration and is one of the multiple campus buildings on theNational Register of Historic Places.

The student population continued to grow in the late 1970s, reaching 22,000. With no room for growth on the downtown campus, thefootball stadium was closed, and the newMountaineer Field was opened near the Medical campus on September 6, 1980. Mountaineer Field would later be named Mountaineer Field at Milan Puskar Stadium.[25] After an $8 million donation to the university, Ruby Memorial Hospital opened on the Medical campus in 1988, providing the state's first level-one trauma center. Early the next year, the undefeated Mountaineer football team, led byMajor Harris, made it to the national championship game before losing toNotre Dame in theFiesta Bowl.

During the 1990s the university developed several recreational activities for students, including FallFest and WVU "Up All Night". While the programs were created to provide safe entertainment for students and to combat WVU's inclusion as one of the nation's topparty schools,[37] they also garnered national attention as solutions for reducing alcohol consumption and partying on college campuses across the country.[38][39] In 2001, a $34 million, 177,000-square-foot (16,400 m2) recreation facility opened on the Evansdale campus, providing students with exercise facilities, recreational activities, and personal training programs.[40]

WVU reached a new level of athletic success to start the new millennium. The football team featured a 3‑0BCS bowl record, ten consecutive bowl game appearances, a #1 ranking in theUSA Today Coaches' Poll, three consecutive 11‑win seasons amassing a 33–5 record, 41 consecutive weeks in the top 25, and 6 conference championships.[41][42] The men's basketball team won the2007 NIT Championship and the2010 Big East championship, while appearing four times in the sweet sixteen, twice in the elite-eight, and once in the final-four of theNCAA tournament.[43][44] The athletic successes brought the university a new level of national exposure, and enrollment has since increased to nearly 30,000 students.[45]

On April 24, 2008, thePittsburgh Post-Gazette reported the university had improperly granted anMBA toHeather Bresch, the daughter of the state's governorJoe Manchin and an employee ofMylan, a pharmaceutical company whose then-chairman Milan Puskar was one of the university's largest donors.[46] In the aftermath, the university determined Bresch's degree had been awarded without the prerequisite requirements having been met. They subsequently rescinded it, leading to the resignation of presidentMichael Garrison, provost Gerald Lang, and business school dean Steve Sears. Garrison had been profiled as a trend toward non-traditional university presidents by theChronicle of Higher Education[47] andInside Higher Ed,[48] but the faculty senate approved a vote of no confidence in the search that selected him.[49] C. Peter McGrath was named interim president in August 2008.[50]James P. Clements became WVU's 23rd president on June 30, 2009. He had previously served as provost atTowson University.[51] On September 16, 2009, Michele G. Wheatly was named Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs.[52] In November 2013, James P. Clements was selected to be Clemson University's 15th president.[53]E. Gordon Gee served as interim president; this was Gee's second time in this role, having first served as president of WVU in 1981.[54]

On August 11, 2023, facing financial difficulties, university leaders proposed to cut 7% of the university's faculty and eliminate 32 major programs offered at the Morgantown campus. These cuts would affect some humanities disciplines, including the entire Department of World Language, Literature and Linguistics,[55] as well as some non-humanities programs, such as pharmacy and engineering.[56] Within the first week of fall classes, on August 21, 2023, hundreds of students staged a walkout and held rallies on Morgantown's Downtown and Evansdale campuses to show opposition to the proposal. Participants wore red in honor of the striking coal miners who fought in theBattle of Blair Mountain. The event was organized by theWest Virginia United Students' Union,[57] which began organizing in response to potential reductions and discontinuations while the program reviews were still in process.[58] Shortly thereafter, the WVU Faculty Assembly approved a vote of "no confidence" in president Gee.[59]

Campus

[edit]
Woodburn Hall is one of the oldest buildings at West Virginia University and has long been a symbol of the university.
Stalnaker Hall is the oldest residence hall on campus.[60]

The Morgantown campus comprises three sub-campuses. The original main campus, typically called the Downtown Campus, is in the Monongahela River valley on the fringes of downtown Morgantown. This part of the campus includes eight academic buildings on theNational Register of Historic Places. The Downtown Campus comprises several architectural styles predominantly featuring red brick including Victorian Second Empire, Federal, Neoclassical, and Collegiate Gothic among others. The Evansdale Campus, a mile and a half north-northwest, on a rise above the flood plain of theMonongahela River, was developed in the 1950s and 1960s to accommodate a growing student population since space for expansion was limited at the Downtown Campus. The Health Sciences Campus, in the same outlying area (but on the other side of a ridge), includes the Robert C. Byrd Health Sciences Center, the Erma Byrd Biomedical Research Facility, Ruby Memorial Hospital, Chestnut Ridge Hospital, Mary Babb Randolph Cancer Center, WVU Healthcare Physicians Office Center,Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute, WVU Eye Institute, and the WVU Children's Hospital.

The Health Sciences Campus is nearMountaineer Field, over a ridge from the Evansdale Campus.

Core Arboretum

[edit]

TheCore Arboretum is a 91-acre (37 ha) arboretum owned by West Virginia University and on Monongahela Boulevard in Morgantown, West Virginia. It is open to the public daily without charge.[61]

The Arboretum's history began in 1948 when the university acquired its site. Professor Earl Lemley Core (1902–1984), chairman of the Biology Department, then convinced President Irvin Stewart to set the property aside for the study of biology and botany. In 1975 the Arboretum was named in Core's honor.

The Arboretum is now managed by the WVU Department of Biology and consists of mostly old-growth forests on steep hillside and Monongahela River floodplain. It includes densely wooded areas with 3.5 miles (5.6 km) of walking trails, as well as 3 acres (12,000 m2) of lawn planted with specimen trees.

The Arboretum has a variety of natural habitats in which hundreds of species of native West Virginia trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants can be found.[62]

Campus safety

[edit]

The university created WVU Alert, a text-based alert system for quickly disseminating emergency situations to faculty, staff, and students.[63] WVU also uses LiveSafe, a smart phone application that enables users to anonymously report crimes or safety concerns, or to use the walk safe feature which allows the user to invite a friend to monitor their location while they walk.[64] Additionally, there are 37, easily accessible, blue-lit towers housing emergency phones across the WVU campuses that automatically dial 911 in the event of an emergency.[65]

The West Virginia University Police Department (UPD) is the largest campus police department in the state and the only campus law enforcement agency in the state accredited by the International Association of Campus Law Enforcement Administrators.[66] The UPD has a sworn officer operations division, a central communication unit, a student cadet unit, investigations, K-9 teams and other support services. Officers have the same authority and powers as city and county police officers.[64]

Transportation

[edit]
See also:Morgantown Personal Rapid Transit
The PRT shuttles students to and from WVU's Health Sciences, Evansdale, and Downtown Campuses.

Due to the distance between WVU's three campuses, the university built the innovative Personal Rapid Transit (PRT) system to link the campuses (Downtown, Evansdale, and Health Sciences) and reduce student traffic on local highways.Boeing began construction on the Personal Rapid Transit (PRT) system in 1972. The unique aspect that makes the system "personal" is that a rider specifies their destination when entering the system and, depending on the system load, the PRT can dispatch a car that will travel directly to that station.

The PRT began operation in 1973, with U.S. PresidentRichard Nixon's daughter, Tricia, aboard one of five prototype cars for a demonstration ride.[67]

The system has 8.7 miles (14.0 km) of guideway track and five stations. The vehicles are rubber-tired, but the cars have constant contact with a separate electrified rail.Steam heating keeps the elevated guideway free of snow and ice.[68]

TheNational Society of Professional Engineers named theWVU PRT one of the top 10 engineering achievements of 1972,[67] and in 1997The New Electric Railway Journal picked the WVU PRT as the bestpeople mover in North America (for 1996).[69]

In 2006 theU.S. Department of Transportation andU.S. Environmental Protection Agency dubbed WVU one of the best workplaces for commuters.[70]

Each autumn, during Mountaineer Week celebrations, a special PRT car is placed in front of theMountainlairstudent union where groups of students participate in the "PRT Cram" with the objective of squeezing in as many people as possible. A record of 97 was set in 2000.[71]

Divisional campuses

[edit]

WVU has two divisional campuses:

West Virginia University at Parkersburg, a primarily 2-year school, was a regional campus of WVU but has been independent since 2009.[72]

Academics

[edit]

Reputation and rankings

[edit]
Academic rankings
National
Forbes[73]236
U.S. News & World Report[74]216(tie)
Washington Monthly[75]142
WSJ/College Pulse[76]252
Global
ARWU[77]501–600
QS[78]1,001–1,200
THE[80]Reporter[a]
U.S. News & World Report[81]606(tie)

WVU isclassified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity".[82][83] According to theNational Science Foundation, WVU spent $185.1 million on research and development in 2018, ranking it 121st in the nation.[84] WVU is affiliated with the Rockefeller Neurosciences Institute, dedicated to the study of Alzheimer's and other diseases that affect the brain.[85] WVU is also a leader in biometric technology research and the Federal Bureau of Investigation's lead academic partner in biometrics research.[86][87]

Admissions

[edit]

Freshman West Virginia resident applicants must have a 2.0 GPA and either an SAT super score of 990 of 1600 or an ACT super score of 19 of 36. For non-residents the requirements are a GPA of 2.5 and either a super score SAT 1060 or a super score ACT of 21. College and program admission requirements for first-time freshmen vary by program.[88] The general freshman acceptance rate at WVU is 71.9% of applications received with an average entering student GPA of 3.42, an SAT super score of 1115 of 1600, and an ACT super score of 24 of 36.[89]

In the fall of 2020, the university relaxed its test score requirements for students applying for admission in response to thecoronavirus pandemic. According to WVU assistant vice president of Enrollment Management George Zimmerman, if students are unable to take theSAT or ACT, they will still be admitted to WVU as long as they have shown academic ability in other areas of their application. The policy is said to be in effect until spring 2023.[90]

Curriculum

[edit]
Woodburn Circle on the downtown campus – Martin Hall (top), Woodburn Hall (right), Chitwood Hall (bottom)
Canady Creative Arts Center in 2024

West Virginia University is organized into 15 degree-granting colleges or schools and also offers an Honors College.

The 2014 WVU Robotics Team won the NASA Centennial Challenge (NASA/Joel Kowsky)

WVU'sforensics and investigative science program was originally created through a partnership with theFederal Bureau of Investigation. The program is accredited by theAmerican Academy of Forensic Sciences and is the official library holdings repository for theInternational Association for Identification. Facilities include four "crime-scene" houses, a vehicle processing garage, a ballistics laboratory, and numerous traditional laboratories and classrooms in Ming Hsieh Hall and Oglebay Hall.

WVU robotics teams have won several international competitions such as the NASA Robotic Mining Competition and the NASA/NIA RASC-AL Exploration Robot-OPS Challenge. In 2016, a WVU team[91] won the final NASA Sample Return Robot Centennial Challenge with a $750,000 prize.[92]

Biometrics is an engineering-centric field of study offered at WVU, the first institution in the world to establish aBachelor of Science degree in Biometric Systems. In 2003, the university also founded the initial chapter of the Student Society for the Advancement of Biometrics (SSAB).[93] On February 6, 2008, WVU became the national academic leader for theFBI's biometric research.[94] WVU is also the founding site for the Center for Identification Technology Research (CITeR), focusing on biometrics andidentification technology.[95]

Health Sciences Campus

The Robert C. Byrd Health Sciences Center is on West Virginia University's Evansdale Campus and houses the Schools of Dentistry, Medicine, Nursing, and Pharmacy. These schools grant doctoral and professional degrees in 16 different fields.[96]

Libraries

[edit]
Wise Library on the downtown campus is West Virginia University's main library.

TheWest Virginia University Libraries encompasses seven libraries and the WVU Press. TheWest Virginia and Regional History Center (the world's largest collection of West Virginia-related research material), is in the Wise Library on the Downtown Campus.[97] Collections include an Appalachian collection.

The Evansdale Library supports the academic programs and research centered on the Evansdale Campus. The library holds materials in the disciplines of agriculture, art, computer science, education, engineering, forestry, landscape architecture, mineral resources, music, physical education, and theater.[98] In addition to the collections, Evansdale Library is home to da Vinci's Cafe,[99] an Information Technology Services Big Prints! poster printing lab,[100] and the Academic Innovation Teaching and Learning Commons Sandbox.[101]

The university co-publishes theLabor Studies Journal with theUnited Association for Labor Education.

Student life

[edit]
Undergraduate demographics as of Fall 2023[102]
Race and ethnicityTotal
White82%
 
Two or more races6%
 
Hispanic4%
 
Black3%
 
Asian2%
 
International student2%
 
Unknown1%
 
Economic diversity
Low-income[b]22%
 
Affluent[c]78%
 

Events

[edit]

FallFest welcomes students to the university by providing an evening of entertainment and musical performances traditionally held during the first week of the fall semester and traditionally at the Mountainlair Student Union.[103] The event began in 1995 as a safe alternative to partying and has become one of the largest University-sponsored events, typically drawing crowds of 15,000 or more.[104] The celebration has been highlighted by a series of evening concerts by renowned artists. A dance party, film festival, comedy show, and several indoor musical performances are also featured.

Mountaineer Week is a celebration of WVU tradition andAppalachian heritage that began in 1947.[105] Festivities have expanded to include competitions among WVU students, designed to honor school and state pride. A beard-growing competition introduced in 1949 has continued throughout the event's history. Participants must shave before the panel of judges that also chooses the winner at the end of the competition.[106] The Mr. and Ms. Mountaineer competition has been included in Mountaineer Week since 1962,honoring one male and one female student who show "outstanding school spirit, academic excellence, and extracurricular involvement". The annual PRT Cram features the uniquePRT system, where students compete to fit the maximum number of riders on a special-model PRT car with the windows removed. The record was set in 2000 when 97 students fit inside one PRT car.[105]

The Lighting of Woodburn Hall is an annual university ceremony held in early December to light historic Woodburn Hall for the holiday season. The event began in 1987 and is open to the public. Christmas carols are typically sung and donations are taken at the event to support community organizations. Patients fromWVU's Children's hospital are often selected to light the Hall.[107]

Fall Family Weekend is an opportunity for students' family members to experience WVU campus life by attending classes, athletic events, college presentations, and student events such as WVU "Up All Night". Tours of the campus facilities are offered by individual colleges and organizations,including tours of the PRT.[108]

Homecoming weekend activities include the Alumni Band-led homecoming parade through downtown Morgantown, the crowning of the royalty, and a football game with a performance by the WVU Alumni band. Student organizations participate in the parade by designing floats. Receptions are held by colleges, student groups, and the alumni center.[109]

Greek Week is held during the spring semester. Highlights include airband events, where organizations compete incheerleading and dance routines, and sports competitions on the Mountainlair recreational field.[110]

Recreation

[edit]
TheMountainlair Student Union on WVU's downtown campus.

TheMountainlair Student Union, commonly called "the Lair" by students, is the three-floorstudent union building at WVU. The building dates to 1968 and replaced an earlier structure built in 1948.[111] The student union offers many recreational opportunities to students including amovie theater,bowling alley,pool hall,ballrooms,video game arcade, a cafeteria-style restaurant, and a collection of fast food restaurants.[112]

The Student Recreation Center is a 177,000-square-foot (16,400 m2) recreation facility that opened before the 2001 academic year with an initial construction cost of $34 million.[40] The facility offers a six-lane swimming pool, 20‑seat spa, 17,000 square feet (1,600 m2) of cardio and free-weight equipment, an elevated running track, basketball courts,volleyball and badminton courts, glass squash and racquetball courts, and a 50-foot (15 m) climbing wall.[113] The center also offers a variety of wellness programs, personal training, child care services, exercise classes, and intramural activities.

The Mountaineer Adventure Program (MAP) offers several activities including Adventure WV, Challenge Course, and International Trips. Adventure WV is focused on providing guidance to freshmen and sophomores through various outdoor orientation expeditions. The Challenge Course program uses a recreational facility designed to teach teamwork and problem-solving skills through physical interaction. International Trips offers worldwide recreational opportunities to places likeFiji andPeru, as well as study abroad credit courses.[114] Several of the MAP programs provide University-accepted credit hours.

The Outdoor Recreation Center, a division of the Student Recreation Center, helps students find recreational activities locally and in other parts of West Virginia. The center sponsors some trips, including whitewater rafting on theCheat River and hiking in theMonongahela National Forest.[113] Students can take advantage ofWest Virginia's natural wilderness by renting outdoor recreational equipment forhiking,camping,climbing,fishing,biking,skiing, andwhitewater rafting, all of which is available with minimal travel time. WVU's main campus is next to theMonongahela River along which runs the Caperton Trail, also known as the "Rail Trail", a 10-mile (16 km) paved path for walking, running, or biking.[115] Other connecting trails total 43 miles (69 km) in additional length, extending from thePennsylvania border toPrickett's Fort State Park. Many student groups take day trips to the nearbyCoopers Rock State Forest, which is less than 15 miles (24 km) from WVU's campus.[116]

Student organizations

[edit]

West Virginia University offers more than 400 student-run organizations and clubs. Many of the organizations are associated with academia, religion, culture, military service, politics, recreation, or sports.[117]

Fraternities and sororities

[edit]
Greek Games onMountainlair Plaza during WVU's annual Greek Week

There are several fraternities and sororities on campus.[118]

Fraternity controversies

In 2014, 18-year-oldKappa Sigma pledge Nolan Burch died during a hazing incident at the fraternity house. Police say his blood-alcohol level was 0.493% at the time of his death.[119] A lawsuit was settled over the student's death in 2018 for $250,000.[120]

In 2019, City Drive Studios produced the documentary "Breathe, Nolan, Breathe", which details what led up to Nolan's death. The film begins with security footage inside the Kappa Sigma house, showing a fraternity brother performing CPR on Nolan's limp body hours after he was dragged inside. The brother kept repeating the words, "breathe, Nolan, breathe." Video also shows fraternity brothers taking videos of Burch lying on a wooden plank and kicking him.[121] According to City Drive Studios, "The purpose of this film is to stop this from ever happening again and to save lives."[122]

Student media

[edit]

TheDaily Athenaeum, nicknamedthe DA, is the 9th-largest newspaper in West Virginia.[123] Offered free on campus, it generates income through advertisements and student fees. The paper began in 1887 as a weeklyliterary magazine, with writing, editing and production taken over by the newly formed School of Journalism in the 1920s. In 1970, the paper split from the School of Journalism and became an independent campus entity governed by the Student Publications Board.The DA was voted as thePrinceton Review's 10th-best college newspaper in the United States in 2005, 15th in 2006, and 8th in 2007.[124]

WWVU-FM, calledU92 or The Moose, plays new music, talk shows, and newscasts. On the air since 1982, U92 can be heard in the Morgantown area at 91.7 FM and also streams live on the internet. In 2007 the station was one of four college radio stations nominated for College Music Journal's Station of the Year Award.[125] In 2015 CMJ awarded the station with three awards including Station of the Year.[126]

Student health

[edit]

The Student Center of Health, also known under the label "WELLWVU", provides services related to student health, disease prevention, and awareness. The Carruth Center for Psychological and Psychiatric Services offers therapy to any WVU student.[127] The Robert C. Byrd Health Science Center and the associated West Virginia University Hospitals, on the Health Science Campus, serve as West Virginia's largest healthcare institution.[128] The hospitals provide a comprehensive set of healthcare needs for local and regional patients. WVU students have full access to healthcare resources, which are accessible from the PRT towers station.

WVU Student Health Services

[edit]

Starting with the Fall 2014 semester WVU implemented a mandatory student health insurance policy, with an opt-out. All domestic students at West Virginia University and WVU Tech, enrolled in 6 or more credit hours and international students enrolled in 1 or more credit hours will be required to carry health insurance coverage.[129]

With the opening of the new Student Health and Wellness building on the Evansdale Campus, WVU Medical Corporation now operates the medical services of Student Health. This is a WVU Urgent Care Clinic office and is the primary care provider to students who use WVU's Aetna Health Insurance policy. The Clinic is open 7 days a week.[130]

Arts and entertainment

[edit]

WVU Arts & Entertainment (A&E) sponsors entertainment events for students throughout the academic year. The department organizes the annual FallFest event, which features popular musicians, comedians, and other performers. WVU A&E annually hosts several concerts at theWVU Coliseum andCanady Creative Arts Center, with past performances byAkon,The All-American Rejects,The Fray,Kelly Clarkson,Ludacris,Maroon 5,Reba McEntire,Willie Nelson, and50 Cent among others.[104] TheCanady Creative Arts Center was constructed in 1967, it included a newMöller pipe organ.[131]

The West Virginia Public Theater (WVPT) is one of two professional musical theaters in West Virginia. The group is near WVU's campus and performs several Broadway numbers yearly.[132]

The 5,300-square-foot (490 m2) Art Museum of West Virginia University features touring exhibitions and displays a collection including over 2,500 works of art from the Appalachian region, Asia, and Africa.[133]

The Royce J. and Caroline B. Watts Museum, on the Evansdale campus, features tools, equipment, artifacts, photos, and other items related to West Virginia's coal and petroleum industries.

Athletics

[edit]
Main article:West Virginia Mountaineers
The "Flying WV" is the most widely used logo in West Virginia University athletics.
Plaque marking where Mountaineer Field was between 1924 and 1979

The school's sports teams are called the Mountaineers and compete in theNCAA's Division I. The school has teams in 17 college sports and has won several national championships, including 20NCAA Rifle Championships as of March 2025[update]. Formerly a full member of theBig East Conference in all sports, on October 28, 2011, the school accepted an invitation to join theBig 12 Conference and became a member on July 1, 2012.

Notable athletes from West Virginia University includeAshley Lawrence,Jerry West,Jim Braxton,Marc Bulger,Avon Cobourne,Mike Compton,Noel Devine,Cecil Doggette,D'or Fischer,Mike Gansey,Marc "Major" O. Harris,Chris Henry,Joe Herber,Jeff Hostetler,Chuck Howley,Sam Huff,Darryl Talley,"Hot Rod" Hundley,Adam "Pacman" Jones,Joe Stydahar,Dan Mozes,Kevin Pittsnogle,Jerry Porter,Todd Sauerbrun,Steve Slaton,Ray Gaddis,Rod Thorn,Oliver Luck,Mike Vanderjagt,Pat White,Quincy Wilson,Amos Zereoué,Greg Jones,Joe Alexander,Owen Schmitt,Georgann Wells,Geno Smith,Ginny Thrasher,Pat McAfee,Tavon Austin,Miles McBride, andJedd Gyorko.

Football

[edit]
Main article:West Virginia Mountaineers football

WVU has had two undefeated regular seasons; they went 11–0 in 1988 and 1993. However, West Virginia lost both bowl games, 34‑21 to Notre Dame in the National Championship, and 41–7 to Florida. The2005 season and the2006 season produced the first consecutive 11-win seasons in school history.[134] In the2007 season, the Mountaineers started the season as the #3-ranked team, the highest preseason ranking in school history. That team eventually was ranked #1 in the Coaches Poll and finished the season with a third consecutive 11-win season after theirFiesta Bowl victory.

Basketball

[edit]
Main articles:West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball andWest Virginia Mountaineers women's basketball

West Virginia men's basketball has competed in three basketball championship final matches: the1959 NCAA final, the 1942NIT final (at that time, the NIT was considered more prestigious than the NCAA), and the2007 NIT Championship. They lost toCalifornia in the 1959 NCAA finals, while the Mountaineers won the1942 NIT Championship overWestern Kentucky, and the 2007NIT contest overClemson. In 1949 future Mountaineers head coachFred Schaus became the first player in NCAA history to record 1,000 points.

Recently, West Virginia reached the Final Four of the2010 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, led by West Virginia coach and former WVU playerBob Huggins. The Mountaineers won the2010 Big East men's basketball tournament and received a #2 seed in the East Region of the2010 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament.

In 2015, West Virginia reached the Sweet Sixteen of the2015 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. They were eliminated from the tournament after losing to Kentucky. In 2018, West Virginia again reached the Sweet Sixteen of the2018 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. They were eliminated from the tournament after losing in the fourth round to #1 seed and eventual champion Villanova.[135]

Soccer

[edit]

Since joining theBig 12 Conference ahead of the 2012 season, West Virginia women's soccer has posted a 27–1–3 record in regular-season league games. In 2016, the Mountaineers claimed their fifth consecutive outright regular-season league championship, becoming the first team in Big 12 history to accomplish that feat. West Virginia also won back-to-back Big 12 tournament championships in 2013 and 2014, as well as two additional Big 12 tournament championships in 2016 and 2018. The Mountaineers are coached by Nikki Izzo-Brown, the program's only head coach.

West Virginia men's soccer competes in theSun Belt Conference (since 2022). The team is 2024 double champion (regular season and tournament) of the Sun Belt,[136][137] ending that year the 16th in the nationwide Uniter Soccer Coaches Ranking[138] and the 21st in the NCAA DI Men's Soccer RPI ranking[139] with 13-2-7.[140]

Rifle

[edit]

With a total of 26 individual NCAA National Champions and 20 team NCAA National Championship titles, West Virginia University's rifle team is the most successful rifle program in the history of the NCAA. Their most recent National Championship as a team was won in 2017. The Mountaineers compete in theGreat America Rifle Conference where they have won 11 regular-season conference championships. The team's home matches take place at the WVU Rifle Range which opened in 2010. Virginia Thrasher, who won a gold medal in thewomen's 10-meter air rifle at the2016 Summer Olympics, was on the Mountaineers rifle team from 2015 to 2019.[141]

Marching band

[edit]
Main article:West Virginia University Mountaineer Marching Band

The West Virginia University Mountaineer Marching Band is nicknamed "The Pride of West Virginia." The 340-member band performs at every home football game and makes several local and national appearances throughout the year.

Fanbase

[edit]
The WVU student section perform the first down cheer at a home football game.

In a state that lacks professional sports franchises, West Virginians passionately support West Virginia University and its athletics teams.[142] Men's basketball head coachBob Huggins, a former Mountaineer basketball player who was born in Morgantown, stated that the "strong bond between the university and the people of West Virginia" is a relationship that is difficult for non-natives to understand.[143]

Some WVU fans, primarily in the student sections, better known as the "Mountaineer Maniacs" have developed a reputation for unruly behavior, being compared to "soccer hooligans"byGQ magazine.[144][145] At some events, there have been cases of objects thrown onto the field or at opposing teams.[146][147] There were also issues with small-scale fires, most notably of couches, being set after games; over 1,100 intentionally ignited street fires were reported from 1997 to 2003.[144]

Members of the Morgantown-area community volunteered as Goodwill City Ambassadors for the first time in the fall of 2012 to welcome visiting fans to the football games. The Goodwill City initiative is a collaborative effort of the City of Morgantown, WVU, Morgantown'sDominion Post, and community residents.

Pageantry

[edit]
See also:WVU Pageantry
The Mountaineer (1971), West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia.

The Mountaineer was adopted in 1890 as the official school mascot and unofficially began appearing at sporting events in 1936.[148] A new Mountaineer is selected each year during the final two men's home basketball games, with the formal title "The Mountaineer of West Virginia University". The new Mountaineer receives a scholarship, a tailor-made buckskin suit with a coonskin hat, and a period rifle and powder horn for discharging when appropriate and safe. The mascot travels with most sports teams throughout the academic year. While not required, male mascots traditionally grow a beard.

The "Flying WV" is the most widely used logo in West Virginia athletics. It debuted in 1980 as a part of a football uniform redesign by CoachDon Nehlen, and was adopted as the official logo for the university in 1983.[149]While the "Flying WV" represents all university entities, unique logos are occasionally used for individual departments. Some examples include the script West Virginia logo for the WVU Department of Intercollegiate Athletics and the interlocking WV logo used in baseball.[150]

Fight songs of West Virginia University include "Hail, West Virginia" and "Fight Mountaineers". TheWest Virginia University Alma Mater was composed in 1937, and is sung before every home football game. The crowd sings along as the WVU Marching Band stands playing it on the field, as part of the pregame show.

"Old gold and blue", the official University colors, were selected by the upperclassmen of 1890 from the West Virginia state seal.[148] While the official school colors are old gold and blue, brighter gold is used in official university logos and merchandise. This change in color scheme is often cited for the lack of a universal standard for colors during the 19th century when the university's colors were selected. Additionally, the brighter gold is argued to create a more intimidating environment for sporting events. The university accepts "gold and blue" for the color scheme, but states clearly that the colors are not "blue and gold", to distinguish West Virginia from its rival, theUniversity of Pittsburgh.

Sporting traditions

[edit]
See also:WVU sports traditions andWVU band traditions
The formation of the state outline byThe Pride of West Virginia

The unofficial song of the university, "Take Me Home, Country Roads" byJohn Denver, became an official West Virginiastate song on March 8, 2014.[151]In 1980John Denver performed his hit song "Take Me Home, Country Roads" at the dedication ofMountaineer Field, and it has since become a tradition for fans to remain in the stands following everyMountaineer victory and sing the song with the players. Although the tradition originated during football games, it is now recognized throughout the university, with the song performed at various athletic events and ceremonies.Sports Illustrated named the singing of "Country Roads" as one of the must-see college traditions.[152]

The Pride of West Virginia is the official marching band of the university. The band's football pre-game show includes traditions such as the Drumline's "Tunnel" and "Boogie" cadences, the 220‑beat per minute run-on cadence to start the performance, marching the "WV" logo down the field to the university fight song, "Fight Mountaineers", expanding circles duringSimple Gifts, and the formation of the state's outline during "Hail, West Virginia".

The Firing of the Rifle is a tradition carried out by the Mountaineer Mascot to open several athletic events. The Mountaineer points the gun into the air with one arm and fires a blank shot from a custom rifle, a signal to the crowd to begin cheering at home football and basketball games. The Mountaineer also fires the rifle every time the team scores during football games.

The Carpet Roll is aWVU Men's Basketball tradition. In 1955 Fred Schaus and Alex Mumford devised the idea of rolling out an elaborate gold and blue carpet for Mountaineer basketball players to use when taking the court for pre-game warm-ups. In addition, Mountaineer players warmed up with a special gold and blue basketball. The university continued this tradition until the late 1960s when it died out, but former Mountaineer player Gale Catlett reintroduced the carpet when he returned to West Virginia University in 1978 as head coach of the men's basketball team.

Popular culture

[edit]
  • West Virginia University is a location in the gameFallout 76, as Vault-Tec University[153]

Notable people

[edit]

Notable alumni

[edit]
Main article:List of West Virginia University alumni

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Institution submitted data but didn't meet the criteria to be ranked.[79]
  2. ^The percentage of students who received an income-based federalPell grant intended for low-income students.
  3. ^The percentage of students who are a part of theAmerican middle class at the bare minimum.

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