Jump to content
  • Allegheny College

    0 comments
    562 views

    (0 reviews)

    Allegheny College attracts top students with unusual combinations of interests, skills, and talents, including some they did not know they had. At Allegheny, we invite our students not to limit themselves but to explore all of their interests.
    Every Allegheny student takes courses in each division of knowledge — humanities, natural sciences, and social sciences — declaring both a major and a minor (outside the division of their major) by the end of their sophomore year. Students combine their interests and expand their concentrations beyond one division, developing the sort of big picture thinking that is in high demand in today's global marketplace.
    Allegheny's undergraduate residential education prepares young adults for successful, meaningful lives by promoting students' intellectual, moral, and social development and encouraging personal and civic responsibility. Allegheny's faculty and staff combine high academic standards and a commitment to exchange knowledge with a supportive approach to learning. Graduates are equipped to think critically and creatively, write clearly, speak persuasively, and meet challenges in a diverse, interconnected world.
    Allegheny students and employees are committed to creating an inclusive, respectful and safe residential learning community that will actively confront and challenge racism, sexism, heterosexism, religious bigotry, and other forms of harassment and discrimination. We encourage individual growth by promoting a free exchange of ideas in a setting that values diversity, trust, and equality. So that the right of all to participate in a shared learning experience is upheld, Allegheny affirms its commitment to the principles of freedom of speech and inquiry, while at the same time fostering responsibility and accountability in the exercise of these freedoms. This statement does not replace existing personnel policies and codes of conduct.
    We expect our graduates to be capable and farsighted leaders and rational and responsible citizens equipped to meet the challenges confronting all society. We expect them to value diversity, individual integrity of thought and action, and the importance of personal rights and freedom in society's context as a whole. We expect them to know that the same complexities that create the problems and challenges of living also give life its richness.
    Allegheny believes that among all possible forms of education, liberal arts and science education best develops individual potential. It enables participants to experience and enjoy life to the fullest, enabling the mind to encompass all aspects of the world. Among other benefits, liberal arts education broadens the kinds of careers, interests, and activities that can be—and are likely to be—pursued. It develops and encourages the use of imagination, in the artistic sense, and for solving everyday life problems. It promotes an understanding of others' aspirations and feelings toward the foundation of constructive relationships.
    At Allegheny College, when we talk about unusual combinations, we mean it as a tremendous compliment that recognizes each of us is a unique character.Look around. You will see a college president who studies decision-making by modern American presidents and then rolls up his sleeves for grassroots community service, an aspiring diplomat singing in the choir, and building a bike path a future physician who edits the college newspaper and pole vaults on an international stage. Unusual combinations, yes, but at Allegheny, they are everyday examples of students exploring all of their talents, all of their passions. Moreover, it is our students who make Allegheny a vibrant, creative, and innovative place.
    As a liberal arts college, Allegheny has as its first concern intellectual growth. The curriculum and graduation requirements are designed to provide educational depth as well as intellectual breadth. Successful completion of Allegheny's four-year program leads to a Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science degree. To provide such an education, Allegheny aspires to this academic goal: to develop students' minds and teach them how to learn on their own. While factual knowledge is essential, no one can master all that is needed for a lifetime in four years. Most important is engaging students in an active learning process that entails not only comprehending facts but also taking responsibility for their proper use.
    Within half a dozen years, Alden succeeded in attracting sufficient funds to begin building a campus, traveling throughout the eastern states seeking support for a planned library and classroom building. The need for a building to house a library led to the construction, in the 1820s, of Bentley Hall, today a leading example of early American architecture. Designed by Alden, this handsome structure still crowns the hill on which the campus is located. It is named in honor of Dr. William Bentley, who donated his outstanding private library to the College.
    Each year, as part of the Commencement ceremony, seniors march through the doors of historic Bentley Hall toward the adventures that await them. In 2015, Allegheny will celebrate its 200-year history and the extraordinary futures of the graduating Bicentennial Class of 2015.

    Allegheny College
    Founding year: 1815
    Website: Visit Website
    Number of students: 0
    Genders Accepted: Mixed (Co-education)
    Leadership: James H. Mullen (President)
    Number of staff: 0
    Type: Universities

    Videos

     

     

     

     

    Address: Allegheny College, 520 N Main St, Meadville, PA, Pennsylvania, 16335, United States



    User Feedback

    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest

×
×
  • Create New...