Hunter College of the City University of New York
College Detail
Hunter College of the City University of New York
| Type: | Public Higher Education Institution |
| Total campus enrollment: | 15,718 |
| Religious affiliation: | Non-denominational |
| Setting: | Urban Setting |
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The College
In 1870, Thomas Hunter founded Hunter College to train young women to become school teachers. Their contributions helped make New York Citys schools among the most highly regarded public school systems in the world. Today, Hunter College is a coeducational liberal arts college serving 21,000 undergraduate and graduate students of all racial, ethnic, and cultural backgrounds. Wide offerings in the liberal arts and sciences and three professional schoolseducation, health sciences, and social workmeet the highest academic standards. A distinguished faculty encourages intellectual and personal growth in each student.
Location
Hunter students study in the heart of Manhattan. Many of the worlds finest museums, libraries, concert halls, cultural centers, and theaters are just a quick walk away.
Majors and Degrees
Hunter College offers bachelors and masters degrees in the arts and sciences, education, health professions, nursing, and social work, along with several combined (B.A./M.A. or B.A./M.S.) degrees. The following programs of study are available: accounting, Africana and Puerto Rican/Latino studies, anthropology, archaeology, art history, biological sciences, chemistry, Chinese language and literature, classical studies, community health education, comparative literature, computer science, dance, economics, elementary education, environmental studies, English, English language arts, film, French, geography, German, Greek, Hebrew, history, honors curriculum, Italian, Jewish social studies, Latin, Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Latin and Greek, mathematics, media studies, medical laboratory sciences, music, nursing, nutrition and food science, philosophy, physics, political science, psychology, religion, Romance languages, Russian, secondary education, sociology, Spanish, statistics, studio art, theater, urban studies, and womens studies. Secondary education programs are for grades 712 unless otherwise noted and include biology, chemistry, Chinese, dance (pre-K12), English, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, mathematics, music (pre-K12, accelerated B.A./M.A. program only), physics, Russian, social studies, and Spanish.
Special programs in anthropology, biological sciences/environmental and occupational health sciences, biopharmacology, biotechnology, economics, English, history, mathematics, music, physics, sociology/social research, and statistics and applied mathematics lead to the combined bachelors/masters degree, enabling highly qualified students to earn both degrees more quickly.
Hunter College also provides preprofessional advisement and preparation for advanced study in chiropractic, dentistry, engineering, law, medicine, optometry, osteopathy, pharmacy, podiatry, and veterinary medicine.
Academic Programs
Hunter instills a rich and informed sense of the possibilities of humanity in its students and expects them to carry their liberal arts education forward in their careers, their public responsibilities, and their personal lives.
The College trains its students in the sciences, the humanities, and a number of professional fields. As they strive to achieve their career goals, students are expected to perceive their chosen fields of study as only a part of a wider realm of knowledge. Undergraduate programs of study at Hunter consist of five parts, totaling 120 credits: a general education requirement, a pluralism and diversity requirement, a concentration of in-depth study (major), elective courses, and a minor.
Undergraduate students at Hunter who exhibit intellectual curiosity and exceptional ability may apply to the Thomas Hunter Scholars Program, an interdisciplinary program that individualizes study according to needs and interests and grants a Bachelor of Arts degree.
Students may earn sophomore standing (up to 30 credits) if they score well on the College-Level Examination Program (CLEP) subject tests, the Advanced Placement examinations of the College Board, and the Regents College Examination (RCE) Program of New York State.
Off-Campus Programs
Hunter College taps Manhattan to allow innumerable internships. Hosts have included Atlantic Records, CNN, the Council on Foreign Relations, DreamWorks SKG, Madison Square Garden, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City Council, Simon & Schuster, and many more. Interns perform curatorial and administrative work in museums, research and production work on TV news shows and newspapers, design work in commercial graphics, and booking, managing, and technical work in theaters.
Academic Facilities
The College is made up of five sites in Manhattan. The largest, a modern complex of buildings connected by skywalks at 68th Street and Lexington Avenue, sits above a convenient subway stop. This campus offers programs in the arts and sciences and in teacher education.
Downtown, the Brookdale Campus on East 25th Street houses the Division of the Schools of the Health Professions, which includes the Hunter-Bellevue School of Nursing, one of the nations largest nursing programs, and the School of Health Sciences.
Uptown on East 79th Street is the Hunter College School of Social Work, which was recently listed among the top ten schools of its kind in the nation by U.S. News & World Report.
On Manhattans West Side, Hunters Studio Art Building houses an 8,000-square-foot gallery and provides M.F.A. students with individual studios that are among the best in the city.
At East 94th Street, the Campus Schools house an elementary school and a high school for the intellectually gifted that are renowned, as is the College itself, for a long tradition of academic excellence.
All locations are minutes from Grand Central Terminal, Penn Station, and the New York/New Jersey Port Authority Bus Terminal, making Hunter easily accessible from Connecticut, Westchester, New Jersey, and Long Island.
The collections of the Hunter College libraries are housed in the Jacqueline Grennan Wexler Library and the Art Slide Library (located at the main campus), as well as at the branch libraries at the Brookdale Campus and the School of Social Work. The libraries hold 750,000 volumes, 2,300 periodicals, a nonprint collection of more than 1 million microforms, and 250,000 art slides in addition to records, tapes, scores, music CDs, and videos. Recently, Hunter installed new computer, multimedia, and Internet labs and its first CD-ROM network. The CD-ROM network provides access to indexes, abstracts, and complete texts and multimedia resources, and Internet labs make the World Wide Web accessible.
Costs
Hunter College is affordable. In 200708, New York State residents enrolled as full-time, matriculated students paid $2000 per semester ($170 per credit part-time). Nonresidents enrolled as full-time, matriculated students paid $360 per credit. All students paid a Student Activity Fee ($84.50 per semester for full-time students and $54.45 per semester for part-time students) and a $15-per-semester Consolidated Fee.
Financial Aid
Hunter College participates in all state and federal financial aid programs. Financial aid is available to matriculated students in the form of grants, loans, and work-study. Grants provide funds that do not have to be repaid. Loans must be repaid in regular installments over a prescribed period of time. Work-study consists of part-time employment, either on campus or in an outside agency. More information is available from the Office of Financial Aid at 212-772-4820.
Entering freshmen whose high school records indicate a high level of academic achievement may apply to the Macaulay Honors College at Hunter College. This prestigious program offers a generous financial aid package, including a full academic scholarship, as well as extensive benefits, including a free room at the Hunter College Residence Hall. In addition, Hunter College offers a wide array of other scholarships.
Faculty
Thanks to its location in the heart of New York City, Hunter College attracts a special kind of faculty member. Some are well-known scholars and researchers in their fields, such as biologists involved in advanced research on genetic structure. Others are professionals with active careers in the city, including well-known painters, sculptors, architects, and urban design experts. Hunters faculty also includes environmental health scientists who work on occupational health and safety issues, nursing administrators who work in the countrys leading hospitals, and film directors, theater critics, and musicians who are engaged in New York Citys cultural milieu. Many members of the faculty are nationally renowned; they maintain Hunters reputation for academic excellence through outstanding teaching and cutting-edge publications and by securing millions of dollars in annual grants for research.
Student Government
Several governing assemblies involve students in Hunters governance. The College Senate, the legislative body of the College, includes faculty members, students, and administrators. Two Student Governments (undergraduate and graduate) also play essential roles in the life of the College. Students with voting power sit on faculty and administrative committees.
Admission Requirements
Candidates for freshman admission are considered based on the overall strength of their academic preparation, cumulative high school averages, and SAT or ACT scores. The College recommends 4 years of English, 4 years of social studies, 3 years of mathematics, 2 years of a foreign language, 2 years of laboratory sciences, and 1 year of performing or visual arts as the minimum academic preparation for success in college.
Transfer applicants with fewer than 24 credits must have a cumulative grade point average (GPA) of at least 2.3 and must meet the freshman criteria previously outlined. Those with 14 to 23.9 credits and a GPA of at least 2.5 as well as those with 24 or more credits and a GPA of at least 2.3 are eligible, regardless of high school average. For more information, applicants should visit Hunter Colleges Web site.
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