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A member of the Claremont Colleges, Claremont McKenna College is a small, highly selective, private coeducational, liberal arts college enrolling about 1100 students with a curricular emphasis on government, economics, and public policy. CMC is located in Claremont, California, 35 miles east of Downtown Los Angeles.

History and reputation


Claremont McKenna College was founded in 1946 as Claremont Men's College. It was renamed in 1981 after Donald McKenna, a founding trustee, after the school became coeducational in 1976.

Today, CMC is consistently ranked as one of the country's top liberal arts colleges; it ranked 10th in U.S. News and World Report in 2005. CMC is also the youngest and smallest college ranked in the list's top 20 schools. Furthermore, admission to the college is highly selective, with only 20% of applicants being admitted in 2005.

The Princeton Review lists Claremont McKenna among the nation's top twenty colleges for the "Best Quality of Life," "Happiest Students," and "Most Politically Active Students."

CMC students continue to distinguish themselves after graduation. Claremont McKenna College was ranked second among liberal arts colleges for yield on Fulbright applications by the Chronicle of Higher Education. Claremont McKenna College is also a nominator for the Luce Scholars Program.

Campus life


Dorms

Claremont McKenna's dorms are divided into 3 regions: North Quad, Mid Quad, and South Quad. In addition, the Student Apartments sit on the East edge of campus, and are occupied primarily by seniors.

North Quad is comprised of Appleby, Boswell, Green, and Wohlford dormitories and are the campus' first dorms. In the north quad dorms, every room opens to the outdoors instead of opening to an interior hallway. North quad rooms are all doubles grouped into suites of four rooms that share a bathroom. North Quad is the center of the social scene at CMC and at the greater 5C community.

CMC's Mid Quad is home to Beckett, Benson, Berger, Marks, and Phillips Halls, which feature long interior corridors, double and single rooms, large shared-bathroom facilities, and all-dorm lounge areas. Commencement is held in Badgley Gardens, the green space just south of Beckett Hall. Construction on a new dorm in Badgley Gardens is scheduled to begin in summer 2007, pending blueprint approval from the Board of Trustees.

The tallest buildings in Claremont happen to be in last residential area - South Quad. Better known as "The Towers," Auen, Fawcett, and Stark Halls, make up South Quad. Each tower has seven floors with approximately twelve students per floor. Each floor has a common area and a large shared bathroom, and there is an all-dorm lounge area on the ground floor. Stark Hall, the newest of the South Quad dorms, is substance-free, meaning that no alcohol or drugs are allowed.

All dorm rooms are attended to by housekeeping staff every other week.

Marian Miner Cook Athenaeum

The Marian Miner Cook Athenaeum hosts more than one hundred dinner and lecture events with distinguished speakers each year, serving as the College's central intellectual and social hub. Students enjoy getting to know their professors at wine and cheese receptions and formal dinners preceding lectures by eminent visitors such as Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Attorney General Janet Reno, filmmaker Spike Lee, and Paul Rusesabagina (the man portrayed in Hotel Rwanda). The Athenaeum also serves daily afternoon tea in its library, featuring chocolate-covered strawberries and pastries. Afternoon tea, like all Athenaeum meals and events, is free to students, faculty, and staff.

Academic programs


General education requirements

Although its specialty is public policy and economics, Claremont McKenna College does hold to the idea of a liberal education by requiring student to add breadth to their knowledge through the completion of course in natural and social sciences, humanities, and foreign language.

First year requirements

Literature 10 - Composition and Literary Analysis

Unless waived for a transfer student, every student must take in their first year at the college. This introductory literature class covers all the major literary genres and is designed to improve each students critical thinking and writing skills. The specific works studied and course format varies depending on professor. There are plans in the Literature department to phase out this class as a requirement.

Civilization 10 - Questions of Civilization

Question of Civilization was designed provide a unifying experience of Claremont McKenna students while fostering the exploration of universal thoughts and ideas. Directed by Prof. Robert J. Valenza, each year a core set of text is chosen for all section of Civilization 10, with each professor free and challenged to add his/her own insights or works to the course. Although not common in all sections, Prof. Valenza encourages the Civ faculty to provide interaction through discussion. Many students, though far from most, find this one of their most cherished CMC experiences.

Nevertheless, the course is not without its critics. Some students have complained that the course attempts to do too much and ends up teaching nothing. The course is designed to be a combination of literature, philosophy, and religious studies, though it too often ends up as none of the above. The class has been called, by both students and professors, "pointless".

Majors

The academic strength of Claremont McKenna College lies in the social sciences, particularly Economics, Accounting, Government, and Psychology. It is also known for its version of the Oxford-style Philosophy, Politics, and Economics major.

For a complete list of CMC's majors, visit the CMC catalog at the Office of Registrar's Website.

Sequences

Claremont McKenna College does not offer traditional minors. Instead, CMC offers a group of sequences, which are minor-like groups of courses on a particular interdisciplinary theme.

CMC's sequences include

Research institutes


CMC sponsors 11 different on-campus research institutes and centers. They seek to produce new research and publications while involving undergraduate students in rigorous academic work. Many are named in honor of the college's donors.

Controversies


Like all colleges, CMC is not without controversy. For example:

  • On the evening of March 9, 2004, after delivering a campus lecture on hate crimes, Visiting Assistant Professor of Psychology Kerri F. Dunn reported that her car had been vandalized and painted with racist, sexist and anti-semitic slurs. In response the Claremont Colleges cancelled classes the next day, and a series of demonstrations, candle-light vigils and community meetings were called to address the threat posed by an alleged and previously unknown group of violently intolerant students. Subsequent investigaton by the City of Claremont's police department and the FBI revealed that Dunn had, in fact, slashed her own tires and applied the insulting phrases to her own vehicle. She was subsequently found guilty of filing a false police report and attempted insurance fraud. She was sentenced to one year in prison and ordered to pay a fine of approximately $19,000 in restitution.

  • A new issue is the planned expansion of the student body. Current president Pamela Gann, a controversial figure among more conservative alumni, is now considering increasing the student body by 60 students. While a modest number, critics of the plan say it will change the student dynamic by making the community less intimate and requiring the building of a new dorm.

  • 2006. Seniors desecrate facilities of pitzer college with rubber chicken supplied by the college along with bird seed. we dont remember why the did it but it was pretty awesome!

Presidents


Alumni


Dropouts


External links


Universities and colleges in California | Claremont Colleges | Independent Colleges of Southern California | Posse schools | Western Association of Schools and Colleges

 

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