San José State University, commonly shortened to San José State and SJSU, is the founding campus of what became the California State University system. The urban campus has an enrollment of about 30,000 students and claims to have more graduates working in Silicon Valley than any other college or university.
San José State was founded as the California State Normal School by the California Legislature on May 2, 1862, and is the oldest public university in California. California State Normal School was itself derived from San Francisco's Minns Evening Normal School, a Normal School that existed in that city from 1857 to 1862. Thus, the school now called "San José State" is even older than the University of California, Berkeley (the Organic Act, which established the University of California, was signed into law on March 23, 1868).
California State Normal School never had a permanent home in San Francisco and was moved to San Jose in 1871. The original California State Normal School campus in San Jose consisted of a rectangular, wooden building with a central grass quadrangle. The wooden buildings were destroyed by fire in 1880 and were replaced by a stone and masonry structure of roughly the same configuration in 1881. This building was declared unsafe following the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and was being torn down when an aftershock of the magnitude that was predicted to destroy the building occurred and no damage was observed. The demolition was stopped, and the portions of the building still standing were made into four halls: Tower Hall, Morris Dailey Auditorium, Washington Square Hall, and Dwight Bentel Hall. These four buildings are the oldest on campus. A $2 million renovation of Tower Hall, the oldest and most recognizable building on campus, was announced in October 2005.
Formerly, San Carlos Street, Seventh Street and Ninth Street crossed the campus, creating essentially six small schools separated by roads clogged with traffic. Beginning in the fall of 1994, the streets were closed and converted to pedestrian walkways and green belts within the campus. San Carlos Street was renamed Paseo San Carlos, Seventh Street became El Paseo de César Chávez, and Ninth Street is now called the Ninth Street Plaza. Three of the six residential brick blockhouses have been demolished, and phase one of the new student village was completed in 2005. If this phase is a success, the three remaining red brick residence halls and Joe West Hall may be demolished and replaced with phase two of the project. However, the school's commuter school status and lower rents in the surrounding community have depressed demand for this new student housing, and future phases are uncertain.
The new housing complex, called Campus Village, is a more than $200 million project designed to replace the old residence halls. The concrete poured for this project was the largest amount of concrete poured in California. Campus Village consists of three buildings ranging from 7 to 15 stories tall. The project was completed in the fall of 2005 and doubled student capacity for on-campus housing. Campus Village has housing options for first-year students, upper-class students, graduate students and faculty, staff or guests of the university.
The new Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library, which opened its doors on August 1, 2003, won the Library Journal’s prestigious 2004 Library of the Year award, the publication’s highest honor. The King Library is the first collaboration of its kind between a university and a major U.S. city. The library is eight stories high and has 475,000 square feet of floor space.
San Jose's first public library occupied the same site from 1901 to 1936, and the Wahlquist Library occupied the site from 1961 to 2000, at which point it was torn down to begin construction of the King Library.
The Business Classroom Project was a $16 million renovation of the Boccardo Business Education Center. Renovations included state-of-the-art telecommunications as well as interior and exterior upgrades.
The university boasts a year-round, outdoor Olympic-size swimming pool that is the largest in Northern California. The Event Center Arena has a full gym including basketball and racquetball courts, a weight room, and a climbing wall. It also plays host to rock concerts and other events. The student union features a bowling alley and large game room.
Spartan Stadium, the other athletic fields, additional student housing and overflow parking are located on the South Campus on Seventh Street, about 1.5 miles south of the main campus.
San José State maintains a facility at Norman Y. Mineta San José International Airport as part of the Aviation Department, and manages the Moss Landing Marine Laboratories in Moss Landing, California, on the Monterey Bay, a cooperative research facility of seven CSU campuses.
The chief executive of San José State is the President of San Jose State University. The current president is Don Kassing, who was appointed to the position on May 11, 2005 after serving as acting president for less than a year. He had been filling in for Paul Yu, who assumed the presidency on July 15, 2004, and resigned a little over two weeks later on August 2, 2004 due to health reasons.
San José State offers 69 bachelors degrees with 81 concentrations, and 65 masters degrees with 29 concentrations.
The university has seven colleges and six schools:
as well as International and Extended Studies *, which coordinates continuing education and professional development programs.
SJSU is ranked in the top 10 public colleges and universities in the West that offer undergraduate and master's programs, according to the latest survey by U.S. News & World Report. On the national level, the university tied for 14th place for the best undergraduate engineering program, placed 5th for the best computer engineering program, and tied for 5th place for the best industrial/manufacturing engineering program.
The SJSU College of Business is one of the 500 institutions worldwide that are accredited by the prestigious AACSB International at both the graduate and undergraduate levels. In addition, the College of Business is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges and the California State Board of Education. The college is actively seeking corporate donations, and most recently received a donation of $10 million from alumni Donald and Sally Lucas. Donald and Sally Lucas are the founders of the Lucas Dealership Group, one of the top 25 automobile dealerships in the country.
The engineering, science, and business schools have more graduates working in Silicon Valley than any other university in the world. Nearly 200 SJSU graduates have founded, co-founded, served or serve as senior executives or officers of public and private companies reporting annual sales between $40 million and $26 billion.
The College of Education has been accredited under the performance-oriented standards of the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education.
The school newspaper, the Spartan Daily, was founded in 1934, and is published five days a week when classes are in session. KSJS, 90.5 FM, is the university's radio station. Known for being one of the best college radio stations in the country and broadcasting with 1500 watts 24 hours a day, KSJS is a student-training ground that features five different types of music (electronic, urban, jazz, subversive rock and rock en espanol), as well as a variety of public affairs programming.
Research collections located at SJSU include the Ira F. Brilliant Center for Beethoven Studies and the Martha H. Cox Center for Steinbeck Research.
SJSU research partnerships include the SJSU Metropolitan Technology Center at NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, the Cisco Networking Laboratory, and the Moss Landing Marine Laboratories.
It is also home to various institutes, such as the Mineta Transportation Institute. Since 2001, the university has operated the Survey and Policy Research Institute (SPRI), which conducts the quarterly, high-profile Silicon Valley Consumer Confidence Survey and other research projects.
In 1881 the first branch campus of the California State Normal School was announced, which later became the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). To commemorate San José's identity as the original California State, the bell pictured at right was forged with the words "California State Normal School, A.D. 1881". After creation of the Los Angeles campus, the San Jose campus was officially known as the California State Normal School, San José. In 1887, the school was renamed the "State Normal School" by the California Legislature. Later on, other normal schools were established in Chico, San Diego and elsewhere throughout the State of California. These normal schools were eventually collected together to form the precursor of today's California State University (CSU) system.
In 1921, the school's name was changed to San Jose State Teachers Training College. In 1935, the State Teachers Colleges became the California State Colleges, administered from the State Department of Education in Sacramento. As a result, the school's name was changed again, this time to San Jose State College. In 1961, the California State Colleges became a separate entity (later the California State University (CSU) system). In 1972 SJSC was granted university status, and the name was changed to California State University, San José. However, in 1974, alumni at the school succeeded in lobbying the California Legislature to change the school's name to "San José State University".
In 1942, the old gym (now Yoshi Uchida Hall) was used to register and collect Japanese Americans before sending them to internment camps.
In 1972-1973 the Economics Department experienced political turmoil. The Administration conducted a purge of left-leaning professors. For several years thereafter, the Economics Department was under censor by the American Association of University Professors.
The English Department has sponsored the annual Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest since 1982.
In 1999, San José State and the City of San Jose agreed to combine their main libraries to form a joint City/University library located on campus, the first known collaboration of this type in the United States. The combined library faced opposition, with critics stating that the two libraries have very different objectives and that the project would be too expensive. [19 Despite opposition, the project proceeded, and the new Martin Luther King, Jr. Library opened on-time and on-budget in 2003. The new library has won several national awards since its initial opening in 2003.
On December 7, 1941, the football team travelled to the island of Oahu to play the University of Hawaii. When Pearl Harbor was bombed, the game was cancelled and the team volunteered for duty with the Honolulu Police Department instead of returning home.
The SJSU men's hockey team was ranked #1 in the west for the 2005-2006 season.
SJSU alumni have won 18 Olympic medals through the years, dating back to the first gold medal won by Willie Steel in track and field in the 1948 Olympics. Alumni have won medals in track and field, swimming, judo and boxing. Due to pressures to maintain the football team, several of these programs have been eliminated, including the historical track team known as "Speed City" which produced Olympic medalists and social activists John Carlos and Tommie Smith.
San José State University | California State University | Education in San Jose, California | Educational institutions established in 1857 | Universities and colleges in California | Western Association of Schools and Colleges
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