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Category: 5. Higher education; University of North
Carolina at Pembroke
OXEN004. Oxendine, Joseph. UNC
Pembroke: the decade of the 90s. Robesonian Thursday, 13
May 1999: 4A.
Publication type: Newspaper article
Guest columnist Joseph Oxendine, who is nearing
the end of his ten-year tenure as chancellor of UNC-Pembroke, outlines
a large and varied number of impressive achievements the university has
made during the decade. They include:
-
the change of the institution's name (in 1996) to the University
of North Carolina at Pembroke;
-
reclassification (in 1994) by the Carnegie Foundation to
Comprehensive I (the mid-level category for masters degree universities);
-
initiation of new degree programs, including (in 1992) a
RN-BSN nursing program offered jointly with Fayetteville State, an MBA
program, MA degrees in Agency Counseling and School Counseling, and bachelors
degrees in Criminal Justice, Community Health Education, American Studies,
Mass Communications, and Birth-Kindergarten;
-
two $500,000 endowed professorships, the Beach Chair in Art
and the William C. Friday chair in Molecular Biology and Biochemistry;
-
the initiation (in 1994) of the Teaching Fellows program;
-
a dramatic increase in grant submissions and awards (in 1998
there were 73 submissions and total awards of $4,717,157, a 1,010 percent
increase over 1992);
-
over 1800 hours contributed by faculty in service to the
public schools, community agencies, and economic and financial development;
-
new, expanded, and renovated buildings, including Sampson-Livermore
Library, Lumbee Hall (administration), and the Business Administration
building;
-
an increase in student diversity (in 1998, 15.6% African
American, 25% Native American, and 2% Hispanic; a U.S. News and World
Report ranking of No. 2 in the South for diversity, and the largest
percentage of Native American students in the magazine's survey);
-
creation of a new university logo and a new athletics mascot;
-
change from NAIA to NCAA II athletics conference;
-
excellent student satisfaction ratings on the UNC General
Administration's Graduating Senior Survey and Sophomore Survey (the 1998
sophomore and graduating senior surveys showed UNC-Pembroke students were
more satisfied than any others in a large number of categories).
Note: Author is Lumbee.
Additional subjects: Joseph Oxendine
This annotation was edited on: June 4, 2002
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