Friday, November 21, 2008

Best Colleges

Carroll College

Work 100 N. East Avenue Waukesha, WI 53186
Work(262) 524-7220
Web site: http://www.cc.edu
  • 45Rank
  • 44Score
Tier 1
College Category:
Universities-Master's (Midwest)

Overview : Carroll College

General Information  
Institutional Control: Private
Year founded: 1846
Religious affiliation: Presbyterian Church (USA)
Academic calendar: semester
Total number of undergraduates: 3,060
Setting suburban
Endowment: $43,084,802
Fall Admissions  
Application deadline: rolling
Application fee: N/A
Fall 2007 Acceptance rate: 72.4 %
Selectivity: selective
Expenses  
Costs: 2008-2009 Tuition and Fees: $21,936
Mission  
School mission In 1841, settlers living in the Wisconsin Territory community of Prairieville established the academy that five years later would become Carroll College. Soon after its founding, Carroll affiliated with the Presbyterian Church and adopted the motto, "Christo et Litteris," which means "for Christ and Learning." The college???s early patrons believed that higher education would serve as an instrument for civilizing the wilderness, spreading the Gospel and planting the roots of democracy deep in the prairie soil. They also sought to provide for the prosperity of their children and future generations. As Wisconsin???s oldest institution of higher learning, Carroll is known today as the "Pioneer College." Throughout its history, the Carroll educational experience has been marked by teaching excellence and individualized attention. Today, 162 years after the college???s founding, these values continue to anchor a superior education geared to ensure students??? success in the 21st century. The college???s educational philosophy is sustained by the four pillars of integrated knowledge, lifelong skills, gateway experiences and enduring values. Integrated Knowledge is the very foundation of a quality liberal arts program. The Carroll curriculum emphasizes breadth and depth of learning. Our purpose is to encourage students to recognize the interrelationships among ideas. We believe that students with this understanding will continue to learn, grow and succeed long after they leave the campus. Lifelong Skills help students prepare for life and work in a world of rapid and constant change. We believe that graduates will continue to evolve and contribute to their communities long after they earn their degrees. To that end, our mission is to help students learn to think critically and creatively, adapt to changing technologies, work efficiently and effectively, collaborate with others, and communicate clear, compelling ideas. Enduring Values help students to consider always the impact of their actions on the world around them. We believe that effective leaders draw their inspiration from strong personal value systems. Our goal, therefore, is to offer students multiple opportunities to make decisions and then to reflect upon their consequences. Gateway Experiences occur both upon entering and upon leaving Carroll College. We believe that our educational responsibility extends beyond the classroom into every aspect of our students??? lives. That is why we place a special emphasis on preparing incoming students for college life and on helping graduates make successful transitions into their first jobs, or graduate and professional schools. The four pillars undergird all that we do at Carroll College. They are integral to our undergraduate curriculum and guide our post-baccalaureate and graduate programs. They provide the broad inspiration for the Carroll experience and the many relationships we nurture with other organizations and institutions. An education at Carroll College offers a student alternatives from which to choose a worthwhile personal, professional and civic life. It promotes intellectual growth that culminates in the capacity for serious and creative thinking. Based on a core of studies in the liberal arts and sciences, complemented by career preparation and co-curricular programs, a Carroll education encourages growth in international and cultural awareness, social responsibility, moral sensitivity and spiritual reflection. A Carroll education begins with the acquisition of fundamental skills and bodies of knowledge. These skills include critical inquiry, effective communication, aesthetic understanding, quantitative reasoning and the capacities to gather and assimilate information and to identify and solve problems. The most essential consequence of a Carroll education is that students develop their capacity and desire to continue learning.

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