HISTORY OF CAL STATE SAN MARCOS
Founding Mission Statement
California State University San Marcos offers excellence in undergraduate and graduate education to a diverse citizenry in an increasingly interdependent world. As the 20th campus in The California State System, CSU San Marcos provides an academic environment in which students, taught by active scholars, researchers, and artists, can achieve a foundation in the liberal arts and sciences and acquire specific competencies appropriate to major disciplines or graduate/ professional study. The University upholds a high level of academic scholarship in research and teaching, and protects academic freedom necessary for such scholarly pursuits. Moreover, the University demands fairness and decency of all persons in the University community. CSU San Marcos promotes a collegial relationship between students and faculty that encourages students’ excitement about the learning experience and process. This campus combines the academic strengths of a large university with the personal interaction characteristic of smaller institutions. The University provides an atmosphere in which students can experience a challenging education in a supportive environment, preparing them to live cooperatively and competitively in a world of cultural and ethnic diversity, economic and governmental differences, shared resources, ecological restraints, and technological change. CSU San Marcos recognizes its special role in the North San Diego County area. In the spirit of partnership, the University initiates and offers programs to further intellectual, professional, and personal development within the diverse community which it serves. The University serves as a resource for books, computer-generated information, and ideas. The University stimulates research and development in collaboration with public and private organizations and, in conjunction with regional industry, participates in the development of science-based technology. The University offers cultural enrichment in an intellectually stimulating environment and acts as a focus for community social activities, music, athletics, and performing and visual arts. CSU San Marcos endorses an international perspective that addresses the global community in its distinctive social, political, and economic terms. This multicultural outlook is reflected in our curriculum, extracurricular activities, international exchanges, and special programs that focus on world issues and problems. Consistent with its global orientation, this comprehensive University exposes students to the study of languages, to world literature and the fine arts, and to issues and traditions of the United States and other countries. The University’s definition of the liberal arts and sciences in these times includes basic skills in writing, critical and creative thinking, mathematics, fundamental computer competence, and an interdisciplinary approach. In addition to the laboratory and classroom, the University provides a variety of educational experiences in an atmosphere that encourages students to examine moral and ethical issues central to their development as responsible men and women. Students investigate the historical past and its relationship to the present and future, and seek to understand human behavior, culture, values, and institutions. They explore the modern mathematical, biological and physical sciences, and technology; focus on international concerns of race, gender, and cultural diversity; and contribute to public services that enrich the local and international community. The University prepares students to take leadership roles in areas of work and society in the international community of the 21st Century. The aim of CSU San Marcos is to instill in its students the enthusiasm and curiosity, the creativity and originality, the healthy skepticism, and the habit of continuing inquiry that are central to all truly educated men and women. The goal is to enable them to realize their potentialities as enlightened individuals and productive members of society in a world of change.The California State University
The individual California State Colleges were brought together as a system by the Donahoe Higher Education Act of 1960. In 1972, the system became the California State University and Colleges, and, in 1982, the system became the California State University. Today the campuses of the CSU include comprehensive and polytechnic universities and, since July 1995, the California Maritime Academy, a specialized campus. The oldest campus — San José State University — was founded in 1857 and became the first institution of public higher education in California. The most recently opened campus – California State University, Monterey Bay — began admitting students in the fall of 1995. The 23rd campus, CSU Channel Islands will open in fall in 2002, with freshmen arriving in fall 2003. Responsibility for the California State University is vested in the Board of Trustees, whose members are appointed by the Governor. The Trustees appoint the Chancellor, who is the chief executive officer of the system, and the Presidents, who are the chief executive officers of the respective campuses. The Trustees, the Chancellor, and the Presidents develop system-wide policy, with actual implementation at the campus level taking place through broadly based consultative procedures. The Academic Senate of the California State University, made up of elected representatives of the faculty from each campus, recommends academic policy to the Board of Trustees through the Chancellor. Academic excellence has been achieved by the California State University through a distinguished faculty whose primary responsibility is superior teaching. While each campus in the system has its own unique geographic and curricular character, all campuses, as multipurpose institutions, offer undergraduate and graduate instruction for professional and occupational goals as well as a broad liberal education. All the campuses require for graduation a basic program of "General Education Requirements," regardless of the type of bachelor’s degree or major field selected by the student. The CSU offers more than 1,600 bachelor’s and master’s degree programs in some 240 subject areas. Many of these programs are offered so that students can complete all upper-division and graduation requirements by part-time, late afternoon, and evening study. In addition, a variety of teaching and school service credential programs are available. A number of doctoral degrees are offered jointly with the University of California and with private institutions in California. Enrollments in fall 2000 totaled 368, 252 students, who were taught by more than 21,225 faculty. The system awards more than half of the bachelor’s degrees and 30 percent of the master’s degrees granted in California. Some 1.94 million persons have been graduated from CSU campuses since 1960.CAMPUSES OF THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY
California State University, Bakersfield
9001 Stockdale Highway
Bakersfield, CA 93311-1099
Dr. Tomás
A. Arciniega, President
(661) 664-2011
California State University, Channel Islands
One University Drive
Camarillo, CA 93012
Dr. Richard Rush,
President
(805) 437-8424
California State University, Chico
400 West First Street
Chico, CA 95929-0150
Dr.
Manuel A. Esteban, President
(530) 898-6116
California State University, Dominguez Hills
1000 East Victoria Street
Carson, CA 90747-0005
Dr. James
E. Lyons, Sr., President
(310) 243-3300
California State University, Fresno
5241 North Maple Avenue
Fresno, CA 93740
Dr. John D.
Welty, President
(559) 278-4240
California State University, Fullerton
800 N. State College Boulevard
Fullerton, CA
92834-9480
Dr. Milton A. Gordon, President
(714) 278-2011
California State University, Hayward
25800 Carlos Bee Boulevard
Hayward, CA 94542
Dr. Norma Rees,
President
(510) 885-3000
Humboldt State University
Arcata, CA 95521-8299
Dr. Alistair W. McCrone, President
(707) 826-3011
California State University, Long Beach
1250 Bellflower Boulevard
Long Beach, CA 90840-0115
Dr.
Robert C. Maxson, President
(562) 985-4111
California State University, Los Angeles
5151 State University Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90032
Dr. James
M. Rosser, President
(323) 343-3000
California Maritime Academy
200 Maritime Academy Drive
Vallejo, CA 94590
Dr. William B.
Eisenhardt, President
(707) 654-1000
California State University, Monterey Bay
100 Campus Center
Seaside, CA 93955-8001
Dr. Peter P. Smith,
President
(831) 582-3330
California State University, Northridge
18111 Nordhoff Street
Northridge, CA 91330
Dr. Jolene
Koester, President
(818) 677-1200
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
3801 W. Temple Avenue
Pomona, CA 91768
Dr. Bob Suzuki,
President
(909) 869-7659
California State University, Sacramento
6000 J Street
Sacramento, CA 95819
Dr. Donald R. Gerth,
President
(916) 278-6011
California State University, San Bernardino
5500 University Parkway
San Bernardino, CA 92407-2397
Dr.
Albert K. Karnig, President
(909) 880-5000
San Diego State University
5500 Campanile Drive
San Diego, CA 92182
Dr. Stephen L.
Weber, President
(619) 594-5200
San Francisco State University
1600 Holloway Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94132
Dr. Robert A.
Corrigan, President
(415) 338-1111
San José State University
One Washington Square
San Jose, CA 95192-0001
Dr. Robert L.
Caret, President
(408) 924-1000
California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
San Luis Obispo, CA 93407
Dr. Warren J. Baker,
President
(805) 756-1111
California State University, San Marcos
333 S. Twin Oaks Valley Road
San Marcos, CA 92096-0001
Dr.
Alexander Gonzalez, President
(760) 750-4000
Sonoma State University
1801 East Cotati Avenue
Rohnert Park, CA 94928-3609
Dr.
Ruben Armiñana, President
(707) 664-2880
California State University, Stanislaus
801 West Monte Vista Avenue
Turlock, CA 95382-0299
Dr.
Marvalene Hughes, President
(209) 667-3122