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815 North Broadway
Saratoga Springs,
New York, 12866


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518-580-5000

 

Skidmore College Today



Mission

The principal mission of Skidmore College is the education of predominantly full-time undergraduates, a diverse population of talented students who are eager to engage actively in the learning process. The college seeks to prepare liberally educated graduates to continue their quest for knowledge and to make the choices required of informed, responsible citizens. Skidmore faculty and staff create a challenging yet supportive environment that cultivates students' intellectual and personal excellence, encouraging them to expand their expectations of themselves while they enrich their academic understanding.

In keeping with the college's founding principle of linking theoretical with applied learning, the Skidmore curriculum balances a commitment to the liberal arts and sciences with preparation for professions, careers, and community leadership. Education in the classroom, laboratory, and studio is enhanced by cocurricular and field experience opportunities of broad scope.

Underpinning the entire enterprise are faculty members' scholarly and creative interests, which inform their teaching and contribute, in the largest sense, to the advancement of learning.

The college also embraces its responsibility as an educational and cultural resource for alumni and for a host of nontraditional student populations, and for providing educational leadership in the Capital District and beyond.


As a result of a commitment to the principles affirmed in the Mission Statement cited above, faculty and students are engaged in a variety of initiatives focused on collecting information about both teaching and student learning. Student work is periodically collected and used anonymously for assessment purposes. Information gathered from reviews of student work helps faculty members determine if students are learning what the curriculum is designed for, whether changes need to be made in courses or pedagogy, and what improvements need to be made in the curriculum. Assessment results are analyzed and used, therefore, to improve the Skidmore teaching and learning experience for both students and faculty.


The Setting

A lively city combining historical charm with modern culture and a cosmopolitan atmosphere, Saratoga Springs is a popular place among Skidmore students year round.

Ceded to the Dutch by the Indians in 1694, the city takes its name from the Indian "Saraghtoga" ("place of swift water"). Its reputation as one of the world's leading spas grew steadily through the nineteenth century, as it increasingly became known as the home of the nation's oldest thoroughbred racetrack and social center for elite society.

Today Saratoga is best known as a resort, cultural, convention, and entertainment center revolving around horse racing, outdoor recreation, classical and popular music, dance, and theater. The city is well known for its restored Victorian mansions, which attract students of art and architecture. The Saratoga Spa State Park, with its springs and mineral waters, is of more than recreational interest to biology students, and the wealth of rock formations in the region brings geologists from around the world. The city's convention facility brings conferences and exhibitions from across the state and nation.

With the growth over the past two decades of the Saratoga Performing Arts Center, the city has greatly increased its offerings as an important cultural center. Located in the state park, SPAC is the summer home of the New York City Ballet and the Philadelphia Orchestra, as well as the venue for top rock and jazz musicians. Distinguished theater companies and chamber music groups perform in SPAC's Little Theater.

Saratoga Springs is also known for the variety of its revitalized downtown area—a collection of shops, restaurants, galleries, and coffeehouses with an appeal to people of virtually all interests. Recent accolades have added to the city's national recognition. In 2002 the National Trust for Historic Preservation named Saratoga Springs one of its "Dozen Distinctive Destinations" for the year. In 1999 Sports Illustrated named Saratoga Race Course one of the world's top 10 sporting venues. In 1997 Saratoga Springs was recognized by American Heritage Magazine with its "Great American Place" award. In 1996 the National Trust for Historic Preservation honored the city with a "Great American Main Street" award.

The area's historical tradition includes the Saratoga Battlefield, scene of the pivotal 1777 clash between the Colonial and British armies that led directly to the end of the American Revolution. Dozens of landmarks celebrate the area's role in American history. The Saratoga Historical Society and Walworth Museums, housed in the Canfield Casino in Congress Park, feature exhibits and period rooms highlighting the city's fascinating past.


The Campus

Set in what was at the turn of the twentieth century a beautiful park of summer residences, Skidmore's campus encompasses more than 650 acres of wooded land at the northwest edge of Saratoga Springs. Land for the campus—now named the Jonsson Campus—was given to Skidmore College by Trustee J. Erik Jonsson and his wife, Margaret, in the early 1960s, when it became apparent that Skidmore was outgrowing its original Scribner Campus in downtown Saratoga Springs. Since 1964, when ground was broken for the first new structure on the Jonsson Campus, forty-nine buildings have been constructed on this site. While strikingly contemporary in architectural style, the campus buildings honor human scale and reflect Skidmore's Victorian heritage in numerous aesthetic details.

Among the college's more recent construction projects is the Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery, which opened in fall 2000, and the renovation and expansion of Case College Center.

Carefully planned to preserve the natural beauty of the setting, the campus was designed to provide for both students and teachers a feeling of freedom and wide horizon. From the covered walkways uniting the residential, academic, and social centers on campus, the prevailing views are to the mountains, woods, and fields, and into the center campus "green." The Jonsson Campus maintains the advantages of a small college where students and teachers meet often and informally and where academic resources are readily at hand.


The Faculty

Skidmore's size and its student-faculty ratio are two of the keys to creating an academic environment that fosters close associations and the exchange of ideas among faculty and students. About 2,200 full-time students bring an unusually wide range of academic and cultural experiences to the campus, and a student-faculty ratio of 11:1 assures each student the chance for the close faculty attention that enhances the liberal arts experience.

Teaching, at Skidmore, is not merely the imparting of knowledge. It is the key to helping students develop their creative abilities, talents, and values; to enriching them as human beings; to integrating scholarship and cocurricular offerings with career goals; and to preparing them for lives of productive contribution to society and of continuous study and inquiry. The abilities to think and analyze clearly, to express oneself effectively through speaking and writing, to discern and value excellence, and to serve society are the hallmarks of a Skidmore education.

The members of the Skidmore faculty are well known for the range of education, research, and experience they bring to the classroom. Though they are prolific in their writing, productive in their research, and outstanding in their creative endeavors, their emphasis is always on teaching, on translating the richness of their experiences into meaningful learning and inspiration for their students. Numbering approximately 200 full-time faculty, Skidmore's teaching faculty represent some of the top graduate schools in the nation and the world. Over 93 percent of the Skidmore faculty hold the Ph.D. or the highest degree in their field.

Beyond their academic interests, the Skidmore faculty are known for taking a personal interest in their students, offering the added word of encouragement, the extra time outside the classroom, or the open mind for questions—all of which contribute to the extra incentive a student needs. These attitudes have helped create a campus known for its warmth and sense of community.


The Academic Program

As a highly selective liberal arts college, Skidmore is firmly committed to providing men and women with a superior grounding in the arts, humanities, sciences, and social sciences. Skidmore students also have the opportunity to pursue career-specific fields such as business, education, and social work. This blend of the theoretical and the practical makes Skidmore uniquely responsive to both student needs and those of the increasingly interdependent world in which we live.

At Skidmore, the theme of creativity carries throughout and across the traditional liberal arts disciplines and preprofessional offerings. The college's emphasis on creative thinking has led to one of the nation's pioneer efforts in establishing a truly cross-disciplinary first-year experience, the required Liberal Studies 1 course. The cross-disciplinary relationships formed in that experience continue in Liberal Studies 2 courses and infuse departments and programs throughout the college, both among faculty and between faculty and students—often leading to close research and artistic collaborations.

The Skidmore curriculum provides a creative intellectual foundation for every student. Students pursue connections among an unusually wide range of disciplinary perspectives and embark on their careers well prepared to take full advantage of the diversity of opportunities they will encounter in the complex modern world. As practiced at Skidmore College, the liberal arts produce a transformational educational experience and promote lifelong learning.

Skidmore offers more than sixty degree programs, including majors in both traditional liberal arts disciplines and preprofessional areas. The curriculum's flexibility allows students to major in one field and minor in another (an English major with a business minor, for example), pursue an interdepartmental major combining two disciplines, or design self-determined majors.

Facility with contemporary digital technologies and with the retrieval and interpretation of information is fostered through a series of courses that incorporate computer resources in the learning process and through special workshops.

The internship program complements this flexibility through "exploratory" and "professional" learning opportunities off campus. Students are encouraged to test their skills through internships in government, industry, communications, and nonprofit organizations at the local, state, and national levels. Many students intern with alumni, who are generous with their time and support of the internship program.

Beyond the Skidmore campus, students may take advantage of courses offered at other Capital District colleges through the Hudson-Mohawk Association of Colleges and Universities, which includes such institutions as Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Union College, and the State University of New York at Albany. Cooperative programs include one in engineering with the Thayer School at Dartmouth College; a Washington Semester coordinated through American University; a semester at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole; an ecosystems semester at Biosphere 2 in Arizona; an M.B.A. program with Clarkson University; and an M.A.T. affiliation with Union College.

The Office of International Programs organizes a wide range of opportunities abroad for students and faculty. The office provides administrative oversight for Skidmore's programs in Paris; London; Madrid and Alcalá, Spain; and Beijing (an emerging program). In addition, the office oversees other Skidmore affiliations in many regions of the world.

The college operates under a semester calendar with fifteen-week fall and spring semesters. Skidmore's summer program includes two five-week academic sessions and other study options.




Creative Thought Matters.
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