College of Idaho
The College of Idaho is a private liberal arts college in Caldwell, Idaho. Founded in 1891, it is the state's oldest private liberal arts college, with an enrollment of 1,000 students. The college has produced seven Rhodes Scholars, three governors, and four NFL players. Its PEAK Curriculum allows students to study in the four knowledge areas of humanities, natural sciences, social sciences, and a professional field, enabling them to earn a major and three minors in four years.
For sixteen years, from November 1991 until October 2007, the C of I was known as Albertson College of Idaho.
History
The college was conceived in 1884 when the Presbyterian Church's Wood River Presbytery, meeting in Shoshone, formed a commission to examine the possibility of establishing a Presbyterian college somewhere in the Idaho Territory. The commission found support for such a venture and in 1890 the Presbytery accepted an offer from a group of Caldwell citizens, led by William Judson Boone, to locate the institution in that community.The college was founded in 1891 by Dr. Rev. William Judson Boone with the support of the Wood River Presbytery. It first opened its doors to students on October 7, 1891. Nineteen students showed up at The College of Idaho for the first classes in 1891. The first classes were held downtown in the Caldwell Presbyterian Church and a year later the college moved into its own downtown building. The campus moved to its present site on the east side of town in 1910 when Henry and Carrie Blatchley donated of land. Sterry Hall, a classroom and administration building, and Finney Hall, the first residence hall, were built that year. Voorhees Hall, the second of what would become a total of five residence halls, opened two years later.
In 1893, it was incorporated under the laws of the State of Idaho and placed in the hands of a self-perpetuating Board of Trustees. Dr. Boone served as president of the College for 45 years until his death in 1936.
In 1991, the college's board of trustees unanimously voted to change its name to Albertson College of Idaho to honor alumnus and long-time donor Joe Albertson and his wife Kathryn The couple, who founded one of the country's largest supermarket chains, Albertson's Inc., met in a chemistry class at C of I and were generous benefactors of the college. At the time of the name change, the enrollment was
On October 10, 2007, college president Bob Hoover announced that the name would revert to The College of Idaho, with the mutual agreement of the J.A. and Kathryn Albertson Foundation, to promote acceptance and gain financial backing from alumni who were unhappy about the original name change. This coincided with a donation by the foundation to the college.
Student demographics
Seventy percent of its students are from Idaho, and international students comprise nearly 10% of the student body. There are more than twenty states and forty countries represented. The C of I maintains a 63% graduation rate, and there is a 12 to 1 student to faculty ratio; 85% of full-time faculty have their terminal degree. The college has a medical school acceptance rate of more than 85%. Minority students make up more than 20% of the student body, and more than one-third of the enrollment identifies as first-generation college students. 86% of freshman students move on to their sophomore year. The college accepts 68% of applications. More than 60% of students live on the close-knit, residential campus. Approximately 40% of students are varsity athletes, and the male/female ratio is 48:52.Academics
The college offers 26 undergraduate majors, 58 undergraduate minors, three graduate programs, and a variety of collaborative programs through 16 departments. Popular majors include Biology, Business, History, Psychology, and Political Economy.Academic departments
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Health & Human Performance
- Mathematical and Physical Sciences
- Art
- English
- Modern Languages
- Music
- Philosophy and Religion
- Theatre & Speech Arts
- Anthropology & Sociology
- Business & Accounting
- Education
- History
- Political Economy
- Psychology
Accreditation
Collaborative programs
Collaborative programs between The College of Idaho and other institutions offer degrees from both with students spending three to four years at C of I and two to three years at the cooperating university.Collaborative programs in health professions include: nursing, clinical lab science, speech and language pathology and audiology, physical therapy, occupational therapy, pharmacy, pharmaceutical science and public health.
Other collaborative programs include engineering and law.
PEAK Curriculum
"PEAK is The College of Idaho's highly distinctive, undergraduate curriculum. PEAK allows students to graduate with an academic major and three minors in four years.... PEAK empowers students to design their own curriculum within a structure that gives both breadth and depth to their education." The curriculum was implemented in the Fall of 2010. It is made up of four different peaks: humanities & fine arts, social sciences & history, natural sciences & mathematics, and professional studies & enhancement. Each student under this curriculum is required to major in one of the four peaks, while minoring in the other three.Academic calendar
The academic calendar provides opportunities for experimental as well as conventional approaches to learning. During the fall and spring terms traditionally formatted courses are offered over a twelve-week term. Each twelve-week term is segmented by a one-week break in the middle of the term, usually following midterms. Between the fall and spring terms, a four-week winter session is offered that stresses experimentation, innovation, creative teaching, and imaginative learning using tutorials, seminars, or independent research methods. Before the PEAK Curriculum was implemented in the Fall of 2010, the winter session was six weeks long.Student life
The college has more than 50 student clubs and organizations, with an active student government, the Associated Students of The College of Idaho and strong intramural and club sports programs. Intramural sports include: basketball, soccer, softball and flag football.The College's Outdoor Program takes advantage of Idaho's geography and include backpacking, hiking, fly fishing, camping, winter camping, snowshoeing, kayaking, rafting, rock climbing, backcountry skiing, inner tubing, and stargazing. The Outdoor Program leads week-long trips during the breaks between terms and after midterms.
Other student organizations include student government, the Resident Hall Association, the Student Philanthropy Council, Campus Ministries, the International Student Organization, etc. Some on-campus clubs are Circle K International, Swing Dance Club, Students for Life, and Philotech to name a few.
The college has three fraternities: Delta Tau Delta, Kappa Sigma, and Sigma Chi, and four sororities: Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Sigma Epsilon.
Athletics
The College of Idaho is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and United States Collegiate Ski and Snowboard Association. The College primarily competes in the Cascade Collegiate Conference, although it is a member of the Frontier Conference for football, the Pacific Northwest Collegiate Lacrosse League for men's lacrosse and the Northwest Collegiate Ski Conference for men's and women's skiing. In 2014, the C of I reinstated its football program after a 37-year hiatus. The Coyote is the school's mascot, but C of I teams are often referred to as the "Yotes." The College offers 10 men's and 10 women's sports:Men's sports
Women's sports
- Basketball
- Cross country
- Golf
- Skiing
- Soccer
- Softball
- Swimming
- Tennis
- Track & field
- Volleyball
All 19 of The College of Idaho's NAIA teams were honored as NAIA Scholar Team for 2008-09 season. Each team maintained an average GPA of at least 3.0. This set an all-time NAIA record for number of Scholar Teams in one season. C of I student-athletes continue to earn high marks in the class room and are among the annual leaders in scholar-athlete and academic All-America honorees.
Orma J. Smith Museum of Natural History
The College of Idaho houses the Orma J. Smith Museum of Natural History in William Judson Boone Science Hall. It is the only natural history museum for southwestern Idaho, southeastern Oregon, and northern Nevada. The natural history museum serves three main purposes: to support the educational programs at The College of Idaho, to provide a resource to the community, and to house resources for scientific research.Orma J. Smith taught chemistry, zoology, and geology in the early 1900s. A small museum was established in the 1930s to house his collections but was closed in 1963. It was reopened in 1976 in the basement of Boone Hall, driven by the need to house collections from the College of Idaho expeditions led by Dr. Robert Bratz and the current director, William H. Clark.
Since the ‘70s, the Museum has been staffed primarily by volunteers, many the College of Idaho alums, and students. The first Saturday is dedicated to Museum Workdays, where the museum is open for work with Museum staff. A monthly education seminar takes place at noon on Workdays.
The museum is a repository for some very large regional collections.
Notable alumni
Among the alumni who have become elected officials, successful business owners, and other community leaders are two former governors, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian, an Academy Award-winning musician, seven Rhodes Scholars, 14 Truman, Marshall and Goldwater Scholars, the founder of Albertson's Inc. and the co-founder of Patagonia Outerwear- Joe Albertson, founder of Albertson's supermarkets, notable philanthropist
- Kathryn Albertson, wife of the founder of the Albertsons chain of grocery stores, notable philanthropist
- Elgin Baylor, Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame inductee, played his first collegiate season at The College of Idaho
- Andy Benoit, sports journalist who covers the NFL for Sports Illustrated
- Cary Coglianese, University of Pennsylvania Law School faculty leader and author.
- Christopher Farnsworth, novelist
- Warren Jones, justice, Idaho Supreme Court
- Larry Lujack, Chicago Radio Host
- C.L. "Butch" Otter, former Governor of Idaho
- R.C. Owens, NFL wide receiver, played for the San Francisco 49ers, Baltimore Colts, and New York Giants
- Klaus Scharioth, former German ambassador to the United States
- Gerald Schroeder, former chief justice, Idaho Supreme Court
- Mary Shaw Shorb, research scientist, invented first method to assay Vitamin B-12
- Elmo Smith, former Governor of Oregon
- Paul Smith, Academy Award-winning composer
- Robert Smylie, 24th Governor of Idaho, 1955 to 1967
- Kristine Tompkins, co-founder of Patagonia and founder of Conservacion Patagonica
Archives
Idaho's Gem and Mineral Collection is located at the Orma J. Smith Natural History Museum at the College.