Rahul Sharma (Editor)

National Park College

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Motto
  
Find Your Path

Established
  
2003

Academic staff
  
98

Number of students
  
3,000

Type
  
Community college

President
  
Dr. John Hogan

Phone
  
+1 501-760-4222

Graduation rate
  
18.7% (2014)

National Park College

Former names
  
Garland County Community College, Quapaw Technical Institute

Address
  
101 College Dr, Hot Springs, AR 71913, USA

Undergraduate tuition and fees
  
Local tuition: 3,140 USD (2015), Domestic tuition: 4,540 USD (2015)

Similar
  
Cossatot Community College, North Arkansas College, Southeast Arkansas College, Phillips Community College o, Rich Mountain Communi

Profiles

Chilla national park college trip


National Park College is a two-year institution of higher learning located in Hot Springs, Arkansas. NPC was founded in 2003 as a result of a merger between fully accredited Garland County Community College and Quapaw Technical Institute, which had been established in 1973 and 1969, respectively. It is now one of the state's largest community colleges, enrolling 3,000 students annually in credit programs and an additional 3,800 students in non-credit programs. The name of the college is derived from its location adjacent to Hot Springs National Park.

In 2006, as part of its initial capital campaign, the college received a donation of 1.5 million dollars from Frederick M. Dierks of Hot Springs, who had been associated with a business and owned timberland and produced pulp and paper, and that was sold to Weyerhaeuser in 1969. This was the largest cash donation in the history of Arkansas community colleges. These funds were purposed for a new nursing and health sciences facility. By December 2007, the college had raised an additional $900,000 for the campaign and initiated a joint program in early-childhood and middle-school teaching with Henderson State University.

After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, NPC assisted students displaced from their home colleges by either enrolling in its college programs or finding colleges for them to enroll in.

In 1994, when it was known as Garland County Community College, the college was censured by the American Association of University Professors for failure to abide by the 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure and 1958 Statement on Procedural Standards in Faculty Dismissal Proceedings. As of September 2015 the censure remains in place.

References

National Park College Wikipedia