Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Navarro College

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Type
  
Public College

Athletics
  
NJCAA – Southwest

Phone
  
+1 800-628-2776

Founded
  
1946

Established
  
1946

Mascot
  
Beauregard

Number of students
  
10,000

Colors
  
White, Red

Navarro College

Former names
  
Navarro Junior College (1946–1974)

Location
  
Corsicana, Texas, United States

Campus
  
Corsicana, Fairfield, Mexia, Midlothian, Waxahachie

Address
  
3200 W 7th Ave, Corsicana, TX 75110, USA

Undergraduate tuition and fees
  
Local tuition: 2,400 USD (2016), Domestic tuition: 3,870 USD (2016)

Notable alumni
  
Chris Davis, Aaron Glenn, Tano Tijerina, Byron Cook, Keith Burns

Similar
  
Trinity Valley Communi, Tyler Junior College, Blinn College, Kilgore College, Cisco College

Profiles


Navarro College is a two-year public institution consisting of a main campus located in Corsicana, with branches in Fairfield, Mexia, Midlothian, and Waxahachie, Texas. The college currently features annual student enrollment of more than 9,000 students.

Contents

The Corsicana campus has strong ties with Texas A&M University–Commerce, which has branches at the Navarro College campuses in Corsicana and Midlothian.


History

In spring 1946, a group of local citizens met to form a steering committee for the purpose of establishing a junior college in Navarro County. In a general election held July 16, 1946, voters approved the creation of Navarro Junior College and authorized a county tax to help finance the institution. In that same election, voters chose a seven-member board of trustees to govern the college. The first students began classes in September 1946. Most of the 238 members of that first student body were returning veterans from World War II taking advantage of assistance available under the newly enacted GI Bill of Rights. The first campus of Navarro College was the site of the Air Activities of Texas, a World War II primary flight school located six miles (10 km) south of Corsicana.

In 1951, the campus was moved to its present location, a 47-acre (19 ha) tract west of downtown Corsicana on Texas State Highway 31.

In 1974, the college broadened its philosophy and purpose to encompass the comprehensive community-based educational concept, adding occupational education programs and implementing new education concepts including individualized and self-paced instruction and the use of audio-tutorial instructional media. In keeping with the new educational role, the word "junior" was dropped from the institution's name, and the official name Navarro College was adopted by the Board of Trustees. In an attempt to address the growing needs of its service area, which consists of Navarro, Ellis, Freestone, Limestone, and Leon counties, the college began offering courses in various locations in those areas in the early 1970s and eventually established two permanent centers, Navarro College South at Mexia and the Ellis County Center at Waxahachie. Later, a third and fourth off-campus centers were added in Midlothian and Fairfield.

Ebola controversy

In October 2014, Navarro College received criticism for sending admission rejection letters to two prospective students from Nigeria. The letters, signed by the college's international programs director, informed the applicants that the college was "not accepting international students from countries with confirmed Ebola cases." Nigeria was identified by the World Health Organization through the summer of 2014 with multiple confirmed cases of Ebola, but there had been no new Ebola cases "in more than 21 days" (since early September). The rejected applicants lived in Ibadan, Nigeria, approximately 80 miles from Lagos, where the most recent infected cases were identified. The college offered an explanation on October 13, stating that the rejections were not a result of fears of Ebola, but that its international department had recently been restructured to focus on recruiting students from China and Indonesia. On October 16, college Vice-President Dewayne Gragg, issued a new statement, contradicting the previous explanation and confirming that there had indeed been a decision to "postpone our recruitment in those nations that the Center for Disease Control and the U.S. State Department have identified as at risk."

Campus

The Corsicana campus has expanded to 103 acres (42 ha) with 23 buildings. It is home to the Cook Education Center, which houses a 60-foot-diameter (18 m) dome planetarium with seating for more than two hundred, tied with the University of Texas at Arlington for the largest planetarium in Texas. The Cook Education Center also contains the Pearce Collections Museum, home to many American Civil War artifacts as well as a western art collection.

Organization and administration

As defined by the Texas Legislature, the official service area of Navarro College includes all of Ellis, Freestone, Leon, Limestone, and Navarro counties.

Academic profile

Navarro is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. The accreditation was given in 1954 and reaffirmed in 1964, 1974, 1985, 1995 and again in 2006.

Waxahachie Global High School is partnered with Navarro College, and set up in a way that students at Global can take classes at Navarro. Thus they can graduate high school with an associate degree or transferable credits to a 4-year university along with their high school diploma.

Athletics

The college athletics teams are nicknamed the Bulldogs. In 2011, the baseball team won the NJCAA Junior College World Series in Grand Junction, Colorado. The Bulldogs beat Central Arizona College, 6–4, on J.T. Files' walk-off home run in the 10th inning.

Navarro offers athletic scholarships in the following sports for men: football, basketball, baseball and for women: soccer, softball, volleyball. The bulldogs compete in the Southwest Junior College Conference of the NJCAA.

Notable people

  • Willis Adams, NFL player
  • Eddie Brown, NFL player
  • Keith Burns, NFL player
  • Keo Coleman, NFL player
  • Byron Cook, state representative from Navarro County
  • Chris Davis, MLB player
  • DeMarcus Faggins, NFL player
  • Al Fontenot, NFL player
  • Aaron Glenn, NFL player
  • Brock Holt, utility player for the Boston Red Sox
  • Ray Jacobs, four-time NFL All-Star
  • Durwood Keeton, American football player
  • Jermane Mayberry, NFL player
  • Stockar McDougle, NFL player
  • Bill O'Neal, historian
  • Tano Tijerina, minor-league pitcher for the Milwaukee Brewers, 1993–1997, incoming County Judge of Webb County, Texas, beginning January 1, 2015
  • Pat Williams, NFL player
  • J'Marcus Webb, NFL player
  • Mark Wheeler, NFL player
  • References

    Navarro College Wikipedia