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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 newest—CSU Channel Islands—opened in fall
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
systemwide policy, with 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 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 1,800 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 graduate requirements by part-time, late afternoon, and
evening study. In addition, a variety of teaching and school
service credential programs are available. A limited number
of doctoral degrees are offered jointly with the University
of California and with private institutions in California.
Enrollments
in fall 2004 totaled 397,000 students, who were taught by
some 21,000 faculty. The system awards more than half of the
bachelor’s degrees and 30 percent of the master’s degrees
granted in California. Nearly 2 million persons have been
graduated from CSU campuses since 1960.
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