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Private university in Pennsylvania, U.s.a.

Drexel University
Drexel University seal.svg

Former names

Drexel Institute of Fine art, Science, & Manufacture (1891–1936)
Drexel Institute of Technology (1936–1970)[1]
Motto Ambition Tin can't Wait [two]
Blazon Private research university
Established Dec 17, 1891; 130 years ago  (December 17, 1891) [3] [4]
Accreditation MSCHE

Bookish affiliations

  • AITU
  • NAICU
  • Space-grant
Endowment >$1 billion (2021)[5]
President John Anderson Fry[6]
Provost Paul Eastward. Jensen[7]
Students 24,205[three]
Undergraduates 15,346[3]
Postgraduates viii,859[3]
Location

Philadelphia

,

Pennsylvania

,

U.s.


39°57′14″N 75°11′17″Due west  /  39.954°N 75.188°W  / 39.954; -75.188 Coordinates: 39°57′14″Due north 75°11′17″Westward  /  39.954°North 75.188°West  / 39.954; -75.188
Campus Urban, 96 acres (0.39 km2) (total)
74 acres (0.30 km2) (University Metropolis primary campus)
Paper The Triangle
Colors  Blue
Yellowish[eight]
Nickname Dragons

Sporting affiliations

  • NCAA Division I FCS - CAA
  • City vi
Mascot Mario the Magnificent
Website world wide web.drexel.edu
Official logo of the university

Drexel University is a private research academy with its main campus in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was founded in 1891 by Anthony J. Drexel, a financier and philanthropist. Founded as Drexel Institute of Fine art, Science and Manufacture, it was renamed Drexel Institute of Technology in 1936, before bold its electric current name in 1970.

As of 2020[update], more than 24,000 students were enrolled in over lxx undergraduate programs and more than than 100 principal's, doctoral, and professional programs at the academy.[3] Drexel's cooperative instruction program (co-op) is a prominent aspect of the schoolhouse'due south degree programs, offering students the opportunity to gain up to eighteen months of paid, total-time work feel in a field relevant to their undergraduate major or graduate caste programme prior to graduation.

History [edit]

The Primary Building, dedicated in 1891.

Drexel Academy was founded in 1891 equally the Drexel Establish of Art, Scientific discipline and Industry, by Philadelphia financier and philanthropist Anthony J. Drexel. The original mission of the institution was to provide educational opportunities in the "practical arts and sciences" for women and men of all backgrounds. The institution became known as the Drexel Institute of Applied science in 1936, and in 1970 the Drexel Institute of Technology gained academy status, becoming Drexel University.

Although there were many changes during its first century, the university's identity has been held constant as a privately controlled, non-sectarian, coeducational middle of higher learning, distinguished by a commitment to applied education and hands-on feel in an occupational setting. The central attribute of Drexel University's focus on career preparation, in the form of its cooperative instruction program, was introduced in 1919. The plan became integral to the academy's unique educational experience. Participating students alternate periods of classroom-based study with periods of full-fourth dimension, practical work experience related to their academic major and career interests.

Between 1995 and 2009, Drexel Academy underwent a flow of significant change to its programs, enrollment, and facilities under the leadership of Dr. Constantine Papadakis, the university'south president during that time. Papadakis oversaw Drexel'southward largest expansion in its history, with a 471 percent increment in its endowment and a 102 pct increase in student enrollment. His leadership likewise guided the academy toward improved functioning in collegiate rankings, a more selective approach to admissions, and a more rigorous academic program at all levels. It was during this period of expansion that Drexel acquired and assumed management of the erstwhile MCP Hahnemann University, creating the Drexel University College of Medicine in 2002. In 2006, the academy established the Thomas R. Kline School of Police, and in 2011 the School of Police accomplished full accreditation by the American Bar Association.[nine]

Dr. Constantine Papadakis died of pneumonia in April 2009 while notwithstanding employed as the university's president. His successor, John Anderson Fry, was formerly the president of Franklin & Marshall College and served every bit the Executive Vice President of the University of Pennsylvania.[6] [10] Under Fry'southward leadership, Drexel has continued its expansion, including the July 2011 conquering of The University of Natural Sciences.[11]

Academics [edit]

Schools and colleges [edit]

College of Arts and Sciences [edit]

The College of Arts and Sciences was formed in 1990 when Drexel merged the two existing College of Sciences and College of Humanities together.

Antoinette Westphal Higher of Media Arts and Design [edit]

The College of Media Arts and Design "fosters the study, exploration and management of the arts: media, design, the performing and visual". The higher offers 16 undergraduate programs, and 6 graduate programs, in modernistic art and design fields that range from graphic design and dance to manner design and tv set management. Its wide range of programs has helped the college earn full accreditation from the National Association of Schools of Art and Design, the National Architectural Accrediting Board, and the Quango for Interior Design Accreditation.

Bennett S. LeBow College of Business organisation [edit]

The Bennett South. LeBow Higher of Concern history dates to the founding in 1891 of the Drexel Establish, that later on became Drexel Academy, and of its Business Department in 1896. Today LeBow offers 13 undergraduate majors, eight graduate programs, and 2 doctoral programs; 22 percent of Drexel University's undergraduate students are enrolled in a LeBow College of Business program.

Gerri C. Lebow Hall, habitation of the LeBow College of Business

The LeBow College of Business has been ranked as the 38th best private business school in the nation.[12] Its online MBA program is ranked 14th in the world past the Financial Times; the publication likewise ranks the undergraduate business organisation programme at LeBow every bit 19th in the U.s.. The function-time MBA program ranks 1st in academic quality in the 2015 edition of Business Insider'south rankings. Undergraduate and graduate entrepreneurship programs are ranked 19th in the state by the Princeton Review.[xiii] Lebow College of Business'south Primary of Finance program is ranked 101st in the earth by the 2020 QS Earth University Rankings.[14]

School of Economics [edit]

Economics programs at the LeBow College of Business organisation are housed within the Schoolhouse of Economics. In add-on to the undergraduate program in economic science, the schoolhouse is home to an M.South. in Economics programme every bit well equally a PhD programme in economic science. Faculty members in the School of Economics take been published in the American Economic Review, RAND Periodical of Economics, and Review of Economics and Statistics. The school has been ranked amid the best in the earth for its all-encompassing enquiry into matters of international merchandise.[15]

Higher of Engineering [edit]

Drexel's Higher of Technology is one of its oldest and largest bookish colleges, and served equally the original focus of the career-oriented school upon its founding in 1891. The College of Engineering is home to several notable alumni, including two astronauts; financier Bennett S. LeBow, for whom the university'southward College of Business is named; and Paul Baran, inventor of the packet-switched network. Today, Drexel University's College of Engineering, which is abode to 19 per centum of the undergraduate pupil torso,[xvi] is known for creating the earth'south outset engineering caste in appropriate technology.[17] The college is also one of only 17 U.Due south. universities to offer a bachelor'due south degree in architectural engineering, and only ane of five private institutions to practice so.[eighteen] [19]

The Drexel Engineering Curriculum (tDEC) [edit]

The 2006 edition of U.S. News ranks the undergraduate engineering program #57 in the country and the 2007 edition of graduate schools ranks the graduate plan #61. The 2008 edition ranks the Academy Technology Program at #55 and in the 2009 US News Ranking, the university has moved upward to the #52 position.

The applied science curriculum used by the school was originally called E4 (Enhanced Educational Experience for Engineers) which was established in 1986[xx] and funded in part by the Engineering Directorate of the National Science Foundation.[21] In 1988 the program evolved into tDEC (the Drexel Engineering science Curriculum)[21] which is composed of two full years of rigorous cadre engineering courses which encompass the freshman and sophomore years of the technology student. The College of Engineering science hasn't used the tDEC curriculum since approximately 2005.

College of Computing and Informatics [edit]

The Higher of Computing and Informatics is a recent add-on to Drexel Academy, though its programs take been offered to students for many years. The college was formed by the consolidation of the former Higher of Information Science & Technology (often called the "iSchool"), the Department of Computer Science, and the Calculating and Security Technology programme. Undergraduate and graduate programs in computer science, software applied science, data science, information systems, and computer security are offered past the college.[22]

College of Medicine [edit]

The Drexel University College of Medicine was added to the colleges and schools of the university in 2002, having been formed upon the acquisition of MCP Hahnemann Academy. In addition to its M.D. programme, the Higher of Medicine offers more than 40 graduate programs in its Graduate Schoolhouse of Biomedical Sciences and Professional Studies.

Graduate Schoolhouse of Biomedical Sciences and Professional person Studies [edit]

The Graduate Schoolhouse of Biomedical Sciences and Professional studies offers both Master of Science and Physician of Philosophy degree programs in fields like biochemistry, biotechnology, clinical inquiry, and forensic scientific discipline. The school also serves as the center for biomedical research at Drexel University.

Schoolhouse of Biomedical Engineering science, Scientific discipline and Health Systems [edit]

Founded in 1961 every bit the United states' first Biomedical Engineering and Science Institute, the Schoolhouse of Biomedical Engineering, Science and Health Systems focuses on the emerging field of biomedical science at the undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral levels. Primary inquiry areas within the schoolhouse include bioinformatics, biomechanics, biomaterials, neuroengineering, and cardiovascular engineering.[23]

College of Nursing and Health Professions [edit]

Formed in 2002 along with the College of Medicine, Drexel'south College of Nursing and Health Professions offers more than 25 programs to undergraduate and graduate students in the fields of nursing, diet, health sciences, wellness services, and radiologic engineering. The college's research into matters of diet and rehabilitation have garnered approximately $2.9 million in external enquiry funding on an annual basis. The physician assistant program at Drexel's College of Nursing and Health Professions is ranked in the top xv such programs in the The states; its anesthesia programs and physical therapy programs are, respectively, ranked every bit top-50 programs nationwide.[13]

Richard C. Goodwin College of Professional Studies [edit]

Established in 1892, the department now known as the College of Professional Studies has focused exclusively on educational programs and pursuits for nontraditional adult learners. Today, the Goodwin College of Professional Studies offers several options designed for adult learners at all stages of career and educational development. Bachelor of Science degree completion programs are offered in part-fourth dimension evening or weekend formats; graduate programs and doctoral programs are offered at the graduate level, as are self-paced "continuing instruction" courses and nearly a dozen cocky-paced certification programs.[24]

Pennoni Honors College [edit]

The Pennoni Honors College, named for Drexel alumnus and trustee Dr. C.R. "Chuck" Pennoni '63, '66, Hon. '92, and his wife Annette, recognizes and promotes excellence among Drexel students. Students admitted to the Honors Higher live together and take many of the same classes; the college provides these students with access to unique cultural and social activities and a unique guest speaker series. Students are also involved in the academy'southward Honors Pupil Advisory Committee and have the opportunity to take office in Drexel's "Alternative Spring Break", an international study bout held each jump.[25]

Thomas R. Kline Schoolhouse of Law [edit]

Upon its founding in 2006, the Thomas R. Kline School of Law, originally known equally the Earle Mack School of Law, was the get-go law school founded in Philadelphia in more than three decades. The Schoolhouse of Police force offers L.L.M. and Primary of Legal Studies degrees, in addition to the flagship Juris Doctor plan, and uniquely offers cooperative education every bit part of its curriculum beyond all programs. In 2015, Bloomberg Business ranked the Kline Schoolhouse of Law equally the second near underrated constabulary school in the United States.[26]

School of Pedagogy [edit]

One of the oldest schools within Drexel Academy, the modern School of Education dates back to the 1891 founding of the schoolhouse. Originally, the Section of Education offered teacher training to women every bit one of its original, career-focused degree programs. Today, the School of Education offers a coeducational approach to teacher training at the elementary and secondary levels for undergraduates. Other undergraduate programs include those focused on the intersection betwixt learning and technology, teacher certification for non-education majors, and a minor in education for students with an interest in didactics. Graduate degrees offered by the School of Education include those in assistants and leadership, special teaching, higher education, mathematics education, international instruction, and educational inventiveness and innovation. Doctoral degrees are offered in educational leadership and learning technologies.

Drexel University'due south School of Pedagogy offices are located on the third floor of the UCity Foursquare edifice located at 3401 Market place street.

Dornsife School of Public Wellness [edit]

The School of Public Health states that its mission is to "provide education, comport inquiry, and partner with communities and organizations to improve the health of populations".[27] To that finish, the school offers both a B.S. and a minor in public health for undergraduate students too as several options for students pursuing graduate and doctoral degrees in the field. At the graduate level, the Dornsife School offers both a Chief of Public Health and an Executive Master of Public Wellness, also as an M.Due south. in biostatistics and an M.South. in epidemiology. Two Physician of Public Health degrees are also offered, equally isa Md of Philosophy in epidemiology. The school'due south graduate and doctoral students are heavily invested in the research activities of the Dornsife School of Public Wellness, which has helped the schoolhouse attract almanac funding for its four research centers.

Center for Hospitality and Sport Management [edit]

The Center for Hospitality and Sport Direction was formed in 2013, in an effort to house and consolidate academic programs in hospitality, tourism direction, the culinary arts, and sport direction. Academic programs combine the unique skills required of the sports and hospitality industries with the principles and curriculum espoused past the management programs within Drexel'south LeBow Higher of Business.[28]

Charles D. Shut School of Entrepreneurship [edit]

Focusing specifically on the skills required to successfully start and launch a business, the Charles D. Shut School of Entrepreneurship is the commencement and only freestanding school of entrepreneurship in the United States. Undergraduate students take part in a B.A. plan in entrepreneurship and innovation, while graduate students a combined Principal of Science caste in biomedicine and entrepreneurship. Minors in entrepreneurship are also offered to undergraduate students.

Laurence A. Baiada Institute for Entrepreneurship [edit]

Housed within the Shut Schoolhouse is the Baiada Establish for Entrepreneurship. The constitute serves as an incubator for Drexel student startups, providing resources and mentorships to students and some mail-graduates who are starting their own business while enrolled in one of the Close Schoolhouse's caste programs or bookish minors.[29]

Online teaching [edit]

Drexel University launched its first Internet-based pedagogy program, a master'south degree in Library & Computer science, in 1996.[30] In 2001, Drexel created its wholly endemic, for-profit online education subsidiary, Drexel e-Learning, Inc., amend known as Drexel University Online.[31] [32] It was appear in October 2013 that Drexel Academy Online would no longer be a for-profit venture, simply rather become an internal partitioning within the university to better serve its online student population.[33] Although headquartered in Philadelphia, Drexel appear a new Washington, D.C., location in December 2012 to serve equally both an academic and outreach center, catering to the online student population.[34] [35]

In an effort to create greater awareness of distance learning and to recognize exceptional leaders and best practices in the field, Drexel University Online founded National Distance Learning Calendar week, in conjunction with the U.s. Distance Learning Association, in 2007.[36] [37] In September 2010, Drexel University Online received the Sloan-C award for institution-broad excellence in online teaching indicating that it had exceptional programs of "demonstrably high quality" at the regional and national levels and across disciplines.[38] Drexel University Online won the 2008 United States Altitude Learning Association's Best Practices Awards for Distance Learning Programming.[39] In 2007, the online education subsidiary had a revenue of $40 million.[40] In March 2013, Drexel Online had more than 7,000 unique students from all fifty states and more than twenty countries pursuing a bachelor'southward, master's, or certificate.[41] Equally of Dec 2013[update], Drexel University Online offers more 100 fully accredited primary's degrees, bachelor'due south degrees and certificate programs.[42]

Cooperative instruction programme [edit]

Drexel's longstanding cooperative education, or "co-op" program is one of the largest and oldest in the U.s..[43] Drexel has a fully internet-based job database, where students can submit résumés and request interviews with whatever of the thousands of companies that offering positions. Students also have the selection of obtaining a co-op via contained search. A student graduating from Drexel's v-twelvemonth caste program typically has a total of 18 months of co-op with upward to three different companies. The majority of co-ops are paid, averaging $18,720 per half-dozen-month period, still this figure changes with major.[44] Nigh i third of Drexel graduates are offered full-time positions by their co-op employers right after graduation.[45]

Research activity [edit]

Drexel is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very Loftier Research Action".[46] The academy was ranked 51st in the 2018 edition of the "Acme 100 Worldwide Universities Granted U.Due south. Utility Patents" list released by the National University of Inventors and the Intellectual Property Owners Association.[47]

Research Centers and Institutes at Drexel include:

  • Arts and Sciences
    • Eye for Interdisciplinary Programs
    • Center for Public Policy
    • Mobilities and Inquiry Policy
  • Educational activity
    • The Heart for Labor Markets and Policy
    • The Centre for the Prevention of School-Aged Violence
    • The Math Forum
  • Informatics
    • Data Mining & Bioinformatics Lab
    • Geographic Data Systems & Spatial Analysis Lab
    • Institute for Healthcare Informatics
    • Metadata Research Center
  • Media Arts & Pattern
    • Kal and Lucille Rudman Establish for Entertainment Manufacture Studies
    • The RePlay Lab
  • Business and Leadership
    • Laurence A. Baiada Institute for Entrepreneurship
    • Middle for Corporate Governance
    • Sovereign Institute for Strategic Leadership
    • Center for Corporate Reputation Management
  • Applied science
    • A.J. Drexel Plasma Institute
    • A.J. Drexel Applied Communications and Information Networking (ACIN) Institute
    • A. J. Drexel Constitute of Basic and Applied Protein Scientific discipline
    • A. J. Drexel Nanotechnology Plant (DNI)
    • Ben Franklin Technology Partners' Nanotechnology Institute
    • Center for Electric Power Engineering
    • Middle for Telecommunications and Information Networking
    • Centralized Research Facilities (CRF)
  • Public Health
    • Autism Public Health Inquiry Plant
    • Center for Wellness Equality (CHE)
    • Center for Public Health Readiness and Communication (CPHRC)
    • Centre for Nonviolence and Social Justice
    • National Resource Center on Advancing Emergency Preparedness
    • Center for Public Health Practice

Rankings [edit]

Academic rankings
National
ARWU [48] 95–114
Forbes [49] 133
THE/WSJ [fifty] 115
U.S. News & Globe Report [51] 103
Washington Monthly [52] 134
Global
ARWU [53] 301–400
QS [54] 651–700
THE [55] 351–400
U.Due south. News & World Written report [56] 354

USNWR graduate school rankings [57]

Education 178
Applied science 74
Police force 93
Medicine: Primary Care 94-122
Medicine: Research 91
Nursing: Principal's 89

USNWR departmental rankings [57]

Biological Sciences 159
Chemistry 122
Clinical Psychology eighty
Computer Scientific discipline 82
Library & Data Studies 11
Mathematics 94
Nursing-Anesthesia 43
Physical Therapy 49
Physician Banana 10
Physics 91
Psychology 148
Public Affairs 152
Public Health nineteen

In its 2022 rankings, U.S. News & Earth Report ranked Drexel tied for 103rd amid national universities in the United States, tied for 57th in the "Nearly Innovative Schools" category, 100th in "All-time Value Schools", and tied for 249th in "Top Performers on Social Mobility.[58]

In its 2018 rankings, Times Higher Education World University Rankings and The Wall Street Periodical ranked Drexel 74th among national universities and 351st-400th among international universities.[59]

In its 2018 rankings, Forbes ranked Drexel 24th among Stem universities.[sixty] In 2019, it also ranked Drexel 226th among 650 national universities, liberal arts colleges and service academies, 120th among research universities, 154th among individual universities, and 96th among universities in the Northeast.[61]

In 2016, Bloomberg Businessweek ranked the undergraduate business program 78th in the country.[62] In 2014, Business Insider ranked Drexel's graduate business school 19th in the country for networking.[63]

In 2014, The Princeton Review ranked Drexel 20th in its list of worst college libraries.[64]

Campuses [edit]

Drexel University's programs are divided beyond three Philadelphia-area campuses: the University Metropolis Campus, the Center City Campus and the Queen Lane College of Medicine Campus.

University City Main Campus [edit]

The 77-acre (31 ha) University City Primary Campus of Drexel University is located just west of the Schuylkill River in the University Urban center district of Philadelphia. It is Drexel's largest and oldest campus; the campus contains the university'south administrative offices and serves equally the principal bookish middle for students. The northern, residential portion of the main campus is located in the Powelton Village section of Due west Philadelphia. The ii prominent performing stages at Drexel University are the Mandell Theater and the Principal Auditorium. The Main Auditorium dates back to the founding of Drexel and structure of its chief hall. It features over g seats, and a pipe organ installed in 1928. The organ was purchased by Saturday Evening Post publisher Cyrus H. K. Curtis afterward he had donated a similar organ, the Curtis Organ, to nearby University of Pennsylvania and information technology was suggested that he do the same for Drexel.[65] The 424-seat Mandell Theater was built in 1973 and features a more than functioning-oriented stage, including a total wing system, modern stage lighting facilities, stadium seating, and accommodations for wheelchairs. It is used for the semiannual leap musical, as well every bit various plays and many events.[66]

Queen Lane Campus [edit]

The Queen Lane Campus was purchased past Drexel University every bit part of its acquisition of MCP Hahnemann Academy. It is located in the East Falls neighborhood of northwest Philadelphia and is primarily utilized past first- and second-year medical students, and researchers. A free shuttle is available, connecting the Queen Lane Campus to the Eye City Hahnemann and University City Master campuses.[67]

Heart City Campus [edit]

The Center City Campus is in the middle of Philadelphia, straddling the Vine Street State highway between Broad and 15th Streets. Shuttle service is offered between the Center Metropolis Campus and both the University Urban center and Queen Lane campuses of the university.

The Academy of Natural Sciences [edit]

A consummate Tyrannosaurus rex fossil on display with other dinosaur specimens at The Academy of Natural Sciences.

In 2011, The University of Natural Sciences entered into an agreement to become a subsidiary of Drexel University. Founded in 1812, the Academy of Natural Sciences is America'due south oldest natural history museum and is a earth leader in biodiversity and environmental enquiry.

Drexel University Sacramento [edit]

On January five, 2009, Drexel University opened the Center for Graduate Studies in Sacramento, California.[68] Somewhen renamed Drexel University Sacramento upon the addition of an undergraduate program in business organization administration, the campus also offered an Ed.D. program in Educational Leadership and Management and master's degree programs in Business Administration, Finance, Higher Teaching, Human Resources Development, Public Health, and Interdepartmental Medical Science.[69] On March 5, 2015, Drexel University announced the closure of the Sacramento campus, with an eighteen-calendar month "stage out" flow designed to permit current students to complete their degrees.[lxx]

Pupil life [edit]

Buckley Volleyball Courts on 33rd and Arch Streets

Student government [edit]

The Undergraduate Educatee Government Clan of Drexel University works with administrators to solve pupil problems and tries to promote communication between the students and the administration.

Graduate Students Clan [edit]

The Graduate Student Association "advocates the interests and addresses concerns of graduate students at Drexel; strives to enhance graduate student life at the University in all aspects, from bookish to campus security; and provides a formal ways of communication between graduate students and the Academy community".[71]

Campus Activities Lath [edit]

The Campus Activities Board (CAB) is an undergraduate, pupil-run event planning organization. CAB creates events for the undergraduate population. To assist with planning and organisation, the Campus Activities Lath is broken down into 5 committees: Special Events, Traditions, Marketing, Civilisation and Discovery, and Performing and Fine Arts.

Jewish Life on Campus [edit]

Drexel has an gauge Jewish population of 5% and has both a Chabad House and a Hillel. Both provide services to Jewish and non-Jewish students at Drexel. Due to the recent influx of Orthodox Jewish students[72] the Chabad now has its ain daily kosher meal program. The Hillel besides has hot kosher food simply but on select nights.[73] There is also an eruv which is jointly managed past Jewish students from Drexel and the University of Pennsylvania.[74]

Press and radio [edit]

Radio [edit]

WKDU is Drexel's student-run FM radio station, with membership open to all undergraduate students. Its condition as an 800-watt, non-commercial station in a major market metropolis has given information technology a wider audition and a higher profile than many other higher radio stations.

Television [edit]

DUTV is Drexel's Philadelphia cable television set station. The student operated station is part of the Paul F. Harron Studios at Drexel University. The purpose of DUTV is to provide "the people of Philadelphia with quality educational tv, and providing Drexel students the opportunity to gain experience in television management and production".[75] The Programing includes an eclectic variety of shows from a bi-monthly news show, DNews, to old films, talk shows dealing with of import current issues and music appreciation shows. Over 75 percent of DUTV's programming is educatee produced.[75]

Publications [edit]

The Triangle has been the academy'due south newspaper since 1926 and currently publishes on a weekly basis every Friday. The Triangle has won several Mark of Excellence Awards which honour the best in Student Journalism from the Society of Professional person Journalists. First place in Editorial Writing (2000),[76] General Column Writing (2000),[76] Second place in Editorial Writing (2001),[77] and third place in Sports Column Writing (2001).[77] In 2004, it won two National Pacemaker Awards for excellence in higher newspapers.[78] In December 2019 The Triangle appear the creation of their podcasting division, "Tri-Pod,",[79] which debuted on January 10, 2020.[lxxx] Tri-Pod currently has two active podcasts, "Last Phone call".[81] and "Marker and Jair Explain Sports".[82]

The school yearbook was showtime published in 1911 and named the Lexerd in 1913.[83] Prior to the publishing of a campus wide yearbook in 1911 The Hanseatic and The Eccentric were both published in 1896 every bit class books.[84] Other publications include MAYA, the undergraduate student literary and artistic magazine; D&K Magazine, Design & Merchandising students crafted magazine; The Smart Set from Drexel University, an online mag founded in 2005; and The Drexelist a blog-style news source founded in 2010.

The Drexel Publishing Group serves as a medium for literary publishing on campus. The Drexel Publishing Group oversees Inquire (The Periodical of the Higher of Arts and Sciences at Drexel University), Painted Bride Quarterly, a 36-twelvemonth-former national literary mag housed at Drexel; The 33rd, an annual anthology of student and faculty writing at Drexel; DPG Online Magazine, and Maya, the undergraduate literary and creative magazine. The Drexel Publishing Group also serves as a pedagogical organisation past allowing students to intern and work on its publications.

Housing [edit]

Drexel requires all non-commuting get-go- and second-yr students to alive in ane of its 10 residence halls or in "academy canonical housing".[85] Kickoff year students must live in i of the residence halls designated specifically for start-years. These residence halls include Millennium, Bentley, Kelly, Myers, Towers, Van Rensselaer, Due north, and Race Halls. Kelly, Myers, Towers, and Bentley Halls are traditional residence halls (a bedroom shared with one or more roommate(s) and 1 bath per floor), while Race, N, Caneris, and Van Rensselaer Halls are suite-mode residence halls (shared bedrooms, private bathrooms, kitchens, and common area within the suite). Millennium Hall, Drexel's newest residence hall, is a modified suite (a bedroom shared with i roommate, and bathrooms and showers that look like closets with open sinks in the hallway).

Each residence hall is designed to facilitate the Freshman Experience in a slightly different mode. Millennium, Kelly, and Towers Halls are all typical residence halls. Myers Hall offers "Living Learning Communities" where a group of students who share mutual interests such as language or major live together. Nigh of Bentley Hall is reserved for students of the Pennoni Honors College, although some floors are occupied by other students.

2nd-year students have the option of living in a residence hall designated for upperclassmen, or "university approved housing". The residence halls for upperclassmen are Due north and Caneris Halls. Northward Hall operates nether the For Students By Students Residential Experience Engagement Model, adult by the Residential Living Office. At that place are many apartments that are university approved that second-year students can choose to live in. Three of the largest flat buildings that fit this description are Chestnut Square, University Crossings, and The Summit, all owned by American Campus Communities. Many other students live in smaller apartment buildings or individual townhouse-style apartments in Powelton Village. A second-year pupil can choose 1 of the already listed university approved housing options or petition the university to add a new property to the approved list.[86] While living in a university canonical apartment offers the freedom of living exterior a residence hall, due to the Drexel co-op organization, many students finish upwardly in the residence halls because they operate on a quarter to quarter basis, and don't require students to be locked into leases.

Graduate students tin live in Stiles Hall.

All residence halls except Caneris Hall and Stiles Memorial Hall are located n of Arch Street betwixt 34th Street and 32nd Street in the Powelton Hamlet area.

Educatee organizations [edit]

Drexel University recognizes over 250 educatee organizations in the following categories:[87]

  • Academic
  • Club Sports
  • Community Service/Social Action
  • Cultural
  • Fraternity & Sorority Life
  • Full general Interest
  • Honorary
  • Media
  • Performing and Fine Arts
  • Political
  • Spiritual & Religious

Honorary and professional person organizations [edit]

The following groups are recognized every bit honors or professional organizations nether the Office of Campus Activities and are non considered part of social Greek life at Drexel University.

  • Alpha Kappa Psi - Eta Psi chapter (est. 2008) - Professional Business Fraternity
  • Alpha Omega Epsilon - Social and Professional person Sorority for Engineers
  • Blastoff Phi Omega, Zeta Theta chapter (est. 1948) - National Service Fraternity
  • Alpha Phi Sigma - National Criminal Justice Honor Lodge
  • Beta Blastoff Psi, Delta Tau affiliate - Honors Fraternity for Accounting, Finance and MIS
  • Beta Beta Beta - National Biological Honor Society
  • Beta Gamma Sigma, - International Business Honor Society
  • Chi Epsilon - National Ceremonious Engineering Honors Social club
  • Delta Epsilon Iota, Upsilon Delta chapter - (Dragons for Excellence and Inspiration) National Honors Lodge
  • Delta Sigma Pi, Omega Chi Chapter - Co-Ed Professional Fraternity
  • Eta Kappa Nu, Beta Alpha chapter (est. 1935) - Electrical Engineering Laurels Society
  • Gamma Sigma Sigma - National Service Sorority
  • Kappa Delta Pi - International Award Gild in Education
  • Phi Chi Theta - Zeta Delta (est. 2008) - Professional Concern Fraternity
  • Phi Eta Sigma - National Honors Society
  • Phi Sigma Pi, Gamma Xi chapter - Honors Fraternity
  • Pi Nu Epsilon - Music and Performing Arts Fraternity
  • Pi Sigma Alpha, Blastoff Epsilon Chi affiliate - The National Political Science Accolade Society
  • Pi Tau Sigma, Xi chapter - International Mechanical Engineering science Fraternity
  • Psi Chi - International Honors Guild - Psychology Fraternity
  • Tau Beta Pi, Pennsylvania Zeta chapter - Engineering science Laurels Society
  • Upsilon Pi Epsilon - Computer science Fraternity

Greek life [edit]

Approximately 12 percent of Drexel's undergraduate population are members of a social Greek-letter organization. There are currently fourteen Interfraternity Council (IFC) capacity, seven Panhellenic Council (PHC) chapters and xiii Multi-cultural Greek Quango (MGC) chapters.[88]

2 IFC chapters have been awarded Elevation Chapters in 2008 past their respective national organizations; Pi Kappa Alpha, and Alpha Chi Rho. In 2013, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Alpha Epsilon Pi were awarded the Peak Chapter award by their respective national headquarters.

Athletics [edit]

Mario the Magnificent, mascot of Drexel, by Eric Berg

Drexel's schoolhouse mascot is a dragon known equally "Mario the Magnificent", named in laurels of alumnus and Lath of Trustees member Mario V. Mascioli.[ninety] The Dragon has been the mascot of the school since around the mid-1920s; the first written reference to the Dragons occurred in 1928, when the football team was chosen "The Dragons in The Triangle". Before condign known equally the Dragons, the athletic teams had been known by such names as the Blueish & Golden, the Engineers, and the Drexelites.[ninety] The school'due south sports teams, at present known equally the Drexel Dragons, participate in the NCAA'due south Segmentation I equally a member of the Colonial Able-bodied Association.[91] They do non currently field a varsity football team.[92]

In addition to its NCAA Division I teams, Drexel University is home to 33 agile club teams including men'southward ice hockey, lacrosse, water polo, squash, triathlon, and cycling. Other lodge teams include soccer, baseball game, rugby, field hockey, and roller hockey. The club teams operate under the management of the Guild Sports Quango and the Recreational Sports Office.

Pupil lore and traditions [edit]

Tradition suggests that rubbing the toe of the bronze "Waterboy" statue, located in the Primary Building atrium, can result in receiving good grades on exams. Although the rest of the bronze statue has developed a nighttime brown patina over the years, the toe has remained highly polished and shines similar new.[90]

In popular civilisation [edit]

Drexel has appeared in news and television media several times. In 2006 Drexel served as the location for ABC Family's reality bear witness "Dorsum on Campus".[93] As well in 2006, the Epsilon Zeta affiliate of Delta Zeta won ABC Daytime's Summertime of Fun contest. As a issue, the sorority was featured in national television spots for a week and hosted an ABC party on campus, which was attended past cast members from General Infirmary and All My Children.[94]

John Langdon, who taught typography in the Antoinette Westphal College of Media Arts & Blueprint from 1988 to 2015, created the ambigram featured on the cover of Dan Chocolate-brown's Angels & Demons; a number of other ambigrams served as the fundamental focus of the volume and its respective film. Dan Brown used the proper name Robert Langdon for the lead character, played by Tom Hanks, in his novels as a tribute to John Langdon.[95] [96] [97]

In 2007, Drexel was the host of the 2008 Democratic presidential candidate contend in Philadelphia, televised by MSNBC.[98] The university hosted the US Table Tennis Olympic Trials betwixt January 10 and thirteen, 2008.[99] [100] Drexel University as well hosted the 2011 U.Due south. Open Squash Championships from October 1–6, 2011, likewise equally the 2012 U.S. Open Squash Championships from October 4–12, 2012.[101] [102]

Alumni [edit]

Since its founding the academy has graduated over 100,000 alumni.[103] Certificate-earning alumni such as artist Violet Oakley and illustrator Frank Schoonover reflect the early emphasis on art every bit role of the university's curriculum. With World War II, the university's technical programs swelled, and as a consequence Drexel graduated alumni such as Paul Baran, 1 of the founding fathers of the Internet and one of the inventors of the bundle switching network, and Norman Joseph Woodland, the inventor of barcode technology. In addition to its emphasis on engineering Drexel has graduated several notable athletes such as National Basketball Association (NBA) basketball game players Michael Anderson and Malik Rose, and several notable business people such as Raj Gupta, former president and Chief executive officer (CEO) of Rohm and Haas, and Kenneth C. Dahlberg, onetime CEO of Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC). Alassane Dramane Ouattara President of the Commonwealth of Ivory coast. In 2018, Tirthak Saha -a 2016 graduate of the ECE schoolhouse - was named to the Forbes 30 Under 30 list for achievements in the Free energy field.[104]

In 1991, the university's centennial anniversary, Drexel created an association called the Drexel 100, for alumni who have demonstrated excellence work, philanthropy, or public service. Later the cosmos of the clan 100 alumni were inducted in 1992 and since then the consecration process has been on a biennial basis. In 2006 164 full alumni had been inducted into the clan.[105]

Awards [edit]

Drexel University created the almanac $100,000 Anthony J. Drexel Infrequent Accomplishment Award to recognize a faculty member from a U.Due south. institution whose piece of work transforms both research and the society it serves. The first recipient was bioengineer James J. Collins of Boston University (at present at MIT) and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.[106]

In 2004, in conjunction with BAYADA Home Health Care, Drexel University's Higher of Nursing and Health Professions created the BAYADA Accolade for Technological Innovation in Nursing Educational activity and Practice. The accolade honors nursing educators and practicing nurses whose innovation leads to improved patient care or improved nursing education.[107]

Gallery [edit]

See as well [edit]

  • Clan of Independent Technological Universities

Notes [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Drexel Athletics website
  • "Drexel Institute of Fine art, Science, and Industry". New International Encyclopedia. 1905.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drexel_University

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