Woodbury University
Type | Private |
---|---|
Established | 1884 |
Endowment | $18.6 Million |
President | David M. Steele-Figueredo, Ph.D. |
Students | 1,500+ |
Undergraduates | 1,249 (acceptance rate 56.6%) |
Postgraduates | 169 |
Location | Los Angeles, Burbank, and San Diego, California, USA |
Campus | Suburban, 22.4 acres (9.1 ha) |
Website | woodbury.edu |
Woodbury University is a private, non-profit, coeducational, nonsectarian university located in Burbank, Los Angeles County; and a satellite campus in San Diego, both in southern California. It offers undergraduate and graduate degrees from four schools: Architecture; Business; Media, Culture & Design; and Liberal Arts.[1]
History
The school was founded in 1884 as Woodbury's Business College by its namesake, F. C. Woodbury, formerly a partner in Heald's Business College in San Francisco, thus making it the second oldest institution of higher learning in Los Angeles and one of the oldest business schools west of Chicago. That historic link between Woodbury and the world of business has been maintained throughout the years. Woodbury was coeducational from its founding, making it one of the earliest colleges West of the Mississippi to admit women. The original mission of Woodbury University was to educate Los Angeles residents in the practical areas of business: bookkeeping, commercial law, and telegraphy. For a time, Woodbury could boast that 10% of Los Angeles' citizenry were attending the institution and its earliest alumni lists form a literal who's who of 19th century Los Angeles.[2]
In 1931, the division of professional arts was established to focus on those fields of design that are closely allied to business: commercial art, interior design, and fashion design. Woodbury then became a college of business administration and design. In 1969, Woodbury introduced a graduate program leading to the Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree. In 1974, Woodbury College became Woodbury University.
In 1982, Computer Information Systems was added as a major, followed in 1984 by Architecture. In 1987, the Weekend College program for working adults was established with the aid of grants from The Fletcher Jones Foundation and The William Randolph Hearst Foundation. In 1994 the university formally organized its undergraduate and graduate programs into three schools: the School of Architecture and Design, the School of Arts and Sciences, and the School of Business and Management.[3] That year three majors in the School of Arts and Sciences came into being: Psychology, Politics & History and Liberal Arts & Business. Additional undergraduate degree programs have been added in the areas of Marketing, Animation Arts, Communication, and Leadership.
Los Angeles campuses
For the first 103 years, the university followed the growth of the business community based in Central Los Angeles. It was originally at 226 South Spring Street in Downtown Los Angeles.[4] By 1937, it moved to new facilities at 1027 Wilshire Boulevard in the Westlake district, just west of downtown. For 50 years this building served the university’s classrooms and administrative needs.
In 1985, the university acquired a 22.4-acre (9.1 ha) suburban campus in Burbank, the site of the former Villa Cabrini Academy, a high school for girls run by the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart, founded by Frances Xavier Cabrini.[5][6] In 1987 the university moved to the new campus in the eastern San Fernando Valley.[7]
Since 2005, the Los Angeles campus has been home to the Julius Shulman Institute.[8]
Off-campus sites are located in Hollywood and at the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Headquarters in the Hall of Justice, Downtown Los Angeles.
Woodbury University San Diego
In 1998 the institution opened a satellite campus in Downtown San Diego, Woodbury University San Diego, where it offers Bachelor of Architecture, Master of Architecture, and Master of Interior Architecture degrees.[9] In Fall of 2008, It moved from Downtown San Diego to the Barrio Logan district of the city. The new location's building features a new computer laboratory, studios, classrooms, and a library.
Academics
Currently Woodbury University comprises three schools and one college offering graduate and undergraduate programs: The School of Business, School of Architecture, School of Media, Culture & Design, and the College of Liberal Arts.[10] Woodbury undergraduate programs admit students on a rolling basis and the acceptance rate for all undergraduate majors is 56.6%.
- School of Business [11]
- School of Architecture [17]
- Architecture (BArch), Burbank, San Diego [18]
- Interior Architecture [19]
- Master of Architecture (MArch) [20]
- Master of Landscape Architecture (M.LA), San Diego.[21]
- Master of Interior Architecture (M.I.A.), Burbank, San Diego.[22]
- Master of Science in Architecture (M.Sc.Arch.) [23]
- Master of Science in Architecture - Real Estate Development (MSArch RED), San Diego [24]
- School of Media, Culture & Design [25]
- Design Foundation [26]
- Filmmaking [27]
- Game Art & Design [28]
- Animation [29]
- Media Technology [30]
- Fashion Design [31]
- Graphic Design [32]
- Psychology [33]
- Communication [34]
- College of Liberal Arts [35]
Diversity
Woodbury University enrolls approximately 39% white, non-Hispanic students; 28% Hispanic students; 17% international students; 9% Asian students; and 4% African-American students.[42]
Accreditation
Woodbury University is accredited by the Senior Commission of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) and is approved by the Postsecondary Commission, California Department of Education. The Western Association of Schools and Colleges granted Woodbury its original regional accreditation in 1961. In 1994 the Architecture program was accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB). The School of Business received its accreditation from the Association of Collegiate Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP) Spring 1998. In 1991, the Interior Architecture Program was accredited by the Council for Interior Design Accreditation. In 2008, the school received accreditation from the National Association of Schools of Art and Design (NASAD). Woodbury University is a member university of the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB).[43]
On May 10, 2014, Woodbury University announced that its School of Business is among 12 international and four American business schools to earn accreditation from AACSB International for 2014, joining 713 institutions of higher learning in 47 countries and territories around the world who have successfully completed the multi-year internal review, evaluation and improvement process.[44] AACSB accreditation represents the highest achievement for an educational institution that awards business degrees, a status conferred on less than 5 percent of all business programs worldwide.
Student Housing
Woodbury's Burbank campus has two residence halls with space for approximately 225 residents. South Hall, which is a small building composed mostly of single rooms, was built in the 1960s and houses up to 67 residents. South Hall is one of the original buildings acquired with the Burbank campus and was used as a dormitory for the Villa Cabrini Academy. North Hall, the larger of the two residence halls, opened in 1990 and houses up to 158 residents.[45]
Rankings
2014 Money Magazine ranked Woodbury University 15th nationally out of the top 25 Colleges That Add the Most Value.' This recognition identifies Woodbury as a school that truly changes the trajectory of its students. US News & World Report Best Colleges Rankings (West) were: #48 Regional Universities, #15 Best Colleges for Veterans[46]
Whistleblower Controversy
In 2012, the wife of Woodbury University's then president, Luis Calingo, came under allegations over mistreatment of maintenance workers employed at the school. When the wife of the former president stood up for those workers, she was promptly fired from the university and later filed a lawsuit that was settled out of court by the university.[47][48]
Notable alumni
- Cleo Baldon – Landscape architect
- Don Adolfo Camarillo – Founder of Camarillo, California, and one of the last Californios.
- George Allan Hancock – Owner of Rancho La Brea; site of the La Brea Tar Pits, and the Santa Maria Valley Railroad, also a Banker, Industrialist and Marine Researcher
- Helen Gurley Brown – Author, publisher, and businesswoman. She was editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan magazine for 32 years.[49]
- Ahmad Najafi – Actor and producer
- Alan Leitner – Abstract artist
- William Travilla – Costume Designer
- Star Parker – Republican politician
- Eric Stryker – porn performer
- Joseph M. Souki – Speaker of the Hawaii House of Representatives
- Mary Foy - Women's rights activist, and first female head librarian of Los Angeles Public Library
- Richard Denning - Actor
References
- ↑ Woodbury.edu: Homepage
- ↑ The Princeton Review.
- ↑ Woodbury – History
- ↑ Thomas, Grace Powers (1898). Where to educate, 1898–1899. A guide to the best private schools, higher institutions of learning, etc., in the United States. Boston: Brown and Company. p. 12. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
- ↑ "Villa Cabrini". The Museum of the San Fernando Valley.
- ↑ "Stained-Glass Windows". Mother Cabrini Shrine.
- ↑ LA Times.com: "Woodbury University Moving to Burbank", (18 Sept. 1985).
- ↑ "Julius Shulman Institute".
- ↑ School of Architecture - About
- ↑ Woodbury University - About
- ↑ Woodbury: School of Business programs
- ↑ Accounting Program
- ↑ Management Program
- ↑ Fashion Marketing Program
- ↑ Marketing Program
- ↑ MBA Program
- ↑ Woodbury: School of Architecture programs
- ↑ Bachelor of Architecture Program
- ↑ (BFA) Interior Architecture Program
- ↑ Master of Architecture Program
- ↑ Landscape Architecture Graduate Program
- ↑ Interior Architecture Graduate Program
- ↑ MSArch Program
- ↑ (MSArch) Real Estate Development Graduate Program
- ↑ Woodbury: School of Media, Culture & Design
- ↑ Design Foundation Program
- ↑ Filmmaking Program
- ↑ Game Art & Design Program
- ↑ Animation Program
- ↑ Media Technology Program
- ↑ Fashion Design Program
- ↑ Graphic Design Program
- ↑ Psychology Program
- ↑ Communication Program
- ↑ Woodbury: College of Liberal Arts
- ↑ Interdisciplinary Studies
- ↑ Politics & History Program
- ↑ Professional Writing Program
- ↑ Public Safety Administration Program
- ↑ Leadership Program
- ↑ Leadership Graduate Program
- ↑ Lamster, Mark (2 March 2011). "The Future Belongs to Woodbury University". Architect Magazine. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
- ↑ AACSB International
- ↑
- ↑ LA Times.com: "Woodbury University, New Dorms to Finally Be Completed", (21 April 1990).
- ↑ US News & World Report: "Best Colleges: Woodbury University Rankings"
- ↑ "Fired Woodbury University exec files lawsuit".
- ↑ "Settlement reached in former Woodbury University employee case".
- ↑ Scanlon, Jennifer (2009). Toff, Nancy, ed. Bad Girls Go Everywhere: The Life of Helen Gurley Brown. Oxford University Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-19-534205-5.
External links
- Official Woodbury University website
- Facebook: Nan Rae Gallery — Burbank campus.
Coordinates: 34°12′31″N 118°20′30″W / 34.20850°N 118.34155°W