Northwest Arkansas Community College
Type | Publiccommunity college |
---|---|
Established | August 15, 1989 |
President | Dr. Dennis C. Rittle |
Students | 9,475 (Fall 2022) |
Location |
,
,
United States
36°21′30″N94°10′21″W / 36.35824°N 94.17249°W |
Campus | Suburban |
Mascot | Eagles |
Website | www.nwacc.edu |
NorthWest Arkansas Community College(NWACC) is a publiccommunity collegewith its main campus inBentonville, Arkansas. Total enrollment for the fall semester of 2018 was 8,308.[1]
History
[edit]NWACC was founded by voters in theBentonvilleandRogers Public School Districtson August 15, 1989, when they passed by a 65-percent margin a 3-mill property tax to support the new institution. NWACC opened its doors to 1,200 students in August 1990 and has in excess of 8,300 college credit students (Fall 2018), making it one of the largest and fastest growing two-year colleges in Arkansas. An additional 7,000 students are served by non-credit courses throughout the service area.[2][3][1]
In the early days, NWACC was known as the "College without walls" because it solved the problem of not having enough "bricks and mortar" funding to build classrooms by conducting classes in a variety of buildings throughout the community.[4]
Faculty often had to transport learning materials, equipment, and even laboratory specimen in their personal vehicles from one location to another to meet with students.
Academics
[edit]Northwest Arkansas Community College offers many areas of study leading to associate degrees.[5]and also provides the option to take online classes. NWACC is accredited by theHigher Learning Commission.[6]As of 2019 NWACC operates a Transition Academic Program with theUniversity of Arkansasto allow students to enroll, take courses and share credits at both schools, while simultaneously pursuing an associate degree at NWACC and a bachelor's degree at the University of Arkansas.[7]
Campuses and locations
[edit]Main campus
[edit]The main campus of Northwest Arkansas Community College is located directly off of highwayI-49. The main campus includes ShewMaker Center for Global Business Development,[8]Center for Health Professions,[9]and a nature preserve.
Brightwater Culinary School
[edit]After beginning as the culinary program within NWACC, Brightwater was officially launched in early 2017 as separate operational entity, while still being a part of NWACC. The college is known for its emphasis on local food culture and the development of the "High South Cuisine" concept, which focuses on local, farm to table approach.[10]
Brightwater officially opened in the 8th Street Market district of Bentonville within a formerTyson Foodschicken processing plant, allowing the enrollment to grow from a few dozen students to a maximum of 350.[11]
The Brightwater facility and the 8th Street Market won theAmerican Institute of ArchitectsCentral Excellence in Design award for 2017.[12]
Washington County Center
[edit]The Washington County Center inSpringdaleopened in 2019, consolidating operations from other sites in Springdale andFarmingtonat the new building nearArvest BallparkandArkansas Children's Hospital Northwest. The Washington County Center site in west Springdale was selected to improve access for the 36% of NWACC students residing in Washington County, as well asSiloam Springsstudents. The new building contains 14 classrooms, three labs, and an event space. A nursing simulation lab will increase the size of the nursing program.[13]
Clubs and organizations
[edit]There are 23 registered student organizations on campus including honor societies, business, special interest, religious, international and cultural organizations, and many more. The Student Government Association (SGA) is the student body leadership organization which aims to represent both NWACC and NWACC students. Members host several student events each year, are student advocates, and also work with NWACC staff, faculty, administration to help make the student experience better.
References
[edit]- ^ab"Community college sees enrollment increase".NWADG.com. Retrieved2018-09-09.
- ^"History". Nwacc. Retrieved1 December2014.
- ^"2017 NWACC Fact Sheet"(PDF). RetrievedMay 30,2018.
- ^"NWACC's Washington County site becoming a reality".Arkansas Online. 2018-06-28. Retrieved2019-02-07.
- ^"Degrees". Nwacc. Retrieved1 December2014.
- ^"Accreditation". Nwacc. Retrieved1 December2014.
- ^"University of Arkansas Announces New Academic Program with NWACC".AMP. 2019-01-10. Retrieved2019-02-07.
- ^"ShewMaker". Nwacc. Retrieved1 December2014.
- ^"Health Professionals". Nwacc. Retrieved1 December2014.
- ^"'High south cuisine' food culture emerging in Northwest Arkansas - Talk Business & Politics".Talk Business & Politics. 2014-05-28. Retrieved2018-05-30.
- ^"Brightwater: Community vision to spur economic development around food - Talk Business & Politics".Talk Business & Politics. 2016-07-11. Retrieved2018-05-30.
- ^"AIA Central States 2017 Design Awards".www.aiane.org. Retrieved2018-05-30.
- ^Perozek, Dave (December 13, 2019)."College opens new campus in Springdale - NWACC officials expect about 800 students to enroll".Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.WEHCO Media. pp. 9, 11.ISSN1060-4332. RetrievedMay 4,2020.