Trustees
Dwight D. Perry, Chairperson |
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George R. Hamilton, Vice Chairperson |
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Avon L. Ruffin, Secretary |
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Harold T. Epps |
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Joan Higginbotham |
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Wendell McCain |
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Paul R. Pope, Jr. |
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Kim Saunders |
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Allyson Siegel |
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Kenneth R. Tindall |
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Karyn S. Wilkerson |
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Administrative Officers
Chancellor’s Office
Debra Saunders-White, Chancellor |
530-6104 |
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Wendell Phillips, Chief of Staff |
530-5423 |
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Melissa Jackson Holloway, University Legal Counsel |
530-6154 |
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John N. Smith, Special Assistant to the Chancellor |
530-5402 |
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Ayana Hernandez, Director of Public Relations |
530-7266 |
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Leah Kraus, Chief Information Officer |
530-7423 |
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Timothy Bellamy, Chief of Police |
530-5326 |
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Hope Murphy Tyehimba
Assistant University Legal Counsel |
530-7588 |
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Johnnie Southerland, Director
Strategic Planning |
530-5321 |
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Ivanna Cole, Internal Auditor |
530-7742 |
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Ingrid Wicker McCree, Director
Athletics |
530-7057 |
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Brenda Shaw, Director, Title III |
530-7853 |
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Betty Willingham
Executive Assistant to the Chancellor |
530-6104 |
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Evelyn Little
Executive Assistant to the Chief of Staff |
530-5561 |
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Anthony Jarman
Assistant to the Chancellor |
530-5011 |
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VACANT
Executive Assistant to Legal Counsel |
530-6105 |
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Yolanda Tynes
Administrative Support Specialist |
530-6104 |
Academic Affairs
Johnson Akinleye |
530-6230 johnson,akinleye@nccu.edu |
Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs |
312 Hoey Administration Building |
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Frances Graham |
530-6738 fdgraham@nccu.edu |
Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs |
301-A Hoey Administration Building |
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Monica Leach |
530-6682 monica.leach@nccu.edu |
Associate Vice Chancellor for Enrollment Management |
306 Hoey Administration Building |
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Janice Harper |
530-5216 jharper@nccu.edu |
Assistant Vice Chancellor for University Programs |
306 Hoey Administration Building |
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Shawn Stewart |
530-6367 sstewart@nccu.edu |
Assistant Vice Chancellor for Institutional Research and Planning |
2027 H.M. Michaux, Jr. School of Education |
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Deborah Lane |
530-6996 dlane@nccu.edu |
Special Assistant to the Provost and Vice Chancellor |
210 Hoey Administration Building |
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Jerome Goodwin |
530-6739 jgoodwin@nccu.edu |
University Registrar |
110 Hoey Administration Building |
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Theodosia Shields |
530-5233 tshields@nccu.edu |
Director of Library Services |
1st Floor James E. Shepard Memorial Library |
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Pauletta Brown Bracy |
530-6900 pbracy@nccu.edu |
Director of Accreditation |
315 Hubbard Totten Chemistry Building |
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Jeanette Barker |
530-6902 jbarker@nccu.edu |
Director of Institutional Effectiveness |
315 Hubbard Tottel Chemistry Building |
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Gregory Bosworth |
530-6905 gbosworth@nccu.edu |
Director of Quality Enhancement Plan (QEP) |
110 Hubbard Totten Chemistry Building |
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Vera Scott |
530-6492 vscott17@nccu.edu |
Administrative Support Associate |
212 Hoey Administration Building |
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Selina Mumford |
530-6230 smumford@nccu.edu |
Administrative Support Associate |
310 Hoey Administration Building |
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Deans
Debra Parker |
530-5269 dparker@nccu.edu |
College of Behavioral and Social Sciences |
222 Miller Morgan Building |
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Carlton Wilson |
530-6794 cwilson@nccu.edu |
College of Arts and Sciences |
115 Farrison-Newton Communication Bldg. |
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Wanda Lester, Interim |
530-6175 wanda.lester@nccu.edu |
School of Business |
201 Willis Commerce Building |
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Wynetta Lee |
530-6466 wynetta.lee@nccu.edu |
School of Education |
2062 H.M. Michaux, Jr. School of Education |
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Caesar Jackson, Interim |
530-7396 crjackson@nccu.edu |
School of Graduate Studies |
123 Taylor Education Building |
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Phyliss V. Craig-Taylor |
530-6112 pcraigtaylor@nccu.edu |
School of Law |
260 Albert L. Turner Law Building |
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Irene Owens |
530-6485 iowens@nccu.edu |
School of Library and Information Sciences |
310 James E. Shepard Library |
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Ontario Wooden |
530-5235 owooden@nccu.edu |
University College |
239 Alexander Dunn Building |
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Associate and Assistant Deans
Robert Wortham, Interim |
530-5349 rwortham@nccu.edu |
College of Behavioral and Social Sciences |
240 Miller Morgan Building |
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Veronica Nwosu |
530-6456 vnwosu@nccu.edu |
College of Arts and Sciences |
208-D Edmonds Classroom Building |
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VACANT |
530-6133 |
School of Business |
237 Willis Commerce Building |
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Diane Scott |
530-7297 discott@nccu.edu |
School of Education |
2067 H.M. Michaux, Jr. School of Education |
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Laura Demarse |
530-7381 ldemarse@nccu.edu |
School of Business |
105 Willis Commerce Building |
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Kara Gilliard |
530-7513 kgilla24@nccu.edu |
School of Business |
216 Willis Commerce Building |
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Laura Brooks |
530-6843 laura.brooks@nccu.edu |
School of Law |
Albert L. Turner Law Building |
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David Hood |
530-6933 dshood@nccu.edu |
University College |
Alexander Dunn Building |
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Michelle Cofield |
530-6510 mscofield@nccu.edu |
School of Law |
Albert L. Turner Law Building |
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Frank Toliver, Jr. |
530-6506 ftoliver@nccu.edu |
School of Law |
265 Albert L. Turner Law Building |
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Lisa Morgan |
530-6115 lmorgan@nccu.edu |
School of Law |
160 Albert L. Turner Law Building |
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Adrienne Meddock |
530-5249 ameddock@nccu.edu |
School of Law |
112 Albert L. Turner Law Building |
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Ronald Douglas |
530-6365 rdouglas@nccu.edu |
School of Law |
148 Albert L. Turner Law Building |
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Stephanie B. Williams |
560-6517 sbwilliams@nccu.edu |
School of Law |
173 Albert L. Turner Law Building |
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Pamela Glean |
530-7166 pglean@nccu.edu |
School of Law |
040 Albert L. Turner Law Building |
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Director of Research Institutes
David S. Thomson |
530-7001 dthomson@nccu.edu |
Biomanufacturing/ Research Institute Technology Enterprise (BRITE) |
1011 Biomanufacturing Research Institute and Technology Enterprise (BRITE) |
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Sean Kimbro |
530-7025 kkimbro@nccu.edu |
Julius L. Chambers Biomedical/Biotechnology Research Institute (BBRI) |
104 Julius L. Chambers BBRI |
Director of Centers & Institutes
Jarvis Hall |
530-7256 jhall@nccu.edu |
Institute for Civic Engagement and Social Change |
109 Edmonds Classroom Building |
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Kimberly Cogdell-Boyce |
530-6618 kcogdell@nccu.edu |
Biotechnology Pharmaceutical Law Institute |
160 Turner Law Building |
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Mark Morris |
530-5254 mmorris@nccu.edu |
Dispute Resolution Institute |
125 Turner Law Building |
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Sandra White |
530-7060 swhite@nccu.edu |
Center for Science, Math & Technology Education |
305 Lee Biology Building |
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Harvey McMurray |
530-5204 hmcmurray@nccu.edu |
Center for Advancement of Justice Study and Policy |
301 Farrison-Newton Communication Bldg. |
*formerly Center for Domestic & International Criminal Justice Research & Policy |
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Christopher Herring |
530-5206 mherring@nccu.edu |
Institute for Homeland Security and Workforce Development |
Holy Cross Annex, First Floor |
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Arnold Dennis |
530-7092 adennis@nccu.edu |
Juvenile Justice Institute |
200 Eagle Campus Drive |
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Branislav Vlahovic |
530-7253 vlahovic@nccu.edu |
CREST (Center for Research Excellence in Science and Technology) |
1201 Mary Townes Science Complex |
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Branislav Vlahovic |
530-7253 vlahovic@nccu.edu |
NASA University Research Center - Center for Aerospace Device Research and Education |
1201 Mary Townes Science Complex |
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Director of Programs
Deborah Bailey |
530-6143 dbailey@nccu.edu |
Academic Comm. Service Learning Program |
208 Cottage One |
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VACANT |
530-7912 |
Office of International Affairs |
102 Lee Biology Building |
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John Myers |
530-6461 jmyers@nccu.edu |
Summer Ventures in Science and Mathematics |
3104 Mary Townes Science Complex |
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Ansel Brown |
530-7477 abrown@nccu.edu |
University Honors Program |
G-06 Annie Day Shepard Hall |
Administration & Finance
Walter Davenport, Interim |
530-6204 walter.davenport@nccu.edu |
Vice Chancellor of Administration and Finance |
113 Hoey Administration Building |
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Yolanda Deaver |
530-6204 ydeaver@nccu.edu |
Associate Vice Chancellor of Administration and Finance |
113 Hoey Administration Building |
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Zack Abegunrin |
530-7403 zabegunrin@nccu.edu |
Associate Vice Chancellor for Facilities Management |
121 Hubbard-Totten Chemistry Building |
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Claudia Hager |
530-6922 chager@nccu.edu |
Associate Vice Chancellor for Finance and Process Improvement |
113 Hoey Administration Building |
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Linc Butler |
530-5214 linc.butler@nccu.edu |
Chief Human Resources Officer |
213-C Hubbard-Totten Building |
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Cynthia Carter |
530-7598 ccarter@nccu.edu |
Director of Budget and Financial Planning |
218 Hoey Administration Building |
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Gary Ward |
530-7484 gaward@nccu.edu |
Associate Comptroller |
011-B Hoey Administration Building |
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Godfrey Herndon |
530-5063 gherndon@nccu.edu |
Director of Purchasing |
615 Lawson Street |
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Robert McLaughlin |
530-5325 rmclaug7@nccu.edu |
Director of Health and Safety |
013 Police and Public Safety Building |
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Tim Moore |
530-7420 tmoore@nccu.edu |
Director of Auxiliaries and Business Services |
Lower Level W.G. Pearson Cafeteria |
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Phillip Powell |
530-6392 ppowell@nccu.edu |
Director of Facilities Services |
Physical Plant |
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Sharon Coleman |
530-6204 scolem28@nccu.edu |
Administrative Assistant |
113 Hoey Administration Building |
Institutional Advancement
Harriet F. Davis |
530-6151 hfdavis@nccu.edu |
Vice Chancellor of Institutional Advancement |
131 William Jones Building |
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Randal Childs |
530-5264 rchilds@nccu.edu |
Associate Vice Chancellor |
129 William Jones Building |
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Verita Brown, Interim |
530-7399 vbrown13@nccu.edu |
Director of Advancement Services |
032 William Jones Building |
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Justin Stiller |
530-7784 jstiller@nccu.edu |
Advancement Services Associate |
30 William Jones Building |
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Enoch Bond, Interim |
530-5597 ebond@nccu.edu |
Director of Annual Giving |
038 William Jones Building |
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Martina E. Chavis |
530-7072 mchavis6@nccu.edu |
Major Gifts Officer |
122 William Jones Building |
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Cynthia Fobert |
530-7204 cfobert@nccu.edu |
Development Writer & Coordinator of Special Projects |
039 William Jones Building |
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Ashley Pugh |
530-6295 apugh8@nccu.edu |
Public Communications Specialist |
118 William Jones Building |
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Jacqueline Allen |
530-7074 jaallen@nccu.edu |
Office Manager |
132 William Jones Building |
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Helen Tannis |
530-5259 htannis@nccu.edu |
Prospect Researcher |
039 William Jones Building |
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Verita Brown |
530-7399 vbrown13@nccu.edu |
Endowment Specialist |
032 William Jones Building |
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Denise Raynor |
530-6965 dgraynor@nccu.edu |
Executive Assistant |
132 William Jones Building |
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Shaun Johnson |
530-6731 sjohn101@nccu.edu |
Associate Director, NCCU Foundation |
040 William Jones Building |
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Leslie Allen-Howell |
530-7397 lhowell@nccu.edu |
Accounts Payable Technician, NCCU Foundation |
038 William Jones Building |
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Joan Morrison |
530-7830 jmorrison@nccu.edu |
Assistant Director, Alumni Relations |
Alumni House |
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Lamisa McCoy-Foxx |
530-7361 lmccoy@nccu.edu |
Event Manager, Alumni Relations |
5 Alumni House |
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Graduate Education and Research
Hazell Reed |
530-6893 hreed@nccu.edu |
Vice Chancellor for Research & Economic Development |
304 Hoey Administration Building |
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David S. Thomson |
530-7001 dthomson@nccu.edu |
Biomanufacturing/Research Institute Technology Enterprise (BRITE) |
1011 BRITE Building |
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Sean Kimbro, Director |
530-7025 kkimbro@nccu.edu |
Julius L. Chambers Biomedical/Biotechnology Research Institute (BBRI) |
104 Julius L. Chambers BBRI |
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Edith Hubbard, Director |
530-7331 eahubbard@nccu.edu |
Office of Sponsored Research and Programs |
308 Hubbard Totton Building |
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Undi Hoffler |
530-5140 uhoffler@nccu.edu |
Director of Research Compliance |
309-B Hubbard Totten Building |
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Sean Kimbro |
530-7016 kkimbro@nccu.edu |
Director of Cardio-Medibolic Program |
124 Julius L. Chambers BBRI |
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Kendra Cardwell |
530-7756 kcardwell@nccu.edu |
Assistant Director, Sponsored Research |
304 Hubbard Totten Building |
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Camilla Felton |
530-7002 cfelton@nccu.edu |
Research Operations Manager |
006 Julius L. Chambers BBRI |
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Jody Lewis |
530-7022 klewis50@nccu.edu |
University Program Specialist |
101 Julius L. Chambers BBRI |
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Derek Norford |
530-7023 dnorford@nccu.edu |
University Veterinarian |
005 Julius L. Chambers BBRI |
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Ricardo Richardson |
530-6421 mrrichardson@nccu.edu |
Director of Cancer Research |
220 Julius L. Chambers BBRI |
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Sparkle Sutton |
530-7905 sksutton@nccu.edu |
Sponsored Research and Programs Manager |
304-C Hubbard Totten Building |
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Carol Hicks |
530-5105 carol.burnette@nccu.edu |
Executive Assistant to the Vice Chancellor |
309 Hubbard Totten Building |
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Student Affairs
Johnnie Southerland, Interim Vice Chancellor |
530-5321 jsoutherland@nccu.edu |
Student Affairs and Enrollment Management |
208 Student Services Building |
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Monica Leach, Associate Vice Chancellor |
530-6682 monica.leach@nccu.edu |
Enrollment Management |
306 Hoey Administration Building |
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Rosemary Jackson, Medical Director |
530-7335 rjacks37@nccu.edu |
Student Health |
118 Student Health Building |
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Denettia Shaw, Director |
530-6687 dshaw9@nccu.edu |
Office of Transfer Services |
106 Lee Biology Building |
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Krystal George, Assistant Director |
530-6134 kgeorge@nccu.edu |
Women’s Center |
4 Women’s Center |
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Erica Dixon, Director |
530-6013 edixon@nccu.edu |
Campus Recreation and Wellness |
C204 Walker Complex |
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Ardell Sanders, Interim Director |
530-6130 asande37@nccu.edu |
Centennial Scholars Program |
208 Student Services Building |
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Tia Doxey, Director |
530-6497 tdoxey@nccu.edu |
Student Life Assessment |
224 Student Services Building |
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Michael Page, Director |
530-5263 mpage@nccu.edu |
Campus Ministry |
525 Nelson Street |
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Carolyn Moore, Director |
530-5294 cmoore@nccu.edu |
Counseling Services |
209 Student Health Building |
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Robin Hanes-Featherstone, Director |
530-7934 rhanes@nccu.edu |
Student Union/Student Activities and Assistant Dean of Student |
104 Student Union |
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Kesha Lee, Director |
530-6325 klee@nccu.edu |
Student Support Services |
G-20 Student Services Building |
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Jennifer Wilder, Director |
530-7298 jwilder@nccu.edu |
Residential Life |
G-06 Student Services Building |
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Janelle Simmons, Director |
530-7498 jwilder@nccu.edu |
New Student Services |
G-36 Student Services Building |
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Carol Gibbs, Medical Director |
530-5098 cgibbs@nccu.edu |
Student Health |
110 Student Health Building |
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Frances Lunsford, Associate Director |
530-6180 flunsfo1@nccu.edu |
Scholarship/Student Aid |
111 Student Services Building |
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Kent Williams, Assistant Director |
530-7846 kwill122@nccu.edu |
Student Involvement |
134 Student Union |
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Marquita Johnson, Assistant Director |
530-7848 mjjohnson@nccu.edu |
Student Union/Student Activities |
C204 Walker Complex |
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Gary Brown, Director |
530-7466 gbrown@nccu.edu |
Student Rights & Responsibilities |
120 Student Services Building |
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Sherry Henderson, Assistant Director |
530-6180 hendersons@nccu.edu |
Scholarships/Student Aid |
106 Student Services Building |
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Vickie McNeil |
530-5198 vmmcneil@nccu.edu |
Special Assistant to the Vice Chancellor |
210 Student Services Building |
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Pat Nelson |
530-6342 pnelson@nccu.edu |
Executive Assistant to the Vice Chancellor |
208 Student Services Building |
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Office of Undergraduate Admissions
Anthony Brooks, Director |
530-6298 abrooks7@nccu.edu |
Undergraduate Admissions |
4 McDougald House |
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Christopher Withers, Assistant Director |
530-6097 cwither3@nccu.edu |
Undergraduate Admissions |
McDougald House |
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Camilla Ross, Office Manager |
530-7344 cross@nccu.edu |
Undergraduate Admissions |
5 McDougald House |
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Karen Godwin, Administrative Support Specialist |
530-5489 kgodwin@nccu.edu |
Undergraduate Admissions |
Basement Student Union |
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Terra Anthony-Ash, Administrative Support Specialist |
530-7347 tanthony@nccu.edu |
Undergraduate Admissions |
Ground Floor McDougald House |
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Tonya Moses, Administrative Support Specialist |
530-6298 tmoses@nccu.edu |
Undergraduate Admissions |
McDougald House |
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Diana Green, Student Services Assistant |
530-5219 dmgreen@nccu.edu |
Undergraduate Admissions |
McDougald House |
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Angela Hawkins, Administrative Support Specialist |
530-5308 ahawkins@nccu.edu |
Undergraduate Admissions |
1 McDougald House |
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Doris Cunningham, Administrative Support Associate |
530-6665 dcunningham@nccu.edu |
Undergraduate Admissions |
McDougald House |
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History of the University of North Carolina
In North Carolina, all public educational institutions that grant baccalaureate degrees are part of the University of North Carolina. North Carolina Central is one of the 16 constituent institutions of the multi-campus university.
The University of North Carolina, chartered by the N. C. General Assembly in 1789, was the first public university in the United States to open its doors and the only one to graduate students in the eighteenth century. The first class was admitted in Chapel Hill in 1795. For the next 136 years, the only campus of the University of North Carolina was at Chapel Hill.
In 1877, the N. C. General Assembly began sponsoring additional institutions of higher education, diverse in origin and purpose. Five were historically black institutions, and another was founded to educate American Indians. Several were created to prepare teachers for the public schools. Others had a technological emphasis. One was a training school for performing artists. In 1931, the N. C. General Assembly redefined the University of North Carolina to include three state-sponsored institutions: the campus at Chapel Hill (now the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), North Carolina State College (now North Carolina State University at Raleigh), and Woman’s College (now the University of North Carolina at Greensboro). The new multi-campus University operated with one board of trustees and one president. By 1969, three additional campuses had joined the University through legislative action: the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, the University of North Carolina at Asheville, and the University of North Carolina at Wilmington.
By 1971, the General Assembly passed legislation bringing into the University of North Carolina the state’s ten remaining public senior institutions, each of which had until then been legally separate: Appalachian State University, East Carolina University, Elizabeth City State University, Fayetteville State University, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, North Carolina Central University, the North Carolina School of the Arts, Pembroke State University, Western Carolina University, and Winston-Salem State University. This action created the current 16-campus University. (In 1985, the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics, a residential high school for gifted students, was declared an affiliated school of the University; and in 1996, Pembroke State University was renamed The University of North Carolina at Pembroke through legislative action.)
The UNC Board of Governors is the policy-making body legally charged with “the general determination, control, supervision, management, and governance of all affairs of the constituent institutions.” It elects the president, who is the chief executive officer of the University. The 32 voting members of the Board of Governors are elected by the General Assembly for four-year terms. Former board chairmen and board members who are former governors of North Carolina may continue to serve for limited periods as non-voting members Emeriti. The president of the UNC Association of Student Governments, or that student’s designee, is also a non-voting member.
Each of the seventeen constituent institutions is headed by a chancellor, who is chosen by the Board of Governors on the president’s nomination and is responsible to the president. Each institution has a board of trustees, consisting of eight members elected by the Board of Governors, four appointed by the governor, and the president of the student body, who serves ex-officio. (The NC School of the Arts has two additional ex-officio members.) Each board of trustees holds extensive powers over academic and other operations of its institutions on delegation from the Board of Governors.
North Carolina Central University Mission Statement
Historical Statement
North Carolina Central University was founded in 1909 as the National Religious Training School and Chautauqua by Dr. James Edward Shepard. It became the first public liberal arts institution for African Americans in the nation. The University is now a master’s comprehensive institution that offers bachelors and master’s degrees, a Juris Doctor, and a PhD in Integrated Biosciences to a diverse student population.
Mission
North Carolina Central University, with a strong tradition of teaching, research, and service, prepares students to become global leaders and practitioners who transform communities. Through a nationally recognized law school, highly acclaimed and innovative programs in the visual and performing arts, sciences, business, humanities, and education programs, NCCU students are engaged problem solvers. Located in the Research Triangle, the University advances research in the biotechnological, biomedical, informational, computational, behavioral, social and health sciences. Our students enhance the quality of life of citizens and the economic development of North Carolina, the nation, and the world.
Academic Standing and Accreditation
North Carolina Central University is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges to award baccalaureate, master’s, and doctoral degrees. Contact the Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, Georgia 3003-4097 or call 404-679-4500 for questions about the accreditation of North Carolina Central University.
Specialized accreditation and/or certification in the following areas contribute to the University’s goal of ensuring academic rigor and integrity in all degree programs. The following is a list of accredited and certified academic programs and their respective accrediting organizations.
Athletic Training (Department of Physical Education)
Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education
Business
Association of Collegiate Business Schools and Programs
Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business
Chemistry
American Chemical Society
Communication Disorders (School of Education)
Council on Academic Accreditation in Speech-Language Pathology
Counseling (School of Education)
Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs
Criminal Justice
North Carolina Criminal Justice Education and Training Standards Commission
Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences
Dietetics (Department of Human Sciences)
Commission on Accreditation for Dietetics Education
Education
Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation
North Carolina Department of Public Instruction
Environmental, Earth and Geospatial Sciences
National Environmental Health Science & Protection Accreditation Council
Geography and Earth Sciences (Department of Environmental, Earth, and Geospatial Sciences)
University Consortium for Geographic Information Science
Hospitality and Tourism Administration (School of Business)
Accreditation Commission for Programs in Hospitality Administration
Law
American Association of Law Schools
American Bar Association
Library and Information Sciences
American Library Association
Nursing
North Carolina Board of Nursing
Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing
Parks and Recreation Management (Department of Physical Education and Recreation)
National Recreation and Park Association /American Association for Physical Activity and Recreation
Public Health Education
Society of Public Health Education - American Association for Health Education
Social Work
Council on Social Work Education
Theater
National Association of Schools of Theater
In the School of Education, programs approved by the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction include Elementary Education (K-6); Middle Grades Education in Language Arts, Math, Science, and Social Studies; Communication Disorders; Career Counseling; Mental Health Counseling; School Counseling; Secondary Grades Education in English, Mathematics, Comprehensive Science, and Comprehensive Social Studies; Special Subjects (K-12) in Art, Dance, Music, Theater Arts, Physical Education, French, and Spanish; Educational Technology; School Administration; and Special Education in General Special Education, Visual Impairments, Learning Disabilities and Emotional/Behavioral Disabilities.
History and Background
North Carolina Central University, a state-supported liberal arts institution, was chartered in 1909 as a private institution and opened to students on July 10, 1910. It was founded by Dr. James E. Shepard. From the beginning, when it was known as the National Religious Training School and Chautauqua, its purpose has been the development in young men and women of that fine character and sound academic training requisite for real service to the nation. To this end, the training of all students has been entrusted to the most capable teachers available.
The institution’s early years were characterized by a wealth of enthusiasm and high endeavor, but not of money. Private donations and student fees constituted the total financial support of the school, and the heavy burden of collecting funds rested on the President.
In 1915 the school was sold and reorganized, then becoming the National Training School. During this period of its history, Mrs. Russell Sage of New York was a generous benefactor of the school. In 1923, the General Assembly of North Carolina appropriated funds for the purchase and maintenance of the school; thus, in that year, it became a publicly supported institution and was renamed Durham State Normal School. Two years later, the General Assembly converted the institution into the North Carolina College for Negroes, dedicating it to the offering of liberal arts education and the preparation of teachers and principals of secondary schools.
At its 1927 session, the General Assembly began a program of expansion of the college plan to conform to the needs of an enlarged academic program. The interest of the Honorable Angus W. McLean, then Governor of North Carolina, and his belief in the institution, aided greatly in the promotion of this program. State appropriations were supplemented by a generous gift from B.N. Duke and by contributions from citizens of Durham in 1929. The 1930s afforded federal grants and state appropriations for a new program of physical expansion and improvement of educational facilities, a program that continued until the beginning of World War II.
The College was accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools as an “A” class institution in 1937 and was admitted to membership in that association in 1957.
The General Assembly of 1939 authorized the establishment of graduate work in liberal arts and the professions. Pursuant thereto, graduate courses in the arts and sciences were first offered in that same year. The School of Law began operation in 1940, and the School of Library Science was established in 1941.
In 1947 the General Assembly changed the name of the institution to North Carolina College at Durham.
On October 6, 1947, Dr. Shepard, founder and President of the college, died. The Board of Trustees appointed an interim committee consisting of Dr. Albert E. Manley, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences; Miss Ruth G. Rush, Dean of Women; and Dr. Albert L. Turner, Dean of the School of Law, to administer the affairs of the institution until the election of the second president.
On January 20, 1948, Dr. Alfonso Elder was elected President of the institution. At the time of his election, Dr. Elder was serving as the head of the Graduate Department of Education and had formerly been Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Elder retired September 1, 1963.
Dr. Samuel P. Massie was elected as the third President of the College on August 9, 1963. Dr. Massie came to the institution from Washington, D. C., where he was Associate Program Director for Undergraduate Science Education at the National Science Foundation, and Professor and Chairman of the Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry at Howard University. He resigned on February 1, 1966.
The Board of Trustees appointed an interim committee consisting of Mr. William Jones, Business Manager; Dr. Helen G. Edmonds, Graduate Dean; and Dr. William H. Brown, Professor of Education, to administer the affairs of the institution until the fourth president took office.
On July 20, 1966, Dr. Albert N. Whiting was named fourth President of the institution. He came to North Carolina College from Baltimore, Maryland, where he had been Dean of the Faculty at Morgan State College. Dr. Whiting served as President and Chancellor from July 1, 1967, until his retirement June 30, 1983.
In 1969, the General Assembly changed the name of the institution to North Carolina Central University. On July 1, 1972, North Carolina Central University became a constituent institution of the University of North Carolina. On July 1, 1983, Dr. LeRoy T. Walker became interim Chancellor of the University. He had served the institution as Chairman of the Department of Physical Education and Recreation, Head Track Coach and Vice Chancellor for University Relations. At their February 1986 meeting, the University of North Carolina Board of Governors, at the request of the University’s Board of Trustees, decreed that Dr. Walker was Chancellor of the University rather than Interim Chancellor and made that action retroactive to the beginning of his term.
Dr. Tyronza R. Richmond, formerly Dean of the School of Business, succeeded Dr. Walker as Chancellor on July 1, 1986. Prior to his arrival at North Carolina Central University, Dr. Richmond was Associate Dean and Professor at the School of Business and Public Administration at Howard University.
In December 1991, Dr. Richmond resigned as Chancellor to return to the classroom and was succeeded on January 1, 1992, by Dr. Donna J. Benson as Interim Chancellor. Dr. Benson was succeeded in January 1993 by Attorney Julius L. Chambers, former director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Legal Defense Fund.
Mr. Chambers led the University for over eight years, stepping down on June 1, 2001. At that time, Dr. James H. Ammons, Jr., became the ninth chief administrator of North Carolina Central University. Prior to his election, Dr. Ammons was the Provost and Vice President at Florida A & M University in Tallahassee, Florida.
Dr. Charlie Nelms became the tenth chief administrator of North Carolina Central University in August of 2007. He came with a “Destination Graduation” slogan. Prior to joining North Carolina Central University, Dr. Nelms served as Vice President for Institutional Development and Student Affairs for the Indiana University System.
The Faculty
North Carolina Central University seeks to attract and maintain an outstanding faculty of individuals who are capable of contributing to the enrichment of its educational and research programs. The University’s faculty members come from all sections of the United States as well as from several foreign countries, bringing to the campus a rich diversity of training and experience.
In addition to the primary responsibility of instruction, faculty members actively engage in research and other creative pursuits. Research interests are widespread among the various disciplines and the faculty eagerly compete to bring grants to the University. Much of this research result in books, scholarly papers, and presentations at professional conferences, bringing acclaim both to the individual faculty members and to the University. Faculty members are also encouraged to participate in the activities of the community at large as well as the University community. Many participate in government, business, educational, artistic, and other endeavors that enrich the Durham community.
The Campus
North Carolina Central University is located in the eastern section of North Carolina’s Piedmont, within the world-famous Research Triangle. The city of Durham, with a population of 218,179 is a part of a larger standard metropolitan area with 1,401,331 people. The city is sufficiently large to afford to students the advantages of contacts with urban institutions. The University draws on the cultural resources of the city, state, and nation in furthering the development of its students; it also encourages students who participate in worthwhile activities of the community.
The University is located in a community and region in which noteworthy efforts are evolving to utilize all available resources to the end of creating better environments for human development. Basic changes are taking place in the sociology and technology of the region. The University seeks to assist students to understand these changing situations so that as future community leaders they may participate in guiding the dynamics of American society toward desirable goals.
Buildings
Sixty-two buildings of modern and modified Georgian brick construction are now located on North Carolina Central University’s 106-acre campus. All academic buildings, as well as the cafeterias and the student union, are completely air-conditioned.
The buildings are functional as well as aesthetically pleasing and have been designed especially to meet the needs of the students and teachers who use them. They are also designed with the fact in mind that in a state-supported institution the people of the State are ever welcome visitors and resource persons who can make significant contributions to the overall development of the institution. Lounges, seminar rooms, auditoriums, and numerous utility services for the residents and visiting public are features of all the buildings.
Attractively landscaped lawns and the geometrically arranged walks and roadways blend with the natural scenery of the foliage and trees to provide the kind of beauty that the University traditionally has regarded as one of the essentials of educational experiences.
The Hoey Administration Building, with its statute of the school’s founder, Dr. James E. Shepard, in front, is a focal point of the campus. The institution’s administrative offices as well as registration services, cashier, and the student accounting offices are located in this building. The William Jones Building, which is next to Hoey, is the former home of the School of Law and now serves as home to the Office Of Institutional Advancement, and Career Services.
The newly renovated Alexander-Dunn Building, contains the administrative offices of the University College. Services provided include Academic Advising, Academic Support, Developmental and Supplemental Learning/Reading Instruction, and Title III Retention and Academic Strategies to ensure student success.
The B.N. Duke Auditorium, also next to Hoey, seats 875 persons for theatrical and musical performances as well as other assemblies. It was named after a generous benefactor of the institution.
Facing the Fayetteville Street side of the campus are the Lee Biology Building and the Robinson Science Building.
The Mary M. Townes Science Complex at Concord and Lawson Streets now serves as home for the Biology, Chemistry, Environmental, Earth and Geospatial Sciences, Mathematics and Computer Science and Physics departments. These departments make up the College of Science and Technology.
The Helen G. Edmonds Classroom Building houses classrooms and seminar rooms for the departments of History, Political Science, Sociology, and Social Work.
The School of Business is housed in the recently renovated Willis Commerce Building. This building contains the most up-to-date classroom and seminar facilities as well as the School’s own computing center available for use by its faculty and students and the University as a whole.
The Taylor Education Building contains the Department of Psychology, the Institute for Minority Issues, Graduate Studies Office, office space, classrooms for the Human Sciences Department, and swing space for offices displaced because of renovations.
The Human Sciences Department is housed in the Dent Building, which contains classroom and laboratories for clothing and textiles, food and nutrition, family relations and child development, family resource management and housing, and interior design. In addition, a biochemistry and a child development laboratory for children ages 3-5 occupy sections of the Dent Building.
The Miller-Morgan Health Sciences Building offers modern classrooms, clinical and laboratory space for the departments of Nursing, Health Education, and ROTC. This building contains lounges for students and faculty, a learning resources center, and an auditorium that seats 300 and is used extensively for community and University functions.
The Criminal Justice Department and the Public Administration Program are located in the Albert N. Whiting Criminal Justice Building, which was completed in 1984 and named after a former chancellor. This building offers up-to-date classrooms, seminar rooms, and laboratory facilities that include crime and computer labs. The building also contains a library used by these disciplines.
The newly renovated Turner Law Building, facing the Alston Avenue side of the campus, houses the School of Law. The four-story building contains offices for student activities including the Law Journal, the Legal Clinic, and other student activities, as well as classroom space. The Law Library is also in the building and provides a comfortable environment for study and research.
The Leroy T. Walker Physical Education and Recreation Complex, named for a former chancellor, contains 102,000 square feet of offices, classrooms, sports facilities, and laboratories. The Center is actually four structures joined together by enclosed stairs and walkways. These structures include an aquatics building that houses a 50-meter, Olympic-size swimming pool; an administration building that also contains classrooms, faculty offices, locker rooms, and a student center; a gymnasium building that includes dance studios, training and weight rooms, dressing and storage rooms, offices, two teaching theatres, and practice areas for archery, riflery, and golf; and a gymnastics building that includes a gymnasium designed for gymnastics and eight handball courts.
The Alfonso Elder Student Union, named for a former president of the University, contains student government offices, lounges for students, meeting rooms, a snack bar and cafeteria, a game room, barber shop, and the campus book store. Facilities are available for receptions, concerts, and other public functions. The Fine Arts Building houses art studios and classrooms. The adjoining C. Ruth Edwards Building is the home of the Department of Music and includes practice studios and classrooms for music. The Edwards Music Building also contains rehearsal space for the band and a small concert auditorium. Connected to this building is the University’s Art Museum.
The Farrison-Newton Communications Building contains the departments of English and Mass Communication, Modern Foreign Languages, and Theatre. In addition to classrooms, laboratories, and seminar space, the WNCU radio station is also located in the building. The Communications Building also houses a modern 250-seat theatre in which the University’s acclaimed dramatic productions are presented.
One of the University’s newest buildings is the Biomedical/Biotechnology Research Institute. The 3,800-square-foot facility contains 12 research laboratories, teleconferencing capabilities, an auditorium, classrooms, and state-of-the-art telecommunications technology. The building’s construction was completed in 1998.
Chidley North Residence Hall, opened in August 2011. This facility houses 517 students. The building is LEED GOLD certified. There are eleven other residence hall on the campus , all of which are coed.
The H.M. Michaux Building is a 103,000-square-foot modern equipped building that was ready for occupancy in Fall 2000. The new School of Education is a state-of-the-art telecommunications technology facility, and adds an additional 100 parking spaces. This facility houses the School of Education; Information Technology, (The Early College High School is currently housed in the Robinson Science Building); Office of Research, Evaluation, and Planning; the University’s Academic Computing Center; and the Extended Studies Program.
The Biomanufacturing Research Institute and Technology Enterprise Building (BRITE) houses the Pharmaceutical Science Bachelor’s and Master’s degree programs. It contains tate-of-the-art scientific, technological, and research equipment used in the biomanufacturing and technology industries. It was opened for classes in Fall 2006.
Benjamin Ruffin Residence Hall was opened in 2007. Located off Fayetteville Street, it overlooks the University Circle and Hoey Administration Building. The newest of all residence halls, Ruffin Hall accommodates 344 students.
Martha Street Apartments are located off Lincoln and Cecil Streets. Designed for graduate students, these apartments contain 32 units.
The renovation of the W.G. Pearson Cafeteria added two new conference rooms, the Chancellor’s dining room, a faculty dining room, a banquet hall, and a spacious open dining area for students with choices of six different cuisines.
Library Facilities
The mission of the libraries at North Carolina Central University is to provide resources and services, which support the University’s educational research, cultural and public service objectives.
The James E. Shepard Memorial Library, with an estimated cost of $900,000, opened November 1951. It provided open shelves, an excellent reference collection, and current books and periodicals for every field of study offered by the college. The seating capacity of the new library was approximately 500 students.
Early in 1974, construction began on a three-story addition to the library. This added approximately 50,000 square feet to the building and cost over $2,400,000. The library moved into the new addition during December 1975 and January 1976.
Before an additional library renovation could begin, mold removal and asbestos abatement at the library needed to occur. Partitions were erected on the first and second floors, sealing off the annex section of the building. In September and October 2004, mold was removed from three floors’ worth of circulating books, bound journals and historical theses (approximately 600,000 volumes). In November, all collection materials from the annex were moved to an off-site storage facility near Durham Technical Community College. Asbestos abatement was completed in December.
In January 2005, Shepard Library’s renovation was underway and completed in 2007. As the end of Shepard Library’s renovation neared, preparations were made to move off-site materials back into the building. Space on the ground floor that had previously been devoted entirely to the circulating book collection was now seriously diminished because of the creation of the Mega Lab, a new area for the Reserve department, some staff offices, and a large student study area. The Mega Lab is maintained and staffed by the Information Technology Services Department. The library’s expanded Treasure Room and University Archives moved into what had formerly been the Government Documents department. Most of the documents collection moved into the space vacated by the CMC, with some highly-used items located to the Reference department. All departments initiated major weeding projects at the off-site facility, pulling duplicates and little-circulated items as well as closed subscriptions or outdated journal titles. Shepard Library staff moved into their renovated office space at the end of the spring 2007 semester. A student group study area was created on the second floor and the area vacated by the Teleconference Center’s return to the third floor was turned into the library’s first Electronic Classroom. Twenty-four computers and state-of-the art projection screens created a home base for the library’s Information Literacy program.
Library resources at North Carolina Central University are located in the James E. Shepard Memorial Library, the Music Library, the Library in the School of Library and Information Sciences, the Library of the School of Law, and the Curriculum Materials Center Library located in the Michaux School of Education. These libraries contain a total of over 850,000 volumes. They subscribe to a total of 6,165 periodicals. Access to these collections is provided by an integrated online catalog and circulation system.
In 1994, NCCU became a member of the Triangle Research Libraries Network (TRLN). TRLN is a cooperative comprised of libraries at Duke University, NCCU, UNC at Chapel Hill, and NC State University, with combined collections of over 10 million volumes.
NCCU students can borrow directly from any of the TRLN institutions by presenting a valid NCCU student ID card. Borrowing privileges at TRLN libraries are extended to faculty, staff, and administrators who present a current University ID card. Additional library resources are available at the remaining thirteen institutions in the UNC System, which graduate students and faculty have direct borrowing privileges. Electronic access to these collections is provided via Search TRLN and UNC Express, which are integrated online catalogs.
The James E. Shepard Memorial Library contains 498,000 volumes and 140,200 federal and state government documents. Microform and an extensive inventory of full-text electronic databases are among the library’s non-print resources. Some of the electronic databases can be accessed off-campus by students and faculty. An outstanding collection of books and pamphlets on African American life and culture is found in the Treasure Room.
Textbooks, curriculum guides, and non-print items in the field of education, are housed in the Curriculum Materials Center (CMC). Audiovisual materials are also part of the CMC collection. Word processing and Internet access are available on library computers for student use.
The Music Library, located on the third floor of the Edwards Music Building, contains an excellent collection of instrumental and vocal music, orchestral scores, and records, in addition to a carefully selected collection of books in the field of music. The Music Library is a branch of the Shepard Library.
The School of Library and Information Sciences (SLIS) is located on the third floor of the James E. Shepard Memorial Library. The SLIS Library, which is a part of the School of Library and Information Sciences, houses an outstanding collection of current materials and equipment to support the academic programs in Library Science and Information Systems.
The Law Library has over 400,000 volumes and volume equivalents for your research needs. We also participate in the Triangle Research Libraries Network (TRLN), which gives our students and faculty access to the holdings of the other academic research libraries in the Research Triangle. We subscribe to electronic resources like LexisNexis, Westlaw, Fastcase, Loislaw, BNA and HeinOnline. Students, faculty and staff can access most of our electronic resources from their homes anytime using the University’s Virtual Private Network! Using these resources is not as simple as “Googling,” so our librarians provide training to ensure you have meaningful access to the many legal research databases we offer.
The Law Library provides two stories of space for individual and collaborative study. Our reading room, a product of the 2005 law school renovation, is light-filled and boasts both soft seating for momentary study breaks, and beautiful shaker-styled seating for intense study. The library’s second floor contains eight state-of-the-art study rooms available for collective study and study carrels that are unassigned and available to all students. Our students have access to the library’s space 100 hours per week.
Institutional Advancement
The Office of Institutional Advancement (IA) is charged with communicating the University’s mission, vision and goals to the public for the purpose of cultivating widespread financial support. In turn, private funds raised by Institutional Advancement help to ensure the University’s excellence in higher education. These contributions are put to use as soon as possible to provide support for need- and merit-based student scholarships, research, fellowships, professorships, new programs and opportunities for students, and special events that would not exist except for the work of Institutional Advancement.
According to the University’s funding priorities, professional gift officers assigned to Major Gifts, Planned Giving, Corporate and Foundation Relations and Annual Giving, plan and implement fund-raising initiatives that identify prospective donors, engage them and cultivate giving. The officers look for opportunities to connect potential donors with particular campus programs or initiatives that coincide with the donors’ interests and philanthropic goals. Our donor base of support includes faculty and staff, alumni, parents, friends, corporations and foundations.
Once the gift is received, the Advancement Services unit is responsible for acknowledging donations, providing tax receipts, preparing and distributing reports and assisting donors face-to-face, on the phone and online. These staff manage a database of 70,000 constituent records.
Alumni Relations is the unit of IA that serves to foster the relationship between 30,000 NCCU alumni and their alma mater. Alumni Relations encourages alumni to serve as ambassadors who will promote the university to prospective students and work to enhance the positive public perception of NCCU in their varied communities. Alumni Relations staff develop, coordinate and promote programs to keep alumni informed about and involved in campus life. They plan and implement special events, especially including Homecoming, to help alumni maintain their connection to their academic home.
The Office of Public Relations is part of Institutional Advancement and has a responsibility to university employees, students and alumni to enhance the image of the institution and to keep the public informed about NCCU’s staff, students, programs and activities. The Office is also responsible for final review and sign-off on the content and design of all university publications for external audiences. It is solely responsible for disseminating information to the news media or to hold news conferences on behalf of the university, particularly including crisis communications. Except for crisis communications, the Office delegates all public relations services for the Division of Athletics to the Office of Sports Information.
NCCU Foundation, Inc.
The NCCU Foundation, a 501(c) 3 organization works in close collaboration with Institutional Advancement and it is housed in IA’s offices. The Foundation receives the donations on behalf of the university and oversees the investment and financial accounting of donor funds. The Foundation has a Board of Directors with the executive director reporting to the president of the Foundation Board who interacts daily with the vice chancellor for Institutional Advancement.
University Career Services
The mission of the Career Services is to facilitate and ensure growth, expansion, and awareness of each student’s career development process through interactive programs, technological initiatives, effective career assessments, and employment opportunities. Career Services is dedicated to helping students hone career and professional development skills needed to stay employable in the current job market. The Office serves students from freshman year through graduation and beyond; whether it’s selecting the right major, exploring career options, looking for part-time job or internship, or preparing for an interview. Mentoring and coaching from alumni and corporate partners also facilitate career and major decisions. Online services are available and allows students, alumni and employers to access information through the Eagle Career Network, nccucareerservices@nccu.edu.
Numerous representatives from Fortune 500 and other companies throughout the United States visit Career Services each year to conduct employment interviews with prospective candidates. Many graduate and professional schools visit or contact the Career Services r seeking candidates for graduate study in areas such as business, law, medicine, social science, and the humanities.
Part-time job resources, on-campus student employment, internships, and cooperative education opportunities are available through an extensive “experiential learning program” to assist students with obtaining valuable work experience before graduation. Experiential opportunities are available in the governmental, private, and public sectors. Some of these include serving as White House and Washington Center interns, working in the United States Congressional Offices or working in a major corporation such as GlaxoSmithKline, SAS, Environmental Protection Agency, and PNC Bank.
Also, Career Services programming provides a variety of professional and developmental workshops on topics such as resume writing, interviewing, job search training, and experiential education. Brochures, pamphlets, magazines, graduate school catalogs, company annual reports, videos, and other career related materials are available for students, faculty, and alumni to browse in the Career Center and online. Appointments may be scheduled or a counselor may see students on a walk-in basis at anytime.
Academic Community Service Learning Program
Mission Statement
The Academic Community Service Learning Program (ACSLP) contributes to the preparation of local, state, national, and international leadership through public and community service opportunities and service-based intellectual inquiry and research. The ACSLP provides a setting for the convergence of service and scholarship for NCCU students, faculty, staff, and alumni.
Goals
The Academic Community Service Learning Program (ACSLP) provides outstanding service learning and community service activities for NCCU students, faculty, and staff. The ACSLP facilitates and supports excellence in innovative teaching, learning, and research through the intersection of intellectual theory and community-based practice across the academic spectrum.
The Program
The Academic Community Service Learning Program was established at North Carolina Central University in the 1990’s. North Carolina Central University was one of the first institutions in NC as well as one of the first HBCUs in the United States to establish a formal presence for the integration of community service and service learning within the academic setting. Students at NCCU utilize the community service and service learning programs organized through the ACSLP to gain valuable leadership and intellectual inquiry skills and to link academic theory to “real world” issues.
The ACSLP program has been a pioneer in Higher Education in expanding the classroom setting to include service to community. The University encourages all undergraduates to embrace the leadership skills, critical thinking skills, and research training developed through service to the community.
All undergraduate students are required to earn 120 community service hours as part of the graduation requirement.
The ACSLP integrates service with the academic mission of NCCU in the following ways:
The Academic Community Service Learning Advisory Committee: This board has been reconstituted to include faculty, administrators, and community representatives who meet each semester to provide support for, guidance of, and promotion of service learning and community service as viable approaches that support intellectual inquiry and leadership development.
Faculty - Community Agency Symposium: This forum will be offered annually to assist community organizations and faculty to better understand the link between inquiry and practice. The symposium provides a training and communication forum for faculty and community organizations who partner to provide academic service learning activities.
GEC Faculty, Student and Community Forum:
ACSLP will engage GEC faculty, students and community partners in a special forum during the 2013-2014 academic year to discuss issues of importance in service learning.
An Annual Recognition Banquet: This banquet formally recognizes and showcases student, faculty, staff, and community achievements.
Annual Campus Wide-Service Project. Each year a campus-wide service project will be selected to highlight NCCU’s mission “Truth and Service” through the tangible provision of concentrated service given by NCCU’s students, faculty, and staff. In 2008-2009, Habitat for Humanity was selected as one of NCCU’s campus -wide service projects.
Benefits of Community Service and Service Learning
There are numerous benefits of the ACSLP including not limited to the following:
- Students develop leadership skills and a sense of civic and social responsibility
- Students learn reflective and analytical skills through service.
- Students learn reflective and analytical skills through service.
- The Faculty is supported in providing high quality service learning courses to undergraduate students.
- The Faculty is resourced in demonstrating the link between theory and community issues/needs.
- Community agencies and NCCU develop and strengthen sustainable partnerships.
The Program
The Academic Community Service Learning Program supports NCCU’s mission of providing leadership training and increasing the intellectual inquiry skills of students through a combination of scholarly inquiry and practical service.
The program is structured to support student, faculty, and staff involvement in direct community service learning activities either combined with a formal departmental course or through “service activities” sponsored by the ACSLP office, Academic Departments, Colleges and Schools and through Student Affairs.The ACSLP office also registers more than 100 local agencies as official community service partners. Working with one of the many community service partner is an option for students to earn the required 120 hours of community service credit.
The University requires all full time, transfer, and re-admitted undergraduate students to complete 30 hours of community service for each academic year attending NCCU until the completion of the first four years on campus have been completedTherefore if a student has been enrolled for 3 years, the expectation is for (90) hours of service.If a student has been enrolled for four years, the expectation is 120 hours of completed community service. After the completion of 4 complete academic years of enrollment and 120 hours of service, no further hours are required.
How Do I Earn Community Service Hours?
Community Service
More than 100 agencies and organizations are registered with the ACSLP office.The ACSLP has job descriptions of volunteer service in almost every academic field and something to suit every interest.Students earn one hour of community service credit for each hour served in a community setting to count toward the university service requirement.
Service Learning
The ACSLP works with every School, College, and Academic Department on campus to register service learning courses. If you are enrolled in a service learning course in any Academic Department, you can receive community service credit if you complete the course successfully.Credit earned is based on the number of hours your professor has listed on the syllabus.
Selected One-Time Events
“One-time events” are sponsored each semester to encourage the entire campus community to engage in the University’s commitment to service. Each year a service theme is selected and at least one campus-wide event is held each semester. These events are usually worth up to 15 hours of community service credit.
Schools, Colleges, and Departments can also sponsor one-time events. If these events are registered with the ACSLP office, students can receive up to 15 hours credit per semester for participation.
ACSLP and Research
We encourage faculty and students to develop service learning research projects that combine critical inquiry with civic engagement.Each year, the ACSLP will sponsor a workshop to assist faculty and students to consider utilizing civic engagement/action research methods. Civic Engagement research is an excellent tool for upper level courses, completing independent assignments, and for faculty to utilize in research.
Utilizing Civic Engagement /action research meets university goals and enhances university-community collaboration.
Commonly Asked Questions About Community Service/Service Learning
What activities constitute acceptable Community Service? Community Service is conducted when students are engaged in the following activities:
- Students are placed in a community-based public or private organization through the ACSLP program. The placement will involve approved sites selected by the ACSLP to provide NCCU students with optimal opportunities to link theory with practice.
- Students participate in a service learning course that has been registered with the ACSLP Program.
- Students participate in one-time events hosted either by Academic Departments or student ACSLP. All one-time events must be registered with the ACSLP.
- Students participate in approved practicum courses, internships, or other courses that combine theory with practical volunteer hours served in the community. All hours served in the community must be volunteered. Internship and Practicum courses must be registered with the ACSLP.
Who is exempt from Community Service?
Students who have graduated from NCCU after completion of a four-year degree and are returning for a second degree are exempt from the service requirement. Additionally, all current seniors who have re-enrolled at NCCU and were classified as a senior before 1995 are exempt
Student Veterans, Military Reserve and National Guard Community Service Requirement
Student Veterans
Enrolled NCCU students who are veterans and have completed military active duty with an honorable discharge will earn 60 hours of credit towards the required 120 hours of community service. To qualify for this credit, the student must present their military form DD-214 showing the discharge status to the office of Academic Community Service Learning (ACSL).
National Guard and Military Reserve
Enrolled NCCU students who are current members of the Military Reserve or National Guard will earn 60 hours of credit towards the required 120 hours of community service. The qualification for this credit is based upon completion of basic training, job training, and a minimum of one year cycle (one weekend per month and two-weeks per year assignments), and the student must present their enlistment contract and military form DD-214 to the office of Academic Community Service Learning (ACSL).
Active Duty
Enrolled NCCU students who are called to active duty must present a copy of their military orders to the office of ACSL and the University Registrar. These students will earn 60 hours of credit towards the required 120 hours of community service.
Why are we required to complete community service?
NCCU’s motto is “Truth and Service”. Dr. James Shepard, NCCU’s founder thought that service was an essential element of a college education.In today’s competitive world, the character, commitment, and sense of purpose developed through community service provide NCCU students a clear and consistent advantage.
What will happen if I fail to complete community service?
If the community service requirement is ignored, students will have their accounts flagged. A student will be unable to register for future courses until the service requirement is met. Continued deficits in service will jeopardize graduation.
Transportation
Transportation is provided to placement sites within a 15 minute driving distance from campus. Transportation services depend upon the availability of resources.
Other Resources Available Through ACSLP
America Reads Program
America Reads Program is a national literacy effort seeking to involve college students as volunteer tutors. Students work in community schools and organizations to help young children improve reading skills.
America Reads is a work-study funded program, and students can earn work-study funding while participating in this volunteer activity. Students must complete an application with ACSLP to become eligible for the America Reads program
Focus on Retention
The ACSLP has initiated a “Focus on Retention” initiative to help faculty and students to capitalize on the research-based connection between community service/service learning and college retention.
Civic Leadership Initiative
The ACSLP provides technical support to the community agencies and organizations that partner with us to provide valuable experiences to NCCU students. In the future, a Civic Leadership Institute for students, faculty, and community will be offered through ACSLP to learn the theory and practice of civic engagement and community participation.
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