Organization:Indian River State College

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[ ⚑ ] 27°25′25″N 80°21′29″W / 27.423693°N 80.357928°W / 27.423693; -80.357928

Indian River State College
Indian River State College.png
TypePublic college
Established1959
PresidentEdwin R. Massey, Ph.D.
Location
Fort Pierce
,
Florida
,
United States
Websitewww.irsc.edu

Indian River State College (IRSC) is a public college in Fort Pierce, Florida. It serves the counties of Indian River, Martin, Okeechobee and St. Lucie.

History

The college was established in 1959 as Indian River Junior College and located in a former public school building in Fort Pierce. IRJC moved to its current main campus on Virginia Avenue in 1963 after the city of Fort Pierce donated the site to the institution. In 1970, the Board of Trustees decided a name more fitting of the College's service to the community was needed, and it was renamed Indian River Community College. This was in keeping with the national trend for public junior colleges to drop the word "junior" in favor of 'Community." Within the confines of the College, the school is called The River or 'the ersk', pronouncing the school's acronym, IRSC. The school's mascot is the Pioneer.

On 10 September 2007, IRCC's Board of Trustees voted unanimously to change the college's name to Indian River College, as it began its transition into a four-year institution. The name change needed to be enacted into law by the Florida Legislature.[1] Ultimately, the school's name was changed to Indian River State College by the college's board of trustees effective 1 July 2008.[2]

Campus

The main campus occupies a 87 acres (35 ha) site that was formerly the Fort Pierce landfill site. It has branch campuses in Okeechobee (Dixon Hendry campus), Port St. Lucie (Pruitt campus), Stuart (Chastain campus) and Vero Beach (Mueller campus) plus additional learning centers facilities in the area.[3]

Academics

Nine bachelor's degree programs have been added in middle and secondary school teacher education in math and science, exceptional student education, nursing, organizational management, public safety administration and healthcare management. Indian River State College is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to award Associate and Baccalaureate Degrees. The institution offers additional educational programs such as Technical Certificates and Applied Technology Diplomas. The institution also offers an Adult High School Program that allows adults that have not graduated high school to continue earning credits that may be counted towards their completion of the GED. IRSC also participates in the dual enrollment state program to allow students to take college classes at a discount while in a public high school. They host the Clark Advanced Learning Center, a technology-based high school as a joint venture between the Martin County School District and IRSC.

The Kight Center for Emerging Technologies is #1 in technology in the nation for mid-size colleges. This designation was awarded by the American Association of Community Colleges and the Center for Digital Education for 2005, 2006, and 2007.[4]

In September 2014, the college was named as one of the ten best community colleges in the United States by the Aspen Institute.[5] In 2018, the college was regarded runner-up for the best state college in the United States by the Aspen Institute. Then again in 2019, it won another from the Aspen Institute, for the #1 best state college in the United States.

Athletics

The college athletic teams, which are nicknamed the Pioneers, compete in the Southern Conference of the Florida State College Activities Association, a body of the National Junior College Athletic Association Region 8. The college has very successful swimming and diving team. Indian River men's swimming and diving have won 45 straight NJCAA swimming and diving championships, and the women's team has won 37 straight national championships.[6] With 45 consecutive wins, IRSC currently holds title to the longest unbroken U.S. championship winning streak in any sport at the collegiate level. The women's team brought home their 37th overall title and extended their consecutive titles to 37.[7][8]

Notable people

Angel Pagán
  • Mike Bianco, Head coach of the University of Mississippi baseball team
  • Sion Brinn, Olympic swimmer
  • Rob Cordemans, Olympic baseball player for the Netherlands
  • Michael Marrone, heavyweight boxer
  • John McCormack, college baseball coach at Florida Atlantic
  • Rusty Meacham, professional baseball player
  • Angel Pagán, professional baseball player
  • Steve Pearce, professional baseball player
  • Ralph Poppell, member of the Florida House of Representatives
  • Fabrizio Scaccia, professional football player
  • Luke Scott, professional baseball player
  • Cory Spangenberg, professional baseball player
  • Jonny Venters, professional baseball player
  • Gordon Touw Ngie Tjouw, Olympic swimmer

References

External links