Talk:Claremont McKenna College

Latest comment: 12 days ago by Clementine Sandoval
edit

An editor paid by CMC came through recently and added a bunch of content that goes against WP:BOOSTERISM and other guidance, e.g. a recentist section listing all CMCers who have won notable scholarships in recent years. I've reverted some of it and tagged the article for further review. Given some of the other elements here, like this professional photo claimed as own work, I suspect that this may not be this article's first encounter with paid editing. Sdkbtalk 03:20, 16 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

@Sdkb Thank you for the notice! GuardianH (talk) 15:49, 19 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

Revision of existing Wikipedia page

edit

Hi there!

I was hired to edit the existing Wikipedia page for Claremont McKenna College (CMC) and disclosed this on my user page earlier this summer. Below is the reasoning for the revisions provided by CMC, and below that is the proposed copy. I had begun editing the page directly as advised on the Discord Help channel but then received conflicting advice to add the proposed changes here instead, which I've done below. The citations aren't complete because I stopped partway, but I used the citation tool on the platform. I'll finish adding the citations, formatting the table, and adding images once the proposed changes have been accepted.

Please don't hesitate to let me know if there are questions or comments. Thank you!

--

We are proposing updates to the Wikipedia page for Claremont McKenna College to ensure that it adheres to Wikipedia's core guidelines, particularly the Five Pillars, as well as the recommendations outlined in the WikiProject Higher Education. Our goal is to enhance the accuracy, neutrality, and encyclopedic quality of the page while aligning its format with peer institutions' Wikipedia pages.

Alignment with Wikipedia's Five Pillars

  1. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia – We aim to ensure the content on Claremont McKenna College’s page is factual, verifiable, and supported by reliable, third-party sources, avoiding promotional language. This is especially important in maintaining the neutral point of view (NPOV) required by Wikipedia.
  2. Neutral point of view – We are taking steps to remove any non-neutral, promotional, or biased language. This involves reducing any undue weight given to particular achievements or events and ensuring balanced representation of the institution's history, achievements, and controversies
  3. Free content – All of our updates will conform to Wikipedia's free content policies and will not violate copyright by including proprietary materials. We aim to provide information that is freely accessible and editable by all members of the Wikipedia community.
  4. Civility and respect – In line with the civility guideline, we welcome input from the Wikipedia community and invite collaboration to make sure the page reflects Wikipedia’s standards.
  5. No firm rules – While adhering to Wikipedia's guidelines, we recognize the community’s dynamic nature and the fact that Wikipedia evolves through consensus. We remain open to suggestions and will work together with editors to reach a consensus that benefits all.

Benchmarking with Peer Institutions

In our efforts, we have also examined the Wikipedia pages of similar institutions, such as the Pomona College, University of Chicago, Colby College, Colgate University, and Middlebury College. These pages serve as models in terms of tone, structure, and comprehensiveness. By using these peer pages as benchmarks, we hope to ensure that Claremont McKenna College’s page maintains a consistent quality and structure in comparison to other institutions of similar caliber.

This update to Claremont McKenna College’s Wikipedia page also aligns more closely with the goals of the WikiProject Higher Education to improve the quality, coverage, and accuracy of Wikipedia articles related to higher education institutions and topics.

We recognize that Wikipedia is a community-driven platform and we are committed to adhering to community standards. We welcome feedback on our proposed changes and appreciate the time and effort that the editor community puts into maintaining the integrity of Wikipedia as a trusted resource.

Thank you for your consideration.

--

Claremont McKenna College (CMC) is a private liberal arts college located in Claremont, California, in the United States. Established in 1946 as a men's college, it was officially incorporated by the State of California in 1947 and began admitting women in 1976. Its mission at the time of founding was to foster leadership among students in the fields of government, economics, and international affairs, and its intellectual framework, developed by George C. S. Benson, CMC’s first president, and his wife Mabel Gibberd Benson, combined a liberal arts education with practical skills, a pedagogical approach the college maintains today.

CMC is one of seven institutions included in the Claremont Colleges.[1] Known as the 7Cs, the consortium includes five undergraduate colleges (the 5Cs) and two graduate institutions. Besides CMC, they include:

Students enrolled at any of the schools in the consortium may access academic programs, research opportunities, and extracurricular activities across all member colleges, which also share facilities such as dining halls and libraries throughout the contiguous campuses. CMC joined the consortium after Pomona and Scripps and numbered 1,422 undergraduate and postgraduate students in 2023.[2]

Faculty at CMC are noted for exhibiting a more conservative political orientation than those at similar liberal arts institutions.[3][4][5][6] Still, in 2019, Heterodox Academy awarded CMC its Institutional Excellence Award for having done the most among colleges and universities “to advance or sustain open inquiry, viewpoint diversity, and constructive disagreement either on its own campus or nationally.”[7]

References

  1. ^ "Claremont McKenna College Admissions Profile and Analysis". liberalarts.admissionsconsultants.com. Retrieved 2024-09-05.
  2. ^ "Claremont McKenna College". Forbes. Retrieved 2024-09-05.
  3. ^ Baskin, Jon (March 17, 2017). "The Academic Home of Trumpism". The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved November 21, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ Wilner, Michael (February 7, 2011). "CMC's Conservative Heart". The CMC Forum. Retrieved March 24, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ Watanabe, Teresa; Gordon, Larry (November 13, 2015). "Claremont McKenna College students embrace a lesson in activism". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved November 21, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ Greene, Howard; Greene, Greene (August 16, 2016). The Hidden Ivies (3rd ed.). New York: Collins Reference. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-06-242090-9. Conservative in nature, Claremont McKenna best serves those who are either conservatives themselves or who welcome the opportunity to challenge themselves in such a setting.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  7. ^ "2019 Open Inquiry Award Winners". Heterodox Academy. 2019. Retrieved September 5, 2024.

History

edit

Known as Claremont Men’s College at its founding in September 1946, CMC began with seven faculty and an incoming class of 86 students,[1] many of whom were World War II veterans attending college on the G.I. Bill.[2]

The college did not initially offer majors but established them in 1951, when majors in accounting, business administration, economics, government, humanities, and international affairs were offered. In partnership with Scripps College, CMC also offered a fine arts major.

In 1975, CMC trustees voted to admit women in a two-thirds vote supported by students representing the Associated Students of Claremont Men’s College;[3] the first women admitted to CMC joined in 1976. The move followed a national trend toward coeducation among schools such as Yale, Dartmouth, Amherst, and Williams. CMC president Jack Stark, who led the college during the transition, considered it CMC’s most important moment. Women who matriculated in those early years graduated with degrees still bearing the Claremont Men’s College moniker.[4]

In 1981, CMC was renamed Claremont McKenna College in honor of founding trustee Donald McKenna.[5]

In November 1989, the father of a CMC student hired a stripper to perform in the college’s dining hall, sparking student protests. Then-CMC president Jack Stark told The New York Times that he did not wish to comment on “whether [the incident] was or was not degrading to women.”[6]

The 21st century

edit

In September 2007, alumnus and trustee Robert Addison Day contributed a $200 million gift to CMC for the creation of the Robert Day Scholars Program and a master’s program in finance.[7] Some faculty worried that the gift might “distort the college into a single-focus trade school.”

In January 2012, a high-ranking official later identified as former dean of admissions, Richard C. Vos, was discovered to have been inflating SAT scores by 10–20 points over six years in submissions to the U.S. News & World Report. TIME magazine wrote that “such a small differential could not have significantly affected U.S. News & World Report rankings.” A study commissioned by the college claimed to have found no evidence that the misrepresentations were meant to inflate the school’s ranking in the publication’s annual listings. The controversy prompted Forbes to omit CMC from its yearly rankings in 2013.

Also in 2012, CMC published a Campus Climate Task Force report that described a “pervasive, ‘hyper-masculine’ and heteronormative ethos at CMC” and noted that, “while female students are valued as friends and intellectual colleagues during the day, at night and particularly on weekends, female students reportedly feel they are objectives targets for sex or ‘hook-ups.’” CMC and the other schools in the consortium responded by increasing efforts to reform this culture, including hiring a dedicated Title IX staff member, creating the 7C EmPOWER Center, conducting bystander training under the Teal Dot certification, and establishing a student-run advocacy organization that provides 24/7 support for victims of sexual assault.

In November 2015, the dean of students resigned after students protested what they believed to be insufficient institutional resources for marginalized students. The dean had implied that minority students did not meet CMC’s vision when she wrote in an email,

We have a lot to do as a college and a community. Would you be willing to talk to me about these issues? . . . They are important to me and the DOS staff and we are working on how we can better serve students, especially those that don’t fit our CMC mold.

Her response to an incident of allegedly culturally appropriative Halloween costumes was also deemed anemic. The student protests closely followed and were associated with the 2015–2016 University of Missouri protests.

On April 6, 2017, approximately 300 student protestors from across the Claremont Colleges blockaded the Marian Miner Cook Athenaeum to prevent conservative pundit Heather Mac Donald from speaking. The college live-streamed the talk, and seven students involved in the blockade were disciplined, with some receiving suspensions.

Academics

edit

CMC provides a comprehensive liberal arts education focused on economics, government, international relations, and public affairs. It operates on a semester schedule and features 13 departments and 32 majors. To graduate, students must complete a senior thesis and meet the requirements for their major, which they may complement with one of 11 “sequences” of interrelated courses across various disciplines.

CMC also offers accelerated and dual degree programs that allow students to earn advanced degrees in less time than traditional pathways. For example, students may choose joint programs or accelerated master’s degrees in business administration, economics, political science, and psychology. In addition, the college offers an M.A. in Finance.

Class sizes are small, with about 88% of classes comprising fewer than 20 students. The average student-faculty ratio is 7.9 to 1.

More than 90% of CMC students graduate within four years. In 2024, CMC alumni early in their careers have an earning potential of approximately $89,800 per year; mid-career alumni have an average earning potential of $175,000 annually.

Rankings

edit

CMC regularly ranks highly in multiple categories in third-party evaluations of colleges and universities. Below are recent honors.

  • #3 among Best Liberal Arts Colleges in America
  • #4 among Best Small Colleges in America
  • #5 among Best Colleges in California by Salary Potential
  • #7 among Best Value Colleges in America and #14 in Best Value Schools
  • #9 among Best Colleges in America
  • #11 among National Liberal Arts Colleges
  • #37 among top producers of Fulbright Scholars in 2023–2024
  • #73 for free speech among all American colleges and universities

Admissions

edit

U.S. News & World Report classifies admissions to CMC as “most selective.” In 2023, the college received 5,709 applications and accepted 591 applicants, an acceptance rate of 10.35%. Retention is high at 95%.

CMC’s student population is diverse, with 47 U.S. states, 46 foreign countries, and the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and Guam represented among the student body. About 14% identify as international or nonresident aliens. Gender representation splits roughly equally between the sexes, and 21% identify as first-generation college students.

The median family income of CMC students is $201,300, with 58% coming from the top 10% of highest-earning families and 4.8% from the bottom 20%.

Research institutes

edit
Student Composition in 2023
RACE ENROLLED
White, non-Hispanic 37%
Hispanic/Latino 15%
Asian, non-Hispanic 16%
Nonresident 14%
Two or more races 8%
Black, non-Hispanic 5%
Race or ethnicity unknown 5%
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander <1%
American Indian or Alaskan Native > 0%

Students at CMC may engage in graduate-level research and collaborative projects at any of the schools’ 11 research institutes:

  • Berger Institute for Individual and Social Development
  • Financial Economics Institute
  • Gould Center for Humanistic Studies
  • Keck Center for International and Strategic Studies
  • Kravis Leadership Institute
  • Lowe Institute of Political Economy
  • Roberts Environmental Center
  • Mgrublian Center for Human Rights
  • Rose Institute of State and Local Government
  • Randall Lewis Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship
  • Salvatori Center for Individual Freedom

Robert Day School of Economics and Finance

edit

CMC primarily provides undergraduate instruction but introduced a graduate program at the Robert Day School of Economics and Finance in 2007. The school offers undergraduate majors in economics, economics-accounting, and a financial economics sequence. It also offers a one-year Master of Arts in Finance degree. In June 2020, RePEc ranked it #4 in its list of top U.S. Economic Departments at Liberal Arts Colleges.

Endowment and tuition fees

edit

CMC’s endowment exceeds $1.1 billion, accounting for nearly 32% of the college’s operating budget.  It is the 28th-largest endowment per undergraduate in the country. In the 2022 fiscal year, its endowment value per full-time-equivalent student equaled $805,832.

Per its 2022–2023 Financial Report, CMC has total net assets worth $1.78 billion, and its core operating budget was $134 million.

For the 2024–2025 academic year, the estimated cost of attendance for both in-state and out-of-state students is $91,510. That total includes tuition, transportation, room and board, books and supplies, and a miscellaneous budget of $1,500.

Approximately 48% of students receive financial aid. The average need-based scholarship and grant award package is $58,735, while the average need-based financial aid package totals $67,295. The average student debt at graduation is $20,978.

In 2021, the Campaign for CMC: Responsible Leadership raised more than $1 billion to double the size of CMC’s campus and to grow its science programs, faculty, and financial aid packages.

Campus

edit

Located 35 miles east of Los Angeles in Southern California, CMC sits on 69 acres at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains. The campus is within a short walking distance from the shops and restaurants of downtown Claremont Village, and the majority of its buildings are designed in the California Modernism style reflective of the era in which the college was founded.

New construction has replaced or joined existing buildings in recent years.

  • In October 2011, the Kravis Center academic complex opened on the west end of campus. Designed by Rafael Viñoly, the all-glass, LEED-certified structure sits atop a Mesabi black-granite reflection pool. It stands as the flagship of CMC’s then-largest capital campaign, which raised $635.2 million.
  • In 2015, CMC kicked off a public art initiative with the acquisition of Mary Weatherford’s From the Mountains to the Sea. Several major installations have since been added, such as Chris Burden’s Meet in the Middle (2016), Ellsworth Kelly’s Totem (2017), four sculptures by Carol Bove (2020), Jeppe Hein’s Modified Social Benches (2022), and Pae White’s Qwalala (2023),.
  • In September 2016, the LEED-certified Roberts Pavilion sports complex opened at the south end of campus. Designed by John Friedman/Alice Kimm Architects, it has won numerous awards, such as the AIA Pasadena & Foothill Design Honor Award in 2016 and the Los Angeles Business Council Architectural Award in the Education category in 2017.

These developments were guided in part by the campus master plan led by Moore Ruble Yudell Architects and Planners in 2009–2010. Expected to inform development for about 30 years, the campus master plan includes the construction of up to 979,000 gross square feet of new facilities and the demolition of up to 256,112 gross square feet of existing structures.

Student life

edit

CMC has no fraternities or sororities, and approximately 95% of students live on campus. The college guarantees housing for all four years of study, with dormitories divided into three regions: North Quad, Mid Quad, and South Quad. Apartments located on the east edge of campus typically house seniors.

Student government

edit

Composed of an executive board and student senate, the Associated Students of Claremont McKenna College (ASCMC) is the college’s official student government. Chaired by a president, the executive board consists of both elected and appointed members who meet weekly to discuss long-term projects and initiatives. Chaired by the ASCMC executive vice president, the senate passes resolutions to influence institutional policy, funds student-led initiatives, and invites administrators and other CMC stakeholders for town hall discussions.

Marian Miner Cook Athenaeum

edit

In September 1983, the Marian Miner Cook Athenaeum broke ground. Known in the 7Cs community as “The Ath,” it is the central venue for intellectual and social events on campus. Trustee Donald McKenna envisioned its original programming for “refreshment and wide-ranging discussion” similar to the “loosely structured atmosphere of an ancient Roman academy or a nineteenth-century London club.”

Today, a speaker series takes place at the Ath over dinner multiple nights a week, with students given priority seating at the head table with visiting speakers. In the afternoons, it hosts “Ath Tea,” a tradition including servings of Rice Krispies treats.

Model United Nations (MUN)

edit

Claremont McKenna College Model United Nations (CMCMUN) represents the college on both national and international stages. In 2023, it won the Best Small Delegation award at Harvard WorldMUN, its sixth delegation award in 11 years. The team ranked fifth in the world division of the 2022–2023 North American College Model UN. Each year, CMCMUN hosts McKennaMUN, a high school conference for which CMC students manage logistics and mentor high school participants.

Athletics

edit

CMC athletes compete alongside their counterparts at Harvey Mudd College and Scripps College. The mens’ teams are known as the Claremont-Mudd-Scripps (CMS) Stags, and the womens’ teams are known as the CMS Athenas. The team colors for both are cardinal and gold.

The teams joined the NCAA Division III within the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC) in 1958. They have won more than 300 conference championships and nine national team championships in the NAIA or NCAA D-III. According to the Division III Winter Learfield Director’s Cup Standings for the 2023–2024 year, CMS ranked 9th among all Division III programs and first among SCIAC colleges.

CMS supports 21 men’s and women’s teams and showcases eight athletic facilities:

  • Biszantz Family Tennis Center for tennis
  • Burns Track Complex for track and field
  • John Pritzlaff Field for soccer
  • John Zinda Field for football and lacrosse
  • Matt M. Axelrood Pool for swimming and diving
  • Roberts Pavilion for basketball and volleyball
  • Athena softball field

Traditions

edit

Several traditions at CMC involve water:

  • Ponding: At midnight on a student’s birthday, friends sing “Happy Birthday” to the celebrant and throw them into the fountains found at the center of campus in a tradition known as “ponding.”
  • Senior thesis celebration: On the day their theses are due, seniors submit them to the registrar and are then given a bottle of champagne that the class president usually provides. Students spend the rest of the day celebrating in the campus fountains.

Welcome Orientation Adventure

All incoming first-year students at CMC participate in the student-run, pre-orientation Welcome Orientation Adventure (WOA) program. They join in student-led activities such as backpacking, camping, rock climbing, canoeing, and community service.

Media

edit

CMC students consistently advocate for the independence of student papers in order to maintain journalistic integrity and freedom from institutional influence. Efforts have been made to separate The CMC Forum from the direct authority of the ASCMC to avoid conflicts of interest and promote unbiased reporting.

The Student Life (TSL)

edit

Founded in 1889, The Student Life (TSL) is the oldest college newspaper in Southern California and the largest media organization at the 7Cs. Published weekly, it serves as the publication of record for the colleges, featuring news, opinions, lifestyle, and sports coverage. It is funded jointly by the consortium’s student governments.

The Golden Antlers

edit

Established in 2012, The Golden Antlers is a satirical and humorous publication hosted by CMC but staffed by undergraduates from the 5Cs.

The CMC Forum

edit

The oldest CMC-specific outlet, The CMC Forum offers campus news, opinions, and lifestyle coverage. Originally a print publication, it is now online-only.

The Claremont Independent

edit

Founded in 1996, The Claremont Independent is known for its conservative and libertarian viewpoints. The magazine frequently covers the 7Cs’ political culture and has been featured in national conservative media outlets. It is funded entirely through private donations and often sparks intense discussion among students.

People

edit

CMC has numerous alumni and faculty of note. Notable alumni include novelists Jack Houghteling and Shelby Van Pelt; Julie Sweet, chair and CEO of Accenture; Daniel Kan, founder and CPO of Cruise; journalist Michael D. Shear; and Steve Bullock, former governor of Montana. Actor Robin Williams attended CMC but did not graduate.

Notable faculty include computer scientist Ran Libeskind-Hadas, historian Wendy Lower, political scientists John J. Pitney and Minxin Pei, poet Henri Cole, and writer Jamaica Kincaid. Clementine Sandoval (talk) 00:01, 6 September 2024 (UTC)Reply

  1. ^ "History of the College". Claremont McKenna College. Retrieved September 5, 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ Starr, Kevin (1998). Commerce and Civilization: Claremont McKenna College, The First Fifty Years 1946–1996 (1st ed.). Claremont, CA: The President and Trustees of Claremont McKenna College. p. 1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  3. ^ Starr, Kevin (1998). Commerce and Civilization: Claremont McKenna College, The First Fifty Years 1946–1996 (1st ed.). Claremont, CA: The President and Trustees of Claremont McKenna College. pp. 244–247.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  4. ^ Bosley, Lisa (Spring–Summer 2015). "Holding their own". CMC Magazine. Retrieved April 10, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ "Donald McKenna Biography". cmc.edu. Retrieved June 12, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ "Campus Life: Claremont McKenna; Striptease At Salad Bar Provokes Protest". The New York Times. November 12, 1989. p. 55. Retrieved November 21, 2018.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ "Claremont McKenna Gets $200-Million Donation". The Chronicle of Higher Education. September 27, 2007. Retrieved October 6, 2007. {{cite web}}: Check |archive-url= value (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)