About North Arkansas College
A comprehensive, public two-year college, North Arkansas
College provides a variety of educational opportunities to the citizens of
Boone, Carroll, Marion, Searcy, Newton, and Madison counties, its service area
in northern Arkansas. A conservative
estimate of North Arkansas
College’s annual economic
impact on its service area is over $80 million.
This includes extra income earned by area residents because they attended
Northark ($69.3 million, based on a study by CC Benefits, Inc.), money spent by
the college and its employees each year in the community ($9.2 million), and
federal assistance to Northark students over and above the cost of tuition and
books ($900,000 plus each semester).
Northark offers transfer and technical degree programs,
one-year technical certificates, certificates of proficiency, customized
business and industry training, adult basic education (GED) classes, and
non-credit community education courses. The institution is especially proud of
its leadership in the use of educational technology, in community outreach and
partnerships, and in health education.
Information technology programs offered to students include
Cisco, Microsoft, Adobe, and Comp TIA certification training, and degree
programs in web and graphic design, software support, applied programming,
network technology, and geographic information systems.
North
Arkansas College
is a charter member of ARKnet,
Arkansas' higher education
computer network. The college was among the first in the state to develop a web
page; provide Internet access to all faculty, staff, and students; offer on-line
courses; and become a regional training center for Cisco Systems. Faculty and
students enjoy high speed, fiber optic, networked computer labs and classrooms
in the John Paul Hammerschmidt Business and Conference Center.
Northark has a fiber optic gigabit Ethernet backbone providing high-speed
network access to each college workstation.
Using a
fiber-optic interactive television system provided by Ozarks Unlimited Resources
Educational Cooperative, North
Arkansas
College
provides college classes to area high schools.
Residents are also offered an opportunity to complete bachelor’s degrees
in Human Resource Development via ITV through the
University
of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
Beginning in the fall semester of 2007, class schedules
include more web courses and sections designed to allow students to customize
their classes for either Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays or Tuesdays and
Thursdays to help minimize transportation costs for students.
Allied Health students make up almost one-third of
North
Arkansas
College
graduates. The college offers career tracks for allied health students in
Licensed Practical Nursing (LPN), Registered Nursing (RN), Certified Nursing
Assistant (CNA), Radiologic Technology, Medical Laboratory Technology, Surgical
Technology, and Emergency Medical Technician-Paramedic.
In 2007, students will see the construction of new facilities
for the College’s Allied Health Division.
Plans are underway to build a 11,000-square-foot addition on the South
Campus. This space will house
nursing labs and classrooms for Registered and Practical Nursing and the Medical
Laboratory Technology and Surgical Technology programs.
Two-thirds of degree-seeking students at
North
Arkansas
College
during the fall semester of 2006 received need-based financial aid.
Sixty-one percent (61%) of Northark students are female.
Although most of the college’s students are 18-20 years old, the average
age of Northark students is 26.
Northark serves many students who are single parents or the first in their
family to attend college.
North
Arkansas College
is the first institution in the state to be accepted as an AQIP institution.
AQIP, the Academic Quality Improvement Program, is an alternative means
of accreditation now offered by the Higher Learning Commission of the North
Central Association of Colleges and Schools.
AQIP allows participating institutions
to meet accreditation standards by developing and using processes which lead to
continuous improvement.
North
Arkansas College
is an acknowledged leader in forming community partnerships and providing health
education in northern Arkansas.
The college partnered with North Arkansas Regional Medical Center (NARMC) in
1996, creating the North Arkansas Partnership for Health Education (NAPHE), an
organization dedicated to professional and community health education.
Beginning as a local partnership, NAPHE has expanded to a regional coalition
with over 60 participants. With
support from the University
of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, NAPHE
now operates its programs as AHEC-NW at Harrison.
Traditional liberal arts students are very important at
North
Arkansas
College. Northark enjoys an excellent relationship
with area universities and provides the first two years of a baccalaureate
degree in most majors. Occupational programs in Accounting; Administrative
Support; Business Management; Collision Repair Technology; Automotive Service
Technology; Computer Aided Design; Construction Equipment Operation; Crime Scene
Investigation; Electronics; Biomedical Electronics; Heating, Ventilation and Air
Conditioning; Law Enforcement Administration; Industrial Systems Technology;
Medical Coding; Medical Transcription; Network Technology; Software
Applications; Truck Driving; and Welding are also available.
Through the spring semester of 2006, more than 54 students in
John
Brown University’s Advance Program had completed a
bachelor’s degree in Organizational Management after taking all of their classes
at North Arkansas College.
During the spring semester of 2002, Northark and Arkansas Tech formed a
partnership that allows students to take courses which lead to selected ATU
baccalaureate programs. Tech degrees
available at Northark are Information Systems, Information Technology, Nursing,
and Early Childhood Education. The University of Arkansas,
Fayetteville, and Franklin University
also offer bachelor’s degree programs at Northark.
North
Arkansas College
has an Honors Program with special classes and facilities for outstanding
students. A full range of student activities is available at North Arkansas
College. Students have the
opportunity to participate in drama, career and recreational organizations,
athletic teams, and intramural competition.
Federal and state grants have provided North Arkansas
College with several programs over the
years, including additional advising opportunities for students through Student
Support Services, Talent Search,
Educational
Opportunity
Center, and Career Pathways programs. With its
Learning
Assistance
Center,
North Arkansas College
is a leader in offering college preparatory courses that help prepare students
to take transfer English and math classes.
The college also offers tutoring in a number of academic areas.
North Arkansas College
is one of two Arkansas
community colleges selected recently to receive a federal Title III grant from
the U.S. Department of Education designated specifically for student success.
The $399,932 award, which is renewable for a total of almost $2 million
over five years, will be used to develop programs promoting student success.
The grant announcement was made in fall of 2006 and will fund the
addition of new innovative teaching
strategies and technology such as smart classrooms to help students succeed.
PLATO, also a computerized instructional delivery system,
provides the primary mode of instructional delivery in Technical Math I and II
and Applied Algebra and Trigonometry.
It is used to supplement instruction in developmental math and
composition courses. PLATO also provides modules to support instruction in
reading, science, and other disciplines, and it can help students prepare for
the ACT, COMPASS, and Praxis exams.
Along with its services to traditional and non-traditional
college students, North Arkansas
College offers courses,
seminars and workshops through its Community Education and Business-Industry
programs. Credit and non-credit courses are designed to enhance job skills,
provide personal enrichment, or be taken just for fun.
North
Arkansas College
houses one of the outstanding Adult Basic Education-GED programs in the state.
An original recipient of a federal Right-to-Read grant, Northark’s ABE-GED
program has served thousands of northern
Arkansas
adults by providing free tutoring in basic skills such as reading and math and
with courses that prepare students to take the General Educational Development
(GED) examination.
North
Arkansas College
makes its facilities available to non-profit groups for meetings and other
activities. Each year more than 60 area groups conduct over 200 meetings at North
Arkansas
College. The college also
sponsors academic and athletic camps and competitions.
During the 1999-2000 academic year, Northark started its John
Paul Hammerschmidt Lecture Series. Dr. Jerry Linenger, a retired U.S. Navy
Captain and NASA Astronaut whose mission aboard the Russian space station Mir
was one of the most dramatic and dangerous in space history, delivered the first
JPH Lecture Sept. 11, 1999. Each
year the North Arkansas College Foundation sponsors JPH Lectures during the fall
and spring semesters.
Building an indisputable history of bold leadership during its
first decade, Northark committed itself to innovation and service by developing
off-campus programs. Today, two of those off-campus programs are fully
accredited Arkansas
colleges, Arkansas State University-Mountain Home and Northwest Arkansas
Community College in
Bentonville. In 1993, Northark was a partner in another 'first' in Arkansas: North Arkansas Community College
and Twin Lakes Technical
College became the state's
first community college-technical college union.
North
Arkansas College
is expanding to serve community needs.
In 2005 the college purchased the former Regions Plaza in Harrison. In
return for its $1.2 million investment, North
Arkansas
College
now has a 65,000-square-foot building located on one full block near downtown Harrison. The deal also includes a parking lot at the
corner of East Ridge
and North Walnut.
Northark is in the final stages of plans to renovate the
portion of the facility formerly housing Regions Bank, creating the L. E. ‘Gene” Durand Conference
Center.
The new facility will include several breakout rooms and a central
meeting room large enough to host banquets and other community events. College
programs already located in the tower section of the building include the Dr.
Dan J. Hawkins Community Health Resource Center, Continuing and Community
Education, Adult Education, Career Pathways, and federal TRIO Programs.
Finance and Administration, North Arkansas College Foundation,
Institutional Advancement, Public Relations, and Microcomputer Services have
also moved to the Center Campus.
A $1.1 million library and classroom construction project was
completed by Northark in June of 1992, and the John Paul Hammerschmidt Business and Conference Center was opened in the summer of 1997
at a cost of about $1.8 million. The facility houses the college's information
technology and business programs and features a display of awards, photographs
and other memorabilia from Harrison native
Hammerschmidt's 26 years in Congress.
The Bill Baker Amphitheatre, named after the college’s founding
president, Dr. Bill Baker, was completed in the fall of 2000.
Dr. Jeffery R. Olson was selected March 2, 2001, as the second
president of North
Arkansas
College. Dr. Olson came to
North Arkansas College
from Orangeburg-Calhoun Technical College
in Orangeburg, S.C., where he served as president for six
years. Previously, he was dean of
occupational education at Coastal
Carolina
Community College from 1989 to 1991 and Vice
President of Learning at the same institution from 1991 until 1995.
Under Olson’s leadership Northark is focused on the economic development
of its service area, working in partnership with the Harrison Chamber of
Commerce and other area organizations to prepare area citizens for the job of
the future.
Northark had an enrollment of 2,047 credit students during the
fall semester of 2006 and a spring semester enrollment with 1,934 students in
2007. In recent years, the college
reorganized its technical, business and information technology programs,
established a Certification and Testing Center, and formed a new division of
Business and Technical Programs. The
Certification and Testing
Center offers high end
certifications from companies like Microsoft ®, CompTIA®, Adobe® and
Macromedia®. Additionally, the
center offers Automotive Service Excellence exams and Federal Aviation
Administration exams.
The college’s Northark Technical
Center, which serves area
high school students with postsecondary occupational training, registered 131
students in the fall of 2006 and 110 in the spring of 2007.
The program provides an opportunity for area high school juniors and
seniors to enroll in a number of technical/vocational programs in the afternoon
from 1 to 4 p.m. These programs include Automotive Service Technology,
Collision Repair Technology, Computer Aided Design, Construction Technology,
Electronics Technology, Geographic Information Systems, Heating, Ventilation,
and Air Conditioning, Industrial Systems Technology, Medical Professions
Education, Network Technology, Restaurant Management, and Welding Technology.
Students receive college credit for courses completed in these programs and many
are able to complete one year Technical Certificates at the same time they
graduate from high school.
Northark added three new Technical Certificates of Proficiency
in 2007: Automotive Service Technology, Collision Repair Technology, and
Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning.
New Certificate programs include Computer Support Technician and Windows
Development. Northark established a
Digital Media Lab located in the South Campus Library.
The lab is equipped with modern computers and peripheral equipment
allowing students to create video, audio, web, and print media using the latest
technology.
North
Arkansas College
has hosted two of the nation's last three presidents. President George Bush was
at Northark in 1985 and again in 1997 to dedicate facilities named after his
longtime friend John Paul Hammerschmidt. President Bill Clinton visited both
campuses on several occasions as Governor of Arkansas.
For university transfer, workforce development, information
technology, healthcare education, and cultural events, residents of northern
Arkansas
“Think Northark First.”
More information about North Arkansas
College is available
through Northark's Internet home page:
www.northark.edu.