Chair of Performing Arts at College of the Canyons

Community college in Santa Clarita, California

College of the Canyons
College of the Canyons logo.svg
Motto Start hither. Go anywhere.
Type Public community college
Established 1969

Parent establishment

Santa Clarita Community Higher Commune
Chancellor Dr. Dianne G. Van Hook
President Dr. Dianne M. Van Hook

Academic staff

358 (as of 2016) [ane]
Students 17,148 (every bit of 2016)[2]
Address

26455 Rockwell Canyon Road

,

Santa Clarita

,

California

,

91355

,

United States


34°24′16″Northward 118°34′05″W  /  34.40444°N 118.56806°W  / 34.40444; -118.56806 Coordinates: 34°24′16″North 118°34′05″W  /  34.40444°N 118.56806°W  / 34.40444; -118.56806
Campus Suburban, 153.4 acres (62.1 ha)
Colors Bluish and Gold
Nickname Cougars

Sporting affiliations

CCCAA – WSC,
SCFA (football)
Website www.canyons.edu

College of the Canyons is located in Santa Clarita

College of the Canyons

Location in Santa Clarita

Show map of Santa Clarita

College of the Canyons is located in the Los Angeles metropolitan area

College of the Canyons

Higher of the Canyons (the Los Angeles metropolitan surface area)

Bear witness map of the Los Angeles metropolitan area

College of the Canyons is located in California

College of the Canyons

Higher of the Canyons (California)

Bear witness map of California

Higher of the Canyons (COC) is a public community college in Santa Clarita, California. It comprises the Santa Clarita Community College District. The college is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges and has campus locations in Valencia and Canyon Country.

History [edit]

Local voters approved the formation of the college in 1967. Information technology officially opened in 1969, operating in temporary quarters on the campus of William South. Hart High School in Newhall. In 1970, the college purchased a permanent campus site along the eastward side of Interstate 5, south of Valencia Boulevard and north of McBean Parkway. The college relocated to a collection of modular buildings on the site in 1970 as permanent facilities were being congenital. Over the years, educational facilities have been built to ensure that they blend with the natural attributes of the location, creating a relaxed and comfortable physical surround.

Campus [edit]

Santa Clarita Performing Arts Center, College of the Canyons

The college is located on 153.iv acres (62.1 ha) of rolling, tree-dotted hills in the neighborhood of Valencia in the urban center of Santa Clarita in northern Los Angeles Canton, California.

Recent additions to the campus include a 926-seat performing arts center, congenital in partnership with the city of Santa Clarita, that offers academic, community and professional productions. The facility, which likewise holds a smaller experimental theater, opened in tardily 2004. A new Music/Dance Edifice opened adjacent to the performing arts center in 2005. As of early on 2006, construction was nether fashion on a new High-Tech Classroom Building (34,000 square feet) and a major expansion of the Laboratory Building.

In 2007, the college opened its Coulee Country campus on a lxx-acre (28 ha) site located at 17200 Sierra Highway, Santa Clarita, CA 91351. The campus had an enrollment of three,845 in the fall of 2009. Its get-go permanent building, the Applied Technology Didactics Center, was scheduled to open up in 2011 to provide education and preparation in a variety of high-demand "light-green" technology fields. The campus is equanimous primarily of modular buildings that are situated to all-time accommodate planned permanent buildings as they are built in the years to come. The campus has an outdoor venue, the Carl A. Rasmussen Amphitheater, that has hosted a variety of campus and community events such as the popular Star Party.

Academics [edit]

With 191 full-fourth dimension faculty members (every bit of fall 2009), the college offers Associate of Arts and Associate of Science degrees in 69 academic programs, also as credentials in 82 certificate programs. University of the Canyons, a center college high school operated by the William S. Hart Union High School District, opened on the College of the Canyons campus in 2002 allowing promising high school students to attend high schoolhouse and college concurrently. The college also oversees the University Center, a collection of public and private universities that offer advanced degree programs on the college's campus, eliminating the need for residents to commute long distances to earn their degrees.

Also operating at the college are the Heart for Applied Competitive Technologies and the Employee Training Institute, both of which have helped local businesses become more efficient and train employees in the latest emerging fields. The Small Concern Evolution Center and the i3 Avant-garde Technology Center, hosted by the higher, leverages higher resources and provides improver support and seminars to assistance entrepreneurs and modest business owners.

Pupil life [edit]

Fall Demographics of student body
Ethnic Breakdown 2018[3]
Hispanic and Latino American 48%
African American half dozen%
Asian American 11%
Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander 0%
White 30%
Multiracial Americans 2%
International students ane%
Unknown 2%
Female person 46%
Male 54%

Since 1994, the COC Speech Team has been recognized nationally at 6 consecutive Phi Rho Pi National Tournaments for all three major areas of speech contest. Headed by Professor Michael Leach, the team has advanced in its success over the years. Well-nigh recently, the team left the 2013 Phi Rho Pi National Tournament with five medals including, one gold, one silver and 3 statuary medals.

Athletics [edit]

The college athletics teams are nicknamed the Cougars and competes equally a fellow member of the California Customs College Athletic Association (CCCAA) in the Western State Briefing (WSC) for all sports except football game, which competes in Southern California Football Association (SCFA).[4] The college currently fields 8 men's and nine women's varsity teams; including baseball, men's and women's basketball, men'south and women's cross country, football game, men's and women's golf, men'southward and women'southward soccer, softball, men'due south and women's pond, women's lawn tennis, men's and women's track and field, and women'due south volleyball.

The men's golf team has won nine state championships 1991 and 8 since 2000 (2000, 2002, 2006, 2008, 2013, 2015,2017 and 2019) women's golf won the state title in fall of 2001,2007 and back to back championships in 2018 and 2019. This is the third time that the women's and men's team have won back to back state championships in the same academic year (Fall 2001, Spring 2002, Fall 2007, Spring 2008 and in Fall 2018 and Spring 2019) The men'due south football team won the national championship in 2004. The men's ice hockey club won the ACHA Division III National Title in 2011. The men's baseball squad has also won three state championships 1981, 1983 and 1986.

As of 2017, COC has won 179 conference titles, 31 land titles, and 1 national title. Of the conference titles, baseball holds 23, men's basketball game holds 8, women's basketball game holds 15, men'southward cross country holds four, football holds 11, men'south golf holds 23, women'south golf game holds viii, women's soccer holds x, softball holds 14, men's swim holds 8 individual titles, women's swim holds 1 individual title, women's dive holds 2, men's rail and field holds two squad titles and 27 individual titles, women's runway and field holds 1 team title and 17 individual titles, and women's volleyball holds 5.[5] The 31 state titles are held by 7 teams: baseball (3), men'southward track and field (vii), women's track and field (ii), men's golf (10), woman's golf game (4), football (1), and men'south cross land (four).[6] The one national title was won past COC football game in 2004.[7]

Filming location [edit]

  • The Amazing Race: All-Stars (aired February 23, 2014 on CBS) – the football field was used for the opening segment where the UCLA's "The Solid Golden Sound" marching band performed the evidence'due south theme song[viii] [nine]
  • Disney Channel Games
  • Hamburger: The Motion Picture (1986) - used equally Busterburger University[10]
  • The Girl Next Door (2004) – used as the site of the primary characters' loftier school[eleven]
  • NCIS – equally "Waverly University"[12]
  • The Newsroom – used as the site of Will's spoken communication on America's recent decline[13]
  • Weeds – used as the site of Doug'southward office, Shane'due south school, and the local community higher[14]
  • Dark Skies (2013)
  • Recovery Road - used equally Maddie Graham'due south high school (Parsons-Bell)
  • Knight Rider (1984). Campus and football game stadium used in an episode titled "Knights of the Fast Lane". The stadium was chosen Taylor Stadium, home of the California Cougars football game squad. The mascot of College of the Canyons is the Cougars.
  • NCIS: Los Angeles season 8, episode eight ("Parallel Resistors").

Notable alumni [edit]

  • Marquise Brown, American football game histrion, Baltimore Ravens
  • Steven Dehler, model, actor and dancer
  • Matt Moore, American football player, Oregon State, Miami Dolphins, Carolina Panthers
  • Ivan Dorschner, Pinoy Large Blood brother: Teen Clash 2010 5th Big Placer, model and player
  • Adam Kovic, internet personality (Machinima, Funhaus)
  • Kevin McHale, (Artie Adams from Glee), Player, singer, dancer, vox actor
  • Aaron Mitchell, former American football player, Dallas Cowboys
  • Domata Peko, erstwhile American football player, Cincinnati Bengals and Denver Broncos
  • Jason Pierre-Paul, American football actor, New York Giants
  • Isaac Sopoaga, former American football player, San Francisco 49ers (2004–2012)
  • Brian Vranesh, professional golfer who has played on the PGA Tour and Web.com Tour[15]
  • Christy Smith, former California State Assembly member (38th commune)[16]
  • Suzette Martinez Valladares, California State Assembly member (38th commune)

See also [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ "College of the Canyons Contour (2018-19) | Valencia, CA".
  2. ^ "College of the Canyons Profile (2018-19) | Valencia, CA".
  3. ^ "2018 USNEWS: College of the Canyons Overview".
  4. ^ "2019-xx CCCAA Directory" (PDF). California Community College Athletic Association. Retrieved 15 April 2020.
  5. ^ "Higher of the Canyons Conference Championships - College of the Canyons". canyons.prestosports.com . Retrieved 2017-10-26 .
  6. ^ "Higher of the Canyons State Championships - Higher of the Canyons". canyons.prestosports.com . Retrieved 2017-ten-26 .
  7. ^ "College of the Canyons". canyons.prestosports.com . Retrieved 2017-10-26 .
  8. ^ Rebecca Kendall, UCLA Bruin Marching Band sets musical footstep for earth-spanning race Archived 2014-02-28 at the Wayback Automobile, UCLA Today, February 18, 2014
  9. ^ "Back in the Saddle" Season 24 Premiere, CBS, February 2014
  10. ^ "Hamburger: The Motion Moving-picture show (1986)". IMDb.
  11. ^ "The Daughter Adjacent Door (2004)". IMDb.
  12. ^ "NCIS Filming Location Information". awardspace.com. Archived from the original on 2012-03-02. Retrieved 2011-07-11 .
  13. ^ The Newsroom - Jeff Daniels Answers "Why Is America The Greatest State?". YouTube. 6 November 2014. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12.
  14. ^ "Weeds". filming.90210locations.info.
  15. ^ "Brian Vranesh". PGATour. Archived from the original on 2012-10-26. Retrieved December iii, 2012.
  16. ^ "Christy Smith elected as 38th District's next Assemblywoman". The Santa Clarita Valley Proclaimer. Nov sixteen, 2018.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Official athletics webpage

bardwellmosperwrongs.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/College_of_the_Canyons

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