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Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
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Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) is a public university in Edwardsville, Illinois, United States.[5] Located within the Metro East of Greater St. Louis, SIUE was established in 1957 as an extension of Southern Illinois University Carbondale.[6] It is the younger of the two major institutions of the Southern Illinois University system. SIUE has eight constituent undergraduate and graduate colleges, including those in arts and sciences, business, dentistry, education, engineering, graduate study, nursing, and pharmacy, in addition to it main campus it also hosts the East St. Louis Center closer to the city of St Louis.

Key Information

While most of SIUE's students are from Illinois, out-of-state and international students account for 19% of enrollment.[7] SIUE offers in-state tuition for undergraduate students from all 50 states.[8] The university offers numerous extracurricular activities to its students, including athletics, honor societies, student clubs and organizations, as well as fraternities and sororities. The university has more than 115,000 alumni.[9]

Fielding athletic teams known as the SIU Edwardsville Cougars, the university participates in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division I level as a member of Ohio Valley Conference (OVC).

History

[edit]

During the post–World War II economic expansion, a lack of public higher education was noticeable in the growing Metro-East area.[10] Organizations from across the area took it upon themselves to relieve this lack. Southern Illinois University (SIU), over 100 miles (160 km) to the region's south, opened a residence center in Belleville in 1949.[11] In 1955, the Edwardsville Chamber of Commerce founded the Southwestern Illinois Council for Higher Education (SWICHE), tasked with creating a more permanent solution to the problem.[12] SWICHE and SIU's board of trustees met and stated their agreement in goals in 1956, and, that same year, an Executive Committee from the Board of Education in Alton invited Alonzo Myers, Chairman of the Department of Higher Education for Higher Education at New York University, to perform a study of the need for higher education in the Metro-East.[12]

Myers's 1957 report, The Extent and the Nature of Needs for Higher Education in Madison and St. Clair Counties, outlined the precise need:[13] the 1950 census showed that students in the region in question were only half as likely as those in other regions of the country to finish a four-year college degree program (owing specifically to the lack of a nearby university and the financial difficulties of going to school away from home at other state universities).[14] Businesses in the area were in need of college-trained employees, but were forced to hire outside of the area,[15] especially in the fields of business administration, nursing, education, and industrial technology.[16] Myers concluded that, rather than more residence centers, private schools, or junior colleges, a branch of a four-year public university would best serve the needs of the area.[17] He recommended SIU, the closest large public university, as the best candidate.[18]

Acting on the report, in 1957, SIU purchased both a former building of East St. Louis High School and the campus of Shurtleff College in Alton as temporary facilities. Even with all of the research and planning that had gone before, the true need had been underestimated. When the new campuses opened, officials planned on having about 800 students; 1776 enrolled, and enrollment doubled within two years.[6]

The dual campus solution was temporary, mostly because both facilities were in urban areas with little room for expansion even at the time of purchase. Land for the permanent campus was purchased in 1960—2,660-acre (1,076.5 ha) of farmland. Money for the purchase came from A) contributions from individuals, businesses, industries, labor unions, civic organizations, and PTAs; B) loans from 14 Metro-East banks; and C) state funding.[19] The location, west of Edwardsville, was chosen due to its accessibility via highways, its usability as an educational campus, and its proximity to the major urban areas of the Metro-East.[20]

In 1960, a bond issue was voted upon by the residents of Illinois; the measure passed by more than 100,000 votes, providing funds for the construction of the campuses of SIUE and the school now known as the University of Illinois Chicago.[21] A conference entitled Environmental Planning-Edwardsville Campus (EPEC) took place in 1961, highlighting the architectural and spatial design of the future campus.[22] The campus was designed by architects Hellmuth, Obata and Kassabaum]. Ground was broken in 1963[23] and, with the first two buildings (Peck Hall and Lovejoy Library) completed, classes were first held on the Edwardsville campus in fall 1965.[24] A series of dedication ceremonies from 1966 to 1969 highlighted the ongoing growth of the campus.[25]

Prior to the development of the Edwardsville campus, six "Divisions of Academic Programs" were established for the SIU Residential Centers in Alton and East St. Louis on March 4, 1960. When the move was made to the new campus in 1965, the "Divisions" became the Schools of Business, Education, Fine Arts, Humanities, Science and Technology, and Social Sciences.[26] The nursing program, which was to become the School of Nursing when the new campus opened, was established on March 29, 1964.[26] On April 18, 1969, the board of trustees voted to establish the School of Dental Medicine, which opened in 1972.[26] The School of Engineering originated as the Engineering Department of the School of Science and Technology and was elevated to School status in 1982.[26] Between September 9, 1993, and July 1, 1995, the Schools of Fine Arts, Humanities, Sciences, and Social Sciences and the University College merged to become the College of Arts and Sciences.[26] The newest of SIUE's schools, the School of Pharmacy, began classes in 2005.[27] In 2014, the School of Education was renamed to School of Education, Health and Human Behavior to better represent the diversity and growth of its academic programs.[28]

During its early days of rapid growth, the school became increasingly independent of its parent school in Carbondale. In 1971, SIU's board of trustees made official the campus's name of Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville.[29]

Mississippi River Festival

[edit]

From 1969 to 1980, the SIUE campus hosted the Mississippi River Festival (MRF), a summer outdoor concert series that featured performances by the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra (which was in-residence on campus during the MRF's early years) and high-profile classical, jazz, folk, pop, and rock artists including the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Van Cliburn, Aaron Copland, Bob Hope, The Who, Yes, Chicago, Joan Baez, The Eagles, the Modern Jazz Quartet, and The Grateful Dead. The MRF stage was situated beneath a large tent, which also covered the reserved seating section, with lawn seating available outside on the grass of the expansive natural amphitheater. The MRF attracted crowds of up to 30,000.[30]

Campus

[edit]

Main campus

[edit]
SIUE sign at the entrance to the main campus

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville is located on 2,660 acres (1,076.5 ha) of trees and lakes, making SIUE one of the largest college campuses in the US by land area.[31] The campus is home to a wide variety of university programs and facilities—classroom and labs, arts and theatre spaces, research centers, student housing, and athletic and recreational venues.

The majority of SIUE's academic buildings are located in the Core Campus, inside Circle Drive on the south side of the 77 acres (31.2 ha) Cougar Lake. Many of the academic buildings were constructed during the 1960s, shortly after the land for the campus was purchased, with major additions during the 1970s. Another building boom has occurred since the turn of the 21st century, as the university experienced enrollment growth and expanded programs.[32]

The center of the Core Campus is the Stratton Quadrangle, named after William Stratton, who served as the governor of Illinois from 1953 to 1961 and was the university's first commencement speaker in June 1960.[33] The quadrangle is designed with no direct pathway between two buildings, this provides students with exposure to nature during the commute between buildings.[33] The quadrangle also contains The Rock, which is constantly changing color because student organizations, such as fraternities and sororities, compete to see who can keep it painted their colors the longest.[33] The original Rock, a rose quartz boulder, was donated by the supplier of stone for the original Core Campus buildings. It was stolen during the night of October 7–8, 2003, and was found in pieces nine days later. A replacement Rock of limestone was donated by the Unimin Corporation in 2003, installed on March 14, and dedicated on April 7. The remnants of the original Rock were put on display in the Morris University Center.[34]

Lovejoy Library

The Lovejoy Library is named after Elijah Parish Lovejoy and sits on the north side of the Stratton Quadrangle. It opened in 1965 and now holds over 800,000 volumes of almost 600,000 titles in book form plus over 1.67  million titles on microfilm across its four floors.[35] Three of the university's major academic buildings lie to the east of Lovejoy Library and northeast of the quadrangle. Peck Hall is named after John Mason Peck and opened in 1965. It houses the College of Arts & Sciences and the Departments of Anthropology, History, Sociology, Social Work, English, Foreign Languages, Political Science, and Philosophy.[36] Alumni Hall opened in 1976 and was originally known as Classroom Building III. It houses classrooms and the offices of the School of Nursing and of the departments of Speech Communication, Art Education, Art Therapy, Geography, and Public Administration and Policy Analysis.[37] Founders Hall was originally known as Classroom Building II and opened the same year as Alumni Hall. Founders contains various classroom spaces and is home to the schools of Business and Education and the Army ROTC program.[38]

The Science Building Complex is located to the west of Lovejoy Library. The Science Lab Building East (originally the Science Building) opened in 1966. Construction of the new Science Lab Building West began in late 2009, as part of a $72 million project to build it and completely renovate the existing building. The new building opened for use in the Fall of 2013, and the gutting and renovation of the old building is underway with completion originally scheduled for the Fall of 2016.[32][39][40][41] Renovation work on Science Building East was halted in 2015 due to the Illinois budget crisis, but SIUE "forward funded" the work on the two large lecture halls, which were already back in use when work resumed. Science Lab Building West was rededicated in September 2018, the completion late but well under budget.[42][43]

Dunham Hall opened in 1966 and underwent an expansion in 1995. The building is named after Katherine Dunham and houses the Departments of Music, Mass Communications, Theater and Dance, and the Information Technology Services.[44] In addition to departmental offices, the building houses music studios, theater studios and workshops, the student television studio, a multimedia computer lab, video editing lab, photojournalism dark room, and WSIE-FM and web-radio radio stations.[44] There is also a theater seating approximately 400, with a proscenium stage, orchestra pit, theatrical lighting, and special effect trap doors. The building is located south of the Science building and directly west of the quadrangle.[44]

The Morris University Center is named for former SIU president Delyte W. Morris and opened in 1967. The MUC is the heart of student activity and lies on the southern edge of the Stratton Quadrangle.[45] The facility contains dining halls, restaurants, a ballroom, conference rooms, the university bookstore, a bowling center and game room, a Starbucks coffeeshop, the University Bookstore, and other student services, as well as offices for various student organizations and volunteer activities.[45] The Student Success Center is one of the newest facilities on the SIUE campus. It opened in 2009 and is connected to the MUC.[32] Available to students 24 hours a day, the Success Center houses academic and personal support services all in one convenient location, a study lounge and coffee bar, meeting rooms, and a Mac computer lab. The building also contains the offices of student government, disability support services, academic advancement, health services, a career development center, and international programs.[46] The building was constructed using Green building techniques that includes the use of sustainable and recycled construction materials.[46]

Rendleman Hall is located to the east of the University Center and is named after former SIUE president John S. Rendleman. It opened in 1969 and serves as the main administrative building, housing the admission review and processing office, the bursar's office, and the housing office.[47] Rendleman Hall, since 1970, has also been the location of the branch U.S. Post Office for ZIP code 62026, which serves SIUE's campuses in Edwardsville, Alton, and East St. Louis.

Other academic, arts and athletic buildings are located to the west of the campus center. The Theater Department also uses the Metcalf Experimental Theater, a separate building named after James F. Metcalf (father of actress Laurie Metcalf) that opened in 1984 as a replacement for an old Quonset hut that was used for productions.[48] The Engineering Building, opened in 2000 and expanded in 2013–14, houses the SIUE School of Engineering. It includes classrooms, laboratories, and offices for the school and its departments.[49] The Art and Design Building, opened in 1994 and expanded in 2012–13, contains the offices of the Department of Art and Design and its classrooms and studios.[50] The Center for Spirituality & Sustainability, formerly known as the Religious Center was completed in 1971 and is located near the Art and Design Building.[51] It is topped by a plexiglass Geodesic dome which resembles a globe with Edwardsville oriented at the top.[51] The center was designed by R. Buckminster Fuller and internationally known architect, Shoji Sadao, and dedicated by Fuller, who was a visiting professor at SIUE at the time. The 90th Meridian runs through the building.[52]

In celebration of the 2018 Illinois Bicentennial, the Southern Illinois University Edwardsville campus was selected as one of the Illinois 200 Great Places[53] by the American Institute of Architects Illinois component (AIA Illinois).

Athletic facilities

[edit]

The Vadalabene Center (also known as the "VC"), named after state senator Sam M. Vadalabene, opened in 1983 and is the focal point for SIUE athletics, containing many of the university's sports facilities.[54] The Vadalabene Center's arena was renamed to First Community Arena at the Vadalabene Center by First Community Credit Union in 2021. The company will pay $2.3 million over the next 10 years for the new name. The center was expanded in 1993 with the addition of the Student Fitness Center, which was improved in 2009.[55] It was further expanded in 2008 as SIUE's athletics began the transition from NCAA Division II to Division I. Among the changes were an increase in the arena seating from 2,400 to over 4,000.[56] All of the athletics department offices are housed in the Lukas Athletics Annex to the VC, which was opened in 2012.[57] The VC is home to not only Intercollegiate Athletics, but also to Campus Recreation and to the Departments of Kinesiology and Health Education of the School of Education.[54] Korte Stadium and its Bob Guelker Field opened in 1994 and serves the men's and women's soccer and track and field teams.[58] Cougar Field, home of the softball team, and its Fulginiti Indoor practice facility (opened 2012) sits just to the northwest of Korte Stadium.[59] The Simmons Baseball Complex is home to the Cougar baseball team and is located on New Poag Road, west of Stadium Drive, in the northwest corner of the campus.[60] The Cougar Tennis Courts are just west of the Vadalabene Center[61] and the SIUE Cross Country Course is on the north edge of the campus at the intersection of North University Drive and New Poag Road.[62]

Student housing

[edit]

Housing consists of several residence halls and Cougar Village, which are the university's on-campus apartments. All campus student accommodations are suite-style and furnished. Each contains social lounges and multiple service units such as computer labs and Learning Resource Centers. Student housing surrounds the academic buildings in the central portion of the SIUE campus.

Woodland and Prairie Hall are located on the southern side of campus between Circle Drive and South University Drive. The two serve as freshmen dorms, providing housing for a combined 1,000 students. Woodland Hall opened in 1994 and is the oldest residence hall. It houses 500 freshmen students.[63] The hall is multifunctional and contains conference and meeting rooms. Woodland Hall has a small student café, Woodland Cart, which provides students with food during the week.[63] Freshmen Focused Interest Communities (groups based on common interest or academic majors) are spread out among the three freshmen residence halls. Prairie Hall opened in 1998.[63] It houses 500 freshmen students. Prairie Hall contains meeting rooms and a computer lab, and Freshmen Focused Interest Communities.[64]

Bluff and Evergreen Halls lie to the west of Circle Drive and are the two newest residence halls on the SIUE campus. Bluff Hall opened in 2001 and houses 500 freshmen students.[65] Bluff Hall recently added an Esports Arena into the building. Evergreen Hall is the newest residence hall, opened in 2007, and houses about 500 students.[66] Evergreen is designed for upper-class residents, it features apartment and suite-style living.[66] Students are able to choose from multiple floor plans. The hall also has multiple service facilities, such as fitness center and meeting rooms.[67]

In addition to the traditional, dorm-style residence halls, Cougar Village is a student apartment development that opened in 1970.[68] The complex is located along the eastern shore of Cougar Lake and is composed of around 500 two and three-bedroom apartments in 62 buildings that house approximately 1,500 undergraduate students, graduate students, and family residents.[68] The village was originally called Tower Lake Apartments, after the man-made lake on the north side of campus located behind the water tower and the heating and refrigeration plant. Tower Lake is now called Cougar Lake. Apartments provide multiple floor plans and are a short walk or shuttle ride from the core campus.[68] Cougar Village also includes the Cougar Village Commons Building, located in the middle complex. The Commons contains an information desk, laundry facilities, a lounge, a computer lab, and the Common's Grill and Convenience Store. In 2010, a project was developed and approved to remodel eight of the buildings in Cougar Village into a Greek Village, providing on-campus fraternity and sorority houses, but the project was later dropped.[69]

University Park

[edit]

University Park is a 330-acre (133.5 ha) mixed-use technology park located on the eastern side of the SIUE Campus.[70]

The School of Pharmacy Lab houses the SIUE School of Pharmacy and began offering courses to students admitted to the SIUE doctor of Pharmacy program in August 2005.[71] The building is located in SIUE's University Park.[70] The School of Pharmacy also has space in the adjacent 200 University Park Building and in the nearby Technology and Management Center and the Biotechnology Laboratory Incubator, which also contains Biology and Chemistry labs, as well as the Geographic Information Systems offices.[72]

The National Corn-to-Ethanol Research Center (NCERC) is the world's only facility dedicated to researching the ways and means of converting corn (maize) to ethanol.[73]

Additional facilities

[edit]
Bridge over Turtle Pond in the Gardens at SIUE, fall 2005

The Environmental Resource Training Center (ERTC) is designated by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) as the State of Illinois' center for continuing education of personnel involved in the operation, maintenance and management of drinking water and wastewater treatment systems.[74] The ERTC is located on the north side of the campus along New Poag Road and features lab and classroom space, as well as a 30,000 gallon-per-day wastewater treatment and drinking water treatment plant.[75]

The university developed a 35-acre (14.2 ha) botanical garden, known as The Gardens at SIUE, that is also a living laboratory in support of the educational and research missions of the university.[76] The Gardens are located off Cougar Lake Road, near the Cougar Lake Recreation Area and the Cougar Village apartments.

The Southwest Illinois Advanced Manufacturing Center (SIAM) was launched in 2005, performing applied and basic research for product/process development and improvement.[77] The center was funded by the U. S. Department of Commerce Economic Development Administration. The Hoffman Center on the N.O. Nelson Campus of Lewis and Clark Community College in Edwardsville provided over 35,000 sq ft (3,300 m2) of space for SIAM.[78] The center was closed in 2012.

Alton Campus

[edit]

SIUE's campus in Alton, Illinois, 17 miles (27 km) from the main campus, the site of SIU's Alton residential center from 1957 to 1965, now houses the School of Dental Medicine and its offices, classrooms, labs, clinics, and ancillary services.[79]

The Alton campus is also home to the Alton Museum of History and Art, located inside Loomis Hall.[80]

East St. Louis Center

[edit]

SIUE's East St. Louis Center, located in East St. Louis, Illinois, 22 miles (35 km) from the main campus, traces its beginnings when Southern Illinois University Board of Trustees in response to local people's demands for more education in the Metro East established residence centers in East St. Louis in 1957. The current location is the center's fifth in the city since 1957, but it is the first site specifically designed and built for this purpose. The center provides educational programs, community outreach health services, and cultural events to an economically deprived area of the Metro East. It also provides clinical and practicum experiences relating to urban community needs for various university baccalaureate, professional, and master's programs and for urban studies research.[81]

The ESLC operates in conjunction with the SIUE East St. Louis Charter High School to prepare students for career and college programs.[82] The ESLC includes a Head Start Program providing services to children up to age five, pregnant women, and families; a Latchkey Program to provide local families with after-school care for children ages six to 12;[83] and the SIUE East St. Louis Center Performing Arts Program, established in 1967 (formerly known as the Katherine Dunham Center for the Performing Arts and originally as the Performing Arts Training Center) to provide cultural and performing arts classes and workshops.[83] The center also houses the Community Nursing Services office of the SIUE School of Nursing,[84] the East St. Louis Dental Clinic of the SIUE School of Dental Medicine,[85] an eye care clinic, and the East St. Louis Community College Center.[81]

Springfield Campus

[edit]

SIUE also maintains an off-site location in Springfield, Illinois, for graduate nursing students as part of the SIUE School of Nursing.[86] Classes at the Springfield Campus are delivered via live televideo conferencing as well as traditional lectures.[86] The location is near the SIU School of Medicine and works with the School of Medicine to help students engage in interdisciplinary activities.[86]

Academics

[edit]

The university is classified among "D/PU: Doctoral/Professional Universities".[87] Total enrollment in fall 2015 was 14,265, the largest overall enrollment in the university's history. The new freshman class of 2015 of 2,096, representing the second largest group of new freshmen in SIUE's history. The average ACT Score for SIUE's fall 2015 freshman class was 23.2; the national average freshman ACT score is 20.9.[88] There are more than 91,000 living alumni. The student body in the fall of 2013 came from all 102 Illinois counties, 38 states, and 43 foreign nations. The international student population exceeds 300. The top five countries represented on campus are India, Turkey, Iran, China, and Nigeria.[89]

SIUE offers 65 baccalaureate degrees, eight post-baccalaureate certificate, 49 master's degrees, 12 post-master's or specialist certificates, and doctoral degrees in Dental Medicine, Pharmacy, Educational Leadership, and Nursing Practice.[90] The university also offer three cooperative Doctor of Philosophy degrees in education, engineering, and history in conjunction with SIUC.[91] Additionally, the Office of Educational Outreach provides and coordinates continuing education programs offered by several academic departments.[92]

SIUE confers degrees from eight colleges and schools, while Lovejoy Library also has status as a school that does not grant degrees:[91]

The Engineering Building as seen at night

In fiscal year 2016, SIUE faculty and staff received 162 grants and contracts for research, teaching, and service initiatives worth more than $24 million—which ranked second among more than 680 comparable public and private universities in the country. The grants awarded were from agencies that included the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Departments of Education and Health and Human Services, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.[93]

Accreditation

[edit]

SIUE has had full accreditation from the Higher Learning Commission (HLC) of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools since 1969.[94]

The SIUE School of Business and its Department of Accounting are accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB).[95] All of the SIUE School of Education programs are fully accredited by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education as well as by the Illinois State Board of Education,[96][97] and its Early Childhood Education Program is accredited by the National Academy of Early Childhood Programs.[97] In the SIUE School of Engineering, the Civil Engineering, Computer Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Industrial Engineering, Manufacturing Engineering, and Mechanical Engineering programs are accredited by the Engineering Accrediting Commission of the American Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET); the Computer Science Program is accredited by the Computing Accreditation Commission of ABET;[98] and the Construction Management program is accredited by the American Council for Construction Education (ACCE).[99] The SIUE School of Nursing is fully accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE) for a period of ten years;[100] additionally, the Certified Nurse Anesthesia Program is fully accredited for a ten-year period by the Council on Accreditation of Nurse Anesthesia Programs.[101] The SIU School of Dental Medicine is fully accredited by the Commission on Dental Accreditation of the American Dental Association (ADA),[102] and the Endodontic Residency and Periodontics Residency programs offered in cooperation with St. Louis University are also accredited by the Commission on Dental Accreditation of the ADA.[103] In the spring of 2009, the SIUE School of Pharmacy, the university's newest school, received full accreditation status from the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE).[104]

Departments within the SIUE College of Arts Sciences university are accredited or certified by: the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications,[105] the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association,[106] the Council on Social Work Education,[107] the National Association of Schools of Music,[108] the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration,[109] and the National Association of Schools of Theatre,[110] as appropriate. In addition, the American Art Therapy Association[111] and the American Chemical Society[112] have formally reviewed and approved SIUE's programs as meeting their standards.

Rankings

[edit]
Academic rankings
Master's
Washington Monthly[113]99 (USA)
Regional
U.S. News & World Report[114]72 (in the Midwest)
National
Forbes[115]554

U.S. News & World Report Best Colleges 2019 edition dropped SIUE 25 places from 2014 so that SIUE became tied for number 72 in the "Best Regional Universities-Midwest" category.[116] Back in the 2014 edition, U.S. News & World Report Best Colleges had placed SIUE at number 47, and at that time placed it among the top 10 public universities, both in the "Best Regional Universities-Midwest" category. Plus, back then in 2014, SIUE was tied with Butler University at No. 3 of the "Up-and-Coming Schools (Midwest)".[117]

Washington Monthly, a national political magazine, in its "2018 College Guide and Rankings" ranked SIUE at number 99 among private and public colleges and universities in the nation that are classified as "Masters Universities" with the rankings based on contributions to the public good.[118] Previously, in 2014, Washington Monthly had ranked SIUE 40th in its "Masters Universities" category, the 2018 ranking dropping SIUE 59 places.[119]

The National Council for Home Safety and Security's 2018 listing of the Safest College Campuses in the U.S. placed SIUE 11th among schools with an enrollment over 10,000; this placed the school No. 1 in Illinois and ranked ahead of all institutions in Missouri.[120] The online news magazine The Daily Beast ranks SIUE 21st in the nation among its 2010 Top 50 Safest Colleges: University Primetime News ranked it as the ninth safest. These ratings led to feature stories on SIUE's safety. SIUE police officers are academy trained and engaged in a community policing program.[121][122][123]

SIUE students' commitment to community service through volunteer efforts earned them a spot on the 2009 and 2010 President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll of the Corporation for National and Community Service, an honor given to only six US colleges and universities each year.[124]

SIUE's School of Business was ranked as a "Best 310 Business School" in the 2010 edition of the Princeton Review.[125] In The Princeton Review's 2012 rankings, SIUE's business school was ranked in the top 294.[126] In 2006, SIUE's Department of Psychology won a national award from the Council for Higher Education Accreditation. In 2014, the same department won a departmental service award from the American Psychological Association.[127]

Athletics

[edit]
SIUE Athletics wordmark
Vadalebene Center
Cougar mascots
SIUE once housed two live cougar mascots. From 1968 to 1985, the female cougar, Chimega (an Apache word for cougar), was the official mascot. On March 18, 1985, Chimaga died of old age. In July 1982, Kyna became the second official mascot of SIUE. After only five years at SIUE, Kyna was sent to a wildlife preserve in Southern Illinois near Metropolis. SIUE no longer houses live mascots.[128]

The SIUE athletic teams are nicknamed the Cougars. SIUE is a member of the NCAA at the Division I level.[129] The university is a member in the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) and most teams compete in the OVC.[129] However, the university also fields certain sports that the OVC does not sponsor competition in; SIUE is an associate member of the Mid-American Conference for wrestling.[130] Previously, they were an associate member of the Missouri Valley Conference for men's soccer and an associate member of the Southern Conference for wrestling from 2007 to 2017.[131][132] Until 2008, SIUE competed in the NCAA's Division II as a member of the Great Lakes Valley Conference (GLVC). The university has won 17 NCAA National Championships, 16 of which occurred while the university was a member of Division II.[133]

The school mascot was Cory the Cougar until 2010, when the school decided to get a new mascot, "Eddie the Cougar"—the new name being a direct reference to Edwardsville.[134] The number 57 on Eddie's jersey is in honor of the university's founding in 1957.[135]

Student life

[edit]

Student clubs and activities

[edit]

Numerous extracurricular activities are available to students, including nearly 150 registered student organizations, Greek organizations, and sports clubs.

Many of the student activities are overseen by the staff of the Kimmel Belonging and Engagement Hub[136] which also offers students the opportunities to engage in community volunteer programs.[137] Among these programs, students can take part in the Student Leadership Development Program, which consists of 60 hours of volunteer service and attending a structured reflection session. Half of the volunteer hours must be completed in the community. Participants can receive credit toward a leadership transcript by documenting service hours and by providing an account of skills obtained and duties performed.[138]

The Department of Campus Recreation sponsors a wide variety of intramural sports, club sports, and recreation activities such as group fitness classes, aquatic programs, gym and fitness programs, special events, and outdoor recreation activities and trips.[139]

Greek organizations

[edit]

The Greek community at SIUE has roughly twenty fraternities and sororities.[140]

Student media and publications

[edit]

The school newspaper, The Alestle, is named for the school's three campuses: Alton (the location of the dental school), East St. Louis and Edwardsville.[141] The Alestle is a member of the Illinois College Press Association and the Associated Collegiate Press. The Alestle is published exclusively online on Tuesdays and in print on Thursdays during fall and spring semesters and on Wednesdays during summer semesters. It was established in 1960.[141]

WSIE-FM 88.7 is the university-owned radio station that specializes in modern jazz, blues, R&B, news, SIUE sports, and student programming. The station serves the Greater St. Louis Area and Southwestern Illinois and is also available online. The station offers hands-on training for SIUE students to gain knowledge of radio station production.[142]

SIUE Web Radio is a sister organization to WSIE. The station began in 2003 as a branch of the traditional station but eventually broke off and is now a separate organization that partners with the Mass Communications Department and The Alestle.[143]

Student Government

[edit]

The Student Government (SG), SIUE's student government, serves the primary function to serve as an advocate on student issues and voice students' concerns about campus issues.[144] The organization has a combined undergraduate and graduate student senate.[144] The student government at SIUE is composed of two branches. The legislative branch consists of twelve senators elected by the student body on a yearly basis.[144] The Executive Board consists of the Student Body President, Student Body Vice President, and Student Trustee who are also elected by the student body.[144] The Financial Officer, Head Justice, Organization Relations Officer, External Affairs Officer, Equity and Wellness Officer, and Communications officer are all considered part of the Executive Board and are appointed by the Student Body President then confirmed by the Senate.[144]

Freedom of speech settlement

[edit]

In late July 2023, SIUE paid a student $80,000 to settle a legal complaint against it for faculty misconduct against a student. The student had expressed conservative views online. Other students complained the views were harmful, and gag and no contact orders were issued against her. Under the settlement, three SIUE professors must undergo compulsory First Amendment training.[145]

Notable alumni

[edit]

In the Fall of 2019, SIUE had 106,627 living alumni.[9] The SIUE Alumni Association[146] has offices in the B. Barnard Birger Hall.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
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Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) is a public comprehensive university located in Edwardsville, Illinois, approximately 20 miles northeast of St. Louis, Missouri. Founded in 1957 as an extension of Southern Illinois University Carbondale, it operates as the northern campus in the Southern Illinois University system, spanning 2,660 acres and serving the Metro East region. SIUE enrolls about 12,813 undergraduate students as of fall 2025, marking a 7.7% increase from the previous year amid national enrollment declines, with total degree-seeking enrollment exceeding 13,000 across bachelor's, master's, specialist, and doctoral programs in seven colleges including arts and sciences, business, education, engineering, health, nursing, and pharmacy. The university emphasizes affordable, high-quality education preparing students for careers, with strengths in professional fields like nursing, engineering, and business. Its athletic teams, the Cougars, participate in NCAA Division I as members of the Ohio Valley Conference, fielding 17 varsity sports including basketball, soccer, and track and field, with facilities such as the Vadalabene Center supporting competitive programs. SIUE has sustained steady growth through targeted recruitment and program efficiencies, though it has implemented budget measures including cuts to non-core offerings to maintain fiscal balance.

History

Founding and Early Years (1957–1960s)

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville originated as an upper-division extension campus of , established by the Board of Trustees in 1957 to meet surging demand for accessible higher education in Illinois's region, amid post-World War II population growth and industrial expansion near . Initial operations focused on evening and extension classes for working adults, commencing July 1, 1957, at the Alton Residence Center on the repurposed campus, with day classes starting September 24, 1957, at both Alton and East St. Louis centers in leased facilities such as a former school building. The university projected enrollment of 800 students, but received 1,900 applications, reflecting acute regional needs unmet by distant institutions. Rapid growth strained temporary sites, with enrollment reaching 3,800 by 1959 and exceeding available services. In parallel, the Southwestern Illinois Council for Higher Education, organized in 1956 following advocacy since 1955, spearheaded a private fundraising drive that secured land in Edwardsville by 1958 for a permanent on 2,660 acres of bluffs overlooking the . Groundbreaking occurred May 2, 1963, for initial structures, prioritizing a shift from off-campus extensions to a dedicated four-year . The Edwardsville campus transitioned to operation September 23, 1965, opening with the Peck Classroom Building and Lovejoy Library to accommodate expanding programs. Early centered on upper-division and offerings in professional fields like , , and —launched March 29, 1964—to align with local demands for educators, managers, and healthcare workers in the manufacturing-heavy economy. By 1960, six academic divisions, including , social sciences, and natural sciences, formalized the foundational structure, supporting enrollment growth to over 2,700 students by 1969.

Expansion and Independence (1970s–1990s)

In the early 1970s, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville pursued greater administrative autonomy from while maintaining affiliation within the broader , a trend that included separate operations for entities such as alumni services by January 1972. This shift supported localized decision-making amid growing regional demand for higher education. However, by February 1979, the Board of Trustees reversed the autonomy trend by establishing a system-wide structure led by a , balancing independence with coordinated oversight across campuses. Enrollment at SIUE surged during the , reaching a then-record high of 13,700 students in fall 1970, driven by affordable in-state tuition rates and the campus's strategic proximity to the job market, which facilitated access for commuting students from the region. The university responded to this growth by expanding academic offerings, including the initiation of graduate-level advancements; on June 6, 1980, SIUE awarded its first doctoral degrees, marking a milestone in program development. The 1980s saw a building boom to accommodate sustained demand and infrastructural needs, including groundbreaking for a facility on May 18, 1981, and its dedication as the Vadalabene Center on May 7, 1984. Additional constructions, such as the Early Childhood Center dedicated on April 24, 1986, and the Tower Lake on May 20, 1988, enhanced campus facilities for student life and academics. Into the , this expansion continued with the opening of the Student Fitness Center on April 1, 1993, and the first new student residence hall dedicated on October 13, 1994, reflecting adaptations to demographic shifts and state funding availability despite regional manufacturing downturns.

Mississippi River Festival Era (1968–1980)

The Mississippi River Festival (MRF) was launched in the summer of 1969 on the Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) campus as an outdoor series, spearheaded by university president Delyte Morris in collaboration with the . Initial events featured a mix of rock acts and classical performances, including on July 1, 1969, and the in subsequent years such as 1970 and 1980. The festival utilized a large circus tent erected on the campus grounds, drawing crowds from the metropolitan area and beyond, with early shows attracting thousands and contributing to local economic activity through ticket sales, concessions, and visitor spending. During the 1970s, the MRF reached its zenith, hosting 353 events over its lifespan and featuring prominent rock performers such as , The Who (drawing a record 31,756 attendees in 1972), and the Eagles (with 29,700 in 1975). Total attendance exceeded one million patrons across the 12-year run, with the series integrating SIUE's arts programs by showcasing , , , and alongside contemporary rock, thereby enhancing the university's cultural profile amid its growth as an independent institution. This period solidified the festival's role in campus identity, positioning SIUE as a regional hub for live performances that bridged academic and extracurricular spheres. The festival concluded after its 1980 season, with performing as the final act in August, following an announcement that no events would occur in 1981. Persistent financial losses, exacerbated by reduced state funding for public universities and the absence of a permanent performance venue, undermined viability despite subsidies and sponsorships. A shift in university leadership further prioritized academic resources over large-scale extracurricular events, reflecting broader institutional emphases on fiscal restraint amid evolving student priorities.

Modern Developments (2000s–Present)

Following the 2008 recession, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) experienced enrollment growth, reaching a peak of approximately 14,000 students in the late , driven by expanded programs in STEM fields and health professions such as and . The university established a dedicated STEM Center to support , , and outreach, while breaking ground on a new facility for its Schools of and in 2023 to address regional healthcare workforce needs. This emphasis contributed to overall institutional expansion amid state funding challenges, with enrollment dipping to around 11,900 by 2024 before rebounding 7.7% to 12,813 in fall 2025, bucking national declines. In response to the , SIUE implemented hybrid learning models, building on pre-existing blended formats to facilitate a transition to remote instruction while maintaining academic continuity. Flipped methods, later supported by a $2 million NSF grant in 2025 for STEM course redesign, aided adaptation by emphasizing pre-class preparation and active in-class engagement. Student-athletes demonstrated resilience, with NCAA (APR) scores in 2025 reflecting continued progress and a departmental GPA of 3.325, extending a 38-semester streak above 3.0. SIUE advanced through its Climate and Sustainability Advisory Board (CASAB), which coordinates initiatives for ecological integrity, energy reduction, and climate awareness as outlined in the university's strategic plan Pillar #5. Regional partnerships, such as the 2025 collaboration with The Wedge for and the Successful Communities Collaborative for community resiliency projects, strengthened ties with local governments and nonprofits. These efforts aligned with SIUE's inclusion in the 2025 WSJ/ Pulse of top U.S. colleges, recognizing value in student outcomes amid fiscal adjustments like closing an $18 million deficit via efficiencies.

Campuses and Facilities

Edwardsville Main Campus

The Edwardsville Main Campus of Southern Illinois University Edwardsville encompasses 2,660 acres of rolling woodlands and hills located atop bluffs overlooking the valley in . This expansive site, which includes a 4,000-acre and preserve adjacent to the , supports a student population exceeding 12,000, with facilities designed for academic instruction, , and . The core academic area is concentrated within Circle Drive on the south side of the 77-acre Cougar Lake, featuring key buildings such as Rendleman Hall for administration, Lovejoy Library for resources, and the Morris University Center for student services. Student housing options on campus include traditional residence halls like Bluff Hall, Woodland Hall, and Prairie Hall, which provide furnished, air-conditioned accommodations with amenities such as wireless internet and accessible units. These facilities foster a supportive community environment for undergraduates. Additionally, University Park, a 330-acre mixed-use technology park on the eastern side of the campus, facilitates research collaborations, entrepreneurial activities, and events through partnerships with businesses and SIUE's School of Business. Recreational and athletic facilities, including Korte Stadium and areas around Cougar Lake, complement the academic core with spaces for outdoor activities and events. Edwardsville itself ranks highly for safety among towns; for instance, it placed 13th nationally in SafeWise's 2020 analysis of U.S. communities based on low violent and rates. More recently, Niche rated SIUE's campus as the 12th safest in for 2026, evaluating factors like crime statistics and security measures.

Alton Campus

The Alton Campus, situated on 26 acres in , serves as the primary site for the SIU School of Dental Medicine, a specialized unit of Southern Illinois University Edwardsville focused on and clinical . Originally the campus of , a Baptist that ceased operations in 1957, the site was repurposed that year for SIUE's Alton Residence Center, where initial extension classes were held as part of the university's early expansion from . The dental school itself was established in 1972, leveraging the location's compact, elevated setting above the bluffs for a controlled educational environment with convenient access to the metropolitan area. The campus emphasizes practical, patient-centered dental training through its Doctor of Dental Medicine (DMD) program, a four-year that integrates preclinical with advanced clinical rotations. Facilities include modern laboratories equipped with 30 workstations featuring upper-body mannequins for practicing procedures such as restorations and spatial techniques, alongside dedicated wet labs for hands-on skill development. Patient care occurs in on-site clinics offering services like adult , pediatric care, and treatment, which serve the local community while providing supervised clinical experience for students; these clinics partner with regional health providers for comprehensive case management. As a smaller satellite to the Edwardsville main campus, Alton integrates with broader SIUE resources for administrative support, library access via the Biomedical Library branch, and shared academic oversight, though most instruction remains site-specific to dental programs. The campus's riverside proximity historically supported Alton's role as a hub, indirectly benefiting early SIUE extensions by facilitating regional recruitment and logistics in the area, though direct riverfront utilization for campus operations is limited.

East St. Louis Higher Education Center

The East St. Louis Center of Southern Illinois University Edwardsville operates as an urban outreach facility within the Wyvetter H. Younge Higher Education Campus at 601 James R. Thompson Boulevard in downtown , approximately 20 miles southeast of the main Edwardsville campus. This location, accessible via MetroLink rail and , facilitates community engagement in a city marked by severe post-industrial economic decline, including a 70% loss since the mid-20th century due to factory closures and suburban migration. The center's mission emphasizes enhancing through , , and service targeted at underserved families and individuals from preschool age through adulthood, prioritizing equity and empowerment in the region. Established amid East St. Louis's industrial downturn—exacerbated by outmoded manufacturing from the onward and a 31% drop in retail sales between 1960 and 1974 compared to statewide growth—the center relocated to the current campus to bolster local revitalization efforts. In 2022, the facility was renamed to honor Wyvetter H. Younge, a local advocate and former state representative, reflecting its role in addressing persistent regional disparities through accessible, community-embedded programming rather than traditional degree pathways. Operating on a smaller scale than the main campus, it caters to non-traditional students with flexible, practical offerings that accommodate working adults and at-risk youth via convenient downtown access and targeted support services. Key initiatives include the Building Futures program, which provides career assessments, , paid , workshops, and training to equip young adults with employable skills and pathways to higher education or jobs. Complementing this, the East St. Louis Learning Resource Center functions as a emphasizing and resources, fostering workforce readiness through community outreach and skill-building sessions. Additional efforts, such as partnerships for workforce development targeting local men and collaborations linking residents to SIUE faculty and research, underscore the center's emphasis on practical, equity-focused interventions amid ongoing economic challenges.

Springfield Campus

The Springfield outpost of Southern Illinois University Edwardsville functions primarily as a coordination hub for graduate students pursuing in and , capitalizing on its location in ' state capital to facilitate access to government agencies. Unlike the main Edwardsville campus, it lacks comprehensive infrastructure such as dedicated classrooms or residence halls, instead emphasizing partnerships with state entities to support internships and in legislative and executive operations. The (MPA) program, housed under the Department of and , integrates practical internships where students perform professional roles in organizations, often aligned with functions in Springfield. These opportunities prepare participants for management careers in the public and nonprofit sectors by combining coursework with real-world application, such as policy implementation and administrative tasks. Enrollment remains modest, targeting working professionals seeking advancement, which allows for tailored experiential components without large-scale facilities. Partnerships with Illinois state and local governmental organizations enable SIUE students to engage directly in policy-related activities, including analysis and , fostering causal links between academic training and governmental efficacy. This setup supports system-wide coordination within the network, extending educational reach to the capital without duplicating full resources.

Academics

Colleges and Programs

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville organizes its academic offerings into the College of Arts and Sciences and five professional schools: , and Human Behavior, , , and . This structure supports over 80 undergraduate majors, more than 40 graduate programs, and select doctoral options, with a oriented toward applied skills in fields like healthcare, engineering, and education to align with regional economic demands in the metropolitan area. The College of Arts and Sciences encompasses 21 departments providing foundational alongside specialized bachelor's and master's degrees in areas such as biological sciences, chemistry, English, , , physics, and . The delivers AACSB-accredited programs including in with specializations in accountancy, computer information systems, , , , and , plus MBA and MS options emphasizing practical and . The , Health and Human Behavior offers degrees in education (e.g., elementary, special, and secondary tracks), , , , and , with graduate pathways for teaching licensure and behavioral health leadership. The School of Engineering stands out for its applied focus, granting ABET-accredited bachelor's degrees in civil, computer, electrical, industrial, and , alongside master's programs in and sustainable infrastructure; it maintains strengths in non-linear dynamics, vibration analysis, and processes. The School of , the institution's largest program by enrollment, provides CCNE-accredited pathways including a traditional , accelerated RN-to-BSN completion, and graduate tracks like and DNP for advanced practice and roles, prioritizing clinical competencies and evidence-based care. The School of confers a degree with integrated experiential training in community and institutional settings. SIUE enrolls approximately 12,000 students across these units, predominantly undergraduates from , with a high proportion of transfer students from nearby community colleges and commuters drawn to its accessible, career-oriented programs.

Enrollment and Degrees Awarded

Fall 2025 enrollment at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville totaled 12,813 students, reflecting a 7.7% increase from the previous year and bucking national declines in postsecondary enrollment. This figure includes approximately 9,600 undergraduates and 3,200 graduate and professional students, based on proportional trends from prior years. Over the past decade, total enrollment has fluctuated, declining from peaks near 14,000 in the early to around 11,900 in fall 2024 before the recent uptick, driven by gains in first-year (19% increase to 1,826) and transfer students. Student demographics indicate a predominantly student body, with 58.6% identifying as White non-Hispanic, 8.0% Black non-Hispanic, 5.9% Hispanic, 2.5% Asian, 8.0% international, and 8.6% other or multiracial in fall 2024 data. Women comprise about 57% of undergraduates and 59% of graduate students. Racial and ethnic diversity has increased modestly over the last decade, with non-White underrepresented minority shares rising amid overall enrollment contraction, though students remain the clear majority. Retention and graduation rates highlight moderate student success. First-year retention stands at 75.7% for the fall 2023 cohort returning the following year, with overall full-time undergraduate retention around 73-78%. The six-year graduation rate for first-time, full-time students is approximately 53-56%, with a four-year rate of 37%; transfer-out rates reach 28%, indicating many students complete elsewhere. These metrics align with regional public universities but lag national peers in efficiency. In the fiscal year ending June 30, 2024, SIUE awarded 3,278 degrees, including 1,990 bachelor's, 974 master's, 123 professional doctorates, and smaller numbers of certificates and research doctorates.
Degree LevelNumber Awarded
Bachelor's1,990
Master's974
Professional Doctorate123
Other (certificates, research doctorates)191
Awards concentrate in professional and applied fields, with nursing (331 bachelor's), business administration (313 bachelor's), and psychology (149 bachelor's) leading, reflecting rising demand for health, business, and STEM programs over traditional humanities. Humanities degrees, such as in English or history, comprise under 5% of totals, consistent with broader shifts toward vocational majors amid declining liberal arts enrollment nationally.

Accreditation and Quality Assurance

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville holds regional accreditation from the Higher Learning Commission (HLC), which oversees degree-granting institutions in the North Central region of the United States. This accreditation was reaffirmed on September 18, 2025, following a comprehensive evaluation visit conducted March 31 to April 1, 2025, during which peer reviewers identified no areas of noncompliance and confirmed that the university satisfies all five HLC Criteria for Accreditation, including core components related to mission, ethics, teaching effectiveness, resources, and planning. The HLC's Open Pathway cycle governs SIUE's ongoing assurance processes, with the next comprehensive reaffirmation scheduled for the 2034-2035 academic year. Several academic programs at SIUE maintain specialized accreditations from discipline-specific bodies, ensuring alignment with professional standards in fields such as business and engineering. The School of Business is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB), placing it among the top 5% of business schools worldwide; this includes separate accounting accreditation maintained since 1987. In engineering, bachelor's programs in civil engineering, computer engineering, electrical engineering, industrial engineering, and mechanical engineering are accredited by the Engineering Accreditation Commission of ABET, verifying that graduates meet criteria for engineering practice readiness. Additional program accreditations cover areas like education (Illinois State Board of Education), nursing, and public health (Council on Education for Public Health), with annual reviews confirming continued compliance. As a public institution in , SIUE undergoes state-level oversight from the Illinois Board of Higher Education (IBHE), which mandates program reviews, efficiency assessments, and measurement of student learning outcomes to ensure fiscal and academic accountability. IBHE evaluations, such as those in 2022, have affirmed SIUE's processes for analyzing outcomes data across programs, with no reported sanctions or conditional approvals in recent cycles. Historical HLC reviews since the university's establishment in have similarly sustained full without probationary status, underscoring consistent adherence to standards amid periodic self-studies and external validations.

Rankings and Performance Metrics

In the 2026 rankings, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville placed #363 among National Universities and #196 among Top Public Schools, reflecting performance across factors such as graduation rates, faculty resources, and financial aid. /College Pulse 2025 rankings included SIUE in the top 500 U.S. colleges at #334, emphasizing value metrics like post-graduation salaries and , though this positioned it as mid-tier overall amid broader national competition. These placements underscore SIUE's regional accessibility but highlight limitations in national prestige and outcomes compared to higher-ranked publics. SIUE's four-year graduation rate stands at 37% for full-time undergraduates, with a six-year rate of 52%, indicating persistent challenges in timely degree completion that diminish overall value for time-sensitive investments. Median at graduation averages $21,846, paired with six-year post-enrollment of $46,384, yielding a debt-to-earnings profile that offers modest returns, particularly for out-of-state students facing higher net costs without proportional salary uplift. Federal data from the College Scorecard further positions SIUE below average in return-on-investment when adjusted for opportunity costs, as low completion rates amplify foregone during extended enrollment. Despite broader critiques, SIUE demonstrates strengths in regional , with graduates in fields like and benefiting from proximity to St. Louis-area employers, contributing to localized placement rates exceeding 60% in some programs based on self-reported data. This edge stems from practical ties rather than institutional ranking, as earnings align closely with Midwest medians without outperforming peers in scalable metrics.

Research and Innovation

Research Centers and Institutes

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville maintains a network of research centers emphasizing applied research aligned with regional economic and environmental priorities, such as , biofuels, and STEM education , rather than large-scale basic science endeavors. The National Corn-to-Ethanol Research Center (NCERC), established with origins tracing to 1992 and fully operational since 2003, operates as the world's only fully integrated facility for biofuels research, focusing on corn-based production, biochemicals, biomaterials, and bioproducts to support industrial clients in the biorenewables sector. This center leverages ' position in the to advance practical innovations in , including partnerships for coproduct development from ethanol byproducts. Other notable institutes include the Interdisciplinary Research and Innovation Scholarship (IRIS) Center, founded in 2009 within the College of Arts and Sciences to foster collaborative faculty across disciplines. The Center for STEM Research, Education, and Outreach promotes hands-on STEM activities and regional programming, with initiatives addressing diversity in STEM fields through stories of underrepresented scholars and partnerships to enhance introductory STEM experiences for minority students. These efforts reflect SIUE's proximity to the , informing applied projects on monitoring in local watersheds and sustainable practices, though such work remains integrated into broader environmental faculty rather than standalone institutes. Faculty-led research in these centers often incorporates undergraduate participation via the Undergraduate Research and Creative Activities (URCA) program, which supports student assistants with stipends and enables hands-on involvement in labs and projects, typically up to 90 participants per semester across disciplines. This model prioritizes in applied contexts, such as and biofuels, over theoretical pursuits, aligning with SIUE's classification as a medium-sized institution with moderate research activity.

Funding and Outputs

In fiscal year 2024, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) recorded total research and development expenditures of $21.9 million, up slightly from $19.2 million in fiscal year 2023. These figures, reported via the National Science Foundation's Higher Education Research and Development (HERD) survey, reflect funding predominantly from federal agencies (such as the National Science Foundation), state and local governments, and industry partners, with external awards totaling over $40 million proposed or secured in recent cycles. Such levels position SIUE as a mid-tier research spender, far below the $50 million annual threshold required for Carnegie R1 classification, indicating limited pursuit of high-volume federal research-intensive status. Research outputs at SIUE emphasize applied technologies over prolific , with faculty generating scholarly works in fields like and but at rates lower than those at R1 institutions, where per-faculty metrics often exceed 2-3 peer-reviewed papers annually. Patents and inventions focus on practical applications, including biofuels production processes developed through the National Corn-to-Ethanol Research Center (NCERC), such as advancements in biobutanol and methods supported by Department of grants. For instance, NCERC collaborations have contributed to patented industrial techniques, though overall patent filings remain modest, with SIUE's office handling disclosures rather than achieving widespread licensing revenues. Efficiency analyses highlight fiscal constraints, with expenditures directed toward regional priorities like rather than expansive portfolios; administrative costs, while not uniquely quantified for SIUE, align with broader trends where indirect rates recover facilities and overhead but yield tangible impacts primarily in applied domains. This model prioritizes state-aligned projects, such as Illinois-funded expansions for biofuels, over competing for large-scale federal grants that drive higher publication volumes elsewhere.

Collaborations and Impacts

SIUE maintains collaborations with regional institutions, including , through a $2 million National Science Foundation grant awarded in 2025 for developing flipped teaching models in STEM education, enhancing pedagogical methods across metro-area campuses. The university's E3 Fueling Growth initiative partners with the University of Illinois Extension and Monroe County , funded by U.S. Department of Agriculture grants, to advance science and technology applications in rural industries such as and . Additionally, the (NCERC) collaborates with firms to scale biofuel production technologies, providing customized and testing services that integrate industry needs with academic expertise. These partnerships secure industry funding, including nearly $500,000 from the USDA in 2020 for projects reducing post-harvest agricultural losses through improved production techniques. In healthcare and related sectors, SIUE supports regional apprenticeship hubs targeting and healthcare assistance, fostering skill development aligned with local employer demands. The Successful Communities Collaborative program facilitates one-year engagements with municipalities, addressing community-specific challenges via interdisciplinary teams. Research-driven workforce at NCERC has trained professionals for and roles, contributing to regional development and supporting over 6,977 jobs in the metropolitan area through broader university operations tied to these efforts. initiatives, such as the 2020 air and noise quality network, generate localized data for assessing urban-rural interfaces, informing municipal planning though direct policy causation remains indirect and community-scale. Overall, these activities yield measurable local economic multipliers, with SIUE's integrated and amplifying regional output by an estimated $1.3 billion in fiscal year 2023, yet exert negligible national influence beyond niche advancements. Successes center on practical, evidence-based solutions for Metro-East challenges, prioritizing causal linkages to and over expansive policy shifts.

Athletics

Programs and Conferences


The Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) Cougars compete in athletics, primarily as members of the (OVC) since 2008. The program emphasizes competitive sports including men's and women's basketball, soccer, and (indoor and outdoor), alongside , , , , cross country, and . Men's wrestling participates in the .
SIUE transitioned from to Division I in 2008, operating under provisional status until achieving full Division I certification in 2012. This shift expanded opportunities for approximately 324 student-athletes, comprising 154 men and 170 women across 16 varsity sports. The distribution supports compliance through proportional participation opportunities and dedicated equity policies.

Facilities and Infrastructure

The Vadalabene Center, opened in 1984, houses the First Community Arena, the main venue for SIUE's men's and , , and wrestling teams, with a capacity exceeding 4,000 including seating and standing room. A $6 million in 2008 introduced chair-back seats, updated locker rooms, classrooms, offices, and a new playing floor, enhancing functionality for intercollegiate use. In 2012, a $5.4 million Charles and Mary Lukas Athletic Annex was completed adjacent to the center, providing additional administrative and support space. The Ralph Korte Stadium, part of the broader and completed in 1994, primarily supports soccer and track & field programs, featuring 3,000 permanent seats plus lawn areas for an additional 1,000 spectators. This facility has established itself as one of the nation's premier soccer venues, accommodating local through international competitions, though specific upgrade investments beyond initial construction remain undocumented in public records. Athletic infrastructure funding at SIUE incorporates university resources, state allocations, and private contributions, such as a 2019 ten-year $2.3 million deal for the First Community Arena, reflecting public-private models to offset and renovation costs. Despite these inputs, departmental constraints have occasionally deferred non-essential , as seen in 2016 cuts postponing over $300,000 in projects amid broader fiscal adjustments. Capacity limits align with Division I requirements but highlight potential underutilization relative to investment scale, given the facilities' event-hosting scope without corresponding revenue dominance over operational expenses. No major safety incidents have been reported for these venues in recent records.

Achievements and Criticisms

SIUE athletic programs have maintained strong academic performance among student-athletes, posting an average NCAA (APR) score of 987 for the 2023-2024 academic year, exceeding the national average of 984. Three teams—women's cross country, men's golf, and —achieved perfect multi-year APR scores of 1000 in the latest release. In competition, the men's soccer team captured the regular season title in 2024 for the second consecutive year and won the conference tournament, securing an automatic bid. The men's program reached a milestone by qualifying for its first tournament in 2025 after winning the OVC championship as the No. 2 seed, though it fell in the opening round to . Wrestling has contributed to the department's successes with historical conference dominance, including multiple titles and individual NCAA qualifiers, though recent national impacts have been limited. These achievements underscore a focus on competitive balance within conferences, fostering through accessible, community-oriented events without the financial excesses seen in revenue-heavy programs. Critics point to SIUE's sparse national postseason record as evidence of competitive limitations, with only sporadic Division II appearances prior to the 2025 basketball debut and no advancing wins in Division I play to date. Compliance challenges have occasionally surfaced, including booster violations of NCAA rules and a 2023 lawsuit by the head women's coach alleging in hiring practices, highlighting potential administrative biases. Financially, the athletics department relies heavily on institutional subsidies, comprising 83% of its budget from university allocations rather than self-generated revenue, which some argue strains academic resources amid broader campus budget pressures. Despite this, the model's emphasis on cost control—prioritizing participation over extravagance—avoids the debt traps plaguing over-invested programs, aligning with SIUE's regional mission.

Student Life

Housing and Campus Resources

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville offers on-campus housing accommodating approximately 3,500 students across traditional residence halls including Bluff Hall, Prairie Hall, and Woodland Hall, as well as apartment-style options in Evergreen Hall. These facilities provide shared bedrooms starting at $3,655 per semester and private apartments at $5,200 per semester, with annual housing costs averaging $6,760 when combined with meal plans at $5,210. Dining services feature multiple campus halls integrated with flexible meal plans mandatory for first-year residents. With total undergraduate enrollment at 8,945, on-campus serves roughly 40% of students, reflecting a commuter-dominant population where many reside off-campus in the surrounding Metro-East area. This structure supports accessibility for regional commuters but limits residential capacity during enrollment peaks, prompting initiatives like a $200,000 grant in 2025 to mitigate insecurity among vulnerable students. Campus resources include the Counseling and Health Services center in the Student Success Center, providing free appointments for counseling, medical care, and emergency walk-ins to fee-paying enrolled students via phone at 618-650-2842 or in-person visits. measures contribute to Edwardsville's ranking as the third safest and most affordable U.S. community for students in 2024, and among the top 15 safest college towns nationally. Housing costs, while comparable to in-state tuition of $12,922 annually, have drawn criticism for exceeding some off-campus alternatives, particularly for families.

Extracurricular Activities and Clubs

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) hosts over 250 registered student organizations, encompassing academic, cultural, professional, service, and special interest categories. These groups provide opportunities for students to engage in activities such as environmental through the Environmental Careers Club, which focuses on and in , and robotics exploration via the Autonomous Robotics Club, which promotes hands-on learning and innovation in automation technologies. Other examples include the Society for and the chapter for initiatives. Intramural sports programs complement these organizations, offering recreational competition in sports including , , , and , with team registration fees of $25 typically waived for residence hall teams comprising at least 75% on-campus residents. University-wide events, such as , feature student-led activities like parades, tailgates, intramural tournaments, and dances, fostering campus-wide participation and school spirit. Funding for student organizations derives primarily from the mandatory and Organizations sub-fee, assessed per credit hour, which supports general operations, on-campus programming, and travel through allocations managed by the Student Government and Kimmel Student Involvement Center. Organizations must register annually and maintain minimum membership and officer requirements to access these resources.

Greek Life and Social Organizations

Fraternity and Sorority Life at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville encompasses 21 recognized chapters governed by four councils: the Interfraternity Council (IFC) for men's fraternities, the Panhellenic Council (PHC) representing five (NPC) sororities, the (NPHC) for historically Black organizations, and the United Greek Council (UGC) for culturally based groups including one . These organizations, established on campus since 1961, involve approximately 8% of undergraduate students, with membership totaling around 800 to 1,000 individuals based on recent semester reports. The councils provide self-governance, enforcing standards for recruitment, accountability, and educational programming, including annual anti-hazing compliance certifications required of all chapters. IFC and PHC oversee formal recruitment processes, such as PHC's primary recruitment for sororities like and Delta Phi Epsilon, while NPHC and UGC emphasize membership intake aligned with cultural traditions. This structure promotes through executive boards and chapter advisors, fostering skills in and event management. Chapters engage in , logging thousands of hours and raising funds for causes; for instance, in spring 2023, sorority members contributed 1,329 hours averaging 2.61 per member, alongside donations tracked in university reports. Specific events include Sigma Phi Epsilon's annual Greek Goddess fundraiser supporting Big Brothers Big Sisters of America. These activities enhance social networks and connections, aiding post-graduation opportunities, though participation remains selective via , limiting access and contributing to perceptions of exclusivity. Despite benefits in building community and academic support—evidenced by tracked GPAs often exceeding campus averages—Greek life faces criticism for exclusivity and risks, with university policies strictly prohibiting such practices under law. A 2021 incident involving fraternity's ceremony, which included reported racist and homophobic elements, prompted federal investigations and underscored ongoing compliance challenges. Overall, involvement correlates with higher engagement in leadership roles but requires balancing inclusivity with organizational standards.

Student Media and Governance

The Alestle serves as the primary student-run newspaper at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, operating under the Mass Communications department and producing content on campus news, events, and issues. As a member of the Illinois College Press Association, it has earned awards for student and maintains in line with university policies emphasizing rights and avoidance of in reporting. In recent years, The Alestle has covered sensitive topics such as international student visa revocations, prompting debates on source and contributing to broader student press advocacy for First Amendment protections. Student involvement in broadcast media at SIUE is facilitated through the Communications program, which provides hands-on experience in techniques, though no dedicated student-operated radio station is prominently featured; affiliations with the SIU system's WSIU public media outlet occur via internships or contributions rather than direct operational control. The Government at SIUE functions as the elected representative body for undergraduate, , and professional students, structured with executive officers and a legislative of 31 members chosen via annual spring elections. Elections follow a formalized timeline, including candidate guides and manuals outlining eligibility, campaigning, and voting procedures, with oversight from appointed commissions. The body holds authority over allocation of fees, processing requests for organizations' programming, travel, and events through channels like the Finance Officer and advisory boards, subject to bylaws requiring transparency and service hours from officers. This fiscal role enables influence on and resource distribution, though operations emphasize representation over direct administrative veto power.

Diversity and Campus Climate

The student body at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) reflects the demographics of the Metro-East region, with fall 2023 enrollment data indicating approximately 60.5% , 13.1% or African American, 5.8% or Latino, 2.7% two or more races, 2.3% Asian, and smaller percentages for other categories among undergraduates. Total enrollment stood at 12,813 in fall 2025, with undergraduates comprising about 9,925, showing modest growth amid national declines in higher education participation. These figures underscore a majority- composition, with minority representation concentrated among students, aligning with regional patterns in where populations are notable but enrollment lags behind national college averages. SIUE maintains diversity initiatives including a Campus Climate Reporting System for bias incidents and harmful speech, established to foster reporting and response protocols since 2018. The university's 2018-2025 Diversity and Inclusion Strategic Plan mandates annual training for students, faculty, and staff aimed at reducing reported racial and incidents, though empirical tracking of decreases remains tied to self-reported data. A Incident Response Protocol coordinates responses to incidents involving students, faculty, or staff, emphasizing non-discrimination policies while distinguishing from protected speech. Campus climate surveys reveal mixed perceptions of inclusivity. The 2023 ADVANCE Toward an Inclusive Model of Excellence survey of faculty highlighted qualitative concerns about equity, with comparisons to 2020 data showing persistent gaps in perceived fairness, particularly among faculty of color. A 2016 student climate survey, completed by 563 respondents, identified suggestions for promoting political diversity alongside racial and gender inclusivity, indicating early recognition of viewpoint tensions. Broader systemwide surveys, such as the 2022 SIU , yielded transparency on DEI but underscored challenges in balancing ideological conformity with open discourse, as regional conservatism in the Metro-East area—evident in local voting patterns favoring Republican candidates in recent elections—contrasts with academia's documented left-leaning faculty composition, where political donations skew over 90% Democratic nationally, potentially limiting exposure to diverse perspectives. Empirical safety data for all groups remains strong, with low rates on , though informal reports suggest conservative students experience heightened scrutiny under protocols, challenging narratives of uniform inclusivity.

Free Speech Restrictions and Settlements

In 2017, the at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) filed a federal lawsuit against university officials, challenging the institution's Speech Zone Policy, which confined expressive activities such as demonstrations, leafleting, and oral advocacy to a single 20-foot radius area around a campus landmark known as "The Rock" in Stratton Quadrangle—comprising less than 1% of the total grounds. The policy required prior permission for use of this zone and prohibited such speech on public sidewalks, walkways, and lawns elsewhere on , effectively limiting spontaneous or unapproved expression. The suit, represented by , alleged First Amendment violations due to viewpoint discrimination and overbroad restrictions on student speech. The case settled in February 2018, with SIUE agreeing to rescind the Speech Zone Policy entirely, revise related and demonstration rules to eliminate prior approval requirements for most expressive activities, and pay $10,000 in attorney fees to the plaintiffs. University officials maintained that students had never been strictly confined to the zone but acknowledged the need for policy clarification to align with constitutional protections. This resolution addressed administrative overreach in designating limited areas for speech, a practice critiqued for undermining open campus discourse. In a separate incident, SIUE art therapy graduate student Maggie DeJong faced three no-contact orders in 2021 from professors who deemed her conservative and Christian viewpoints—expressed in class discussions on topics like and sexuality—"harmful" and disruptive to peers, effectively gagging her participation and labeling her opinions as discriminatory. DeJong sued university officials in 2022, claiming viewpoint discrimination under the First Amendment and violations, as the orders stemmed from her dissent against prevailing progressive perspectives in the program. A federal district court denied the defendants' motion to dismiss in March 2023, allowing the case to proceed on free speech grounds. The lawsuit settled in July 2023 for $80,000 to DeJong, mandatory First Amendment training for involved faculty, and revisions to SIUE policies on no-contact orders to prevent future ideological enforcement. Chancellor Randy Dunn emphasized the university's commitment to free expression, though critics noted the settlement underscored a pattern of suppressing dissenting conservative speech under guises of "harm" or inclusivity. These cases illustrate administrative tendencies to prioritize ideological conformity over neutral protections for diverse viewpoints. The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression () has consistently rated SIUE poorly for free speech protections, assigning it an "F" grade and a score of 54 out of 100 in its 2026 College Free Speech Rankings, placing it among Illinois institutions with weak policies on disruptive conduct and tolerance for non-conforming expression. 's assessments, drawing from policy reviews and incident data, highlight discrepancies between SIUE's stated commitments to open inquiry and practices that disproportionately restrict conservative or heterodox speech, as evidenced by the aforementioned lawsuits. Such rankings reflect broader concerns over institutional bias favoring left-leaning perspectives, with administrative actions often prioritizing sensitivity over robust debate.

Administrative and Policy Criticisms

In fiscal year 2025, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) confronted a structural deficit of $10.3 million, attributed primarily to persistent enrollment declines and inflexible fixed costs such as personnel expenses. James T. Minor responded by directing "salary sweeps" that redirected over $15.4 million from departmental salary lines to offset the shortfall, a measure critics described as an administrative overreach that strained academic units without addressing underlying inefficiencies. Administrative decisions amid these fiscal pressures drew scrutiny for exacerbating perceptions of bloat, with 234 employees earning over $100,000 annually in 2023 despite tuition increases exceeding 90% from 2006 to 2016 and ongoing state funding reductions. For instance, deans received salaries ranging from $133,000 to $166,000, while program cuts targeted low-enrollment specializations in areas like , reflecting a prioritization of administrative stability over academic preservation. These actions coincided with proposals to eliminate six major specializations and three minors, justified by administrators on grounds of insufficient numbers and upper-level course utilization, though detractors argued the moves signaled deeper governance failures in adapting to demographic shifts. The SIUE Faculty Association, representing unionized tenure-track faculty since its 2016 formation amid state crises, has wielded influence in responses by negotiating terms that include raises and over impacts. Union protests in 2023 and 2024 highlighted tensions, with members demanding greater transparency and resistance to understaffing, potentially contributing to slower implementation of cost-saving measures and prolonged deficits. However, these efforts aligned with a partial recovery, as enrollment ticked upward for the first time in four years by fall 2025, enabling a projected balanced $341.6 million through combined cuts and stabilization. This outcome underscores causal links between delayed efficiencies—tied to union protections and administrative inertia—and enrollment stagnation, though it also demonstrates adaptive adjustments absent more aggressive reforms.

Notable Individuals

Alumni Achievements

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville alumni demonstrate success predominantly in regional , healthcare, and , with limited instances of national visibility. The university's emphasis on practical, career-oriented programs contributes to high local retention, as evidenced by data showing 57% of recent School of Business undergraduates securing positions in the metropolitan area or southwestern . Median earnings for graduates six years post-bachelor's degree average $46,384, aligning with outcomes for regional public institutions rather than elite national universities. In politics, earned an MBA from SIUE in 1997 and represented as a Republican from 1997 to 2021, focusing on energy and commerce issues during his tenure on relevant House committees. Post-Congress, he served as a distinguished lecturer in SIUE's department. Shelby Steele obtained an MA in from SIUE and advanced to a senior fellowship at Stanford University's , where his scholarship on race, identity, and cultural dynamics—detailed in works like (2006)—has drawn both acclaim for empirical critiques of victimhood narratives and criticism for challenging prevailing progressive orthodoxies on civil rights outcomes. He received the in 2004 for contributions emphasizing individual agency over systemic determinism. The SIUE Alumni Hall of Fame highlights professional impacts, such as 2025 inductee Charles "Charlie" Myer (BS ), recognized for leadership in regional enterprise development, and Brian J. Henry (BS mass communications '95), noted for media and communications advancements. These examples underscore contributions to local economies, with over 56,000 residing in and sustaining ties to Metro-East industries like and healthcare.

Faculty and Administrators

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville's administrative leadership has shaped its growth since its establishment in 1965, with overseeing key infrastructural and academic expansions. David Werner, from 1997 to 2004, contributed to curriculum diversification and facility developments during a period of enrollment increase. Vaughn Vandegrift, serving from 2004 to 2012, advanced amid state budget constraints, focusing on program efficiencies. Randall G. Pembrook, from 2016 to 2022, emphasized research productivity and partnerships, including enhancements to the School of Engineering. James T. Minor, the tenth since March 1, 2022, has prioritized operational resilience and community engagement in response to enrollment declines and fiscal pressures. Faculty at SIUE number in the hundreds across disciplines, with the institution maintaining a relatively low reliance on adjuncts at 30% of teaching staff, compared to higher national averages, enabling greater stability in tenure-track positions. In the School of Engineering, notable contributors include Jeff Darabi, recognized with the 2019 Public Service Award for excellence in teaching and scholarship, particularly in applications. Reza Osouli has been honored for mentorship in , receiving the Outstanding Faculty Advisor Award from the ' student chapter in 2025. The School of Nursing employs over 70 educators, the majority holding doctoral degrees, supporting clinical training programs with empirical focus on patient outcomes and . Hiring practices at SIUE reflect broader academic trends toward diversity initiatives, as seen in the , Health and Human Behavior's 2020 effort to recruit multiple faculty of color explicitly to counter institutionalized , raising questions about merit-based selection amid ideological pressures common in higher education. climate surveys have highlighted subtle biases and microaggressions, potentially influencing balance, though productivity metrics like rates and grant remain prioritized in tenure evaluations. Empirical assessments of hiring outcomes show varied ideological representation, with general surveys indicating underrepresentation of conservative viewpoints typical in U.S. public universities.

References

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