Overall Rating Gold - expired
Overall Score 66.70
Liaison David Gibson
Submission Date March 30, 2018
Executive Letter Download

STARS v2.1

Hampshire College
IC-3: Academics and Demographics

Status Score Responsible Party
Complete N/A Edmund Melia
Director of Institutional Research
Dean of Faculty Office
"---" indicates that no data was submitted for this field

Number of academic divisions (e.g. colleges, schools):
5

Number of academic departments (or the equivalent):
5

Number of students enrolled for credit:
1,268

Total number of employees (staff + faculty):
447

Full-time equivalent student enrollment (undergraduate and graduate):
1,244

Full-time equivalent of employees (staff + faculty):
405.73

Full-time equivalent of students enrolled exclusively in distance education:
0

Number of students resident on-site:
1,066

Number of employees resident on-site:
3

Number of other individuals resident on-site, e.g. family members of employees, individuals lodging on-site (by average occupancy rate), and/or staffed hospital beds (if applicable):
0

Weighted campus users, performance year:
1,504.55

Additional documentation to support the submission:
---

Data source(s) and notes about the submission:

Hampshire was designed for interdisciplinary education, based on the idea that questions and issues are best examined from multiple perspectives.

Students can combine talents within the arts, such as writing and photography, with a particular cultural interest. Or they can address problems of war and peace, of environmental policy, or of the uses of new information technology, which demand scientific as well as political, economic, and ethical understanding.

Instead of traditional, single-discipline departments, Hampshire's curriculum is organized into five interdisciplinary schools:
School of Cognitive Science
The School of Cognitive Science (CS) engages students with interests ranging from psychology, philosophy, and neuroscience to animal behavior, child development, computer science, digital multimedia, and linguistics.

School of Critical Social Inquiry
The School of Critical Social Inquiry (CSI) includes students and faculty interested in a diverse array of fields such as Africana studies, anthropology, Asian studies, history, psychology, economics, sociology, politics, law, philosophy, and education, as well as many more. Students also engage with many College-wide programs such as Community Partnerships for Social Change (CPSC) and the Childhood, Youth, and Learning Program (CYL). What unites CSI is a common commitment to understanding the processes of social and cultural formations and their implications.

School of Humanities, Arts, and Cultural Studies
The School of Humanities, Arts, and Cultural Studies (HACU) engages students with interests ranging from philosophy, literature, film, video, photography, history, dance, painting, art history, cultural theory and history, critical theory, religious studies, studio arts, to ancient studies, music, American studies, media studies, environmental design, and architecture.

School for Interdisciplinary Arts
In the School for Interdisciplinary Arts (IA), students and professors work across boundaries of art forms such as theater, sculpture, creative writing and literary arts, children's theater, creative drama, entrepreneurship, art and technology, arts education, and arts and social action.

School of Natural Science
School of Natural Science (NS) students involve themselves in original scientific research. Areas of interest include environmental sciences, agricultural studies, health sciences, and more. Students can—and do—concentrate in almost every branch of science, from astronomy and bio-engineering to marine ecology and genetics.

https://www.hampshire.edu/academics/interdisciplinary-schools


Hampshire was designed for interdisciplinary education, based on the idea that questions and issues are best examined from multiple perspectives.

Students can combine talents within the arts, such as writing and photography, with a particular cultural interest. Or they can address problems of war and peace, of environmental policy, or of the uses of new information technology, which demand scientific as well as political, economic, and ethical understanding.

Instead of traditional, single-discipline departments, Hampshire's curriculum is organized into five interdisciplinary schools:
School of Cognitive Science
The School of Cognitive Science (CS) engages students with interests ranging from psychology, philosophy, and neuroscience to animal behavior, child development, computer science, digital multimedia, and linguistics.

School of Critical Social Inquiry
The School of Critical Social Inquiry (CSI) includes students and faculty interested in a diverse array of fields such as Africana studies, anthropology, Asian studies, history, psychology, economics, sociology, politics, law, philosophy, and education, as well as many more. Students also engage with many College-wide programs such as Community Partnerships for Social Change (CPSC) and the Childhood, Youth, and Learning Program (CYL). What unites CSI is a common commitment to understanding the processes of social and cultural formations and their implications.

School of Humanities, Arts, and Cultural Studies
The School of Humanities, Arts, and Cultural Studies (HACU) engages students with interests ranging from philosophy, literature, film, video, photography, history, dance, painting, art history, cultural theory and history, critical theory, religious studies, studio arts, to ancient studies, music, American studies, media studies, environmental design, and architecture.

School for Interdisciplinary Arts
In the School for Interdisciplinary Arts (IA), students and professors work across boundaries of art forms such as theater, sculpture, creative writing and literary arts, children's theater, creative drama, entrepreneurship, art and technology, arts education, and arts and social action.

School of Natural Science
School of Natural Science (NS) students involve themselves in original scientific research. Areas of interest include environmental sciences, agricultural studies, health sciences, and more. Students can—and do—concentrate in almost every branch of science, from astronomy and bio-engineering to marine ecology and genetics.

https://www.hampshire.edu/academics/interdisciplinary-schools

The information presented here is self-reported. While AASHE staff review portions of all STARS reports and institutions are welcome to seek additional forms of review, the data in STARS reports are not verified by AASHE. If you believe any of this information is erroneous or inconsistent with credit criteria, please review the process for inquiring about the information reported by an institution or simply email your inquiry to stars@aashe.org.