HISTORY OF THE COLLEGE
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Northern Virginia Community College (NVCC) was established in
1964 as Northern Virginia Technical College to serve the counties of Arlington, Fairfax, Loudoun and Prince William and teh Cities of Alexandria, Fairfax, Falls Church, Manassas, and Manassas Park.
The College opened for classes in the fall of 1965 in a single
building in Bailey's Crossroads. Enrollment was 761 students
who were served by a faculty and staff of 46. Robert W. McKee
was the first president. Dr. Richard J. Ernst became the second
president of the College in September 1968 and served for thirty
years. Dr. Belle S. Wheelan became the third president of the
College in July 1998 and served for three years. Dr. Robert G.
Templin, Jr., became the fourth president of the College in August
2002.
The College was renamed Northern Virginia Community College in
1966 when the Statewide General Assembly changed the name of the technical
college system to the Virginia Community College System (VCCS).
College transfer curricula were added to the existing occupational/technical
curricula for a more comprehensive program.
In 1966, the College bought 78 acres in Annandale,
which became the first of six permanent campus sites. The first
building
was constructed there and opened in 1967. That same year 100-acre
sites were purchased for campuses in Sterling, Manassas, and
Woodbridge. In 1969, a campus site was purchased for Alexandria.
The campus site for the Medical Education Campus was purchased
in 2000.
Classes were first offered in Loudoun, Manassas,
and Woodbridge in the fall of 1972. Classes moved from Bailey’s
Crossroads to the Alexandria Campus in 1973. The Extended Learning
Institute
(ELI) began offering home study courses in January 1975 and has
developed into a leader in distance education, serving more than
100,000 students who have taken 250,000 classes through distance
learning since its inception. In the fall of 2003, a new Medical
Education Campus opened in Springfield, Virginia to meet both
student and employer demand for health professions education. In 2006, the College opened two new educational centers, one in Arlington and the other in Reston.
The College’s enrollment and programs
grew rapidly. By 1970, enrollment exceeded 10,000 students. By
1973, NVCC became
the largest institution of higher education in Virginia with
17,260 students. During the academic year 2003-2004, the College
served 59,709 students in credit courses and another 17,182 in
non-credit courses. Workforce and professional classes as well
as professional and cultural activities attracted approximately
275,000 people over the year.
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