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Virginia Wesleyan University

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(Redirected from Virginia Wesleyan College) Private university in Virginia Beach, Virginia, U.S.
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Virginia Wesleyan University
Former namesVirginia Wesleyan College (1961–2017)
MottoSapientia Illuminat Viam
Motto in EnglishWisdom lights the way
TypePrivate
Established1961; 63 years ago (1961)
Religious affiliationUnited Methodist Church
Academic affiliations
Endowment$123.5 million (2021)
PresidentScott D. Miller
Academic staff160
Students1,607 (Main Campus), 355 LUJ/VWU Global (Japan), 1,403 VWU Online (Continuing Education)
LocationVirginia Beach, Virginia, United States
36°52′4.8″N 76°11′15.4″W / 36.868000°N 76.187611°W / 36.868000; -76.187611
CampusUrban, 300 acres (1.21 km)
ColorsDark Blue, Grey/Silver, and Coastal Blue      
NicknameMarlins
Sporting affiliationsNCAA Division IIIODAC
MascotBob Marlin
Websitewww.vwu.edu

Virginia Wesleyan University (VWU) is a private university in Virginia Beach, Virginia. The university is nonsectarian but historically affiliated with The United Methodist Church. It enrolls 1,607 students annually in undergraduate and graduate programs, 355 students at LUJ/VWU Global (Japan), and 1,403 in VWU Online (Continuing Education). Virginia Wesleyan transitioned from a college to a university in 2017.

The Virginia Wesleyan University campus is also home to the Chesapeake Bay Academy, an educational institution that educates and guides students with learning disabilities, including attention disorders (ADHD), dyslexia, and dysgraphia, and the Tidewater Collegiate Academy, an innovative laboratory for teaching and learning that extends from the primary grades through high school.

Through academic collaboration with local arts and sciences partners, on-site learning experiences are also provided at the Virginia Aquarium & Marine Science Center and Brock Environmental Center in Virginia Beach; The Chrysler Museum of Art in Norfolk; Sentara College of Health Sciences in Chesapeake; and the Norfolk Botanical Garden.

VWU collaborates with Virginia Beach Economic Development for a work development center, The Hive, in Virginia Beach. Approximately 3,000 continuing education learners benefit from joint programs at The Hive.

History

The school was chartered in 1961 as Virginia Wesleyan College under the initiative of Methodist minister Joseph Shackford Johnston, later the college's first president. It became a university in 2017.

Presidents of Wesleyan
Name Tenure
Scott Douglas Miller 2015-
William Thomas Greer Jr. 1992-2015
Lambuth McGeehee Clarke 1966-1992
Joseph Shackford Johnston 1965

Academics

Colleges and schools

Virginia Wesleyan University consists of four schools devoted to specific areas of study: the Susan S. Goode School of Arts and Humanities, the Joan P. Brock School of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Birdsong School of Social Science, and the D. Henry Watts School of Professional Studies.

Batten Honors College

The Batten Honors College, named for Virginia Wesleyan Trustee Emerita Jane Batten and her late husband Frank Batten, Sr., was founded in 2017 with a mission to "inspire, engage, and prepare academically talented students to become leaders, environmental stewards, and impactful citizens in the global community."

VWU Global Campus

With the addition of LUJ/VWU Global (Japan), University College at Virginia Wesleyan University was renamed VWU Global Campus. VWU Global Campus operates all for-credit programs outside of the traditional undergraduate program, the campus in Japan, and also supports non-credit, continuing-education offerings. Hampton Roads Workforce Development, Tidewater Community College, and VWU share a workforce development center, The Hive, in Virginia Beach. Approximately 3,000 continuing education learners benefit from joint programs at The Hive.

Westminster/Wesleyan Lifelong Learning Institute

The Westminster/Wesleyan Lifelong Learning Institute is a component of Virginia Wesleyan's University College was launched in 2017. Several courses will be taught during each of two regular semesters, and roughly half will be on faith-related topics. Over 1,100 learners enrolled in WWLLI courses in the 2018–19 academic year.

Diversity and inclusion

Virginia Wesleyan often states its commitment to inclusivity and one of the institution's core values within its Preeminence '28 strategic plan reads, "Inclusive and Caring Community that empowers members to form meaningful relationships through listening, understanding, and communication."

The university was ranked in 2018 and 2019 by U.S. News & World Report among the top 25 institutions in Campus Ethnic Diversity for National Liberal Arts Colleges. According to the university profile, students represent 34 states and 10 countries, with 43 percent from underrepresented populations.

Virginia Wesleyan's campus is the South Hampton Roads home for the Virginia Center for Inclusive Communities. The 83-year-old organization opened a satellite office at VWU in December 2018.

Business leader and known civil rights advocate Harvey Lindsay made a $250,000 gift to Virginia Wesleyan in 2019 to enable the university to begin expanding the study of African-American history and traditions in Virginia.

Campus

The Greer Environmental Sciences Center at Virginia Wesleyan University.

Situated on 300 acres (1.2 km) in Virginia Beach, the university is separated into four villages. Bray Village (Village I) and Allen Village (Village II) offer combined living-learning environments built on the Jeffersonian model, with multi-purpose buildings. Brock Village (Village III) and Honors Village (Village IV) are solely housing units. Construction began on a fifth village, Oxford Village, in June 2019 with an expected completion in late 2020.

The Robert "Bobby" T. Williams Trail, leading from the Blocker Youth Center to Lake Taylor, was dedicated in October 2019 in memory of the 1975 graduate who was killed in the Virginia Beach Municipal Center shooting in May 2019.

The Greer Environmental Sciences Center, dedicated in 2017, received the Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s National Conservationist of the Year Award in 2018. The facility is a state-of-the-art center for teaching and research. The 18-acre Wilson Arboretum was established in 1995 in memory of William M. Wilson, dean of the university from 1971 to 1994. Since 1997, retiring faculty members have chosen a tree to be planted within the arboretum to honor their service to the institution

The 12-acre Beech Forest, a rare example of an old-growth stand of beech trees, was designated a Natural Heritage Resource by the Commonwealth of Virginia in 1992. The campus features over 13 miles of biking and hiking paths and trails.

Facilities

The Susan S. Goode Fine and Performing Arts Center opened in March 2019.

The following complexes and buildings, with completion dates noted, now house the university's academic, administrative, and residential functions.

  • Jerry G. Bray, Jr. Village (Village I) (1966)
    • Residence halls:
      • Louise W. Eggleston Hall
      • Abel E. and Clara Eaton Kellam Hall
      • Margarette Hanes Old Hall
      • Paul Howard Rose Hall
    • Academic buildings:
      • Birdsong Hall
      • Peter D. Pruden Hall
      • Aubrey L. Eggleston Commons
  • Dennie Allen Village (Village II)
    • Residence halls:
      • East Hall (1990)
      • Franklin Little Hall (1990)
      • Alison J. and Ella W. Parsons Hall (1990)
      • Walter Clarke Gum Hall (1970)
      • Joseph S. Johnston Hall (1990)
      • Landmark Hall
      • William Travis Smithdeal Hall (1970)
    • Academic buildings (1990):
      • Allen Commons
      • Charles and Bertha Mast Graybeal Hall
      • Guy C. and Ora Goodwin Roop Hall
      • Floyd E. Kellam, Jr., Social Sciences Lab (2002, 2014)
  • Joan and Macon Brock Village (Village III) (1993)
    • Residence halls:
      • North Hall
      • South Hall
      • Harry I. and Elizabeth W. Teagle Hall
    • Apartments and townhouses (2005)
  • Honors Village (Village IV) (2008)
    • Residence townhouses:
      • Broyles Hall
      • DeFord Hall
      • Hendrix Hall
      • Mastracco Hall
      • Watts Hall
      • Residence Hall 6
  • S. Frank and Wilma Williamson Blocker Hall
  • Lambuth M. Clarke Hall (1998)
  • Susan T. Beverly Hall (2020)/Fine Arts Building (1966)/Edward D. Hofheimer Theatre (1981)
  • Greer Environmental Sciences Center (2017)
  • Henry Clay Hofheimer II Library (1969, 2008)/Neil Britton Art Gallery
  • Greenhouse (2017)
  • Susan S. Goode Fine and Performing Arts Center/Joan and Macon Brock Theatre/Eleanor and Henry Watts Grand Lobby and Gallery/Susan Beverly Grand Terrace and Pond (2019)

The following complexes and structures house additional administrative buildings as well as athletic and student activities facilities:

  • Jane P. Batten Student Center (2002)/TowneBank Arena (2020)
  • Birdsong Field – Paphites Pavilion (2015)
  • Frank Blocker, Jr., Youth Center – Tidewater Collegiate Academy/YMCA Camp Red Feather (2017)
  • Robert F. and Sara M. Boyd Dining Center (1991)
  • Everett Tennis Center (2011)
  • Katherine B. and Mills E. Godwin, Jr., Hall (1999)
  • Facilities Management (1993)
  • The Alpine Tower (2008, 2017)
  • Monumental Chapel and Beazley Recital Hall (2020, 1975), The Beacon (2019)
  • TowneBank Park—Kenneth R. Perry Field (2017)
  • Betty S. Rogers Track and Field Center (2017)
  • Trinder Center (1998) with Foster Field (1998)
  • TowneBank Park—Tom and Betty Broyles Field (2019)
  • Sue Benton Birdsong Entrance Gate (2020)
  • DeFord Manor (2021)

Athletics

Main article: Virginia Wesleyan Marlins

Virginia Wesleyan University sports teams are known as the Marlins. The university participates in the Old Dominion Athletic Conference (ODAC) and is a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division III.

Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, swimming, tennis, and indoor/outdoor track and field. Women's sports include basketball, cross country, field hockey, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, indoor/outdoor track and field, and volleyball.

The university maintains an Athletic Hall of Fame honoring those who have made lasting contributions to Virginia Wesleyan's intercollegiate athletic program through outstanding achievements or service.

In recent years, Virginia Wesleyan University has earned recognition as one of the top NCAA Division III programs in the country. The men's basketball team won the national championship in 2006, and the following year returned to the championship game, which they lost. The women's soccer team made it to the final four in 2006 after winning the ODAC tournament for the first time in program history. In 2016, Evan Cox was the Individual NCAA National Champion for Men's Golf. The Virginia Wesleyan softball team won the 2017 NCAA Division III National Championship with a record 54 wins. Head Coach Brandon Elliott was named ODAC Coach of the Year and State Coach of the Year, while his coaching staff earned Regional and National Coaching Staff of the Year honors. Freshman pitcher Hanna Hull earned 2017 Schutt Sports/NFCA Division III National Freshman of the Year and honors as the first National Player of the Year in program history. In 2018, they repeated as NCAA Division III champions. Hull was again named National Player of the Year, and Elliott's staff again earned National Coaching Staff of the Year honors. Despite a 42–6 overall record, and number one regular season rating in the NFCA Division III poll, the Marlins lost to the University of Lynchburg in the 2019 NCAA Regional Finals. In 2021, the VWU Softball team won its third national title in four (complete) season defeating the Texas Lutheran University in the NCAA Division III Championship best of three series with the Marlins claiming a 9–1 win in five innings in the deciding third game.

Through a private gift, Virginia Wesleyan added an esports arena and competitive esports program in 2019.

Notable alumni

This article's list of alumni may not follow Misplaced Pages's verifiability policy. Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations. (August 2018)

References

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  2. ""Virginia Wesleyan University 2020/2021 Profile"" (PDF).
  3. ""Virginia Wesleyan University 2020/2021 Profile"" (PDF).
  4. ""This is not how we love each other": Local United Methodists react to church's controversial ruling".
  5. ""Virginia Wesleyan University 2020/2021 Profile"" (PDF).
  6. "Virginia Wesleyan University to expand presence to Japan with new partnership". April 30, 2020.
  7. "Accolades".
  8. ""Virginia Economic Development"".
  9. Mansfield, Stephen S. (2010). Wisdom Lights the Way: Virginia Wesleyan College's First Half-Century. Donning. ISBN 978-1-57864-643-2.
  10. ""Virginia Wesleyan Announces Transition to University Status"".
  11. "Academics".
  12. "Virginia Wesleyan University welcomes the 1st class of the Batten Honors College".
  13. "Virginia Wesleyan University Global Campus".
  14. ""Virginia Economic Development"".
  15. The Wesleyan Review, October 2017,
  16. Virginia Wesleyan University Magazine, Fall 2018
  17. Nota Bene, Fall 2017 and Spring 2019
  18. "Preeminence '28". www.vwu.edu. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  19. "U.S. News & World Report Campus Ethnic Diversity".
  20. "Virginia Wesleyan University College Profile" (PDF).
  21. "Virginia Center for Inclusive Communities opens Hampton Roads office". dailypress.com. December 18, 2018. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  22. "Growth, Innovation, Prosperity Central to Virginia Wesleyan State of the University". www.vwu.edu. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  23. "Campus Map".
  24. "Virginia Wesleyan, Franklin Johnston Group Break Ground on Coastal 61 at Oxford Village".
  25. Albiges, Marie (June 2, 2019). "Bobby Williams' service to Virginia Beach was honored multiple times over 41 years". pilotonline.com. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  26. "The Wesleyan Review - October 25, 2019". vwu.edu. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  27. Mayfield, Dave (December 6, 2017). "Virginia Wesleyan wins top conservation award from Chesapeake Bay Foundation". pilotonline.com. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  28. Pennecke, Sandra (August 15, 2017). "New building at Virginia Wesleyan more instructional than most". pilotonline.com/inside-business. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  29. Michalski, Annalisa (May 28, 2018). "Three very different facilities, each an arboretum". pilotonline.com. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  30. "Historic Campus Architecture Project (Council of Independent Colleges)". Artstor. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  31. "Virginia Wesleyan Interactive Programs".
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  33. "DIII softball championship: Virginia Wesleyan sweeps final against St. John Fisher".
  34. "Virginia Wesleyan Softball".
  35. "Virginia Wesleyan wins the 2018 DIII Softball Championship | NCAA.com". www.ncaa.com. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  36. Correspondent, Jim Hodges (May 12, 2019). "Lynchburg stuns Virginia Wesleyan in NCAA Div. III softball regional final". pilotonline.com. Retrieved November 12, 2019. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  37. "Virginia Wesleyan University wins 2021 NCAA Division III softball title". WTKR.com. June 1, 2021. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  38. "Virginia Wesleyan becomes second college in Hampton Roads to launch E-Sports team". WTKR.com. October 22, 2019. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  39. "Brandon Adair; Official #67".
  40. "Virginia House of Delegates 2019".
  41. "Ewing Adds Assistant Coach Kevin Nickelberry to His Staff". March 24, 2022.
  42. "Randy Peele - Texas Southern University".
  43. "Oklahoma City Thunder Basketball Operations". NBA.com.
  44. "Senate of Virginia".
  45. "ESPN Press Room - Bob Valvano".
  46. "Keller Williams".

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