Imperial Valley College

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Imperial Valley College
The Imperial Valley College school logo
Motto Where Success Begins[citation needed]
Type Public
Established 1962
Undergraduates 7,000
Postgraduates N/A
Location , ,
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Campus Rural
School Colors Red and Black         
Mascot Arabs
Website www.imperial.edu

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Imperial Valley College is a college in Imperial County, California, USA. Founded in 1962 the college currently enrolls around 7,000 students per year. Currently, Victor Jaime is President of the college.[1] The main campus is located on a 160-acre (0.65 km2) site in the city of Imperial. The extended campuses are located in El Centro and Brawley.

Imperial Valley College, Imperial, California

History

The Imperial Valley College had its beginning on May 9, 1922 with the name of Central Junior College, opening in September that year. Originally at Central Union High School, 2 years later a new college named Brawley Junior College was opened. Brawley Junior College had to close in 1947 due to lack of attendance. Because of this, Central Junior College was now receiving students from all over the Imperial Valley; students and faculty wanted to change the school name to a more representative one. The Board of Trustees officially changed to Imperial Valley College in late 1951. The college remained housed on the campus of Central Union High School in El Centro until the governance of the college was changed in 1959.

The Imperial Community College District was formed by a vote of the electorate in 1959 and a bond issue then authorized construction of a new campus on a 160-acre (0.65 km2) parcel at Aten Road and Highway 111.

A ground-breaking service was held, October 2, 1961, for the new college campus. Meanwhile, due to the lack of space, IVC moved from El Centro to a temporary site in Imperial, on the campus of Imperial High School. The new campus opened for students in September 1962.

Mascot

Because of the desert location, the mascot "Arabs" was chosen. However, the college's leadership has intermittently considered changing this because the mascot has become a distraction for athletic teams traveling out of the Valley. [2] A new push to change the mascot was launched during the spring 2009 academic semester.[citation needed]

References

  1. Welcome by the President - Imperial Valley College
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External links

Sources

  • Henderson, Tracey. Imperial Valley. Neyenesch, 1968.