2015-2016 Philanthropic Impact Report

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ST. CLOUD STATE UNIVERSITY

2015-2016 Philanthropic IMPACT REPORT


As the chair of the St. Cloud State University Foundation Board I had the privilege of working closely President Earl H. Potter. His sudden passing is a loss to the entire campus community but I am encouraged by the fact he assembled a great leadership team and that Provost Ashish Vaidya has been named Interim President for two years.

Total Gifts Raised FY ‘16 $3,405,627

Academic Scholarships Academic Programs

$2,057,719 | 60% $613,024 | 18%

Other Programs

$263,900 | 8%

Athletic Programs

$225,747 | 7% $188,364 | 6%

Unrestricted Athletic Scholarships

President Potter was committed to resource development and its importance to the future of St. Cloud State. The Foundation’s Board of Trustees stands in full support of President Vaidya as he assumes the mantle of leadership at the University. President Vaidya is committed to working with the Foundation Board and staff to continue to explore important opportunities for private investment from alumni and friends in conjunction with the University’s Sesquicentennial in 2019.

$41,370 | 1%

Capital Projects

$15,503

St. Cloud State University Foundation Net Assets

The Foundation Board is committed to bringing strong governance, oversight and policy making to its work with the Foundation and University Advancement. In doing so, we strive to give to you, our donor community confidence that we will be good stewards of the gifts you share with us for the benefit of our students, faculty and staff. Thank you for your loyal support.

$35,000,000 $30,000,000 $25,000,000 $20,000,000 $15,000,000 $10,000,000

A successful year in which the St. Cloud State University Foundation saw giving increase by 15 percent ended in tragedy when our beloved President, Earl H. Potter was killed in an auto accident in June. In this day and age university presidents are very focused on resource development because their institutions require it. I fondly remember President Potter saying that philanthropy is no longer a nicety. It is the margin of excellence which makes our programs great. He was absolutely right. Without it we could not deliver the kind of experience for our students that we do. In the pages that follow you’ll read about some of the experiences that philanthropy makes possible. Your philanthropy. No matter the size of your gift it does indeed make a difference. We hope that you will continue to make St. Cloud State University a priority. Our graduates help make our communities stronger. Our economy more resilient. And your philanthropy helps make that happen. On behalf of the late President Earl H. Potter III and I, thank you for your generous gift of support.

$5,000,000 $0 ‘12

‘13

‘14

‘15

‘16

Sherry Smith, ‘83, Chair

Matt Andrew Vice President of University Advancement

To review a complete listing of the SCSU Foundation’s 2015-2016 donors, please visit scsu.mn/scsuimpactreport


Academic Excellence

Impact Report

BUILDING A CULTURE OF PEACE: Dr. Eddah Mbula Mutua In recognition of the relevancy of her work in promoting peace, Eddah Mbula Mutua, professor of intercultural communication in the Department of Communication Studies, earned a St. Cloud State University Foundation grant to support the expansion of her work. The grant was funded with unrestricted gifts by alumni and friends to the Foundation. Mutua’s program, Communicating Common Ground (CCG) is a service-learning project that offers insights into innovative ways to understand the causes and effects of conflict and how to discern effective strategies that promote peaceful co-existence. It illustrates the possibility of building a culture of peace in communities separated by ethnic, racial, cultural and religious differences. Participating students are from St. Cloud State, five Central Minnesota high schools—Apollo and Technical High Schools in St. Cloud, Rocori High School in Cold Spring, Sauk Rapids-Rice High School, Foley High School—and Naisula School in Kenya. About 500 students have benefited from this work since 2007. “The St. Cloud State University Foundation is thrilled to support Dr. Mutua in this important work with our students. They are skills the world needs,” said Sherry Smith, Foundation Board chair.

of intercultural communication theory and praxis, the project engages diverse students to dialogue (face-to-face and via Skype technology) about conflict experiences in their communities. Sentiments expressed by students about conflict and the possibility of peaceful co-existence reveals their potential as peacemakers and leaders in their respective communities.

“When we look back on our time spent at SCSU, it is with great fondness. It’s where we met, where we made great life-long friends and where we both earned educations that set us up well to succeed in life. That’s why we want to give back to the college that gave us so much.” Lynne ’85 & Jeff ’84 Warne

The overarching goal is for students to learn effective intercultural and interracial conflict management. By focusing on the application Dr. Eddah Mbula Mutua

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Impact Report

Academic Excellence

ANNE FRANK EXHIBIT: An Opportunity for Community Partnership Hundreds of St. Cloud area eighth graders studying Anne Frank in language arts or communications classes expanded their understanding by spending a day on campus learning about Anne Frank through the “Reading and Writing Anne Frank” traveling exhibit from the Anne Frank Center in New York. In addition to viewing the exhibit, the students experienced a hands-on virtual tour of the Anne Frank House in the Visualization Lab at the Integrated Science and Engineering Laboratory Facility (ISELF) and heard from GREAT Theatre’s “The Diary of Anne Frank” Director Jeff Bleam, a St. Cloud State theatre professor. They later went to a performance of the GREAT Theatre production. Nine hundred students from South Junior High, Kennedy Community School, North Junior High and Sauk Rapids-Rice Middle School visited the university throughout January. “This collaboration is creating programming that will help to contextualize and expand understanding of Anne Frank and the Holocaust,” said Dan Wildeson, director of the St. Cloud State Center for Holocaust and Genocide Education and organizer of the exhibit visit.

Additional programming included St. Cloud State hosting Holocaust survivor Inge Auerbacher in Ritsche Auditorium and screening of the documentary “Anne Frank Remembered” both in March. St. Cloud area youths gained a greater understanding of the world of Anne Frank and her passion for writing thanks to the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Education. For many of the students involved, this was their first chance to see live theater and visit a college campus. It gave both these students and the public a rare opportunity to learn about the history involved and go beyond the play. The theater company and Bleam also worked with Wildeson to ensure the play was as authentic as possible in its production of the story. The on-campus events were made possible in part by gifts from alumni and friends to the St. Cloud State Foundation for the benefit of the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Education. The student visits were co-sponsored by the College of Science and Engineering, Learning Resources and Services, the Office of Admissions and the Department of Theatre and Film Studies.

To review a complete listing of the SCSU Foundation’s 2015-2016 donors, please visit scsu.mn/scsuimpactreport

Eighth graders from Sauk Rapids-Rice Middle School interact with the Anne Frank exhibit (Pictured top and bottom)


Academic Excellence

“The Hubbard Broadcasting Foundation grant will be transformational to our mass communications programs. The support it provides will change the way we teach, shape the professional development of our faculty and staff, and further enhance the preparation of our students for the fastpaced, technology-driven communications careers they will encounter.”

Impact Report

Margaret Atwood Visits Campus Award-winning author Margaret Atwood visited St. Cloud State in November 2015 to give a public lecture for students and the community to a packed Ritsche Auditorium on her novel “Oryx and Crake” — the 2015 Common Reading Program book for first-year students.

Dr. Mark Springer Dean, College of Liberal Arts & School of the Arts Margaret Atwood

HUBBARD FOUNDATION GRANT SUPPORTS MASS COMMUNICATIONS FACULTY EXTERNSHIPS Thanks to a grant from the Hubbard Foundation, faculty from the department of Mass Communications will participate in externships with companies in Minnesota and across the United States that are innovators in advertising, public relations, journalism and broadcasting. The externships are part of an outward facing strategy designed to engage industry across St. Cloud State’s academic enterprise to ensure that what’s being taught aligns with needs of the university community partners. Through the next five years, the grant will allow faculty in every mass communications discipline to immerse themselves in a semester long externship, observe best and “next” practices and translate those observations into a revised and improved pedagogy. St. Cloud State’s mass communications program is regarded as one of the best in the Upper Midwest and the Hubbard Foundation Grant will help maintain the program’s preeminence and ensure that students are well prepared for career success.

Each new first-year student is given a copy of the Common Reading Program book to read during their first semester at St. Cloud State. The program gives the students a common academic experience that integrates both curricular and co-curricular activities throughout the year. The program introduces students to collegiate life, cultivates a sense of community on campus and gets students involved with faculty, their fellow students and campus activities. Atwood is a winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award and Prince of Asturias Award for Literature. She has been shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize five times, winning in 2000 for her historical novel “The Blind Assassin.” Atwood, 76, earned the Arthur C. Clarke Award in 1987 for “The Handmaid’s Tale”. Her visit was made possible by gifts from alumni and friends to the St. Cloud State University Foundation in support of the Miller Learning Resources Center. Additional sponsors included the Common Reading Program and the University Program Board.

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Student Presentations Casey Lundy, Acoustic Phonetic Accounts for the Pronunciation of the Inflectional Suffix /z/ in Central Minnesota English Kylie Bruner, Ashley Bisping and Taylor Schmit, Does Persistent Organic Pollutant PCB-153 Affect Development of Autoimmune Type 1 Diabetes? Sunghee Kim, Sruthi Shankar and Duha Vang, Can Flatworms be used as Behavioral Screens for Potential Anti-Epileptic Drugs? Natalie McIntire, Chemotherapeutic Agents from Natural Product Templates: The Design and Synthesis of a Novel Indanone Analogue

STUDENTS PRESENT AT 2016 NATIONAL CONFERENCE St. Cloud State University sent its largest contingent of student researchers ever to the National Conference on Undergraduate Research (NCUR) in April 2016. NCUR is dedicated to promoting undergraduate research, scholarship and creative activity in all fields of study by sponsoring a national conference for students. This gathering of young scholars welcomes presenters from all institutions of higher learning and from all corners of the academic curriculum. It is a unique environment for the celebration and promotion of undergraduate student achievement. The conference also provides models of exemplary research and scholarship, and helps to improve the state of undergraduate education.

A partnership between the University Honors Program, the SCSU Foundation and the Office of Research and Sponsored Programs helped make this year’s St. Cloud State contingent the largest ever to attend this prestigious event. The funding helped the students have the opportunity for the shared experience of participating in this conference and showcasing their scholarship on a national stage. Outstanding undergraduate student researchers were identified and nominated by St. Cloud State faculty and academic administrators to participate in a competitive process to be selected to present their work at the conference.

To review a complete listing of the SCSU Foundation’s 2015-2016 donors, please visit scsu.mn/scsuimpactreport


Student Success

Impact Report

“Today’s business is done in a global marketplace. As a company that derives 50 percent of our revenue from outside the United States, we value students who have been exposed to other cultures, other systems and understand the way commerce connects us all. Nearly one third of our employees are St. Cloud State grads. These grads come to us ‘ready to contribute’ and understand and appreciate our values.” Brad Goskowicz, Chief Executive Officer, Microbiologics, (Pictured above)

Tokyo Experience Benefits Students In today’s marketplace employers are increasingly placing a high value on college graduates who’ve had an international education experience. The Herberger Business School places great importance on providing its students with an array of international education opportunities to add to their core competencies. Facultyled short-term and semester-long international education opportunities provide structured and focused experiences designed to complement the business curriculum and provide students with the international experience employers seek. In March 2016, Dean Dave Harris and other faculty led a group of students to Tokyo for an immersion into the financial district. The visit was made possible by gifts from alumni and friends to the Herberger Business School and a unique partnership with Rikkyo University in Japan and KITT University in India. It allowed students to experience Japanese business through two cultures at the same time. During their trip, students visited the Tokyo Stock Exchange and participated in a stock simulation game. They also met the board chair of Century Medical, Inc. and had the opportunity to make a presentation about St. Cloud State University. The trip was part of a finance, insurance and real estate department class that prepared students by introducing them to cultural differences that shape how business decisions are made in Japan. While the visit pointed out the significant differences between U.S. and Japanese cultures, it also demonstrated to students how much they share in common.

Anna Engbritson, ‘16 and Olivia Grams,’16

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Impact Report

Student Success

UNDERGRAD EARNS NEWMAN CIVIC FELLOWS AWARD St. Cloud State University’s Richard Gordon, St. Cloud, was recognized for his effective mechanisms for creating lasting change in the community, earning the Campus Compact Newman Civic Fellows Award for 2016. “Richard earned this award due to his significant community organizing and involvement around issues of social justice, equity and his efforts to bring the NorthStar to St. Cloud,” said Beth Knutson-Kolodzne, associate director of Civic Engagement and Student Organizations. Double-majoring in Community Development and Planning, and Environmental and Technological Studies, Gordon has worked to hold public meetings, educate constituents and garner feedback about expanding the NorthStar commuter train to St. Cloud to benefit underserved populations and others needing affordable transportation between St. Cloud and the Twin Cities metro area. “This is my first big project, and I consider myself to be extremely fortunate to have this opportunity and to possibly contribute to this community in a way that will change it forever,” Gordon said. The Newman Civic Fellows Award honors inspiring college student leaders who have demonstrated an investment in finding solutions for challenges facing communities throughout the country. Richard Gordon, ‘18

“His leadership on and off campus are to be applauded. We are proud to have Richard among our finest student leaders at St. Cloud State,” President, Earl H. Potter III.

Newman Civic Fellows are recommended by college and university presidents to acknowledge motivation and ability in public leadership. “I am confident he will continue to make a difference in the lives of others and work toward creating more socially just and inclusive environments for all,” said late President Earl H. Potter III. Gordon’s community involvement also includes co-founding the Collegiate Association for Community Involvement, an inter-collegiate student organization engaging student communities with current issues concerning the community at large beyond the college campus, and being involved with the Central Minnesota Sustainability Project in the St. Cloud area. “Change is the end result of conflict,” Gordon said. “In the words of Mumia Abu Jamal, ‘If you are not angry then you are not paying attention.’ Pay attention, get mad and change it.”


Student Success

Impact Report

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HERBERGER BUSINESS SCHOOL: Professional Selling Competition The Herberger Business School’s professional selling competition is an opportunity for St. Cloud State students to showcase their selling skills, knowledge and abilities and receive feedback from sales professionals in Central Minnesota and the Twin Cities who serve as judges and “buyers.” The competition is held each December and April in the Northwestern Mutual Sales Lab. “The entire Professional Selling Specialization program, including the sales competition, was developed in order to provide students with a comparative advantage in the marketplace and to meet growing demand for professional salespeople who have completed university level sales education courses and programs,” said Dennis Bristow, Department of Marketing professor. Students are judged on their ability to develop strategic sales openings, ask probing questions to determine the buyer’s needs and develop a strategic needs-based professional selling presentation. They are also judged on their visual aids and ability to handle buyer objections and close the sale. Professional Selling Specialization courses are taught by Herberger Business School faculty, along with participation from area business professionals.

Women’s Center Addresses Students Living in Poverty Kate Bennett and Carly Puch attended the Let’s Talk Poverty Conference at St. Cloud Technical and Community College with the help of gifts from alumni and friends to the St. Cloud State University Foundation in support of the Women’s Center Fund. Conversations about class, wage disparities and poverty are happening across campus, but practical conversations about ensuring that people have the resources they need are largely absent, Bennett said. After attending the conference and learning about resources in the community, the women returned to the Women’s Center with the goal of educating the Center staff and engaging the campus community in conversations about socio-economic class and poverty.

The courses include traditional classroom faculty and guest lectures combined with experiential learning opportunities through role-play activities, digital recording and feedback on sales presentations in the state-of-the art Northwestern Mutual Sales Lab. The 15-credit program, open to students from any academic discipline, is taught in a five-course format. The sales lab was made possible through a gift to the St. Cloud State University Foundation from Northwestern Mutual – The Columns Resource Group. The competition is sponsored by Anderson Trucking Services and Marco.

Women’s Center graduate assistants Kate Bennett, left, and Carly Puch work together.

Cassandra Howder, ‘16

To review a complete listing of the SCSU Foundation’s 2015-2016 donors, please visit scsu.mn/scsuimpactreport

Bennett brought the message about poverty to the broader campus with a discussion about the intersections of poverty, gender and other identities in the Women’s Center’s fall 2016 Women on Wednesday speaker series. Both Puch and Bennett are pursuing their master’s degree in social responsibility.


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Impact Report

Providing Opportunity

“The experiences and opportunities I have gained in the past two years have helped prepare me to start my career as I strive to give my patients the highest quality care they deserve.” Victoria Hall, ’15 (Pictured right)

Dean’s Scholarship Recipient Victoria Hall This past winter, Victoria Hall joined a medical mission trip in Nicaragua where she provided care for Nicaraguans in poor communities. The experience opened Hall’s eyes about the lives of those in third-world countries. Hall received the 2015 School of Health and Human Services Dean’s Scholarship. She graduated in December 2015 as a fifth-semester nursing student with her Bachelor of Science in Nursing and is currently working on the surgical floor of St. Cloud Hospital. She is thankful to the donors who made it possible. Hall was very involved both on and off campus, as president of the Nursing Club and teaching health topics to Boys and Girls Clubs. She hopes to become a leader on the floor and be a role model to her peers.

MUSIC SCHOLARSHIP: Nina Zywicki A versatile and collaborative musician, Nina Zywicki’s experiences range from drum corps to symphonic orchestras. Zywicki is completing her Bachelor of Arts degree in Instrumental Performance at St. Cloud State University. At St. Cloud State she has participated in various ensembles including the Percussion Ensemble, Wind Ensemble, Orchestra, Collaborative Chamber Ensemble, as well as occasional appearances with the St. Cloud State choirs. Nina Zywicki, ‘17

These opportunities, among countless others, would not have been possible without the guidance and training Zywicki received from her professors. This is what has made her experience at St. Cloud State most valuable. Nina’s immediate plan following graduation is to collaborate with local musicians and focus on the creation of contemporary improvisational music. Nina would like to thank her parents, as well as the David Swenson Foundation, for generously supporting her throughout her academic career at St. Cloud State University.


CGI: Giving Back Through Commitments To Action Helping children grow through play, advocating for peace and promoting equality — these are the goals of students who have made a Clinton Global Initiative Commitment to Action. Six students attended the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) University meeting April 1-3, 2016, at the University of California, Berkeley, to network, attend leadership workshops and receive mentorship from experts, celebrities and their peers on how to make their commitments reality. Gifts by alumni and friends to the St. Cloud State University Foundation helped students attend the CGI University meeting. Karl Johnson, who attended the CGI University meeting, committed to creating a play-therapy, relationship-focused summer program in lowincome housing apartment complexes in St. Cloud. In summer 2016 he worked with the Yes Network, which provides meals to low-income students in the St. Cloud School District during the summer at schools, community centers and apartment buildings. “I cannot express how thankful I am for being able to have an opportunity to meet so many amazing, motivated, passionate people,” Johnson said of the conference.

CGI University encourages college students to make commitments in one of five areas — education, environment and climate change, poverty alleviation, peace and human rights and public health.

For me, scholarships mean opportunity. It takes away some of the burden of wondering how to finance my schooling, and without that burden, I’m able to be dynamic in my major and try new opportunities that I wouldn’t be able to do otherwise. It allows me to pursue new paths that make me stand out and be more competitive for professional schools one day. I owe my thanks to gracious donors, just as much I owe thanks to my family, teachers and mentors.” Logan Kludt ’18, Biomedical Sciences with a minor

ST. CLOUD STATE NAMED MILITARY FRIENDLY SCHOOL

Huskies Scholarships

$1.6 million contributed in scholarships

977 students

awarded scholarships

in Chemistry

4% increase in awards from 2014-2015

To review a complete listing of the SCSU Foundation’s 2015-2016 donors, please visit scsu.mn/scsuimpactreport


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Impact Report

Providing Opportunity

A LIFE TRANSFORMED: Angela Mundis It was 2014 and Angela Mundis was sending her youngest child off to college and going through a divorce. “I went from mom and wife to ‘what am I going to do now’” she said. Instead of getting down about her situation, Mundis took it as a new opportunity. She seized the chance to go back to school herself and earn a degree that would help her to progress in a new field. A long-time St. Cloud resident, Mundis didn’t have the opportunity to go to college out of high school. No one in her family had ever attended and she didn’t have access to financial aid. Mundis always had the goal to earn her degree and had been taking one class a semester at St. Cloud State since 2006. When she started full time, she had a 4.0 GPA and sophomore status. “I never expected to be here, but it’s worked out well,” she said. “I love, love, love coming to class. I don’t miss a class.”

involved on campus. A geography major with a GIS emphasis, she studied abroad on a shortterm trip to Costa Rica. She volunteered with the Intensive English Center (IEC) meeting with two Saudi women every Sunday night.

volunteering and getting more involved on campus where she is president of the Geography Club and Gamma Theta Upsilon Honor Society. “It’s my senior year. I can be really involved on campus again because of my great scholarships,” she said.

When the IEC ended the Sunday night program, Mundis and the women moved their weekly meetings from the campus library to their own homes where they cooked or went shopping together.“We ended up great friends,” Mundis said. “They found a good resource in me, and I found this part of me that I really love.”

Sitting on a panel at orientation for new School of Public Affairs students, Mundis welcomed them to campus by encouraging them to branch out, work on campus and visit the Huskies Scholarships portal and apply. “I tell every student I meet to apply for scholarships,” she said.

She credits the scholarships she’s received with making a difference — providing her with the little extra she needed so she could focus more on her studies, boosting her confidence and inspiring her to work harder.

To make returning to college full-time work financially, Mundis found an on campus job in the philosophy department and went to work waitressing, bartending and in retail.

In 2015-16, Mundis earned the Mary Jane Young Scholarship of $1,800. “This is amazing because of the generosity of donors,” she said. “I can’t even imagine what it would mean to young people too. To anyone who gets it. It’s like showing them that all your hard work pays off.”

Despite juggling multiple jobs and a full credit load, Mundis still found time to volunteer and get

With additional scholarships for 2016-17, Mundis said she will be able to spend more time

To review a complete listing of the SCSU Foundation’s 2015-2016 donors, please visit scsu.mn/scsuimpactreport

Mundis’ son was the first in the family to graduate from college in spring 2015. Angela will be the second this spring, followed by her daughter a week later. What’s next, she doesn’t know. She plans to find a position working with GIS, preferably for a nonprofit organization. “Through the last six years I’ve been telling my kids ‘You can do anything you want to do. The whole world is open to you right now,’” she said. “I’m a little older. I’m a little more experienced. But nothing else holds me back. The world is open to me now.”


“...nothing else holds me back. The world is open to me now.” Angela Mundis, ‘16


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Impact Report

Margin of Victory

DANCE TEAM EARNS NATIONAL TITLE The St. Cloud State Dance Team delivered a national title with a pom pom performance Jan. 17 at the College Cheerleading and Dance Team National Championship in Orlando, Florida. In the open jazz category, St. Cloud State finished sixth, the best in school history. The three-day competition, managed by the Universal Dance Association and Universal Cheerleaders Association, is billed as the nation’s most prestigious dance team championship. St. Cloud State has earned four top-five finishes in previous trips to the nationals.

“We support the SCSU Swimming and Diving program as we saw our two children (and many others) benefit so much from their student-athlete experience. The life lessons, level of responsibility and discipline as well as skill development and personal growth has proven invaluable in their careers and in their lives. Our contributions will help this SCSU tradition continue to serve future students and the greater community. And having an employer match our gift makes the deal even sweeter!” Brian ’80,’86 and Sue ’81,’84 McGrath

Wrestling Claims Second National Title The St. Cloud State wrestling team is the 2016 NCAA Division II national champion for the second consecutive season. Huskies Wrestling defeated 30 teams March 11-12 in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, including runner-up Notre Dame College, South Euclid, Ohio, (82 points) and third-place finisher University of NebraskaKearney (78.5 points). Gifts to the SCSU Foundation in support of wrestling helped support their championship season.

Each of the seven Huskies in the tournament earned All-American honors, led by frosh redshirt Brett Velasquez, who is the individual national champion at 125-pounds. The Bennington, Nebraska native recorded a 5-0 win over Willy Bohince of Mercyhurst in the title match. For his work this season, Coach Steve Costanzo was named the 2016 Coach of the Year by the National Wrestling Coaches Association.


72%

20

29

MEDIAN

MEDIAN

UNDERGRADUATE

GRADUATE

AGE

AGE

579 FIRST TIME STUDENTS

47% + 53% MALE

VETERANS ENROLLED

GRADUATION RATES

17,231 16,457 16,245

18% 35% 42% 4-YEAR

5-YEAR

FEMALE

15,416 15,461

6-YEAR

$7,814

2015 Quick Facts

UNDERGRADUATE 2011

15,461

2,097

23:1

UNDERGRADUATE

STUDENTS LIVING

STUDENT TO

IN RESIDENCE HALLS

FACULTY

1,863 NEW FIRST YEAR

2015

72% 16%

28%

15%

FIRST

PELL GRANT

EXPECTED FAMILY

GENERATION

ELIGIBLE

CONTRIBUTION=$0

TUITION

WHITE

STUDENTS

STUDENTS

OF COLOR

UNDERGRADUATE NON-RESIDENT TUITION

$7,930 ROOM & BOARD

UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS

15%

MN RESIDENT

$15,732

RATIO

1,831 GRADUATE

2014

LAST 5 YEARS

AVERAGE CLASS SIZE

13,630

2013

TOTAL STUDENTS

23 STUDENTS

TOTAL STUDENTS

2012

8%

4%

INTERNATIONAL UNKNOWN STUDENTS

STUDENTS FROM

49 + 93

$1,200

STATES

BOOKS & SUPPLIES

COUNTRIES


720 4th Ave South St. Cloud, MN 56301 1-866-464-8759 320-308-3984 foundation@stcloudstate.edu stcloudstate.edu


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