Northwestern's Residential
Colleges: An Overview
Goals of
the Residential College Program
The original purposes of the residential colleges were threefold:
first, to extend the learning environment from the classroom
to extracurricular life; second, to provide relatively small
supportive communities in which the student would find something
of a small-college atmosphere within the University; and third,
to nurture better relations between faculty and students by
establishing informal connections between student members
and the colleges' Fellows. Generally, the goals of the residential
colleges are to enrich the intellectual, cultural, and social
lives of their students and to help them develop lifelong
habits of learning and responsibility.
Historical Development of the Residential
Colleges
Northwestern's residential college
system was developed in
the early 1970s in response to a report by a faculty committee
that urged the formation of smaller intellectual communities
within the larger University community. This document, "The
Hagstrum Report," spurred the creation of a committee
to study residential colleges across the nation and to make
recommendations on the development of such a system at Northwestern.
In January 1972, the committee, chaired by T. W. Heyck, professor
of history, College of Arts and Sciences, recommended the
establishment of residential colleges at Northwestern; five
colleges were opened the following fall. The original five
included three nonthematic (Lindgren, Shepard, and Willard)
and two thematic (Urban Studies [later renamed the College
of Community Studies] and Philosophy and Religion [which was
closed in 1978 and resurrected as Humanities Residential College
in 1980]). The system has grown from that original five to
eleven residential colleges. Shepard and Willard have remained
"multithematic," but Lindgren developed its theme
of science and engineering. Six additional thematic colleges
have been developed: Ayers Residential College of Commerce
and Industry (1984), Communications Residential College (1981),
International Studies Residential College (1981), Jones Fine
and Performing Arts Residential College (1982), Public Affairs
Residential College (1991), and Women's Residential College
(1976).
Administration of the Residential
College System
Because faculty involvement is central to the success of
the system, the residential college program is administered
by the Office of the Provost, which provides the budget for
the program. The provost's office also appoints masters and
Fellows annually. The coordinator of residential colleges
is appointed by the provost and works with the provost's office
and the Office of Undergraduate Residential Life to develop
and enhance the programming of the residential colleges. The
coordinator provides administrative support for the colleges,
works with the student officers of the colleges to encourage
programming, and serves as the primary liaison with the master
staffs and the college system.
Each college has access to two sets of funds for programming
support. The provost's office provides each college with a
master's budget, which provides stipends for the master staffs
and a budget to help promote academic/cultural programming.
The expenditure of these funds is at the discretion of the
faculty master; she/he also draws on this resource to help
promote faculty involvement with the college.
In addition to these funds, student social funds are collected
into an account administered by the Student Organizations
Finance Office (SOFO) and designated by the college's student
executive board. Academic initiatives in the colleges are
often supported by a combination of student and master's funds.
Officers are encouraged to work with the master staff at reviewing
the RC's proposed plans for the academic year (including key
annual events) and strive to coordinate those plans with budgeting
on a quarterly basis.
For more information, make sure to see
our "What is a
residential college?" and "Why join a residential
college?" pages.
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