2017-18
FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY
FACT BOOK
Office of Institutional Research
318 Westcott
Florida State University
Tallahassee, FL 32306-1359
ir.fsu.edu
August 2018
ii Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Executive Summary of Statistics
First Time in College (FTIC) Admission Statistics (summer/fall applications)
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
App
lied 25,485 23,439 26,037 28,313 30,040 29,579 30,266 29,828 29,027 35,334
A
dmitted 11,901 14,308 15,498 16,561 16,124 16,803 16,763 16,674 16,840 17,381
Enrolled 5,027 5,967 5,952 6,145 5,738 6,048 6,021 6,100 6,282 6,523
A
vera
g
e SAT Enrolled 1196.8 1195.2 1202.7 1205.7 1201.9 1199.5 1211.8 1206.1 1201.8 1259.0*
A
vera
g
e SAT 3 Enrolled 1802.9 1800.1 1795.7 1814.2 1804.5 1797.0
A
vera
g
e ACT Enrolled 25.9 26.3 26.4 26.5 26.7 26.9 27.2 27.1 27.1 27.6
A
vera
g
e Hi
g
h School GPA 3.72 3.71 3.76 3.79 3.85 3.88 3.92 3.91 3.95 4.02
* Beginning in 2017, the SAT test was re-designed. There is no longer a separate writing component. The scores have not been concorded.
New FTIC Students by Residency (annual total)
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
In-state
4,786 5,667 5,654 5,847 5,435 5,836 5,616 5,635 5,650 5,802
Out-o
f
-State
246
367 386 382 383 502 745 609 776 758
ota
5,032 6,034 6,040 6,229 5,818 6,338 6,361 6,244 6,426 6,560
Final Student Instruction (SIF) files
Student Enrollment - Fall Semesters
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Full-time Under
g
raduate 26,463 27,684 28,148 28,797 28,769 28,859 29,083 29,104 29,248 29,325
Part-time Under
g
raduate 3,181 2,773 2,857 3,054 3,174 3,417 3,538 3,355 3,421 3,487
Full-time Graduate 5,646 5,957 5,981 6,075 5,911 5,943 5,945 5,913 5,894 5,715
Part-time Graduate 2,724 2,600 2,530 2,411 2,244 2,092 2,027 1,906 2,035 2,148
Full-time Unclassified 200 342 242 366 334 335 359 372 353 300
Part-time Unclassified 922
899 1,080 1,007 869 831 821 823 916 925
ota
39,136 40,255 40,838 41,710 41,301 41,477 41,773 41,473 41,867 41,900
Student Enrollment - Fall Semesters by Ethnicity and Gender*
2008 2009 2010* 2011* 2012* 2013* 2014* 2015* 2016* 2017*
W
hite Female 15,274 15,258 15,021 15,097 14,920 14,617 14,392 14,045 13,916 13,836
W
hite Male 12,369 12,646 12,719 12,681 12,427 12,255 12,206 11,826 11,513 11,329
Black Female 2,599 2,576 2,412 2,406 2,281 2,236 2,141 2,103 2,258 2,235
Black Male 1,403 1,443 1,399 1,369 1,318 1,270 1,243 1,213 1,243 1,231
His
p
anic Female 2,295 2,518 2,793 3,059 3,202 3,456 3,752 3,877 4,152 4,300
His
p
anic Male 1,903 2,062 2,321 2,501 2,531 2,770 2,917 3,118 3,259 3,343
A
sian Female 681 763 618 598 571 532 542 546 561 581
A
sian Male 619 682 596 588 534 507 494 475 462 470
A
mer. Indian/Native
A
laskan 156 145 116 98 86 98 64 54 62 57
A
mer. Indian/Native
A
laskan 122 111 86 63 47 61 52 33 38 27
Hawaiian/Pacific Isle Female 10 32 36 31 29 27
Hawaiian/Pacific Isle Male 4 33 25 24 26 21
T
wo/More Races Female 287 434 506 493 599 652 733 829
T
wo/More Races Male 192 296 345 354 467 516 550 593
Non-Resident
A
lien Female 586 640 797 895 859 978 1,074 1,137 1,199 1,149
Non-Resident Alien Male 702 721 822 948 914 1,039 1,105 1,141 1,173 1,152
Not Re
p
orted Female 201 340 312 327 350 366 344 364 333 338
Not Re
p
orted Male 226 350 347 350 396 380 320 318 360 382
ota
39,136 40,255 40,838 41,710 41,301 41,477 41,773 41,473 41,867 41,900
*Beginning in 2010, a new methodology for reporting race/ethnicity was required by the U.S. Department of Education. More information is
available under the Race/Ethnicity entry in the glossary of this book.
Degrees Awarded
2007-08 2008-09
2009-10 2010-11 2011-122012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
Baccalaureate 7,615 7,630 7,926 7,886 7,860 7,938 8,105 8,421 8,626 8,611
Master's 2,075 2,129 2,203 2,218 2,142 2,316 2,065 2,153 2,064 2,076
S
p
ecialist 62 47 42 59 59 52 49 49 53 58
Doctorate 368 343 340 429 444 385 436 444 406 417
J
uris Doctorate 305 263 249 276 288 239 262 259 190 213
Medical Doctorate 57
74 94 113 118 112 115 114 120 116
T
ota
l
10,482 10,486 10,854 10,981 10,911 11,042 11,032 11,440 11,459 11,491
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu iii
Executive Summary of Statistics
Annual Student Full-Time Equivalent (National Standard FTE) Enrollment
2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
Lower 14,691.5 13,296.0 13,790.3
14,295.1 14,901.5 14,630.0 14,154.7 14,348.6 14,748.3 14,939.3
Upper 16,519.3 16,324.5 16,859.7
16,780.4 16,898.6 16,981.0 17,280.0 17,209.9 16,844.1 17,255.4
Graduate 7,654.5
7,638.0 7,686.2
7,712.2 7,772.2 7,553.4 7,454.6 7,337.5 7,317.8 7,395.6
ota
38,865.3 37,258.5 38,336.2
38,787.7 39,572.3 39,164.4 38,889.3 38,896.0 38,910.2 39,589.6
College of Medicine (MD) Headcoun
t
284 35
6
411 45
0
47
5
47
6
481 48
2
483 47
0
Nine- & Twelve-Month State Funded Filled FTE Faculty Positions (excludes Medicine)
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16* 2016-17* 2017-18*
Professor 470.9 480.4 490.0 480.2 475.3 493.4 475.8 469.3 480.2 497.9
A
ssociate Professor 377.7 368.7 356.4 331.6 339.1 327.0 320.0 320.5 311.9 296.3
A
ssistant Professor 288.0 267.0 238.7 214.0 232.5 254.0 273.8 284.0 287.0 291.0
Instructor 9.5 7.5 3.5 5.5 7.5 7.5 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Other 369.2
352.3 357.4 334.1 350.9 371.2 388.4 718.8 659.3 662.3
A
ll Ranks 1,515.4 1,475.9 1,446.0 1,365.4 1,405.2 1,453.2 1,458.9 1,792.6 1,738.4 1,747.6
Nine-Month Filled Faculty Average Salary by Rank (excludes Medicine)
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16* 2016-17* 2017-18*
Professor $101,364 $104,603 $103,696 $108,176 $109,378 $114,574 $115,641 $120,467 $127,745 $132,108
A
ssociate Professor $70,836 $72,880 $73,755 $75,779 $76,674 $78,495 $81,337 $85,163 $91,048 $95,341
A
ssistant Professor $67,504 $70,639 $71,900 $75,746 $77,229 $81,255 $81,835 $83,867 $87,034 $86,977
*Beginning in 2015-16, Filled Faculty FTE and Filled Faculty Average Salary includes E&G funded, and non-E&G funded (C&G and Auxiliary) faculty.
Total University Operating Budget (in millions, may not sum to total due to rounding)
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
Education & General $491.3 $468.9 $490.2 $460.3 $416.4 $519.2 $563.2 $599.5 $630.8 $673.8
A
uxiliary Enter
p
rises $204.7 $199.6 $190.6 $212.8 $229.4 $263.0 $253.0 $255.5 $252.5 $262.9
Contracts & Grants $220.8 $193.3 $225.9 $225.3 $225.7 $225.4 $225.0 $224.8 $209.2 $211.0
Local Funds $195.0
$186.8 $224.1 $243.9 $222.9 $241.7 $240.9 $254.9 $255.4 $242.3
T
ota
l
$1,111.7 $1,048.7 $1,130.7 $1,142.3 $1,094.3 $1,249.4 $1,282.2 $1,334.7 $1,347.9 $1,390.0
Tuition & Fees per Credit Hour (does not include a $20 facility use fee or $5 FSU Card fee per student per semester)
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
Under
g
raduate Resident $131.58 $150.87 $173.26 $192.84 $212.09 $215.55 $215.55 $215.55 $215.55 $215.55
Under
g
raduate Non-resident $613.06 $632.35 $654.74 $698.39 $717.64 $721.10 $721.10 $721.10 $721.10 $721.10
Graduate
R
esident $280.75 $322.71 $371.18 $420.78 $477.70 $479.32 $479.32 $479.32 $479.32 $479.32
Graduate Non-resident $912.15 $954.11 $1,002.58 $1,052.18 $1,109.10 $1,110.72 $1,110.72 $1,110.72 $1,110.72 $1,110.72
Law
R
esident $411.72 $473.32 $544.39 $610.10 $656.38 $688.11 $688.11 $688.11 $688.11 $688.11
Law Non-resident $1,078.80 $1,040.35 $1,196.47 $1,262.18 $1,323.45 $1,355.18 $1,355.18 $1,355.18 $1,355.18 $1,355.18
Medical Resident* $18,068 $18,270 $19,841 $21,333 $22,964 $24,279 $24,279 $25,611 $25,611 $25,611
Medical Non-resident* $52,619 $52,822 $54,392 $55,884 $57,515 $58,830 $60,162 $60,162 $60,162 $60,162
*Block fees – two semesters
External Sources for Research, Service and Training Funds (in thousands, may not sum to total due to rounding)
2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
Federal Government $135,409 $141,399 $179,525 $165,446 $148,421 $154,715 $174,301 $149,605 $142,484 $162,482
State/Local Govt. $38,626 $34,115 $17,170 $19,262 $15,171 $18,094 $20,989 $24,028 $20,985 $21,444
Private and Other $21,752
$24,314 $18,596 $18,770 $26,668 $27,375 $34,842 $27,195 $26,606 $26,450
ota
$195,787 $199,829 $215,291 $203,478 $190,260 $200,183 $230,133 $200,828 $190,075 $210,377
University Library Statistics (includes all university libraries)
2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
V
olumes (in thousands) 3,484 3,034 2,217 2,307 2,314 2,327 2,442 2,819 2,331 1,754
e-books (in thousands) 478 549 361 361 362 376 394 1,245 1,609 1,929
Electronic Journals 42,622 52,201 53,691
72,825 80,758 86,570 95,299119,385 125,007 224,836
Databases 440 610 746 771 778 887 1,047 1,064 1,144 434
Library Expenditures (in thousands):
Books/Related Materials $8,183 $8,063 $8,749 $10,152 $9,088 $8,909 $9,441 $9,446 $10,410 $10,246
T
otal Librar
y
Ex
p
enditures $15,963 $15,750 $16,423 $18,626 $17,483 $17,507 $17,931 $18,919 $20,599 $19,975
iv Florida State University Office of Institutional Researchir.fsu.edu
Table of Contents
This 2017-18 Florida State University Fact Book provides the most current data available for a general description of the
activities of the university. Student information is provided through the Fall 2017 semester, or the 2016-17 academic year for
annual figures. Other data are as current as could be obtained at the time of publication.
A version of this fact book and an archive
of past editions may be found online at: ir.fsu.edu/Factbooks/.
INTRODUCTION
Mission, Vision, and Strategic Priorities of Florida State University ........................................................................................ 1
Florida State University Perspective ............................................................................................................................................ 2
Seal of Florida State University ..................................................................................................................................................... 3
History of Florida State University ................................................................................................................................................ 4
Accreditations .................................................................................................................................................................................... 6
Florida State University Colleges and Schools .............................................................................................................................. 8
Governing Boards - Florida State University’s Board of Trustees ........................................................................................... 9
Governing Boards - State University System ............................................................................................................................... 10
Historical Presidents and Current Officers of the University ................................................................................................... 11
Operating Budget, 2017-18 ............................................................................................................................................................. 12
Education and General Allocated Resources by Program Component, 2017-18 .................................................................. 13
External Sources for Research, Service, and Training Funds ..................................................................................................... 14
Organizational Structure ................................................................................................................................................................. 15
Tallahassee/Leon County, Florida ................................................................................................................................................. 16
STUDENTS
Student Characteristics, Fall 2017 .................................................................................................................................................. 18
First Time in College (FTIC) Admission Statistics ..................................................................................................................... 19
New Student Headcount by Residency ......................................................................................................................................... 20
Headcount Enrollment (by Gender, Ethnicity, Level, Status, Campus, and Age), Fall Semesters ...................................... 22
Headcount Enrollment (by School/College), Fall Semesters .................................................................................................... 23
Geographical Origin of Students by Florida County, Fall Semesters ....................................................................................... 24
Geographical Origin of Students by State, Fall Semesters .......................................................................................................... 26
Geographical Origin of Students by Country, Fall 2017 ............................................................................................................ 28
Geographical Origin of First Time in College (FTIC) Students by Florida County, Fall 2017 ............................................ 29
First Time in College (FTIC) Students by High School and State, Fall 2017 ......................................................................... 30
Florida Community/Junior/State College Transfers to FSU, Fall Semesters ......................................................................... 31
Retention and Graduation Rates for Full-Time FTICs ............................................................................................................. 32
Retention and Graduation Rates for Full-Time Transfers ......................................................................................................... 34
Total Student Credit Hours by Course Level and Class Level, Fall 2017 ................................................................................ 36
State Fundable Student Credit Hours by Department, Fall 2017 .............................................................................................. 37
State Fundable Student Credit Hours and Headcount by Level/Semester ............................................................................. 40
Annual Full-Time Equivalent (National Standard FTE) Enrollment (2011-12 through 2016-17 by Department) .......... 41
Annual FTE Enrollment by College (2011-12 through 2016-17) ............................................................................................ 49
Headcount Summaries by Academic Department (Fall 2015 – Fall 2017) ............................................................................. 50
Headcount Summaries by College, Fall Semesters (Fall 2013 – Fall 2017) ............................................................................. 53
Degrees Awarded by Program: 2016-17 (Summer, Fall, Spring) .............................................................................................. 55
Degrees Awarded by College by Year (2011-12 – 2016-17) ...................................................................................................... 58
Enrollment History: Headcount by Level (Fall Terms Since 1905) ......................................................................................... 60
Residence of Alumni by State ........................................................................................................................................................ 61
Residence of Alumni by Florida County ...................................................................................................................................... 62
Panama City Campus Student Headcount Enrollment, Fall Semesters ................................................................................... 63
Distance Learning Course Enrollment and Student Credit Hours ........................................................................................... 66
Enrollment by Location (Campus, Site, International Location) .............................................................................................. 67
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu v
Table of Contents
FACULTY AND STAFF
Faculty Characteristics and Citations ..................................................................................................................................................... 69
Faculty Positions ......................................................................................................................................................................................... 70
Fall Headcount & Annual Student FTE per Filled Faculty Positions ............................................................................................... 71
Mean Salary by Rank for Nine-Month Filled Faculty, 2016-17 ........................................................................................................... 72
Faculty Salary Trends ................................................................................................................................................................................. 73
College of Medicine Faculty .................................................................................................................................................................... 74
Sources of Doctoral Degree, Instructional Faculty ................................................................................................................................ 75
Tenured Faculty by Age, 2016-17 ............................................................................................................................................................ 76
Faculty Senate ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 77
Full-time Employees by Occupational Category, Ethnicity and Gender, Fall 2016 ........................................................................ 78
Employee Raise Information - Percentages ........................................................................................................................................... 79
AWARDS AND HONORS
Eminent Scholar Chairs ............................................................................................................................................................................. 81
Eppes, Daisy Parker Flory, and McKenzie Professors ......................................................................................................................... 82
The President & Provost’s Named Professorship Program .............................................................................................................. 83
Robert O. Lawton Distinguished Professors .......................................................................................................................................... 86
Florida State University Distinguished Teachers ................................................................................................................................... 87
University Teaching Awards ..................................................................................................................................................................... 88
Developing Scholar, Distinguished Research, Graduate Faculty Mentor, Undergraduate Research Mentor ............................. 92
University Advising Awards ..................................................................................................................................................................... 95
Other Faculty and University Dignitary Honors and Awards ............................................................................................................ 96
Ross Oglesby Award .................................................................................................................................................................................. 97
Honorary Degrees Awarded and Westcott Distinguished Service Medal Recipients ..................................................................... 98
SUPPORT SERVICES
Institutes and Research Centers ............................................................................................................................................................ 102
University Libraries ................................................................................................................................................................................. 105
FSU Buildings - Some Facts .................................................................................................................................................................. 106
FSU Buildings - Gross Square Feet and Number of Rooms ........................................................................................................... 108
Net Assignable Square Footage (NASF) by College ......................................................................................................................... 110
Florida State University Site and Acreage Holdings .......................................................................................................................... 111
Center for Academic & Professional Development (CAPD) .......................................................................................................... 112
Division of Student Affairs .................................................................................................................................................................... 113
University Housing .................................................................................................................................................................................. 116
Office of Financial Aid …....................................................................................................................................................................... 117
Intercollegiate Athletics ........................................................................................................................................................................... 118
Florida State University Flying High Circus ........................................................................................................................................ 119
APPENDIX
Florida State University Degree Program Inventory as of August 2017 ......................................................................... Appendix A
Glossary ...................................................................................................................................................................................... Appendix B
The Florida State University Fact Book is published annually by the Office of Institutional Research. In conjunction with the entire
Institutional Research staff and departments across campus, information is compiled by Heather Epstein-Diaz and Andrew Brady.
Inquiries may be directed to Heather Epstein-Diaz (hepstein@fsu.edu), to Andrew Brady (abrady@fsu.edu), or to James Hunt, Director
of Institutional Research (jhunt@fsu.edu).
Pictures in this year’s book include: President John Thrasher; Jennifer Magi and Anna Wuest, Hollings Undergraduate Research
Recipients; Distinguished Teacher Gregory Erickson; Lawton Award recipient Pamela L. Perre; The Oglesby Union; and Argo the
owl.
Sincere thanks are extended to those offices that provided data or otherwise assisted in the production of this publication.
Introduction
Photo: FSU Photo Lab
President
John Thrasher
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Introduction-1
Mission, Vision, and Strategic Priorities of Florida State University
Prologue:
Florida State University was founded in 1851 and has developed from one of the nation’s preeminent women’s
colleges into a comprehensive graduate-research university, offering a broad array of academic and professional programs at all
degree levels.
Mission:
Florida State University preserves, expands, and disseminates knowledge in the sciences, technology, arts, humanities,
and professions, while embracing a philosophy of learning strongly rooted in the traditions of the liberal arts. The university is
dedicated to excellence in teaching, research, creative endeavors, and service. The university strives to instill the strength, skill,
and character essential for lifelong learning, personal responsibility, and sustained achievement within a community that fosters
free inquiry and embraces diversity.
Vision:
Florida State University will be among the nation’s most entrepreneurial and innovative universities, transforming the
lives of our students and shaping the future of our state and society through exceptional teaching, research, creative activity, and
service. We will amplify these efforts through our distinctive climateone that places a premium on interdisciplinary inquiry and
draws from the rich intellectual and personal diversity of our students, faculty, staff, and alumni. These three forces
entrepreneurship, interdisciplinarity, and diversitydeepen FSU’s impact and result in a powerful return to our students and the
people of Florida for their continued support and trust.
Strategic Priorities:
Strategic Priority 1.0 - Deepening our distinctive commitment to continuous innovation.
Goal 1.1 - Expand and incentivize FSU’s internal capacity for innovation.
Goal 1.2 - Increase the University’s role as an engine for Florida’s economic development.
Goal 1.3 - Translate FSU research, scholarship, and creative production into applications that enhance economic development and
quality of life.
Strategic Priority 2.0 - Amplifying excellence across our academic and research programs.
Goal 2.1 - Define and develop an FSU “faculty for the future”.
Goal 2.2 - Enhance the quality of graduate education to achieve preeminence in strategically important areas of study and research.
Goal 2.3 - Strengthen the excellence and reputation of the University’s professional schools.
Goal 2.4 - Encourage and incentivize high-impact, interdisciplinary and inter-college initiatives that address pressing societal issues.
Goal 2.5 - Expand innovative teaching strategies.
Goal 2.6 - Enhance FSU’s strategy for expanding its global footprint and fostering a culturally rich learning environment on campus.
Strategic Priority 3.0 - Realizing the full potential of diversity and inclusion.
Goal 3.1 - Increase the diversity of FSU’s student body, faculty, and staff.
Goal 3.2 - Expand and strengthen academic and co-curricular programs, as well as administrative initiatives, that increase diversity and
inclusiveness.
Goal 3.3 - Develop globally and culturally competent students who are prepared to succeed in an increasingly multicultural and
international society.
Strategic Priority 4.0 - Ensuring student success on campus and beyond.
Goal 4.1 - Expand FSU’s high-impact programs of advising, leadership development, community-building, and academic support.
Goal 4.2 - Deepen FSU’s tradition as an engaged campus community that makes a difference locally and abroad.
Goal 4.3 - Ensure that FSU remains a welcoming and safe campus community that develops the “whole person” and promotes well-
being for all students.
Goal 4.4 - Broaden and strengthen engagement with FSU alumni and friends worldwide.
Strategic Priority 5.0 - Preparing our graduates for 21st century careers.
Goal 5.1 - Expand experiential, cross-cultural, and collaborative learning.
Goal 5.2 - Provide students strong career advising and mentoring.
Goal 5.3 - Engage graduate students in programs and services that prepare them for employment opportunities within and outside of
the academy.
Goal 5.4 - Leverage technology and relationships with employers and workforce development agencies throughout Florida for the
benefit of students and alumni.
Strategic Priority 6.0 - Investing strategically in our institution and reputation.
Goal 6.1 - Build and promote a public identity for FSU that reflects our impressive academic strengths and achievements.
Goal 6.2 - Strengthen the University’s financial foundation.
Goal 6.3 - Provide an up-to-date and adaptable information infrastructure.
Goal 6.4 - Foster a culture of service, problem solving, and teamwork among all FSU employees.
Goal 6.5 - Incorporate sustainable living practices into all FSU activities.
Note: On October 28, 2017, the FSU Board of Trustees approved the prologue, mission, vision, strategic priorities, supporting goals, and initiatives (not
included herein), submitted by the 22-member Strategic Planning Committee. More information is available online at: strategicplan.fsu.edu
2-Introduction Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
Florida State University Perspective
Overview
Florida State University is a public, fully accredited, coeducational research institution, and one of twelve units within the Florida
State University System directed by the Florida Board of Governors. Located in Tallahassee, Florida's capital city, the University affords
students and faculty opportunities for interaction with state and federal agencies for internships, research, and part-time employment, as
well as a myriad of social, cultural, and recreational activities. The main campus is located on 485.0 acres in Tallahassee with other
facilities owned in Leon, Bay, Collier, Franklin, Sarasota, and Gadsden counties, and leased in Escambia, Jackson, Leon, Orange, Palm
Beach, St. Lucie, and Volusia counties in Florida, and other locations overseas. The University owns a total of 1,632.5 acres.
Founded in 1851, Florida State University is a comprehensive, national, graduate-research university offering more than 300
outstanding academic and professional degrees in top flight programs ranging from Business and Physics to Music and Creative Writing.
Florida State University provides extraordinary opportunities for undergraduate students to build a strong foundation in their chosen
fields; study abroad at the University’s overseas campuses; engage in scores of service activities; benefit from world class library and
technical facilities; participate in extensive intramural and recreational events; and interact with some of the finest students and faculty in
the nation in a distinctive, welcoming environment. The University instills the strength, skill, and character essential for lifelong learning,
personal responsibility, and achievement.
With 19 colleges, plus the Graduate School, Dedman School of Hospitality, and the Jim Moran School of Entrepreneurship,
students may take courses of study leading to the baccalaureate degree in 104 degree programs, to the master's degree in 112 degree
programs, to the advanced master’s degree in 1 program, to the specialist degree in 12 degree programs, to the doctorate degree in 70
degree programs, and to the professional degree in 3 degree programs. The academic divisions are the Colleges of Applied Studies; Arts
& Sciences; Business; Communication & Information; Criminology & Criminal Justice; Education; Engineering; Fine Arts; Human
Sciences; Law; Medicine; Motion Picture Arts; Music; Nursing; Social Sciences & Public Policy; and Social Work; plus the Graduate
School, Dedman School of Hospitality, and the Jim Moran School of Entrepreneurship.
Approximately 84.3 percent of the students enrolled at FSU attend full time. Undergraduates comprise 78.3 percent and graduate
students 18.8 percent of the total enrollment of 41,900 students in the Fall of 2017. The remaining 2.9 percent are considered
unclassified. The average age of all students is 22.4; of undergraduates, 20.8; and of graduate students, 28.9.
The State University System operates under the supervision of the Board of Governors, State of Florida. Florida State University
is governed by a Board of Trustees, which was established in July, 2001. The twelve governor-appointed members of the Board of
Trustees are: Edward "Ed" Burr (Chair), Jorge Gonzalez, Jim Henderson, Maximo Alvarez, Kathryn Ballard, William “Billy” Buzzett,
Emily Fleming “June” Duda, Mark Hillis, Craig Mateer, Bob Sasser, Brent Sembler, Todd Adams (Faculty Representative), and the
thirteenth member of Florida State University’s Board of Trustees is the current student body president, Stacey Pierre.
Research and Special Programs
Florida State University has built a reputation as a strong research center in both the sciences and the humanities. It is expected
that more than $200 million in external funds will be generated this year by the faculty and administration as supplements to state funds
used for research. These external funds are in the form of contracts and grants from private foundations, industries, and government
agencies, and are used to support research, improve research facilities, and provide stipends for graduate students.
Florida State is well known in the natural sciences for its basic research programs in biology, chemistry, meteorology, nuclear
science, oceanography, physics, and psychology. Strong basic and applied research programs are also found in computer science,
geology, mathematics, and statistics. As a nationally recognized center of excellence in graduate training in the visual and performing
arts, the University offers professional training in music, theatre, and dance performance and theory.
FSU International Programs has over 50 years of experience in providing students with extraordinary study abroad experiences.
Through our more than 60 academic programs, students can choose to study in over 20 locations throughout the world. Program
opportunities include spring, summer and fall semesters at our four study centers, summer terms in additional locations, Spring Break
programs, First Year Abroad for incoming freshmen, and international internships. The year-round study centers are located in
Florence, Italy; London, England; Panama City, The Republic of Panama; and Valencia, Spain. Summer programs are currently being
offered in locations including China, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Ireland, Peru, Russia, Switzerland,
Tanzania and Thailand. FSU credits are earned for all courses and are transferable within the US university system, in accordance with
each student's home university regulations.
FSU operates the Ringling Center for the Cultural Arts in Sarasota, which includes the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art,
the largest museum/university complex in the nation. Also on the property and operated by FSU is the Florida State University Center
for the Performing Arts, which houses the Asolo Repertory Theatre.
Florida State University has both an Air Force and an Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) program. FSU students
may apply for admission to the Navy ROTC Program offered through Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University in Tallahassee.
FSU is a founding member of the Florida LambdaRail, a consortium of universities created to facilitate advanced research,
education, & economic development activities. The network consists of 1,540 miles of dark fiber/optical equipment, operating at 10
gigs/sec. & allowing up to 32 independent networks to exist. FSU has a supercomputing grid that enables researchers to use high
capacity computing to support complex investigations.
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Introduction-3
Florida State University Perspective
University Libraries provide collections, resources and services to enhance the learning, teaching, research, and service activities
of the Florida State University. The Libraries’ collections includes nearly 3.75 million titles and the web site offers access to more than
400 databases and 200,000 electronic journals. Materials not available online or at the libraries may be requested through interlibrary
loan or through the statewide UBorrow system, offering FSU faculty and students millions of books from 40 other state university and
college libraries. The Library Express Delivery Service delivers books and articles to faculty, post-docs, graduate, teaching and research
assistants on a daily basis. With almost 1.5 million visitors each year, Strozier Library, FSU’s largest library, is open 134 hours each
week, providing around-the-clock research assistance and other services like free academic tutoring and a robust range of academic
support throughout the day and late into the night.
The FSU Libraries include 7 libraries on campus: the Robert Manning Strozier Library, Paul A. M. Dirac Science Library,
Mildred and Claude Pepper Library, Warren Allen Music Library, College of Law Library, College of Medicine Medical Library, and the
College of Engineering Library. Library materials and services are also available at the FSU Panama City Campus, as well as
International Programs study centers in London, Florence, and Panama, and a collection of art and related materials at the John and
Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, Florida.
Among the special programs which have won national or international distinction in research are the Program in Nuclear
Research, Institute for Molecular Biophysics, FSU Marine Laboratory, Center for Music Research, Learning Systems Institute, FSU
Proton-Induced X-Ray Emission (PIXE) Laboratory, FSU Institute of Science and Public Affairs, the College of Motion Picture Arts.
In 1990, the National Science Foundation announced that FSU would be the home of the National High Magnetic Field
Laboratory. A joint project with the University of Florida and Los Alamos National Laboratory, the lab became the nation's top center
for research on magnets millions of times more powerful than the Earth's magnetic field. This facility is the first national lab to be
located in Florida and went into operation in 1994. Research at the lab is conducted in such diverse fields as biology, materials science,
medicine, physics, chemistry, engineering, and superconductivity.
Online Resource: Florida State University’s website can be accessed at http://www.fsu.edu
Seal of Florida State University
The seal of Florida State University, which was designed by the combined talents of the Art and Classics Departments, has its origins in
the first decade of the 20th century during the administration of President Albert A. Murphree. It was updated in the year 2000 to
accurately reflect the year that Florida State University was created, 1851. In 2005, minor cosmetic updates were made.
The torches of the seal symbolize the fire given to man by the Greek god Prometheus. This fire enabled man to elevate himself above
the animals and become human. The torches of the FSU seal symbolize the purpose of the University: the passing on of knowledge
from generation to generation. The torch on the left is Vires: strength of all kinds, physical, moral and intellectual. The center torch is
Artes: that which we acquire - knowledge which transcends skills, the appreciation of beauty. The torch on the right is Mores: customs,
character and tradition. Through these three ideals the student is educated physically, mentally and morally.
Source: Florida State College for Women: Notes on the Formative Years, by William G. Dodd
Online Resource: The history of the FSU seal and university identity guidelines can be viewed at: http://unicomm.fsu.edu/brand/
4-Introduction Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
History of Florida State University
Florida State University, one of the largest and oldest of the twelve institutions of higher learning in the State University
System of Florida, had its beginnings as early as 1823 when the Territorial Legislature began to plan a higher education system. In
1825 the Federal Government reserved two townships for the purpose of maintaining institutions of higher education in the
territory, and on March 3, 1845, the United States Congress, in an act supplemental to the act admitting Florida as a state in the
Union, added two more townships. These townships were granted to the State for the use of two seminaries of learning, one to
be located east and the other west of the Suwannee River. The Legislature of the State of Florida in a Legislative Act of January
24, 1851, provided for the establishment of the two institutions of learning, their first purpose to be "the instruction of persons,
both male and female, in the art of teaching all the various branches that pertain to a good common school education; and next to
give instruction in the mechanic arts, in husbandry, in agricultural chemistry, in the fundamental laws, and in what regards the
rights and duties of citizens."
By 1854 the City of Tallahassee had established a school for boys called the Florida Institute with the hope that the State
could be induced to take it over as one of the seminaries, and in the 1854 session of the Legislature of Florida the City of
Tallahassee presented a memorial asking that the institution west of the Suwannee be located in that city. That effort was not
successful, but in 1856 the Intendant (Mayor) of Tallahassee again offered the Institute's land and building to the Legislature.
Francis Eppes, who spent his formative years on the estate of his grandfather President Thomas Jefferson at Monticello in
Virginia and shared his views of the importance to a democracy of a liberally educated citizenry, was the Mayor of Tallahassee
who made the offer. This time they chose to accept the offer and designated Tallahassee as the site of one of the state seminaries
because of its railway connections, its "salubrious climate," and its "intelligent, refined, and moral community." The bill to locate
the Seminary in Tallahassee passed both houses and was signed by the Governor on January 1, 1857. On February 7, 1857, the
first meeting of the Board of Education of the State Seminary West of the Suwannee River was held, and the institution began
offering postsecondary instruction to male students. Francis Eppes served as President of the Seminary's Board of Education for
eight years and instilled in the institution the Jeffersonian ideals which characterize it today. The school first became co-
educational the following year (1858) when it absorbed the Tallahassee Female Academy, begun in 1843 as the Misses Bates
School. Thus the West Florida Seminary, founded in 1851, began operating in 1857, only twelve years after Florida achieved
statehood. It was located on the hill where the Westcott Building now stands, which has been the site of an institution of higher
education longer than any other site in Florida.
Classes were held at the West Florida Seminary from 1857 until 1863, when the state legislature changed the name to The
Florida Military and Collegiate Institute to reflect the addition of a military section which trained cadets. During the Civil War,
cadets from the school, ranging in age from twelve to eighteen, fought in the Battle of Natural Bridge and helped make
Tallahassee the only Confederate capitol east of the Mississippi not captured during the war. As a result of the brave action of the
West Florida cadets in this battle, the Florida State University Army ROTC cadet corps today is one of only three in the nation
authorized to display a battle streamer with its flag, which bears the words NATURAL BRIDGE 1865. After the end of the war
in 1865, however, Union troops under General McCook descended upon Tallahassee and occupied the city (including campus
buildings), remaining for more than a month.
Following the war, the institution entered a period of growth and development. In 1884 the first diplomas, Licentiates of
Instruction, were awarded, and by 1891 the Institute had begun to focus clearly on what we would today call post-secondary
education; seven Bachelor of Arts degrees were awarded that year. By 1897, the institution had evolved into the first liberal arts
college in the state, and in 1901 it became Florida State College, a four-year institution organized in four departments: the College,
the School for Teachers, the School of Music, and the College Academy. Florida State College was empowered to award the
degree of Master of Arts, and the first master's degree was offered in 1902. That year, the student body numbered 252 men and
women, and degrees were available in classical, literary and scientific studies. In 1903, the first university library was begun. The
following quote from the 1903 Florida State College Catalogue adds an interesting footnote to this period:
“In 1883 the institution, now long officially known as the West Florida Seminary, was organized by the Board of
Education as The Literary College of the University of Florida. Owing to lack of means for the support of this more ambitious
project, and also owing to the fact that soon thereafter schools for technical training were established, this association soon
dissolved. It remains to be remarked, however, that the legislative act passed in 1885, bestowing upon the institution the title of
the University of Florida, has never been repealed. The more pretentious name is not assumed by the college owing to the fact
that it does not wish to misrepresent its resources and purposes.”
In a 1905 reorganization of Florida's educational system by the Legislature, six state institutions of higher learning were
consolidated into two when the University of Florida in Gainesville was established and designated a men's school and the Florida
State College became a women's school called the Florida Female College. The male student body moved from Tallahassee to
Gainesville, taking with it the fraternity system and the College football team, which had been state champions in 1902, 1903, and
1905. In 1909 the name of the college was changed to Florida State College for Women, an institution which grew to become the
third largest women's college in the nation during the 1930's. The College became fully accredited in 1915, and a chapter of the
National Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi was installed in 1925, the year after the College was placed on the list of standard
colleges and universities approved by the Association of American Universities and became a member of the Association of
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Introduction-5
History of Florida State University
American Colleges. In 1935 the first chapter of Phi Beta Kappa in the state, Alpha Chapter of Florida, was installed at the College,
a mark of its status as a true liberal arts college
The year 1947 saw many changes. Demand by returning World War II veterans had brought men back to the campus in
1946 with the establishment of the Tallahassee Branch of the University of Florida, and on May 15, 1947, the Governor signed an
act of the Legislature returning Florida State College for Women to coeducational status and naming it Florida State University. A
permanent president's residence was acquired. The student body, numbering 4,056, chose a new alma mater and selected the
Seminole as their mascot. The Flying High Circus was born, and football was started again when the first home game since 1905
was played in October. Three years later Campbell Stadium was built. The first Student Union was established and housed in the
"O Club" on West Campus, a former Army Air Base which housed mainly male students and provided some classroom space
three miles west of the main campus.
The 1950's brought further development and expansion to the University. To the colleges and schools which had existed
since the Florida State College days (Arts and Sciences, Education, Home Economics, and Music) were added Library Science,
Social Welfare (later split into Social Work and Criminology), Business, Journalism (discontinued in 1959), and Nursing. A
student in the Department of Chemistry was awarded the University's first Ph.D. in 1952. A new building was completed for the
Developmental Research School, which in 1905 had evolved from the High School and the College Academy of earlier days as
the Observation and Practice School, created to provide on-site opportunities for experience and research to students in
Education. Tully Gymnasium, Strozier Library, and the Business Building were completed to enhance the education of the ever-
increasing student population.
In the 1960's the University acquired the Shaw Poetry Collection, established the institutes of Molecular Biophysics and
Space Biosciences, and constructed nine new buildings, including the Oglesby Union and the Fine Arts Building. During this
period, the Panama Canal Branch was opened, and the Program in Medical Sciences was established. The first black student
enrolled in 1962, and the first black Ph.D. candidates graduated in 1970. Programs in African American Studies and Women's
Studies were established. Continuing the liberal arts tradition begun in the 1890's, the Liberal Studies Program required of all
undergraduates was expanded and strengthened.
Before 1887 the institution's chief executive officer had the title Principal, but this was changed to President with the
appointment of George Edgar in 1887. He was followed by Alvin Lewis in 1892, and Dr. A. A. Murphree in 1897. Dr.
Murphree, who came to the Seminary in 1896, became president of Florida Female College in 1905. When he left to become
president of the University of Florida in 1909, Dr. Edward Conradi became president of Florida State College for Women. In
1941, Dr. Doak S. Campbell became president. When Dr. Campbell retired as president of Florida State University on June 30,
1957, Dr. Albert B. Martin served as acting president until September 1, 1957, when Dr. Robert Strozier became president. At
Dr. Strozier's death in April of 1960, Dr. Milton W. Carothers became acting president to serve until Dr. Gordon Blackwell took
over the duties of president on September 16, 1960.
On February 1, 1965, Dr. John E. Champion became acting president replacing Dr. Gordon Blackwell, who resigned.
Dr. Champion was named president on June 22, 1965; he resigned February 17, 1969, and Dr. J. Stanley Marshall was appointed
acting president on the same date. On June 6, 1969, the Board of Regents named Dr. Marshall President; he resigned August 31,
1976. Dr. Bernard Francis Sliger became Interim President upon Dr. Marshall's resignation, and on February 7, 1977, the Board
of Regents named Dr. Sliger President. At the Fall Meeting of the General Faculty on September 18, 1990, the Dean of the
Faculties read a statement on Dr. Sliger's behalf announcing his resignation as president effective August 1, 1991. On March 11,
1991, Dr. Dale W. Lick was designated to succeed Dr. Sliger as president on August 1, 1991. After Dr. Lick's resignation on
August 31, 1993, Dr. Sliger was again named Interim President. On November 29, 1993, H. Talbot "Sandy" D'Alemberte was
designated president effective January 3, 1994. He was succeeded by Dr. Thomas K. Wetherell on January 6, 2003. Eric J. Barron
took the position of 14
th
president on February 1, 2010. Following Barron's resignation, the Florida State University Board of
Trustees named Dr. Garnett S. Stokes as Interim President effective April 2, 2014. John Thrasher became FSU's 15
th
president
on November 6, 2014.
In each succeeding decade, Florida State University has added to its academic organization and presently is comprised of
eighteen independent schools/colleges, plus The Graduate School. It has expanded from the original few acres and buildings to
384 buildings on 1,632.5 acres, including the downtown Tallahassee main campus of 485 acres, a farm which for many decades
supplied the Florida State College for Women with food, the Seminole Reservation--a recreational facility, the Coastal and Marine
Laboratory on the Gulf Coast, the FAMU/FSU College of Engineering facility, the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory and
Division of Research at Innovation Park, and the branch campus in Panama City, Florida. One hundred and sixty-six years after
its founding, Florida State University started the 2017-2018 academic year with a student population of 41,900 and recognition as
a major graduate research institution with an established international reputation.
Source: Office of the Dean of the Faculties
Online Resource: The history of Florida State University can be accessed online at http://www.ir.fsu.edu/FSU_History.html
6-Introduction Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Accreditations
The Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools serves as the accreditor for Florida State University. The
University received its first accreditation in 1915. Discipline-specific accrediting agencies and governing bodies grant accreditation to some
departments and programs.
Degree
College/School/Program Level Accrediting Agency
Florida State University All Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, Commission on Colleges
(SACSCOC)
College of Applied Studies
Nurse Anesthesia M Council on Accreditation of Nurse Anesthesia Educational Programs
(COA)
College of Arts & Sciences
Chemistry B American Chemical Society (ACS)
Computer Science B Computing Accreditation Commission of ABET
Psychology M,D The Clinical Psychology doctoral program is accredited by the
American Psychological Association (APA); The Master’s Program
in Psychology with a Specialty in Applied Behavior Analysis is
accredited by the Association for Behavior Analysis International.
College of Business B,M,D The College of Business is Accredited by AACSB International, the
Business Administration B,M,D Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, for all its
Business Analytics M business programs.
Management B,M
Finance B,M
Marketing B,M
Risk Management/Insurance B,M
Real Estate B
Management Information Systems B,M Accounting is accredited separately by AACSB from the general college
Accounting B,M college accreditation
College of Communication and Information
Communication Disorders M Council on Academic Accreditation in Audiology and Speech/
Language Pathology (CAA)
Information M American Library Association (ALA)
College of Education
Combined Program in Counseling
Psychology & School Psychology D American Psychological Association (APA)
Career Counseling & Mental Health Counseling S Council for Accreditation of Counseling & Related Educational
Programs (CACREP)
School Psychology S National Association of School Psychologists (NASP)
College of Engineering
Civil Engineering B These bachelor's degree programs at the College of Engineering are
Electrical Engineering B accredited by the Engineering Accreditation Commission of ABET,
Mechanical Engineering B Inc., http://www.abet.org
Industrial Engineering B
Computer Engineering B
Chemical Engineering B
College of Fine Arts
Dance B,M National Association of Schools of Dance (NASD)
Interior Architecture and Design B,M The bachelor’s program is accredited by both Council for Interior
Design Accreditation (CIDA) and National Association of Schools
of Art & Design (NASAD). The master’s program is accredited by
National Association of Schools of Art & Design (NASAD).
Studio Art B,M National Association of Schools of Art & Design (NASAD)
Art Education B,M,D National Association of Schools of Art & Design (NASAD),
and American Art Therapy Association (AATA)
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Introduction-7
Accreditations
Degree
College/School/Program Level Accrediting Agency
College of Fine Arts, continued
Art History B,M,D National Association of Schools of Art & Design (NASAD)
Theatre B,M,D National Association of Schools of Theatre (NAST)
College of Human Sciences
Dietetics B,M Accreditation Council for Education in Nutrition & Dietetics (ACEND)
Athletic Training/Sports Medicine B Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education (CAATE)*
Marriage & Family Therapy D Commission on Accreditation for Marriage & Family Therapy
Education (COAMFTE)
College of Law P American Bar Association (ABA)
College of Medicine P Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) of the Association
of American Medical Colleges (AAMC), and the American Medical
Association (AMA)
Residency Programs Residency Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)
Physician Assistant M Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the Physician
Assistant (ARC-PA) (preliminary)
College of Music
Music B,M,D National Association of Schools of Music
Music Therapy B,M American Music Therapy Association (AMTA) & National Association
of Schools of Music (NASM)
Music Education B,M,D National Association of Schools of Music (NASM)
College of Nursing B,M,D Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE)
College of Social Sciences & Public Policy
Public Administration M Network of Schools of Public Policy, Affairs, and Administration
(NASPAA)
Urban & Regional Planning M Planning Accreditation Board (PAB)
Public Health M Council on Education for Public Health (CEPH)
College of Social Work B,M Council on Social Work Education (CSWE)
KEY: B = Accredited Bachelor’s program M = Accredited Master’s program D = Accredited Doctoral program
S = Accredited Specialist program P = Accredited Professional program
*CAATE is transitioning to accrediting only master’s programs. The Athletic Training Program will continue as an undergraduate program
and, therefore, will not be eligible for CAATE accreditation. The university will teach out the students who entered under CAATE
accreditation. The accreditation will expire when the current cycle ends on August 1, 2019.
Source: Office of the Provost
8-Introduction Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Florida State University Colleges and Schools
Florida State University is comprised of sixteen active colleges, plus The Graduate School, Dedman School of
Hospitality, and the Jim Moran School of Entrepreneurship
School/Colle
g
e Founded Current Dean/Director
Fall 2017
Students
Fall 2017
Em
p
loyees Chan
g
es
College of Arts and Sciences 1905 Sam Huckaba 10,496 933
College of Education 1905 Marcy Driscoll (retiring 2018) 1,831 330
College of Human Sciences 1918 Michael Delp 2,488 63
College of Music 1921 Patricia Flowers 1,019 132
College of Information 1947 2009***
The Graduate School 1947 Mark Riley 19 32
College of Social Work 1949 James Clark 763 74
College of Business 1950 Michael Hartline 6,346 154
College of Nursing 1950 Patricia Flowers 781 51
School of Public Administration 1949 1959+
School of Journalism 1950 1959*
School of Engineering Science 1963 1972*
College of Law 1966 Erin O’Hara O’Connor 605 106
College of Criminology & Criminal Justice 1973 Thomas Blomberg 1,918 29
College of Social Sciences & Public Policy 1973 Timothy Chapin 4,884 221
College of Communication 1973 2009***
School of Theatre 1973 2005**
College of Fine Arts 1973 Scott Shamp (Interim) 1,283 165 2014****
FAMU/FSU College of Engineering 1981 Murray Gibson 2,182 133
College of Motion Picture Arts 1988 Ronald Braddock 169 38
College of Medicine 2001 John Fogarty 1,330 460
College of Communication & Information 2009 Lawrence Dennis 2,242 137
College of Applied Studies 2010 Randall Hanna 305 115
Jim Moran School of Entrepreneurship 2017 Susan Fiorito 107 14
Dedman School of Hospitality 2017 Don Farr 409 16
* Discontinued in the year noted.
** Absorbed by the College of Fine Arts (formerly College of Visual Arts, Theatre and Dance) in the year noted.
*** Merged to form the new College of Communication and Information in the year noted.
**** Changed name from the College of Visual Arts, Theatre and Dance to the College of Fine Arts in the year noted.
+ The School of Public Administration discontinued as a stand-alone School in 1959, but is currently housed in the College of
Social Sciences and Public Policy.
Other Academic Divisions of the University
School/Colle
g
e Founded Current Dean/Director
Fall 2017
Students Chan
g
es
Undergraduate Studies 1888* Karen Laughlin 32,812
Graduate Studies 1905 Mark Riley 7,863
Panama City (FL) Campus 1967 Randall Hanna 940 1982**
Republic of Panama Campus 1957 Carlos Langoni 416
* Bachelor of Arts & Bachelor of Letters curricula announced in the year noted.
** Administration of the Panama City Campus was transferred to Florida State University in the year noted.
Source: Office of Institutional Research
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Introduction-9
Governing Boards - Florida State University’s Board of Trustees
Florida State University’s Board of Trustees
Edward Burr (Chair), of Jacksonville, is president and chief executive officer of GreenPointe Holdings, LLC, a diversified holding company he
founded in 2008. After graduating from FSU College of Business with a B.S. in Accounting in 1979, he began his career with Coopers & Lybrand
LLP. He founded the LandMar Group LLC in 1987 and led the company's creation of master-planned, award-winning communities in Florida and
coastal Georgia. Mr. Burr also co-founded Hampton Golf & Lifestyles Management. He has served on Board of Trustees of the FSU Foundation, the
board of the Seminole Boosters and the Executive Board of the FSU Center for Real Estate Education and Research in the College of Business.
Jim Henderson, of Longwood, is Chairman, CEO, and Founder of AssuredPartners, a national insurance brokerage firm. Prior to establishing
AssuredPartners in March of 2011, Jim Henderson brought his insurance expertise to Brown & Brown when he joined the company as its CFO in
1985. Jim served in a variety of roles including President and Chief Operating Officer as well as Vice Chairman. Jim is a graduate of Florida State
University with a BSBA in Accounting and Economics. Jim and his wife, Carole, have three children and eight grandchildren that all reside in Florida.
Todd Adams, of Tallahassee, is a professor of physics and serves as the President of the Faculty Senate at Florida State University. He joined the FSU
faculty in 2001. Todd’s research is in the field of particle physics. He currently works on the CMS experiment at CERN, the European particle physics
laboratory. He uses data collected from proton-proton collisions to search for evidence of new physics. Todd has guided the research of numerous
undergraduate and graduate students (including four Ph.D.’s awarded). He is co-author of more than 1000 peer-reviewed publications as a member of
collaborations at Brookhaven National Lab, Fermi National Accelerator Lab (Fermilab), and CERN. In 2009-2010, Todd served as Chair of the
Fermilab Users Executive Committee, representing the 2000 users of the laboratory. Todd is a graduate of Hope College (B.S. 1991) and the
University of Notre Dame (M.S. 1994, Ph.D. 1997).
Maximo Alvarez, born in Havana, Cuba, received his bachelor’s degree from Florida State University in 1969 and his Master’s degree in 1970.
Maximo founded Sunshine Gasoline Distributors, Inc, and grew the company from four gas stations to over 300 locations and supplier to another 250
branded retail facilities.
Because of his humble beginnings, Maximo has always believed in helping the community as well as the industry in which he
has spent most of his career. Maximo has been involved in the Florida Petroleum Marketers Association and was elected Chairman of the Board in
2000 and inducted into its Hall of Fame in 2005. Maximo has been married to his wife, Esther, for over forty years, and they have three children.
Kathryn Ballard, of Tallahassee, has a long history of charitable and community work, including service on the Board of Directors of the Florida
Special Olympics, the Florida State University College of Human Sciences Board and the Board of Trustees of the Maclay School of Tallahassee. She
also served as Chairman of Maclay School Capital Campaign. Mrs. Ballard has been honored for Outstanding Achievement by the Florida Trust for
Historic Preservation and the Tallahassee/Leon County Historic Preservation Commission for her efforts to restore Tallahassee's historic Lively
House. Mrs. Ballard graduated from Florida State University in 1987 with a Bachelor of Science degree from the College of Human Sciences.
William Buzzett, of Grayton Beach, has almost 30 years of experience in engineering, law, and development. After graduating from law school from
Florida State University, Buzzett worked in private practice, for the Florida Legislature, as an Assistant General Counsel to Governor Bob Martinez,
and as the Executive Director to the 1997-1998 Constitution Revision Commission.
From 2001-2009, he worked for The St. Joe Company, and in
2011, Buzzett served as the Secretary of Florida’s Department of Community Affairs. He is currently a partner with the law firm of Harrison, Rivard,
Duncan & Buzzett, located in Panama City.
Emily Fleming Duda, of Oviedo, is an active member of the FSU Booster Club board, serving five years on the board’s executive committee. She
was awarded the Godfrey Smith Award for Outstanding Service to the board in 2000. Ms. Duda also served on the board of directors of the Florida
Leadership Program for Agriculture and Natural Resources, which is administered through the University of Florida Institute for Food and
Agricultural Sciences.
Mark Hillis, of Winter Park, earned a bachelor's degree from the FSU College of Business in 1964 and a J.D. from the Woodrow Wilson College of
Law. He served for 33 years as first vice president for SunTrust Bank in Atlanta. He is a retired major from the U.S. Marine Corps. Mr. Hillis has
served on the FSU College of Business Board of Governors since 1989. Since 2003, he has served on the College of Business Real Estate Executive
Advisory Board. A lifetime member, he served on the Alumni Association Board of Directors from 1993 to 2002. From 1995 to 2008 he was a
member of the FSU Foundation Board of Trustees.
Craig Mateer, of Orlando, is the CEO and Founder of Orlando based Bags Inc. Mateer graduated from Florida State University with a bachelor’s
degree in 1988 after attending the university on a basketball scholarship. Shortly after graduation, Mateer founded his first valet parking company
which he has transformed into Bags Inc., a company that operates in more than 250 cities worldwide.
Mateer is an active philanthropic supporter of
the disadvantaged, multiple health initiatives, and has served on numerous community boards. Craig’s supports FSU as a member of the prestigious
Micco Club, the FSU Varsity Club, and a Seminole Boosters Platinum Chief. Mr. Mateer resides in Orlando, Florida, and has four children.
Bob Sasser, of Norfolk, Virginia, is the Chief Executive Officer of Dollar Tree Stores, the nation’s largest discount variety store. Bob is a graduate of
Florida State University with a Bachelor of Science degree in Marketing. He was inducted into the College of Business Hall of Fame in 2009 and
returns to FSU when possible to share his experience and ideas with students and faculty. Bob serves on the FSU Board of Trustees and the
Foundation Board of Trustees. He is a lifetime member of the FSU Alumni association, a member of Seminole Boosters, a Double Golden Chief and
a member of the FSU Presidents Club.
Brent W. Sembler, of St. Petersburg, is vice chairman of The Sembler Company. Mr. Sembler serves on the boards of the Republican Jewish
Coalition, Gulf Coast Community Care and All Children's Hospital. He is a past member of Shorecrest Preparatory School's Board of Trustees. He
and his wife, Debbie, established a philanthropic fund that benefits numerous Bay Area charities. Mr. Sembler earned a B.S. degree from Florida State
University in 1980. He and his wife have a daughter and two sons, one of whom currently attends Florida State University.
Stacey Pierre, of Miramar, FL, Florida State University’s student body president, is the 13
th
member of the Board of Trustees.
Online Resource: The Florida State University Board of Trustee’s website can be accessed online at http://trustees.fsu.edu/
10-Introduction Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Governing Boards - State University System
State Board of Education
The mission of the Board of Education is to increase the proficiency of all students within one seamless, efficient system, by
providing them with the opportunity to expand their knowledge and skills through learning opportunities and research valued by
students, parents, and communities, and to maintain an accountability system that measures student progress toward the following
goals: highest student achievement, seamless articulation and maximum access, skilled workforce and economic development,
and quality efficient services. The eight-member Board, which consists of seven appointed members, plus the automatic inclusion
of the Commissioner of Education, are:
Marva Johnson (Chair) Winter Garden
Andy Tuck (Vice Chair) Sebring
Pam Stewart (Commissioner of Education) Tallahassee
Gary Chartrand Ponte Vedra Beach
Ben Gibson Tallahassee
Tom Grady Naples
Michael Olenick Palm City
Joe York Ponte Vedra Beach
Online Resource: the website for the Florida Department of Education can be accessed online at: http://www.fldoe.org/
Florida Board of Governors
The Board of Governors is comprised of seventeen members, fourteen of whom are appointed by the Florida Governor and
confirmed by the Florida Senate for a term of seven years. The remaining members include the Chair of the Advisory Council of
Faculty Senates, the Commissioner of Education, and the Chair of the Florida Student Association. The Board oversees the
operation and management of the Florida public university system's twelve institutions.
The Board of Governors are:
Ned C. Lautenbach (Chair) Naples
Sydney Kitson (Vice Chair) West Palm Beach
Pam Stewart (Commissioner of Education) Tallahassee
Gary Tyson (Chair of the Advisory Council of Faculty Senates of Florida) Tallahassee
Jalisa White (Student Representative) Florida Gulf Coast University
Zachariah P. Zachariah Fort Lauderdale
Jay S. Patel Pensacola
Patricia Frost Miami Beach
H. Wayne Huizenga, Jr. West Palm Beach
Darlene L. Jordan Palm Beach
Alan M. Levine Naples
Wendy S. Link West Palm Beach
Edward A. Morton Naples
Norman D. Tripp Fort Lauderdale
Fernando J. Valverde Miami
Shawn Felton Fort Myers
Frederic V. Salerno Hobe Sound
Tim Cerio Tallahassee
Online Resource: the website for the Florida Board of Governors can be accessed online at: http://www.flbog.org/
Chancellor of Florida’s Colleges and Universities
Marshall Criser III
Marshall Criser III is chancellor of the State University System of Florida. He is the former president of AT&T Florida and a
longtime education leader in the state. He took office as chancellor in January of 2014. Criser is in his fifth year as the Florida
House Speaker's appointee to the Higher Education Coordinating Council, a role he began as a representative of the business
community and continues as chancellor. He is a member of the Scripps Research Institute Board of Trustees in California and
the Florida Council of 100, where he is a former chair.
Online Resource: Read more about Marshall Criser III online at: http://www.flbog.edu/board/office/chancellor/bio.php
The Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Introduction-11
Historical Presidents and Current Officers of the University
Presidents of the University Since 1887*
George Edgar 1887 – 1892
Alvin Lewis 1892 – 1897
Albert A. Murphree 1897 – 1909
Edward Conradi 1909 – 1941
Doak S. Campbell 1941 – 1957
Albert B. Martin (Acting President) 1957
Rober M. Strozier 1957 – 1960
Milton W. Carothers (Acting President) 1960
Gordon W. Blackwell 1960 – 1965
John E. Champion (Acting President) 1965
John E. Champion 1965 – 1969
Stanley Marshall (Acting President) 1969
Stanley Marshall 1969 – 1976
Bernard F. Sliger (Interim President) 1976 – 1977
Bernard F. Sliger 1977 – 1991
Dale W. Lick 1991 – 1993
Bernard F. Sliger (Interim President) 1993
Talbot “Sandy” D’Alemberte 1994 – 2002
T.K. Wetherell 2003 – 2010
Eric J. Barron 2010 – 2014
Garnett S. Stokes (Interim President) 2014
John Thrasher 2014 –
*Prior to 1887, the school’s executive officer was called the principal.
Source: Office of the President
Online Resource: The Office of the President’s website can be accessed online at http://president.fsu.edu/
President John Thrasher
John Thrasher, a Florida State University alumnus and former state legislator, is the university's 15
th
president. His term began on
November 6, 2014, and he assumed office on November 10, 2014.
Thrasher earned a bachelor’s degree in business from Florida State in 1965. He subsequently joined the U.S. Army where he received
the Army Commendation Medal in Germany and was awarded two Bronze stars for his service in Vietnam. He was honorably
discharged as a captain in 1970. Thrasher then returned to his alma mater to earn a law degree with honors in 1972.
From 2001 to 2005, Thrasher was the first chair of Florida State University’s Board of Trustees.Born in Columbia, S.C., Thrasher grew
up in Jacksonville after moving to Florida in 1949. He and his wife, Jean, have 3 children and 8 grandchildren.
Senior Administration Team of Florida State University
Provost & Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs Sally McRorie
Vice President for Faculty Development and Advancement Janet Kistner
Vice President - Finance and Administration Kyle Clark
Vice President for Research Gary K. Ostrander
Vice President for Student Affairs Amy Hecht
Vice President for University Advancement Thomas W. Jennings
Associate Vice President for University Relations Kathleen Daly
Assistant Vice President for University Communications Browning Brooks
Chief of Staff David Coburn
General Counsel Carolyn Egan
Chief Legislative Affairs Office Kathy Mears
Others Reporting Directly to the President
Director, Student Veterans Center Billy Francis
Deputy Chief of Staff Elizabeth E. Hirst
Athletics Director Stan Wilcox
Online Resource: A directory for the senior administration team of Florida State is available online at http://president.fsu.edu/staff/
12-Introduction Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Education and General:
$673,829,513
49%
Auxiliaries:
$262,882,942
19%
Contracts and Grants:
$210,977,258
15%
Local Funds:
$242,319,086
17%
Operating Budget 2017-18
Budget % of Total
Education and General
Non-Medicine $612,869,633
Medicine $46,575,491
FAMU/FSU En
g
ineerin
g
$14,384,389
Education and General Total $673,829,513 48.5%
A
uxiliary Enter
p
rises
A
uxiliar
y
O
p
erations $237,106,474
Debt Services $23,175,000
A
uxiliary Enter
p
rises Total $260,281,474 18.7%
A
uxiliary (Florida Medical Practice Plan) $2,601,468 0.2%
Contracts and Grants
S
p
onsored Research $195,817,971
Develo
p
mental Research School $15,159,287
Contracts and Grants Total $210,977,258 15.2%
Local Funds
Student Activities $14,037,103
Student Financial Aid $139,949,269
Intercolle
g
iate
A
thletics $82,028,144
Vendin
g
$582,884
T
echnolo
gy
Fee $5,721,686
Local Funds Total $242,319,086 17.4%
T
otal $1,390,008,799 100.0%
Source: FSU 2017-18 Operating Budget
Online Resource: The Budget Office’s website can be accessed online at http://www.budget.fsu.edu/
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Introduction-13
Education and General Allocated Resources by Program Component 2017-18
Florida State University (Non-Medicine)
Budget
Percentage
Instruction and Research
$408,917,307
66.7%
Physical Plant Management
$73,198,562
11.9%
Administrative Direction & Support Services
$63,622,276
10.4%
Student Services
$40,637,709
6.6%
Libraries/Audio Visual
$19,295,112
3.1%
Museums and Galleries
$3,053,372
0.5%
Institutes & Research Centers
$1,939,302
0.4%
Radio/TV
$2,205,993
0.3%
Total
$612,869,633
100.0%
Florida State University (Medicine)
Instruction and Research
$43,261,626
92.9%
Libraries/Audio Visual
$615,412
1.3%
Administrative Direction & Support Services
$2,698,453
5.8%
Total
$46,575,491
100.0%
FAMU/FSU College of Engineering
Instruction and Research
$12,817,211
89.1%
Physical Plant Management
$1,567,178
10.9%
Total
$14,384,389
100.0%
Source: Florida State University 2017-18 Beginning Operating Budget
Online Resource: The Budget Office’s website can be accessed online at http://www.budget.fsu.edu/
Administrative Dir. &
Support
$63,622,276
Instruction & Research
$408,917,307
Libraries/Audio
Visual
$19,295,112
Physical Plant
Management
$73,198,562
Student Services
$40,637,709
Institutes & Research
Centers
$1,939,302
Museums &
Galleries
$3,053,372
Radio/TV
$2,205,993
Florida State University Allocated Resources
Chart does not include FAMU/FSU College of Engineering or FSU Medicine
Introduction-14 The Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
External Sources for Research, Service, and Training Funds
Source of Awards
Source 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
Federal Government $149,605,167 $142,483,638 $162,482,210
Percent of all Awards 74.5% 75.0% 77.2%
Corporation for National & Community Services $30,245 $16,500 $167,500
Environmental Protection Agency $233,724 $316,742 $50,673
Health & Human Services $31,684,820 $22,097,850 $33,104,304
National Aeronautics & Space Administration $2,862,420 $3,158,092 $3,331,053
National Foundation on the Arts & Humanities $27,400 $130,350 $553,300
National Science Foundation $53,459,149 $58,440,916 $60,627,300
Peace Corps $12,065 $36,497 $0
U.S. Department of Agriculture $384,147 $582,087 $1,168,771
U.S. Department of Commerce $2,377,644 $1,517,192 $2,643,717
U.S. Department of Defense $11,363,978 $20,914,623 $17,529,673
U.S. Department of Education $29,168,066 $23,809,428 $27,134,993
U.S. Department of Energy $7,733,194 $5,830,865 $9,074,807
U.S. Department of Homeland Security $265,324 $22,564 $135,122
U.S. Department of Interior $578,207 $366,542 $322,572
U.S. Department of Justice $1,114,610 $851,727 $1,449,670
U.S. Department of Labor $15,000 $0 $0
U.S. Department of State $3,085,843 $1,045,586 $2,294,288
U.S. Department of Transportation $5,209,331 $3,199,502 $2,747,083
U.S. Department of the Treasury $0 $146,576 147,384
State/Local Government $24,027,821 $20,985,085 $21,444,455
Percent of all Awards 12. 0% 11. 0% 10.2%
Private and Other Sources $27,195,471 $26,605,937 $26,449,960
Percent of all Awards 13.5% 14.0% 12.6%
TOTAL Awards $200,828,459 $190,074,661 $210,376,625
General Information on Research Activities
2014-15
2015-16
2016-17
Proposals Submitted to Prospective Funding Agencies
1,263
1,301
1,357
New Contract or Grant Awards Received
543
571
578
Extensions or Renewals, Continuations, Supplements of Existing Projects
738
683
762
Projects Active During the Fiscal Year
2,733
2,696
3,173
Applications for Copyrights Submitted
6
4
7
Copyrights Granted
0
3
13
Applications for U.S. Patents Submitted*
104
96
91
U.S. Patents Granted
27
30
51
* These numbers indicate U.S. patents only. There have been additional foreign patents applied for and granted.
Source: Annual Report on Contracts and Grants
Online Resource: The Division of Sponsored Research’s website can be accessed online at http://www.research.fsu.edu/contractsgrants/.
THE FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY
University Organizational Chart
Overview
UNIVERSITY
PRESIDENT
UNIVERSITY
COMPLIANCE
Chief Ethics &
Compliance Officer
Robyn Jackson
DIVISION OF ACADEMIC
AFFAIRS
Provost & Executive Vice
President
Sally McRorie
DIVISION OF
STUDENT AFFAIRS
Vice President
Amy Hecht
Assoc Vice President
Kathleen Daly
VETERAN'S
CENTER
Director
William Francis
DIVISION OF
RESEARCH
Vice President &
Professor
Gary Ostrander
OFFICE OF THE
GENERAL COUNSEL
General Counsel
Carolyn Egan
OFFICE OF
INSPECTOR
GENERAL SERVICES
Chief Audit Officer
Sam McCall
REAL ESTATE
FOUNDATION
Executive Director
Kevin Graham
FSU FOUNDATION,
INC.
Executive Vice
President
Andy Jhanji
ALUMNI
ASSOCIATION
President of Alumni
Association
Scott Atwell
SEMINOLE
BOOSTERS, INC.
President and CEO
Andy Miller
DIVISION OF
UNIVERSITY
ADVANCEMENT
Vice President
& President of FSU
Foundation
Thomas Jennings
FLORIDA CENTER
FOR INTERACTIVE
MEDIA
Program Director
Michael Ferguson
GOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS
Chief Legislative
Officer
Kathleen Mears
OPENING NIGHTS
Director
Michael Blachly
UNIVERSITY
COMMUNICATIONS
Asst Vice President
Browning Brooks
PUBLIC SAFETY
Asst Vice President
Chief David Perry
HUMAN RESOURCES
Assoc Vice President
and F&A Chief of
Staff
Renisha Gibbs
CONTROLLER
Univ. Controller
Sandy Scanlan
FSU FOUNDATION
ACCOUNTING
Asst Vice President
Holly Newell
ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES
Asst Vice President
Steven Conner
TRANSPORTATION
SERVICES
Director
Matthew Inman
PROCUREMENT
SERVICES
Chief Procurement
Officer
Rosey Murton
EMPLOYEE
ASSISTANCE
PROGRAM
Director
James Bramblett
BUSINESS SERVICES
Director
Charles Friedrich
Assoc Vice President
Michael Williams
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
SERVICES ‡‡
Assoc Vice President
Michael Barrett
BUDGET &
ANALYSIS
Chief Budget Officer
Michael Lake
ENTERPRISE
RESOURCE
PLANNING
Assoc Vice President
Michael Barrett
ENVIRONMENTAL
HEALTH & SAFETY
Director
Thomas Jacobson
FACILITIES
Sr Assoc Vice
President
Dennis Bailey
WFSU
Director
David Mullins
UNIVERSITY
BUSINESS
ADMIN
Director
Vacant
DIVISION OF
FINANCE &
ADMINISTRATION
Vice President
Kyle Clark
FACULTY ATHLETICS
REPRESENTATIVE
Management
Eminent Scholar
Pamela Perrewe
INTERCOLLEGIATE
ATHLETICS
VP & Director
Intercollegiate
Athletics
Stanley WIlcox
FACULTY
DEVELOPMENT &
ADVANCEMENT
Vice President &
Professor
Janet Kistner
UNIVERSITY
LIBRARIES
Dean
Julia Zimmerman
CENTER FOR
LEADERSHIP &
SOCIAL CHANGE
Director
Laura Osteen
INSTITUTE OF
SCIENCE & PUBLIC
AFFAIRS
Sr Research
Associate
Stephen Hodge
OFFICE OF
DISTANCE
LEARNING
Director
Robert Fuselier
INSTITUTE FOR
ACADEMIC
LEADERSHIP
Director/Professor
Lawrence Abele
STUDENT
FINANCIAL AID
Asst Vice President
Darryl Marshall
ENROLLMENT
MANAGEMENT
Asst Vice President
John Barnhill
CENTER FOR
ACADEMIC &
PROFESSIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
Director
William Lindner
CRITICAL THINKING
&QER
Director
T. Lynn Hogan
STUDENT SUCCESS
Asst Vice President
Joe O'Shea
INSTITUTIONAL
RESEARCH
Director
James Hunt
CENTER FOR
ACADEMIC
RETENTION &
ENHANCEMENT †
Director
Taddaryl Starke
UNDERGRADUATE
STUDIES
Dean
Karen Laughlin
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
SERVICES ‡‡
Assoc Vice President
Michael Barrett
LEARNING
SYSTEMS
INSTITUTE
Assoc
Professor/Director
Jeffrey Milligan
FSU-PANAMA
Republic of Panama
Director
Carlos Langoni
THE GRADUATE
SCHOOL
Dean
Mark Riley
DEPARTMENTS
REGISTRAR
Univ. Registrar
Kimberly Barber
ADMISSIONS
Director
Hege Ferguson
Assoc Vice President
Richard Burnette
TITLE IX
Director
Mandy Hambleton
Assoc Vice President
& Professor
Bruce Locke
BUDGET & FINANCE
Asst Vice President
Paul Harlacher
INSTITUTIONAL
EFFECTIVENESS
Faculty Admin
Kayce Morton
SACS
ACCREDITATION
Assoc In
Ruth Feiock
OFFICE OF THE
PROVOST
JIM MORAN SCHOOL OF
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Director
Susan Fiorito
DEDMAN SCHOOL OF
HOSPITALITY
Director
Don Farr
PANAMA CITY
CAMPUS
Dean
Randall Hanna
APPLIED STUDIES*
ARTS & SCIENCES
Dean
Sam Huckaba
NURSING
Dean
Judith McFetridge-Durdle
RINGLING
MUSEUM
Academic Affairs
Executive Director
Steven High
Asolo Conservatory
Sarasota, FL ‹
FINE ARTS
Interim Dean
Scott Shamp
Field Education
Program
Gainesville, FL ‹
Field Education
Program
Jacksonville, FL ‹
SOCIAL WORK
Dean
James Clark
SOCIAL SCIENCES &
PUBLIC POLICY
Dean
Timothy Chapin
MUSIC
Dean
Patricia Flowers
MOTION PICTURE
ARTS
Dean
Reb Braddock
MEDICINE
Dean
John Fogarty
LAW
Dean
Erin O'Hara O'Connor
HUMAN SCIENCES
Dean
Michael Delp
FAMU/FSU
ENGINEERING
Dean
J. Murray Gibson
EDUCATION
Dean
Marcy Driscoll
CRIMINOLOGY &
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Dean
Thomas Blomberg
COMMUNICATION
& INFORMATION
Dean
Larry Dennis
BUSINESS
Dean
Michael Hartline
COLLEGES/ SCHOOLS
STUDENT HEALTH &
WELLNESS
Assoc Vice President
Vacant
COMMUNICATIONS
& MARKETING
Program Director
Aron Myers
Asst Vice President
Brandon Bowden
CENTER FOR
ACADEMIC
RETENTION &
ENHANCEMENT †
Director
Taddaryl Starke
UNIVERSITY
COUNSELING
CENTER
Director
Carlos Gomez
UNIVERSITY
HOUSING
Director
Shannon Staten
CAMPUS
RECREATION
Director
Christopher Morris
OGLESBY UNION
Director
William Clutter
UNIVERSITY HEALTH
SERVICES
Interim Director
Amy Magnuson
Assoc Vice President
Allison Crume
STUDENT
GOVERNMENT
ASSOCIATION
Program Director
Danielle Acosta
CENTER FOR
GLOBAL
ENGAGEMENT
Director
Cynthia Green
DEAN OF STUDENTS
Dean of Students
Victoria Dobiyanski
CENTER FOR
LEADERSHIP &
SOCIAL CHANGE
Director
Laura Osteen
THE CAREER
CENTER
Director
Myrna Hoover
OFFICE OF PROPOSAL
DEVELOPMENT
Director
Beth Hodges
COASTAL & MARINE
LAB
Director &
Scholar/Scientist
Felicia Coleman
Assoc Vice President
Ross Ellington
FSU RESEARCH
FOUNDATION
Director
Heather Cave
SPONSORED RESEARCH
SERVICES
Director
Pamela Ray
Asst Vice President
Kerry Peluso
HUMAN SUBJECTS
COMMITTEE
Assoc General Counsel
Jane Mostoller
FLORIDA CENTER FOR
READING RESEARCH
Director
Barbara Foorman
FUTURE FUELS
INSTITUTE
Director
Ryan Rodgers
FLORIDA CLIMATE
INSTITUTE
Co-Director & Professor
Eric Chassignet
FLORIDA CENTER FOR
ADVANCED
AERO-PROPULSION
Professor/Director
Farrukh Alvi
HIGH PERFORMANCE
MATERIALS INSTITUTE
Director
Richard Liang
CENTER FOR ADVANCED
POWER SYSTEMS
Director
Roger McGinnis
INSTITUTE FOR ENERGY
SYSTEMS, ECONOMICS
& SUSTAINABILITY
Professor
vacant
NATIONAL HIGH
MAGNETIC FIELD LAB
Director & Professor
Gregory Boebinger
CENTERS/LABS
GENERAL COUNSEL FOR
RESEARCH
Faculty Admin
Elizabeth Southard
LAB ANIMAL RESOURCES
Director
William Hill
FEDERAL RELATIONS
Director
Jonathan Nurse
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
DEVELOPMENT &
COMMERCIAL-
IZATION
Exec. Director
Brent Edington
‡ Directly reports to Vice President of Student Affairs; indirectly reports to Provost & Executive Vice President
‡‡ Directly reports to Provost & Executive Vice President Academic Affairs; indirectly reports to Senior Vice President of Finance & Administration
† Directly reports to Dean of Undergraduate Studies; indirectly reports to Associate Vice President Student Affairs
* Directly reports to Dean of Panama City Campus
‹ Off Campus Sites
BOARD OF
TRUSTEES
INTERNATIONAL
PROGRAMS
Director
James Pitts
Chart last updated 5/17/2018
16-Introduction Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
Tallahassee/Leon County, Florida
Brief History of the State of Florida and the City of Tallahassee
Thousands of years of Native American culture preceded the European discovery of the Florida peninsula. An estimated 100,000
Native Americans were living here at the time of its discovery by Juan Ponce de Leon in early 1513. As Ponce de Leon's arrival coincided with
the Spring Pascua Florida festivities in Spain, he named the new land "Florida," which meant "filled with flowers." La Florida was also
explored by another Spanish adventurer Hernando de Soto. It is believed that de Soto and his army of over 600 men spent the winter of
1539-40 in an abandoned Apalachee Indian village located in what is now the city of Tallahassee.
Prior to 1821; Florida had consisted of two Spanish colonies that were ceded to Great Britain in the settlement of the Seven Years'
War (1756-1763). In 1821 President James Monroe appointed Andrew Jackson as territorial governor. One of the new governor's first acts
was to organize the territory into two counties, Escambia and St. Johns, with the Suwannee River serving as the dividing line. (In 1822, two
more counties were added Duval in the east and Jackson in the west). The legislative council met at Pensacola, the capital of West Florida, in
1822, and at St. Augustine, the capital of East Florida, in 1823. As these two chief settlements of the territory were separated by 400 miles of
wilderness, it was desirable to select a central site as a capital. Two commissioners appointed by Governor William Pope Duval selected the
then uninhabited area known as Tallahassee as the site for the permanent capital and the governor proclaimed it the capital on March 4, 1824.
The territorial council met there for the first time in November of that year. Tallahassee had been the site of Indian settlements prior to and
during the Colonial Era. Its name is a Creek Indian phrase generally believed to mean "old town" or "old fields." Florida was admitted to the
union as the 27
th
state on March 3, 1845.
Population Statistics
According to the latest US Census estimates, Florida ranks 3
rd
population in the United States of America, Leon county ranks 22
nd
in
population in the state of Florida and Tallahassee is the 7
th
largest city in the state.
Tallahassee Leon County Florida United States
Population 2017 (estimated US Census) 191,049 290,292 20,984,400 325,719,178
Population 2010 (actual US Census) 181,376 275,487 18,801310 308,745,538
Male 85,358 131,134 9,189,355 151,781,326
Female 96,018 144,353 9,611,955 156,964,212
Median Age 26.1 29.6 40.7 37.2
White 104,171 173,480 14,109,162 223,553,265
African American 63,475 83,520 2,999,862 28,929,319
Asian 6,653 8,053 454,821 14,674,252
American Indian/Alaskan Native 443 775 71,458 2,932,248
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 100 140 12,286 540,013
Other Race 2,361 3,397 681,144 19,107,368
Two or More Races 4,173 6,122 472,577 9,009,073
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 11,346 15,361 4,223,806 50,477,594
Renter-occupied housing units 58.6% 45.6% 32.6% 34.9%
Source: United States Census Bureau
Tallahassee/Leon County Weather Facts
The average annual mean temperature at Tallahassee is 67.7
o
F; the average annual high temperature is 79.6
o
F, and the average annual
low temperature is 55.8
o
F. July is typically the hottest month, with an average high temperature of 92.1
o
F and an average low temperature of
72.0
o
F. January is the coldest month, with average high and low temperatures of 63.5
o
F and 39.0
o
F, respectively. The official record-high
temperature is 105
o
F, which was observed on June 15, 2011. The official record-low temperature is -2
o
F, which was observed on February 13,
1899, which gives Tallahassee the distinction of being the only location in Florida ever to have recorded a sub-zero temperature. Since that
morning in 1899, the lowest temperature recorded in the modern historical record since 1948 was 6
o
F on January 21, 1985.
The average annual total rainfall is 58.87 inches. July ranks historically as the wettest month, with an average total rainfall of 7.83
inches, and October ranks as the driest month, with an average total rainfall of 2.91 inches. Summer is the wettest season, and autumn is the
driest. The record 24-hour total rainfall is 10.13 inches, which occurred on June 11-12, 2001. The average annual snowfall is a trace.
Although snow flurries are seen every few years, measurable snow (0.1 inch or greater, by definition) is seldom observed in Tallahassee, having
occurred only six times since 1938 and last occurred on January 3, 2018, when 0.1 inch was recorded. The largest snowfall ever observed was
2.8 inches on February 12-13, 1958.
In 2017, the temperature ranged from a minimum of 23
o
F (on January 9) to a maximum of 98
o
F (on August 18). The annual mean
temperature registered 70.2
o
F, which was some 2.5
o
F above average and made 2017 the third-warmest year on record since 1948. Notably,
February was the third warmest on record. Total rainfall for 2017 was 55.19 inches, which was some 3.68 inches below average and the 23
rd
-
lowest total since 1948.
For the latest National Weather Service forecast or marine forecast, call the Weatherline Forecast Service at 850-942-8851.
For
additional climate information for Tallahassee or other locations in Florida, visit the FSU Climate Center http://climatecenter.fsu.edu
.
Source: Florida Climate Center/Center for Ocean-Atmospheric Prediction Studies http://coaps.fsu.edu
Students
Photo: FSU News Photo Gallery
FSU rising juniors Jennifer Magi and Anna Wuest received the
highly competitive Ernest F. Hollings Undergraduate Scholarship
from the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA).
18-Students Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
Student Characteristics, Fall 2017
HIGHLIGHTS
Enrollment was 41,900 with 32,812 (78%) undergraduates, 7,863 (19%) graduates, 1,225 (3%) unclassified
81.4 percent of all students were Floridians, and 93.6 percent were from the United States
Seventeen Florida counties contributed over 500 students each (in descending order): Leon, Broward, Palm Beach,
Miami-Dade, Hillsborough, Orange, Pinellas, Duval, St. Johns, Seminole, Brevard, Bay, Lee, Sarasota, Collier, Volusia,
and Polk
Students from all 50 states and the District of Columbia were in attendance
Eighteen states contributed 100 or more students each (in descending order): Florida, Georgia, New York, New Jersey,
Virginia, North Carolina, Texas, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Tennessee, California, Ohio, Alabama, South Carolina,
Connecticut, and Massachusetts
Twenty foreign countries contributed 30 or more students each (in descending order): China, Panama, India, South
Korea, Venezuela, Columbia, Canada, Brazil, Japan, Iran, United Kingdom, Mexico, Haiti, Jamaica, Turkey, Taiwan,
Bangladesh, Saudi Arabia, Peru, and Cuba
Women accounted for 55.7 percent of the total enrollment
Minorities, including students who reported two or more races, made up 32.7 percent of the student enrollment who
reported ethnicity. Of those 13,714 students, 55.7 percent were Hispanic, 25.3 percent Black, 7.7 percent Asian, 0.4
percent Native American/Alaskan/Hawaiian, and 10.4 percent reported two or more races
Foreign students comprised 5.5 percent of the total enrollment; 1.7 percent of all students did not report ethnicity
Average age of all students was 22.4; of undergraduates, 20.8; of graduates, 28.9; of unclassified students
Students enrolled full-time represented 84.3 percent of those in attendance
The middle 50 percent High School GPA for the Summer/Fall 2017 Freshman class was 3.9-4.4; middle 50 percent SAT
scores were 1230-1340; and middle 50 percent ACT composite scores were 26-30
Since the Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Program was established by Congress in 1986, a total of
twenty-one students from Florida State University have been honored:
1990: Michael Owens
1992: Krishna Nayak
1994: James Thompson
1995: William Huttner
1995: Darren Oldson
1996: Gabriel Bouch
1998: Jenifer Austin
1998: Frederick Hankins
1999: Minesh Bacrania
2000: Johan Gonzalez
2000: Christina Oberlin
2001: Ronald Hills
2001: Daniel Roberts
2002: Dan Warren
2002: Keola Wierschem
2007: Priya Pal
2008: Rebecca Stone
2009: Alan Kuhnle
2010: Vivek Pal
2010: Kristen Ramsey
2012: Daniel Stribling
2013: Matthew Vedrin
2015: Molly Gordon
Standard tuition and fees charged for one credit hour (main campus) in 2017-18 (does not include $20 per semester
student affairs facility use fee):
Florida Residents
Non-Florida Residents
Undergraduate
$215.55
$721.10
Graduate
$479.32
$1,110.72
Law
$688.11
$1,355.18
Medical (annual block fee)
$25,610.61
$60,161.79
Merit, Achievement, and Hispanic Finalists
National Merit Scholars
Achievement Scholars
Hispanic Scholars
Total
2015
2016
2017
2015
2016
2017
2015
2016
2017
2015
2016
2017
New Freshmen
22
16
29
0
0
0
0
0
0
22
16
29
Other Undergraduates
24
43
51
1
1
1
0
1
1
25
45
53
Total
46
59
80
1
1
1
0
1
1
47
61
82
Source: Fall Preliminary Student Instruction File (SIFP)
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-19
First-Time-in-College (FTIC) Admission Statistics, 2008-2017
* Beginning in 2017, the SAT test was re-designed. The scores have not been concorded.
Unduplicated Applicants Enrolled Students
Summer/
Fall Applied Admitted Enrolled
Number
Taking SAT
Average
SAT 2
Average
SAT 3
Number
Taking ACT
Average
ACT
2008 25,485 11,901 5,027 2,486 1196.8 2,541 25.9
2009 23,439 14,308 5,967 3,091 1195.2 2,881 26.3
2010 26,037 15,498 5,952 2,797 1202.7 3,155 26.4
2011 28,313 16,561 6,145 2,750 1205.7 1802.9 3,395 26.5
2012 30,040 16,124 5,738 2,610 1201.9 1800.1 3,128 26.7
2013 29,579 16,803 6,048 2,652 1199.5 1795.7 3,396 26.9
2014 30,266 16,763 6,021 2,541 1211.8 1814.2 3,480 27.2
2015 29,828 16,674 6,100 2,493 1206.1 1804.5 3,607 27.1
2016 29,027 16,840 6,282 2,400 1201.8 1797.0 3,882 27.1
2017 35,334 17,381 6,523 2,448 1259.0* 4,075 27.6
* Beginning in 2017, the SAT test was re-designed. There is no longer a separate writing component. The scores have not been concorded.
Note: Applied consists of unduplicated applications for the summer and fall terms. Enrolled students are FTICs attending in the fall semester or the previous summer
who continue into the fall.
Applied
Admitted
Enrolled
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
35,000
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Unduplicated Applicants - Applied, Admitted and Enrolled
24.5
25
25.5
26
26.5
27
27.5
28
1190
1200
1210
1220
1230
1240
1250
1260
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017*
Average ACT (Y2)
Average SAT (Y1)
Average SAT and ACT Scores
Average SAT (Y1)
Average ACT (Y2)
20-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
New Student Headcount by Residency
2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
Summer
Fal
l
Sprin
g
Y
ear Summe
r
Fal
l
Sprin
g
Y
ear Summer Fal
l
Sprin
g
Y
ear
FTICs
In-state
2,527 2,999 109 5,635 2,383 3,176 91 5,650 2,314 3,476 12 5,802
Out-o
f
-State
113
481 15 745 144 610 22 776 177 572 9 758
ota
2,640 3,480 124 6,244 2,527 3,786 113 6,426 2,491 4,048 21 6,560
T
ransfers-Florida Community/State/Junior Colle
g
e with AA
In-state
240 1,386 620 2,246 224 1,489 564 2,277 231 1,333 573 2,137
Out-o
f
-State 2 27 10 39 10 30 16 56 10 33 23 66
ota
242 1,413 630 2,285 234 1,519 580 2,333 241 1,366 596 2,203
T
ransfers-Florida Community/State/Junior College w/out AA
In-state
19 93 281 393 22 113 276 411 32 129 391 552
Out-o
f
-State
0 7 12 19 0 3 11 14 1 8 22 31
ota
19 100 293 412 22 116 287 425 33 137 413 583
T
ransfers-Others
In-state
56 302 140 498 54 317 150 521 63 338 119 520
Out-o
f
-State
11 62 58 131 9 125 70 204 73 147 73 293
ota
67 364 198 629 63 442 220 725 136 485 192 813
T
ransfers-
T
ota
l
In-state
315 1,781 1,041 3,137 300 1,919 990 3,209 326 1,800 1,083 3,209
Out-o
f
-State
13 96 80 189 19 158 97 274 84 188 118 390
ota
328 1,877 1,121 3,326 319 2,077 1,087 3,483 410 1,988 1,201 3,599
Seeking a Second Baccalaureate
In-state
48 97 81 226 39 98 96 233 36 71 76 183
Out-o
f
-State
10 8 6 24 4 18 8 30 1 10 5 16
ota
58 105 87 250 43 116 104 263 37 81 81 199
Undergraduate Tota
l
In-state
2,890 4,877 1,231 8,998 2,722 5,193 1,177 9,092 2,676 5,347 1,171 9,194
Out-o
f
-State
136 585 101 822 167 786 127 1,080 262 770 132 1,164
0
ota
3,026 5,462 1,332 9,820 2,889 5,979 1,304 10,172 2,938 6,117 1,303 10,358
Law (JD-seeking)
In-state
0 178 6 184 11 150 1 162 8 165 1 174
Out-o
f
-State
0 28 0 28 0 22 1 23 1 26 1 28
ota
0 206 6 212 11 172 2 185 9 191 2 202
Medicine (MD-seeking)
In-state
117 0 0 117 118 0 0 118 116 0 0 116
Out-o
f
-State
2 0 0 2 2 0 0 2 2 0 0 2
ota
119 0 0 119 120 0 0 120 118 0 0 118
0
Graduate (excludes Professiona
l
)
In-state
269 1,100 353 1,722 312 1,168 286 1,766 304 1,178 340 1,822
Out-o
f
-State
82 792 102 976 94 776 94 964 98 749 94 941
ota
351 1,892 455 2,698 406 1,944 380 2,730 402 1,927 434 2,763
Graduate Tota
l
In-state
386 1,278 359 2,023 441 1,318 287 2,046 428 1,343 341 2,112
Out-o
f
-State
84 820 102 1,006 96 798 94 988 101 775 95 971
ota
470 2,098 461 3,029 537 2,116 381 3,034 529 2,118 436 3,083
T
otal All Students
In-state
3,276 6,155 1,590 11,021 3,163 6,511 1,464 11,138 3,104 6,690 1,512 11,306
Out-o
f
-State
220 1,405 203 1,828 263 1,584 221 2,069 363 1,545 227 2,135
ota
3,496 7,560 1,793 12,849 3,426 8,095 1,685 13,207 3,467 8,235 1,739 13,441
Source: Final Student Instruction (SIF) files
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Student-21
New Student Distribution by Residency
2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
Summer
Fal
l
Sprin
g
Y
ear Summer Fal
l
Sprin
g
Y
ear Summer Fal
l
Sprin
g
Y
ear
FTICs
In-state
95.7% 86.2% 87.9% 90.2% 94.3% 83.9% 80.5% 87.9% 92.9% 85.9% 57.1% 88.4%
Out-o
f
-State
4.3%
13.8% 12.1% 9.8% 5.7% 16.1% 19.5% 12.1% 7.1% 14.1% 42.9% 11.6%
ota
100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
T
ransfers-Florida Community/State/Junior College
w
ith AA
In-state 99.2% 98.1% 98.4% 98.3% 95.7% 98.0% 97.2% 97.6% 95.9% 97.6% 96.1% 97.0%
Out-o
f
-State 0.8% 1.9% 1.6% 1.7% 4.3% 2.0% 2.8% 2.4% 4.1% 2.4% 3.9% 3.0%
ota
100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
T
ransfers-Florida Community/State/Junior College w/out AA
In-state
100.0% 93.0% 95.9% 95.4%
100.0% 97.4% 96.2% 96.7%
97.0% 94.2% 94.7% 94.7%
Out-of-State
0.0%
7.0% 4.1% 4.6%
0.0%
2.6% 3.8% 3.3%
3.0%
5.8% 5.3% 5.3%
ota
100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
T
ransfers-Others
In-state
83.6% 83.0% 70.7% 79.2%
85.7% 71.7% 68.2% 71.9%
46.3% 69.7% 62.0% 64.0%
Out-of-State
16.4%
17.0% 29.3% 20.8%
14.3%
28.3% 31.8% 28.1%
53.7%
30.3% 38.0% 36.0%
ota
100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
T
ransfers-
T
ota
l
In-state
96.0% 94.9% 92.9% 94.3%
94.0% 92.4% 91.1% 92.1%
79.5% 90.5% 90.2% 89.2%
Out-of-State
4.0%
5.1% 7.1% 5.7%
6.0%
7.6% 8.9% 7.9%
20.5%
9.5% 9.8% 10.8%
ota
100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
Seeking a Second Baccalaureate
In-state
82.8% 92.4% 93.1% 90.4%
90.7% 84.5% 92.3% 88.6%
97.3% 87.7% 93.8% 92.0%
Out-of-State
17.2%
7.6% 6.9% 9.6%
9.3%
15.5% 7.7% 11.4%
2.7%
12.3% 6.2% 8.0%
ota
100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
Undergraduate Tota
l
In-state
95.5% 89.3% 92.4% 91.6%
94.2% 86.9% 90.3% 89.4%
91.1% 87.4% 89.9% 88.8%
Out-of-State
4.5%
10.7% 7.6% 8.4%
5.8%
13.1% 9.7% 10.6%
8.9%
12.6% 10.1% 11.2%
ota
100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
Law (JD-seeking)
In-state
0.0% 86.4% 100.0% 86.8%
100% 87.2% 50.0% 87.6%
88.9% 86.4% 50.0% 86.1%
Out-of-State
0.0%
13.6% 0.0% 13.2%
0.0%
12.8% 50.0% 12.4%
11.1%
13.6% 50.0% 13.9%
ota
0.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 0.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
Medicine (MD-seeking)
In-state
98.3% 0.0% 0.0% 98.3%
98.3% 0.0% 0.0% 98.3%
98.3% 0.0% 0.0% 98.3%
Out-of-State
1.7%
0.0% 0.0% 1.7%
1.7%
0.0% 0.0% 1.7%
1.7%
0.0% 0.0% 1.7%
ota
100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0% 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0% 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
Graduate (excludes Professiona
l
)
In-state
76.6% 58.1% 77.6% 63.8%
76.8% 60.1% 75.5% 64.7%
75.6% 61.1% 78.3% 65.9%
Out-of-State
23.4%
41.9% 22.4% 36.2%
23.2%
39.9% 24.5% 35.3%
24.4%
38.9% 21.7% 34.1%
ota
100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
Graduate Tota
l
In-state
82.1% 60.9% 77.9% 66.8%
82.1% 62.3% 75.3% 67.4%
80.9% 63.4% 78.2% 68.5%
Out-of-State
17.9%
39.1% 22.1% 33.2%
17.9%
37.7% 24.7% 32.6%
19.1%
36.6% 21.8% 31.5%
ota
100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
T
otal All Students
In-state
93.7% 81.4% 88.7% 85.8%
92.3% 80.4% 86.9% 84.3%
89.5% 81.2% 86.9% 84.1%
Out-of-State
6.3%
18.6% 11.3% 14.2%
7.7%
19.6% 13.1% 15.7%
10.5%
18.8% 13.1% 15.9%
ota
100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
Source: Final Student Instruction (SIF)
files
22-Students Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
Headcount Enrollment, Fall Semesters
By Gender
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
Male
18,669
45.0%
18,829
45.1%
18,664
45.0%
18,624
44.5%
18,548
44.3%
Female
22,808
55.0%
22,944
54.9%
22,809
55.0%
23,243
55.5%
23,352
55.7%
Total
41,477
41,773
41,473
41,867
41,900
By Ethnicity*
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
Non-Res. Alien
2,017
4.9%
2,179
5.2%
2,278
5.6%
2,372
5.6%
2,301
5.5%
Hispanic
6,226
15.0%
6,669
16.0%
6,995
17.2%
7,411
17.2%
7,643
18.2%
American Indian
159
0.4%
116
0.3%
87
0.2%
100
0.2%
84
0.2%
Asian
1,039
2.5%
1,036
2.5%
1,021
2.5%
1,023
2.5%
1,051
2.5%
Black
3,506
8.5%
3,384
8.1%
3,316
8.1%
3,501
8.1%
3,466
8.3%
Native Hawaiian
65
0.2%
61
0.1%
55
0.1%
55
0.1%
48
0.1%
White
26,872
64.8%
26,598
63.7%
25,871
63.4%
25,429
63.4%
25,165
60.1%
Two or More Races
847
2.0%
1,066
2.6%
1,168
2.9%
1,283
2.9%
1,422
3.4%
Subtotal
40,731
41,109
40,791
41,174
41,180
Not Reported
746
664
682
693
720
Total
41,477
41,773
41,473
41,867
41,900
*See the race/ethnicity entry in this book's glossary for information on the reporting methodology required by the U.S. Dept. of Education.
By Level
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
Freshman
5,817
14.0%
5,470
13.1%
5,594
13.5%
5,632
13.5%
5,708
13.6%
Sophomore
6,520
15.7%
6,713
16.1%
6,907
16.7%
6,908
16.5%
7,005
16.7%
Junior
8,897
21.5%
8,984
21.5%
8,796
21.2%
9,196
22.0%
9,142
21.8%
Senior
11,042
26.6%
11,454
27.4%
11,162
26.9%
10,933
26.1%
10,957
26.2%
Graduate
8,035
19.4%
7,972
19.1%
7,819
18.8%
7,929
18.9%
7,863
18.8%
Unclassified
1,166
2.8%
1,180
2.8%
1,195
2.9%
1,269
3.0%
1,225
2.9%
Total
41,477
41,773
41,473
41,867
41,900
By Status
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
Full-time
35,137
84.7%
35,387
84.7%
35,389
85.3%
35,495
84.8%
35,340
84.3%
Part-time
6,340
15.3%
6,386
15.3%
6,084
14.7%
6,372
15.2%
6,560
15.7%
Total
41,477
41,773
41,473
41,867
41,900
By Campus
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
Main
39,563
95.4%
40,117
96.0%
39,536
95.3%
39,921
95.4%
40,273
96.1%
Panama City
970
2.3%
856
2.0%
961
2.3%
955
2.3%
945
2.3%
Other, Florida
298
0.7%
139
0.3%
251
0.6%
248
0.6%
232
0.5%
Florence
39
0.1%
23
0.1%
47
0.1%
41
0.1%
34
0.1%
London
106
0.2%
105
0.3%
99
0.2%
112
0.3%
91
0.2%
Valencia
91
0.2%
144
0.3%
126
0.3%
89
0.2%
76
0.2%
Panama
401
1.0%
388
0.9%
443
1.1%
494
1.2%
423
1.0%
Other, Overseas
10
0.0+%
7
0.0+%
4
0.0+%
7
0.0+%
2
0.0+%
Total
41,477
41,773
41,473
41,867
41,900
Note: Main campus does not include students taking one or more classes off campus. 40,273 students took at least one course on Florida State
University’s main campus in fall 2017.
By Age
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
UG
G
N
UG
G
N
UG
G
N
UG
G
N
UG
G
N
17 & below
35
0
27
34
0
45
47
0
33
47
0
35
52
0
37
18-19
10,203
1
279
10,485
2
262
10,526
2
273
10,604
2
305
10,962
2
260
20-22
17,615
746
339
17,753
710
364
17,872
780
342
18,279
702
359
18,197
706
389
23-25
2,692
2,808
174
2,736
2,783
156
2,528
2,609
181
2,302
2,640
180
2,237
2,502
158
26-30
925
2,419
97
869
2,456
111
809
2,429
118
803
2,416
132
738
2,436
128
31-35
349
972
61
331
981
66
292
977
61
259
1,069
93
270
1,064
65
36-40
180
448
39
155
443
36
146
454
52
147
484
41
140
511
43
41 & above
277
641
150
258
597
140
239
568
135
228
616
124
216
642
145
Total
32,276
8,035
1,166
32,621
7,972
1,180
32,459
7,819
1,195
32,669
7,929
1,269
32,812
7,863
1,225
Key: UG – Undergraduate Students G – Graduate Students N – Unclassified Students
Source: Fall Preliminary Student Instruction Files (SIFP); full reports can be accessed online at: http://ir.fsu.edu/students.aspx
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Students-23
Headcount Enrollment, Fall Semesters
College
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Applied Studies
299
0.7%
285
0.7%
287
0.7%
305
0.7%
305
0.7%
Arts & Sciences
10,696
25.8%
10,959
26.2%
10,788
26.0%
10,932
26.1%
10,496
25.1%
Business
5,755
13.9%
5,999
14.4%
6,325
15.3%
6,609
15.8%
6,346
15.1%
Communication and Information
2,479
6.0%
2,466
5.9%
2,312
5.6%
2,265
5.4%
2,242
5.4%
Criminology & Criminal Justice
1,915
4.6%
1,895
4.5%
1,906
4.6%
1,934
4.6%
1,918
4.6%
Dedman School of Hospitality
409
1.0%
Education
2,127
5.1%
2,118
5.1%
2,027
4.9%
1,953
4.7%
1,831
4.4%
Engineering
2,183
5.3%
2,268
5.4%
2,198
5.3%
2,144
5.1%
2,182
5.2%
Fine Arts
1,419
3.4%
1,342
3.2%
1,305
3.1%
1,296
3.1%
1,283
3.1%
The Graduate School
16
0.0+%
18
0.0+%
19
0.0+%
19
0.0+%
19
0.0%
Human Sciences
3,280
7.9%
2,972
7.1%
2,949
7.1%
2,763
6.6%
2,488
5.9%
Law
709
1.7%
665
1.6%
614
1.5%
600
1.4%
605
1.4%
Medicine (M.D. Students)
481
1.2%
482
1.2%
483
1.2%
475
1.1%
470
1.1%
Medicine (non-M.D. Students)
46
0.1%
45
0.1%
49
0.1%
170
0.4%
860
2.1%
Moran School of Entrepreneurship
107
0.3%
Motion Picture Arts
211
0.5%
215
0.5%
175
0.4%
175
0.4%
169
0.4%
Music
1,141
2.8%
1,082
2.6%
1,051
2.5%
996
2.4%
1,019
2.4%
Nursing
406
1.0%
388
0.9%
553
1.3%
733
1.8%
781
1.9%
Social Sciences & Public Policy
4,692
11.3%
4,789
11.5%
4,806
11.6%
4,909
11.7%
4,884
11.7%
Social Work
842
2.0%
917
2.2%
840
2.0%
797
1.9%
763
1.8%
Special/Undecided
2,780
6.7%
2,868
6.9%
2,786
6.7%
2,792
6.7%
2,723
6.5%
Total
41,477
100.0%
41,773
100.0%
41,473
100.0%
41,867
100.0%
41,900
100.0%
Source: Fall Preliminary Student Instruction File (SIFP)
The Grad. School - 19
Entrepreneurship - 107
Motion Picture Arts - 169
Hospitality - 409
Applied Studies - 305
Law - 605
Social Work - 763
Nursing - 781
Music - 1,019
Fine Arts - 1,283
Medicine - 1,330
Education - 1,831
Criminology - 1,918
Engineering - 2,182
Comm. & Info. - 2,242
Human Sciences - 2,488
Social Sciences - 4,884
Business - 6,346
Arts & Sciences - 10,496
0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000 10,000 11,000
24-Students Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
Geographical Origin of Students by Florida County, Fall Semesters
County
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
Alachua
540
551
485
492
448
419
397
Baker
19
20
20
14
15
19
16
Bay
1,049
1,023
936
880
857
781
744
Bradford
8
11
18
13
10
10
7
Brevard
918
907
925
949
942
918
840
Broward
3,732
3,708
3,731
3,783
3,756
3,838
3,772
Calhoun
42
32
20
24
28
32
23
Charlotte
119
129
121
113
106
99
92
Citrus
99
98
96
100
100
97
91
Clay
448
408
394
418
381
386
378
Collier
469
517
532
523
533
544
535
Columbia
51
66
62
67
64
50
62
Miami-Dade
2,521
2,495
2,528
2,617
2,781
2,950
3,024
DeSoto
12
10
15
15
15
13
12
Dixie
8
7
6
7
9
8
3
Duval
1,558
1,560
1,510
1,455
1,394
1,448
1,494
Escambia
477
457
442
424
399
382
351
Flagler
102
96
100
89
93
91
92
Franklin
19
18
24
23
23
28
30
Gadsden
217
206
190
189
185
182
151
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Students-25
Geographical Origin of Students by Florida County, Fall Semesters
County
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
Gilchrist
9
19
25
17
16
16
7
Glades
7
5
7
9
6
7
6
Gulf
44
34
28
36
40
41
37
Hamilton
11
10
9
10
7
9
10
Hardee
15
13
9
11
18
15
15
Hendry
14
19
26
22
16
23
19
Hernando
124
116
115
111
112
128
134
Highlands
54
57
43
41
54
50
50
Hillsborough
2,166
2,090
2,094
2,173
2,223
2,269
2,323
Holmes
39
37
42
36
40
35
30
Indian River
174
171
177
205
208
234
218
Jackson
164
159
147
142
118
115
93
Jefferson
71
67
69
68
67
66
61
Lafayette
10
10
8
11
12
10
7
Lake
289
274
262
248
277
266
266
Lee
593
569
590
623
647
676
739
Leon
5,065
4,831
5,103
4,978
4,818
4,538
4,447
Levy
19
21
22
26
21
16
13
Liberty
23
21
18
26
27
23
27
Madison
48
38
41
36
23
21
27
Manatee
413
447
444
469
483
485
472
Marion
288
289
294
288
288
303
306
Martin
331
358
398
415
434
396
384
Monroe
100
105
121
128
134
127
150
Nassau
98
93
101
118
113
102
106
Okaloosa
675
654
642
595
545
512
494
Okeechobee
22
22
19
19
23
19
18
Orange
1,656
1,690
1,709
1,721
1,717
1,778
1,865
Osceola
239
227
242
229
209
221
224
Palm Beach
2,474
2,524
2,601
2,721
2,843
2,943
3,014
Pasco
422
422
419
435
455
452
475
Pinellas
1,541
1,559
1,534
1,548
1,487
1,418
1,343
Polk
544
521
485
498
495
515
503
Putnam
28
23
25
25
23
22
22
St. Johns
728
702
709
726
771
826
891
St. Lucie
211
216
205
212
203
232
234
Santa Rosa
381
391
371
362
363
343
330
Sarasota
596
604
609
634
624
669
697
Seminole
1,064
1,069
1,038
1,018
925
909
873
Sumter
19
13
17
14
25
26
28
Suwannee
45
45
44
31
36
30
33
Taylor
51
57
52
43
41
40
39
Union
6
10
8
7
4
5
6
Volusia
580
592
565
536
511
507
516
Wakulla
186
187
168
182
159
188
188
Walton
153
144
121
116
108
132
145
Washington
74
74
71
62
54
57
66
Florida Counties Total
34,272
33,918
34,002
34,176
33,962
34,110
34,065
Non-Florida
4,545
4,520
4,490
4,806
4,902
5,107
5,367
Non-USA
2,893
2,863
2,985
2,791
2,609
2,650
2,468
Total
41,710
41,301
41,477
41,773
41,473
41,867
41,900
Source: Fall Preliminary Student Instruction File (SIFP)
26-Students Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Geographical Origin of Students by State, Fall Semesters
State
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
Alabama
186
185
167
160
145
142
158
Alaska
11
11
7
8
7
8
10
Arizona
31
31
34
40
39
34
38
Arkansas
37
39
38
44
36
36
23
California
164
165
158
171
161
160
165
Colorado
75
68
78
87
92
89
72
Connecticut
79
73
77
98
103
114
118
Delaware
14
16
13
19
22
21
19
District of Columbia
6
4
3
9
14
10
15
Florida
34,272
33,947
34,028
34,176
33,962
34,110
34,065
Georgia
672
677
671
730
826
846
933
Hawaii
17
14
12
11
14
11
10
Idaho
16
14
17
20
14
20
21
Illinois
162
157
164
191
194
192
230
Indiana
64
67
67
65
57
57
70
Iowa
42
41
33
32
22
22
22
Kansas
26
25
23
35
35
36
38
Kentucky
70
59
62
61
60
68
67
Louisiana
75
67
74
62
63
61
66
Maine
21
20
20
23
25
20
19
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-27
Geographical Origin of Students by State, Fall Semesters
State
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
Maryland
142
151
154
195
204
209
201
Massachusetts
116
122
105
101
109
116
112
Michigan
110
114
100
115
111
101
98
Minnesota
45
49
51
61
52
59
68
Mississippi
63
64
58
55
53
51
47
Missouri
55
52
62
60
58
67
72
Montana
5
6
6
8
7
5
4
Nebraska
31
27
18
11
16
23
27
Nevada
24
20
19
18
14
9
18
New Hampshire
24
26
28
24
22
23
27
New Jersey
154
185
200
218
279
290
354
New Mexico
20
22
21
22
18
15
11
New York
232
220
232
318
319
385
394
North Carolina
229
255
241
212
240
272
302
North Dakota
9
18
23
21
18
15
13
Ohio
176
156
142
149
147
148
164
Oklahoma
24
24
22
20
18
20
26
Oregon
23
22
24
21
25
21
15
Pennsylvania
222
215
223
211
212
210
222
Rhode Island
14
11
14
16
19
24
21
South Carolina
117
119
117
105
107
106
127
South Dakota
10
8
9
6
4
6
5
Tennessee
112
101
117
119
136
159
173
Texas
246
241
246
244
229
238
263
Utah
22
26
25
27
30
32
31
Vermont
8
10
5
5
4
7
8
Virginia
331
329
337
341
337
332
314
Washington
48
54
54
51
48
42
52
West Virginia
26
30
28
27
20
21
22
Wisconsin
67
78
77
64
63
69
71
Wyoming
4
2
1
3
3
4
6
States Total
38,817
38,438
38,483
38,982
38,864
39,212
39,427
Other U.S. Citizens
(e.g. military born overseas)
111
129
157
***
***
***
***
U.S. Territories and Possessions
Guam
2
1
2
0
2
1
Puerto Rico
19
15
12
18
19
16
U.S. Virgin Islands
3
3
2
0
1
1
Territories & Possessions Total
24
19
**
16
18
22
18
*Non-U.S.A.
2,758
2,715
2,837
2,775
2,591
2,633
2,455
Total
41,710
41,301
41,477
41,773
41,473
41,867
41,900
Source: Fall Preliminary Student Instruction File (SIFP)
*Non-U.S.A. students include foreign students and resident aliens.
**For 2013, U.S. territories are included in the U.S. Totals: Puerto Rico (17), U.S. Virgin Islands (2), and Guam (2).
***For 2014 and later, other U.S. citizens were assigned to appropriate states.
28-Students Florida State UniversityOffice of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
Geographical Origin of Students by Country, Fall 2017
Country
Total
Country
Total
Country
Total
Afghanistan
1
Grenada
1
Poland
13
Albania
1
Guam
1
Portugal
2
Anguilla
2
Guatemala
5
Puerto Rico
16
Antigua and Barbuda
1
Guyana
3
Romania
4
Argentina
22
Haiti
45
Russia
16
Armenia
1
Honduras
19
Saint Lucia
2
Aruba
5
Hong Kong
7
Saudi Arabia
34
Australia
12
Hungary
5
Serbia, Republic of
1
Austria
7
India
182
Sierra Leone
1
Bahamas
13
Indonesia
4
Singapore
8
Bahrain
1
Iran
58
Slovakia
3
Bangladesh
37
Iraq
6
South Africa
17
Belarus
3
Ireland
5
South Ossetia
1
Belize
7
Israel
8
Spain
24
Bermuda
1
Italy
21
Sri Lanka
1
Bolivia
8
Jamaica
45
Palestine
1
Bosnia and Herzegovina
1
Japan
60
Suriname
1
Botswana
1
Jordan
3
Sweden
4
Brazil
80
Kazakhstan
4
Switzerland
2
Bulgaria
4
Kenya
9
Taiwan
38
Burkina Faso
2
Korea, Republic of
173
Tanzania
5
Burundi
1
Kuwait
1
Thailand
8
Cameroon
3
Latvia
1
Trinidad & Tobago
13
Canada
99
Lebanon
9
Tunisia
2
Chad
1
Liberia
1
Turkey
45
Chile
11
Libyan Arab Jamahiri
2
Ukraine
11
China
584
Lithuania
2
United Arab Emirates
2
Colombia
126
Luxembourg
2
United Kingdom
51
Costa Rica
12
Macedonia
1
United States
38,926
Cote d’Ivoire
2
Malawi
1
Uruguay
4
Croatia
1
Malaysia
4
Venezuela
170
Cuba
32
Mexico
47
Vietnam
10
Czech Republic
3
Moldova
1
Virgin Islands (U.S)
2
Dem. Rep. of the Congo
1
Montenegro
1
Zambia
1
Denmark
1
Morocco
1
Zimbabwe
2
Dominica
1
Nepal
11
Dominican Republic
10
Netherlands
16
Total
41,900
Ecuador
21
Netherlands Antilles
18
Egypt
9
New Zealand
4
El Salvador
26
Nicaragua
9
Estonia
1
Nigeria
29
Ethiopia
3
Norway
7
Finland
4
Pakistan
17
France
21
Panama
333
Federal Republic of Germany
28
Paraguay
1
Ghana
9
Peru
33
Greece
8
Philippines
15
Note: Countries are those listed by students at the time of their enrollment. Actual names for the countries are taken from the
internal file documentation and may not accurately reflect the current name or status of a particular nation. 2,974 students from
128 countries other than the United States were enrolled in Fall 2017. This number includes 2,301 Non-Resident Aliens.
Source: Fall Preliminary Student Instruction File (SIFP)
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-29
Geographical Origin of FTICs by Florida County, Fall 2017
County
Number
County
Number
County
Number
County
Number
Alachua
54
Franklin
3
Leon
244
St. Johns
194
Baker
5
Gadsden
11
Levy
1
St. Lucie
30
Bay
46
Gilchrist
2
Liberty
0
Santa Rosa
60
Bradford
4
Glades
1
Madison
4
Sarasota
139
Brevard
152
Gulf
4
Manatee
85
Seminole
165
Broward
729
Hamilton
1
Marion
49
Sumter
2
Calhoun
0
Hardee
1
Martin
58
Suwannee
4
Charlotte
24
Hendry
3
Monroe
30
Taylor
2
Citrus
11
Hernando
27
Nassau
24
Union
1
Clay
75
Highlands
14
Okaloosa
77
Volusia
76
Collier
110
Hillsborough
502
Okeechobee
1
Wakulla
13
Columbia
15
Holmes
0
Orange
366
Walton
24
Miami-Dade
560
Indian River
34
Osceola
41
Washington
4
DeSoto
1
Jackson
2
Palm Beach
604
Non-Florida
819
Dixie
0
Jefferson
5
Pasco
88
Non-USA
41
Duval
271
Lafayette
0
Pinellas
251
Total
6,524
Escambia
47
Lake
52
Polk
87
Flagler
20
Lee
153
Putnam
1
Note: FTICs include summer FTICs who continue into the fall.
Source: Fall Preliminary and Summer Final Student Instruction Files
Online Resource: FTIC enrollment reports can be accessed online at: http://ir.fsu.edu/students.aspx
30-Students Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
First Time in College (FTIC) Students by High School and State, Fall 2017
High Schools Contributing 29 or More FTICs
High School City Number
Lawton Chiles Tallahassee 81
H. B. Plant Tampa 72
Cypress Bay Weston 64
Coral Reef Miami 59
Spanish River Boca Raton 55
Marjory S. Douglas Parkland 54
Riverview Riverview 53
Lincoln Tallahassee 52
St. Thomas Aquinas Ft. Lauderdale 51
Jupiter Community Sr. Jupiter 48
Creekside St. Johns 47
Fort Myers Fort Myers 46
Archbishop Edward McCarthy Southwest Ranches 46
Boca Raton Community Boca Raton 45
Cooper City Cooper City 45
Olympia Boca Raton 44
Park Vista Community Park Vista 44
Leon Tallahassee 42
George Steinbrenner Lutz 42
Atlantic Community Delray Beach 40
Winter Park Winter Park 40
William R Boone Orlando 39
Suncoast Riviera Beach 38
Alexander Dreyfoos West Palm Beach 38
Wellington Wellington 38
Bishop Kenny Jacksonville 37
Bartram Trail St. Johns 37
Newsome Lithia 37
Pine View Osprey 37
Timber Creek Orlando 37
Ponte Vedra Ponte Vedra 37
Stanton College Prep Jacksonville 36
West Boca Raton Community Boca Raton 35
Pompano Beach Institute Pompano 34
Miami Palmetto Miami 34
Lakewood Ranch Bradenton 33
Niceville Niceville 33
Osceola Osceola 32
Lake Mary Lake Mary 31
Fleming Island Orange Park 31
40 High Schools Contributing 31 or More FTICs 1,744
1,189 High Schools Contributing 30 or Fewer FTICs 4,685
Home Schooled 50
Unknown, or High School Not Found on List 45
Total 6,524
Source: Fall Preliminary and Summer Final Student Instruction Files
Online Resource: FTIC enrollment reports can be accessed online at
http://ir.fsu.edu/students.aspx
FTIC Students by State
State Number
Alabama 18
Arizona 2
Arkansas 1
California 9
Colorado 9
Connecticut 25
Delaware 3
District of Columbia 2
Florida 5,664
Georgia 178
Hawaii 2
Illinois 58
Indiana 14
Iowa 3
Kansas 7
Kentucky 8
Louisiana 10
Maine 2
Maryland 32
Massachusetts 15
Michigan 10
Minnesota 13
Mississippi 2
Missouri 8
Nebraska 3
Nevada 3
New Hampshire 6
New Jersey 66
New Mexico 2
New York 61
North Carolina 45
Ohio 25
Oklahoma 4
Oregon 1
Pennsylvania 34
Rhode Island 3
South Carolina 21
Tennessee 25
Texas 46
Utah 2
Vermont 2
Virginia 30
Washington 2
West Virginia 1
Wisconsin 6
Non-USA 41
Total 6,524
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Students-31
Florida Community/Junior/State College Transfers to FSU
Florida Community/State College Transfers by Summer/Fall Cohort
County
Community/State College
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
1.
Broward
Broward College
65
77
68
51
65
60
2.
Jackson
Chipola College
54
53
49
38
39
42
3.
Marion
College of Central Florida
17
20
19
16
10
14
4.
Volusia
Daytona State College
32
34
27
20
29
27
5.
Brevard
Eastern Florida State College
41
47
40
34
33
25
6.
Lee
Edison State College
22
24
23
17
21
15
7.
Columbia
Florida Gateway College
13
8
7
12
5
7
8.
Monroe
Florida Keys Community College
0
3
3
0
0
3
9.
Duval
Florida State College at Jacksonville
70
66
68
36
46
50
10.
Bay
Gulf Coast State College
235
171
148
141
119
130
11.
Hillsborough
Hillsborough Community College
28
32
38
25
22
26
12.
St. Lucie
Indian River State College
30
38
39
28
45
34
13.
Lake
Lake-Sumter State College
7
9
10
12
7
11
14.
Manatee
State College of Florida, Manatee-Sarasota
40
29
37
27
38
26
15.
Miami-Dade
Miami-Dade College
90
105
87
113
80
86
16.
Madison
North Florida Community College
17
16
10
15
9
10
17.
Okaloosa
Northwest Florida State College
56
55
31
38
47
40
18.
Palm Beach
Palm Beach State College
73
72
60
47
63
70
19.
Pasco
Pasco-Hernando State College
16
21
15
13
13
18
20.
Escambia
Pensacola State College
27
32
22
27
16
16
21.
Polk
Polk State College
21
12
11
9
12
10
`22.
Putnam
St. Johns River State College
11
14
16
5
7
13
23.
Pinellas
St. Petersburg College
63
54
76
34
57
39
24.
Alachua
Santa Fe College
65
40
56
42
34
38
25.
Seminole
Seminole State College of Florida
26
20
33
17
19
22
26.
Highlands
South Florida College
7
3
7
12
3
6
27.
Leon
Tallahassee Community College
970
922
908
874
1,010
884
28.
Orange
Valencia College
62
63
62
65
35
56
Total
2,158
2,040
1,970
1,768
1,885
1,778
Note: The cohort consists of community/state college transfers from the fall semester and the previous summer who continue into the fall.
Source: Fall Preliminary Student Instruction Files (SIFP)
23,961
73.0%
6,444
19.6%
1,800
5.5%
607
1.8%
Source of Fall 2017 Undergraduates
FTIC Transfers - CC Transfers - Other Other
Type of Student at Most Recent Admission
2,163
2,040
1,970
1,768
1,885
1,778
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
2011 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
CC Transfers by Summer/Fall Cohort
32-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Retention & Graduation Rates for Full-Time FTICs
Y
ear 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
1
st
Number Enrolled 6,116 5,004 5,936 5,963 6,149 5,749 6,096 6,068 6,036 6,217
T
otal Graduated 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Percent Graduated 0.0% 0.0% 0.0+% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%
2
nd
Number Re-Enrolled 5,491 4,574 5,470 5,529 5,631 5,266 5,671 5,650 5,613
T
otal Graduated 16 16 24 26 34 27 36 42 33
Percent Graduated 0.3% 0.3% 0.4% 0.4% 0.6% 0.5% 0.6% 0.7% 0.5%
Number Retained 5,491 4,574 5,471 5,529 5,631 5,266 5,671 5,650 5,613
Percent Retained 89.8% 91.4% 92.2% 92.7% 91.6% 91.6% 93.0% 93.1% 93.0%
3
rd
Number Re-Enrolled 5,105 4,298 5,105 5,144 5,258 4,998 5,351 5,347
T
otal Graduated 252 277 341 290 360 371 447 457
Percent Graduated 4.4% 5.9% 6.2% 5.3% 6.4% 6.9% 7.9% 8.2%
Number Retained 5,121 4,314 5,130 5,170 5,292 5,025 5,387 5,389
Percent Retained 83.7% 86.2% 86.4% 86.7% 86.1% 87.4% 88.4% 88.8%
4
th
Number Re-Enrolled 4,709 3,903 4,644 4,715 4,767 4,508 4,772
T
otal Graduated 3,190 2,773 3,284 3,304 3,453 3,369 3,682
Percent Graduated 56.5% 61.3% 61.5% 60.7% 62.6% 65.5% 68.3%
Number Retained 4,977 4,196 5,010 5,031 5,161 4,907 5,255
Percent Retained 81.4% 83.9% 84.4% 84.4% 83.9% 85.4% 86.2%
5
th
Number Re-Enrolled 1,417 1,022 1,218 1,289 1,206 1,045
T
otal Graduated 1,060 780 897 1,004 955 853
Percent Graduated 73.9% 76.9% 76.6% 77.5% 78.1% 80.4%
Number Retained 4,875 4,088 4,868 4,909 5,053 4,809
Percent Retained 79.7% 81.7% 82.0% 82.3% 82.2% 83.6%
Adjusted Cohort
(
retention/graduation percentages below this point are based on adjusted cohort
)
Original Cohor
t
6,116 5,004 5,936 5,963 6,149
Allowable Exclusions
*
8 11 11 6 3
Adjusted Cohor
t
6,108 4,993 5,925 5,957 6,146
6
th
Number Re-Enrolled 286 184 254 226 206
T
otal Graduated 179 107 159 145 125
Percent Graduated 76.9% 79.2% 79.4% 80.1% 80.2%
Number Retained 4,804 4,030 4,801 4,850 5,008
Percent Retained 78.7% 80.7% 81.0% 81.4% 81.5%
7
th
Number Re-Enrolled 103 70 71 78
T
otal Graduated 43 42 45 40
Percent Graduated 77.6% 80.0% 80.2% 80.7%
Number Retained 4,800 4,023 4,777 4,847
Percent Retained 78.6% 80.6% 80.6% 81.4%
8
th
Number Re-Enrolled 54 26 39
T
otal Graduated 30 11 22
Percent Graduated 78.1% 80.2% 80.6%
Number Retained 4,794 4,021 4,790
Percent Retained 78.5% 80.5% 80.8%
* Allowable exclusions for FTIC students include those who left to serve in the military, or any members of the original cohort who are
deceased or permanently disabled
Note: The fall cohort consists of full-time, FTIC students from the fall semester and the previous summer who continue into the fall.
Students are followed through the end of summer so that each year begins with fall and ends with summer semester. The number re-enrolled
is the number of students from the original fall cohort that were enrolled in the fall, spring or summer semester of the year indicated. The
percent graduated is cumulative. Retention includes the number who re-enrolled plus the graduates of previous years.
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-33
Retention & Graduation Rates for Full-Time FTICs
Note: The fall cohort consists of full-time, FTIC students from the fall semester and the previous summer who continue into the fall.
0.3%
5.9%
61.3%
76.9%
79.2%
91.1%
80.3%
22.6%
4.8%
1.5%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2nd Year 3rd Year 4th Year 5th Year 6th Year
2008 Summer/Fall Cohort
Graduated Retained
0.6%
6.4%
62.6%
78.1%
80.2%
91.0%
79.7%
21.3%
4.1%
1.3%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2nd Year 3rd Year 4th Year 5th Year 6th Year
2011 Summer/Fall Cohort
Graduated Retained
0.4%
6.2%
61.5%
76.6%
79.4%
91.8% 80.2%
22.9%
5.4%
1.6%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2nd Year 3rd Year 4th Year 5th Year 6th Year
2009 Summer/Fall Cohort
Graduated Retained
0.4%
5.3%
60.7%
77.5%
80.1%
92.3%
81.4%
23.7%
4.8%
1.3%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2nd Year 3rd Year 4th Year 5th Year 6th Year
2010 Summer/Fall Cohort
Graduated Retained
34-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Retention & Graduation Rates for Full-Time Transfers
Y
ear 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
1
st
Number Enrolled 1,132 1,237 1,656 1,570 1,557 1,378 1,484 1,408 1,308 1,518
T
otal Graduated 24 28 26 26 17 18 12 10 10 10
Percent Graduated 2.1% 2.3% 1.6% 1.7% 1.1% 1.3% 0.8% 0.7% 0.8% 0.7%
2
nd
Number Re-Enrolled 1,000 1,112 1,478 1,405 1,369 1,222 1,312 1,262 1,168
T
otal Graduated 564 592 775 674 651 593 644 675 645
Percent Graduated 51.9% 50.1% 48.4% 44.6% 42.9% 44.3% 44.2% 48.7% 50.1%
Number Retained 1,024 1,140 1,504 1,431 1,386 1,240 1,324 1,272 1,178
Percent Retained 90.5% 92.2% 90.8% 91.1% 89.0% 90.0% 89.2% 90.3% 90.1%
3
rd
Number Re-Enrolled 374 468 633 626 621 559 583 511
T
otal Graduated 272 346 473 463 456 395 425 386
Percent Graduated 76.0% 78.1% 76.9% 74.1% 72.2% 73.0% 72.8% 76.1%
Number Retained 962 1,088 1,434 1,326 1,289 1,170 1,239 1,196
Percent Retained 85.0% 88.0% 86.6% 84.5% 82.8% 84.9% 83.5% 84.9%
4
th
Number Re-Enrolled 93 109 141 125 139 129 132
T
otal Graduated 55 69 91 82 86 76 90
Percent Graduated 80.8% 83.7% 82.4% 79.3% 77.7% 78.5% 78.9%
Number Retained 953 1,075 1,415 1,288 1,263 1,136 1,213
Percent Retained 84.2% 86.9% 85.4% 82.0% 81.1% 82.4% 81.7%
5
th
Number Re-Enrolled 32 31 42 47 40 45
T
otal Graduated 18 14 20 24 21 24
Percent Graduated 82.4% 84.8% 83.6% 80.8% 79.71 80.3%
Number Retained 947 1,066 1,407 1,292 1,250 1,128
Percent Retained 83.7% 86.2% 85.0% 82.3% 80.3% 81.9%
6
th
Number Re-Enrolled 13 12 25 23 27
T
otal Graduated 3 6 13 15 12
Percent Graduated 82.7% 85.3% 84.4% 81.8% 79.8%
Number Retained 946 1,061 1,410 1,292 1,258
Percent Retained 83.6% 85.8% 85.1% 82.3% 80.8%
7
th
Number Re-Enrolled 12 9 9 9
T
otal Graduated 10 5 6 6
Percent Graduated 83.6% 85.7% 84.8% 82.2%
Number Retained 948 1,064 1,407 1,293
Percent Retained 83.7% 86.0% 85.0% 82.4%
8
th
Number Re-Enrolled 3 4 3
T
otal Graduated 2 3 2
Percent Graduated 83.7% 85.9% 84.9%
Number Retained 949 1,064 1,407
Percent Retained 83.8% 86.0% 85.0%
9
th
Number Re-Enrolled 4 1
T
otal Graduated 2 1
Percent Graduated 83.9% 86.0%
Number Retained 952 1,064
Percent Retained 84.1% 86.0
Note: The fall cohort consists of full-time, AA transfers from the fall semester and the previous summer who continue into the fall. Students
are followed through the end of summer so that each year begins with fall and ends with summer semester. The number re-enrolled is the
number of students from the original fall cohort that were enrolled in the fall, spring or summer semester of the year indicated. The percent
graduated is cumulative. Retention includes the number who re-enrolled plus the graduates of previous years.
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-35
42.9%
72.2%
77.7%
79.1%
79.8%
46.1%
10.6%
3.4%
1.2%
1.0%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2nd Year 3rd Year 4th Year 5th Year 6th Year
2011 Summer/Fall Cohort
Graduated Retained
Retention & Graduation Rates for Full-Time Transfers
Note: The fall cohort consists of AA transfers from the fall semester and the previous summer who continue into the fall.
50.1%
78.1%
83.7%
84.8%
85.3%
42.1%
9.9%
3.2%
1.4%
0.5%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2nd Year 3rd Year 4th Year 5th Year 6th Year
2008 Summer/Fall Cohort
Graduated Retained
44.6%
74.1%
79.3%
80.8%
81.8%
46.5%
10.4%
2.7%
1.5%
0.7%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2nd Year 3rd Year 4th Year 5th Year 6th Year
2010 Summer/Fall Cohort
Graduated Retained
48.4%
76.9%
82.4%
83.6%
84.4%
42.4%
9.7%
3.0%
1.4%
0.7%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2nd Year 3rd Year 4th Year 5th Year 6th Year
2009 Summer/Fall Cohort
Graduated Retained
36-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Total Student Credit Hours by Course Level & Class Level, Fall 2017
All Student Credit Hours Produced, Fundable and Non-Fundable
Level of Course
Class of Studen
t
Headcoun
t
1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000+
T
hesis/
Diss
T
otal
Freshman
5,708 31,218 38,305 8,050 757 0 0 0 78,330
Sophomore
7,005 19,751 48,986 21,345 4,388 0 0 0 94,470
J
unior
9,142 10,176 30,426 53,565 24,911 24 0 0 119,102
Senior
10,957 6,319 16,145 48,750 62,565 383 12 0 134,174
Graduate
Masters
4,026 58 66 81 346 30,644 2,364 755 34,314
Graduate
Specialists
104000088218621,070
Graduate
Doctoral
2,715 4 7 12 6 11,216 5,561 8,550 25,356
Graduate
J
.D.
54803302,9294,53837,476
Graduate
M.D.
470 0 0 0 0 0 7,641 0 7,641
Special
High School
721159000045
Special
Post HS
694 1,591 2,213 1,939 795 9 11 0 6,558
Special
Post Bacc
524
__137 ___333 350 287 1,511 101 0 2,719
T
otal
41,900 69,275 136,499 134,104 94,055 47,598 20,414 9,310 511,255
Note: All fee waivers included
Source: Fall Preliminary Student Instruction File (SIFP)
Note: Professional students include those seeking Medical Doctorates and Juris Doctorates.
22,464
40,602
68,737
69,523
111,315
78,476
25,733
8,807
15,111
60,160
0 20,000 40,000 60,000 80,000 100,000 120,000 140,000
Professional
Graduate
Seniors
Juniors
Sophomores
Freshmen
Fall 2017 Student Credit Hours Produced
Lower Level (1000s & 2000s)
Upper Level (3000s & 4000s)
Graduate Level (5000 & up)
Fundable and Non-Fundable Hours
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-37
Total Student Credit Hours by Department, Fall 2017
Lower
Upper
Grad I
Grad II
Total
AP - College of Applied Studies
69
3,877
1,026
0
4,972
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
0.0%+
1.4%
2.9%
0.0%
0.8%
APCOMM - Professional Communication
69
1,145
81
0
1,295
APNRS - Nurse Anesthesia
0
0
864
0
864
APPSS - Public Safety and Security
0
2,027
69
0
2,096
APREC - Recreation and Leisure Studies
0
705
12
0
717
AS - College of Arts & Sciences
136,950
72,911
5,518
13,272
228,651
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
66.8%
32.0%
15.4%
39.2%
45.5%
ASANT - Anthropology
2,379
1,211
213
9
3,812
ASARO - Aerospace Studies
146
195
0
0
341
ASBIO - Biological Sciences
13,723
7,116
257
1,052
22,148
ASCHM - Chemistry and Biochemistry
12,722
2,883
3
1,953
17,561
Classical Languages, Literature, & Civilization Subtotal:
3,644
4,608
253
211
8,716
ASCLS - Classics
3,168
4,590
202
163
8,123
ASCLSGK - Greek
60
3
39
42
144
ASCLSLT - Latin
416
15
12
6
449
ASCMS - Scientific Computing
162
305
87
326
880
ASCOP - Computer Science
5,268
7,608
993
630
14,499
ASENG - English
13,123
9,722
420
1,061
24,326
ASEOS - Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Science
6,438
1,565
445
642
9,090
ASGFD - Geophysical Fluid Dynamics
0
0
0
18
18
ASHIS - History
4,944
5,570
272
566
11,352
ASHPS - History & Philosophy of Science
0
285
2
0
287
ASHUM_INT - Humanities
3,080
1,014
23
19
4,136
ASMIL - Military Science
124
225
0
0
349
Modern Languages Subtotal:
13,510
4,361
567
428
18,866
ASMLL - Modern Languages, general
57
335
177
54
623
ASMLLARA - Arabic
320
66
6
6
398
ASMLLCHI - Chinese
392
321
12
6
731
ASMLLFRE - French
2,112
735
57
117
3,021
ASMLLGER - German
776
360
80
39
1,255
ASMLLHBR - Hebrew
72
0
0
0
72
ASMLLITL - Italian
1,153
426
50
3
1,632
ASMLLJPN - Japanese
564
320
8
0
892
ASMLLPOR - Portuguese
0
105
3
9
117
ASMLLRUS - Russian
319
348
60
9
736
ASMLLSLA - Slavic
0
141
6
0
147
ASMLLSPN - Spanish
7,745
1,204
108
185
9,242
ASMOB_INT - Molecular Biophysics
0
48
12
185
245
ASMTH - Mathematics
21,632
2,261
183
901
24,977
ASPHI - Philosophy
6,198
1,728
201
445
8,572
ASPHY - Physics
8,259
829
102
1,554
10,744
ASPSY - Psychology
8,179
16,004
359
1,525
26,067
ASREL - Religion
4,835
3,663
138
517
9,153
ASTIC - Statistics
8,584
1,710
988
1,230
12,512
BU - College of Business
10,377
40,356
4,284
444
55,461
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
5.1%
17.7%
12.0%
1.3%
11.0%
BUACC - Accounting
4,776
4,006
801
66
9,649
BUBAISSC - Business Analytics, Info. Systems & Supply Chain
2,541
1,956
963
27
5,487
BUFIN - Finance
0
8,982
1,152
145
10,279
BUMAN - Management
81
8,882
168
123
9,254
BUMIS – Management Information Systems
0
0
105
3
108
BUMRK – Marketing
0
8,323
162
60
8,545
BURIR - Risk Mgmt/Ins, Real Estate & Legal Studies
2,979
8,207
933
20
12,139
38-Students Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Total Student Credit Hours by Department, Fall 2017
Lower
Upper
Grad I
Grad II
Total
CI - College of Communication and Information
7,359
13,972
4,582
458
26,371
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
3.6%
6. 1%
12.8%
1.4%
5.3%
CICOM - Communication
4,962
9,585
1,073
182
15,802
CICSI - Communication Disorders
1,038
1,678
1,696
79
4,491
CILIS - Information
1,359
2,709
1,813
197
6,078
CR - College of Criminology & Criminal Justice
1,053
8,693
894
544
11,184
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
0.5%
3.8%
2.5%
1.6%
2.2%
ED - College of Education
4,334
9,439
3,607
4,454
21,834
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
2. 1%
4. 1%
10. 1%
13.2%
4.3%
EDLPS - Educational Leadership & Policy Studies
1,332
276
960
1,141
3,709
EDPLS - Educational Psychology & Learning Systems
554
1,688
916
2,601
5,759
EDSPM - Sport Mgmt. Recreational Mgmt.& Physical Ed.
1,217
3,717
810
122
5,866
EDTED - Teacher Education
1,231
3,758
921
590
6,500
EG - College of Engineering
716
11,567
867
1,356
14,506
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
0.3%
5. 1%
2.4%
4.0%
2.9%
EGCBE - Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
0
1,985
117
187
2,289
EGCEE - Civil and Environmental Engineering
266
2,208
154
190
2,818
EGECE - Electrical and Computer Engineering
298
2,202
247
384
3,131
EGIND - Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
152
1,408
45
239
1,844
EGMCH - Mechanical Engineering
0
3,764
304
356
4,424
ET - School of Entrepreneurship
246
3,153
0
0
3,399
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
0. 1%
1.4%
0.0%
0.0%
0.7%
HP - School of Hospitality
3,097
4,134
36
0
7,267
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
1.5%
1.8%
0. 1%
0.0%
1.4%
VA - College of Fine Arts
7,932
8,337
2,369
487
19,125
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
3.9%
3.7%
6.6%
1.4%
3.8%
VAAED - Art Education
0
108
523
151
782
VAAHS - Art History
2,955
836
315
214
4,320
VAART - Art
1,673
3,611
306
3
5,593
VADAN - Dance
772
842
322
10
1,946
VAIND - Interior Design
444
1,130
171
0
1,745
VATHE - School of Theatre
2,088
1,810
732
109
4,739
GR - The Graduate School
0
0
3
87
90
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
0.3%
0.0%+
HS - College of Human Sciences
5,457
13,255
578
537
19,827
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
2.7%
5.8%
1.6%
1.6%
3.9%
HSFCS - Family and Child Sciences
2,967
4,893
10
291
8,161
HSNES - Nutrition, Food & Exercise Science
1,756
5,293
541
246
7,836
HSRMP - Retail Merchandising & Product Development
734
3,069
27
0
3,830
LW - College of Law
0
0
520
7,377
7,897
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
0.0%
0.0%
1.5%
21.8%
1.6%
MD - College of Medicine (non-M.D.)
427
133
794
273
1,627
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
0.2%
0. 1%
2.2%
0.8%
0.3%
MD - College of Medicine
135
7
99
0
241
MDHSI - Health Sciences Interdisciplinary
292
126
17
273
708
MDPHYASTPhysician Assistant
0
0
678
0
678
MP - College of Motion Picture Arts
1,002
650
904
0
2,556
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
0.5%
0.3%
2.5%
0.0%
0.5%
MU - College of Music
7,651
4,097
1,350
1,528
14,626
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
3.7%
1.8%
3.8%
4.5%
2.9%
NR - College of Nursing
0
3,171
155
791
4,117
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
0.0%
1.4%
0.4%
2.3%
0.8%
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-39
Total Student Credit Hours by Department, Fall 2017
Lower
Upper
Grad I
Grad II
Total
SW - College of Social Work
12
2,214
4,196
165
6,587
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
0.0%
1.0%
11.7%
0.5%
1.3%
SS - College of Social Sciences and Public Policy
17,886
27,632
4,060
2,072
51,650
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
8.7%
12. 1%
11.4%
6. 1%
10.3%
SSAFA_INT - African American Studies
60
1
0
0
61
SSAST_INT Asian Studies
0
0
0
0
0
SSDMG_INT - Demography
0
0
0
0
0
SSECO - Economics
8,970
5,568
378
612
15,528
SSGEO - Geography
2,670
2,235
375
219
5,499
SSHPR - Health Policy Research
0
0
351
0
351
SSIAF_INT - International Affairs
690
1,280
257
1
2,228
SSISS_INT - Interdisciplinary Social Science
162
510
78
0
750
SSPAD - School of Public Administration & Policy
0
5,433
1,228
300
6,961
SSPOS - Political Science
2,823
6,053
467
321
9,664
SSSOC - Sociology
2,217
5,988
161
463
8,829
SSURP - Urban & Regional Planning
294
564
765
156
1,779
RG Registrar’s Office
364
79
0
0
443
Percent of University Student Credit Hours
0.2%
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
0. 1%
UNIVERSITY TOTALS
204,932
227,670
35,743
33,845
502,190
MD - College of Medicine (M.D. Instruction)
Grad III
Total
7,645
7,645
Source: Fall Final Student Instruction File, All Campus
Online Resource: The student credit hour and FTE reports can be accessed online at http://ir.fsu.edu/sch.aspx
0 25,000 50,000 75,000 100,000 125,000 150,000 175,000 200,000 225,000
Arts & Sciences
State Fundable Student Credit Hours, Fall 2017
0 10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 50,000 60,000
Graduate School
Registrar
Medicine
Motion Picture Arts
Entrepreneurship
Nursing
Applied Studies
Social Work
Law
Hospitality
Criminology
Music
Engineering
Fine Arts
Human Sciences
Education
Comm. & Information
Social Sciences
Business
Lower
Upper
Graduate
40-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Student Credit Hours and Headcount by Level/Semester
Total Student Credit Hours Headcount Enrollments
2012-13 Summer Fall Spring Total Annual FTE 2012-13 Summer Fall Spring
Lower 57,839 197,583 183,484 438,906 14,630.2 Lower 4,286 11,586 9,517
Upper 69,328 220,074 220,023 509,425 16,980.8 Upper 12,632 20,310 21,271
Grad I 22,002 37,484 35,872 95,358 3,973.3 Graduate 5,615 8,139 7,780
Grad II 17,505
34,579 33,830 85,914 3,579.8 Unclassified 1,161 1,191 1,064
Total 166,674 489,720 473,209 1,129,603 39,164.0 Total 23,694 41,226 39,632
Grad III 4,466 7,913 9,617 21,996 481*
2013-14 Summer Fall Spring Total Annual FTE 2013-14 Summer Fall Spring
Lower 55,109 193,646 175,876 424,631 14,154.4 Lower 4,147 12,020 9,910
Upper 68,892 222,678 226,830 518,400 17,280.0 Upper 12,823 20,125 21,159
Grad I 20,056 36,051 35,404 91,511 3,813.0 Graduate 5,534 8,035 7,711
Grad II 17,661
35,903 33,814 87,378 3,640.8 Unclassified 977 1,131 1,025
Total 161,718 488,278 471,924 1,121,920 38,888.1 Total 23,481 41,311 39,805
Grad III 4,468 7,786 8,989 21,243 482*
2014-15 Summer Fall Spring Total Annual FTE 2014-15 Summer Fall Spring
Lower 55,135 196,092 179,228 430,455 14,348.5 Lower 4,591 12,024 10,224
Upper 67,276 223,967 225,056 516,299 17,210.0 Upper 12,670 20,559 21,025
Grad I 19,700 35,917 34,173 89,790 3,741.3 Graduate 5,347 7,967 7,559
Grad II 17,738
34,887 33,679 86,304 3,596.0 Unclassified 1,068 1,187 1,093
Total 159,849 490,863 472,136 1,122,848 38,895.7 Total 23,676 41,737 39,901
Grad III 4,477 7,638 8,968 21,083 483*
2015-16 Summer Fall Spring Total Annual FTE 2015-16 Summer Fall Spring
Lower 59,149 198,586 184,714 442,449 14,748.3 Lower 5,107 12,441 10,157
Upper 66,639 219,906 218,771 505,316 16,843.9 Upper 12,806 19,967 20,925
Grad I 19,028 35,299 35,149 89,476 3,728.2 Graduate 5,174 7,814 7,606
Grad II 17,975
34,491 33,643 86,109 3,587.9 Unclassified 1,076 1,205 1,114
Total 162,791 488,282 472,277 1,123,350 38,908.2 Total 24,163 41,427 39,802
Grad III 4,550 8,006 9,634 22,190 475*
2016-17 Summer Fall Spring Total Annual FTE 2016-17 Summer Fall Spring
Lower 59,250 205,624 183,304 448,178 14,939.3 Lower 5,160 12,454 10,042
Upper 67,406 222,493 227,766 517,665 17,255.5 Upper 12,969 20,174 21,372
Grad I 20,372 36,463 34,815 91,650 3,818.8 Graduate 5,272 7,926 7,582
Grad II 18,082
34,898 32,841 85,821 3,575.9 Unclassified 1,064 1,270 1,158
Total 165,110 499,478 478,726 1,143,314 39,589.4 Total 24,465 41,824 40,154
Grad III 4,288 8,183 9,514 21,985 475*
2017-18 Summer Fall Spring Total Annual FTE 2017-18 Summer Fall Spring
Lower 56,987 204,932 183,741 445,660 14,855.3 Lower 4,962 12,563 10,073
Upper 67,297 227,670 231,435 526,402 17,546.7 Upper 12,921 20,155 21,300
Grad I 20,339 35,743 34,657 90,739 3,780.8 Graduate 5,323 7,849 7,548
Grad II 16,494
33,845 32,716 83,055 3,460.6 Unclassified 1,072 1,233 1,126
Total 161,117 502,190 482,549 1,145,856 39,643.5 Total 24,278 41,800 40,047
Grad III 4,999 7,645 8,712 21,356 470*
* Grad III (Medical) Annual FTE is the fall Medical Doctorate headcount.
Note: The Florida Board of Governors (BOG) changed its FTE standard and that is represented beginning with the 2016-17
FSU Fact Book, and calculated retroactively on this page. The new FTE, which is a national standard, is calculated by dividing
the total annual undergraduate hours by 30 and the total annual graduate hours by 24.
Source: Final Student Instruction Files (SIF)
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-41
Annual Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment (National Standard FTE)
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
Colle
g
e of A
pp
lied Studies
ota
95.4 163.1 208.0 201.5 243.6
365.6
Lower 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 2.0 2.0
U
pp
er 83.6 154.1 202.0 196.9 177.2 256.5
Graduate 11.8 9.0 6.0 4.6 64.4 107.1
Nursing (AP) 55.5 86.5
Graduate 55.5 86.5
Public Safet
y
50.3 92.7 131.6 126.8 110.6
128.5
U
pp
er 48.6 92.3 131.2 125.7 105.2 120.5
Graduate 1.7 0.4 0.4 1.1 5.3 8
Communication (AP)
3.3
2.7
86.3
Lower
0.0 0.0 2.0
U
pp
er
3.3 2.7 76.3
Graduate
0.0 0.0 8.0
Recreation & Leisure Studies 45.1 70.4 75.2 71.4 66.5 64.3
.
U
pp
er 35.0 61.8 69.6 67.9 63.0 59.7
Graduate 10.1 8.6 5.6 3.5 3.5 4.6
Colle
g
e of Arts and Sciences
ota
17,007.1 16,868.4 16,860.4 17,094.0 17,122.3
17,518.7
Lower
9,675.4 9,426.2 9,422.5 9,556.4 9,922.7 10,174.1
U
pp
er
5,397.1 5,563.5 5,484.2 5,598.2 5,262.1 5,399.3
Graduate
1,934.6 1,878.7 1,953.7 1,939.4 1,937.5 1,945.3
A
rts & Sciences, Interdisciplinary
222.5 298.7 328.0
348.7
Lower
199.6 272.2 311.1 313.6
U
pp
er
22.9 26.5 16.9 35.1
A
nthro
p
olo
gy
262.7 242.1 244.1 276.6 213.9 239.3
Lower
183.7 151.9 163.1 184.3 141 152.1
U
pp
er
74.1 89.8 81.0 92.3 72.9 78.1
Graduate
4.9 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 9.1
Biological Science
1,467.4 1,520.6 1,484.7 1,542.7 1,600.1 1,638.2
Lower
826.1 849.8 823.0 854.9 906.8 934.2
U
pp
er
487.2 519.2 501.7 533.9 547.9 551.3
Graduate
154.1 151.6 160.0 153.9 145.4 152.7
Chemistr
y
and Biochemistr
y
1,239.2 1,277.4 1,255.9 1,261.1 1,312.2 1,354.6
Lower
858.1 896.8 872.5 864.1 902.8 952.4
U
pp
er
185.2 190.5 189.5 196.4 208.3 195.4
Graduate
195.9 190.1 193.9 200.6 201.1 206.8
Classics Subtota
l
526.6 498.7 535.0 513.7 509.0 588.4
Lower
88.4 102.8 140.1 164.5 211.8 252.7
U
pp
er
390.6 350.3 338.7 293.5 239.0 284.2
Graduate
47.6 45.6 56.2 55.7 58.2 51.2
Classics
451.4 426.9 474.4 467.5 470.0 545.8
Lower
32.6 51.5 94.9 131.8 185.2 221.9
U
pp
er
383.8 343.6 334.5 289.5 237.1 282.5
Graduate
35.0 31.8 45.0 46.2 47.7 41.4
Greek
18.4 16.7 13.4 9.6 7.6 7.8
Lower
10.3 7.9 6.7 3.1 2.7 2.5
U
pp
er
1.9 2.5 1.2 1.4 0.5 0.5
Graduate
6.2 6.3 5.5 5.1 4.4 4.8
Latin
56.8 55.1 47.2 36.6 31.4 34.8
Lower
45.5 43.4 38.5 29.6 23.9 28.3
U
pp
er
4.9 4.2 3.0 2.6 1.4 1.2
Graduate
6.4 7.5 5.7 4.4 6.1 5.3
42-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Annual Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment (National Standard FTE)
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
Colle
g
e of Arts and Sciences (continued)
Computer Science
937.7 952.2 975.9 1,123.9 1,078.9 1,086.1
Lower
495.2 474.0 434.5 500.1 425.6 390.4
Upper
308.4 353.9 392.9 472.0 500.2 542.4
Graduate
134.1 124.3 148.5 151.8 153.1 153.3
Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Sci.
714.7 712.8 726.6 644.7 588.2 654.0
Lower
455.4 438.7 422.2 356.0 330.6 396.9
Upper
115.2 128.4 146.7 151.1 124.1 137.3
Graduate
144.1 145.7 157.7 137.6 133.5 119.8
English
2,020.3 1,960.3 1,910.0 1,862.1 2,013.8 2,092.1
Lower
1,013.0 932.6 940.9 922.3 1,144.6 1,158.1
Upper
824.0 853.3 790.6 778.5 706.6 765.7
Graduate
183.3 174.4 178.5 161.3 162.6 168.3
History
1,169.7 1,130.0 1,018.6 995.9 927.4 860.6
Lower
623.7 598.6 516.8 464.6 446.6 457.1
Upper
414.8 403.4 397.1 445.9 403.6 329.5
Graduate
131.2 128.0 104.7 85.4 77.2 74
Humanities
461.2 417.8 371.5 322.5 349.9 320.5
Lower
133.0 133.1 128.4 110.9 166.3 157.2
Upper
301.3 270.4 233.4 202.0 177.4 155.8
Graduate
26.9 14.3 9.7 9.6 6.2 7.5
Mathematics
1,254.5 1,267.2 1,249.1 1,770.6 1,755.7 1,729.4
Lower
1,467.8 1,477.8 1,457.5 1,456.2 1,441.0 1,412.5
Upper
155.2 169.4 187.6 183.1 174.0 189.5
Graduate
147.6 144.0 128.5 131.3 140.7 127.4
M
o
dern Languages Subtotal:
1,069.7 1,091.7 1,073.6 1,090.0 1,527.1 1,461.0
Lower
1,092.6 1,057.7 1,104.0 1,053.6 1,032.9 1,029.3
Upper
377.8 400.8 372.9 382.1 357.6 336.8
Graduate
97.6 85.1 91.3 91.4 89.7 94.9
A
rabic
31.7 27.0 36.7 30.9 32.6 36.9
Lower
27.8 19.7 30.2 22.0 24.0 31.6
Upper
2.3 4.8 5.2 7.5 6.9 4.3
Graduate
1.6 2.5 1.3 1.4 1.7 1
Chinese
82.5 89.5 83.2 60.6 52.2 51.0
Lower
49.1 50.0 40.8 30.5 23.9 23.3
Upper
31.5 38.5 40.6 28.9 26.9 25.6
Graduate
1.9 1.0 1.8 1.2 1.4 2.1
French
245.4 251.7 238.3 242.9 234.2 234.8
Lower
175.6 176.4 173.5 166.9 164.7 165
Upper
49.9 57.5 47.5 61.3 50.3 52.8
Graduate
19.9 17.8 17.3 14.7 19.2 17
German
104.2 116.9 108.3 99.9 97.1 91.9
Lower
71.8 79.5 74.4 66.9 66.9 59.1
Upper
26.1 30.0 24.5 22.6 19.8 25.6
Graduate
6.3 7.4 9.4 10.4 10.4 7.2
Hebrew
10.8 16.1 9.7 7.6 9.6 4.9
Lower
10.8 11.6 9.7 7.6 9.6 4.9
Upper
0.0 4.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Italian
180.5 168.6 168.5 149.5 131.6 126.6
Lower
137.4 124.4 120.5 106.6 92.1 85
Upper
35.3 37.9 40.2 35.7 34.7 37.1
Graduate
7.8 6.3 7.8 7.2 4.8 4.5
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-43
Annual Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment (National Standard FTE)
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
Colle
g
e of Arts and Sciences (continued)
Modern Language
s
(
continued
)
Japanese
87.5 84.7 81.2 71.5 73.0 61.9
Lower
56.1 55.4 52.9 45.1 43.5 40.3
Upper
29.6 28.5 27.2 25.0 28.4 21.1
Graduate
1.8 0.8 1.1 1.4 1.1 0.5
Modern Languages, genera
l
39.0 31.3 50.8 38.6 49.1 59.1
Lower
0.0 0.0 0.9 0.0 0.0 1.9
Upper
20.5 15.0 28.8 18.1 29.6 25.3
Graduate
18.5 16.3 21.1 20.5 19.5 31.9
Portuguese
16.4 22.3 7.0 14.5 11.6 8.2
Lower
4.1 8.4 2.7 6.7 2.0 0.0
Upper
10.7 11.5 3.6 7.2 8.8 5.9
Graduate
1.6 2.4 0.7 0.6 0.8 2.3
Russian
72.7 80.0 72.7 79.4 65.4 52.9
Lower
31.9 33.6 29.4 28.0 24.3 19.4
Upper
33.6 38.8 39.0 41.2 35.5 29.4
Graduate
7.2 7.6 4.3 10.2 5.6 4.1
Slavic
9.1 10.2 12.8 14.0 16.9 11.8
Upper
9.1 9.9 12.8 13.5 16.6 11.3
Graduate
0.0 0.3 0.0 0.5 0.3 0.5
Spanish
688.2 645.3 699.0 717.7 706.9 721
Lower
528.0 498.7 569.0 573.3 581.9 598.8
Upper
129.2 123.9 103.5 121.1 100.1 98.4
Graduate
31.0 22.7 26.5 23.3 24.9 23.8
Philosophy
476.5 381.2 455.6 490.4 587.7 666.0
Lower
264.5 183.3 263.3 294.4 407.0 488.9
Upper
161.5 155.4 144.7 149.5 129.7 119.5
Graduate
50.5 42.5 47.6 46.5 51.0 57.6
Physics
809.8 829.5 843.5 903.4 893.9 870.6
Lower
565.8 569.5 577.1 628.2 639.7 619.2
Upper
66.3 76.1 75.1 65.4 61.5 57.8
Graduate
177.7 183.9 191.3 209.8 192.7 193.6
Psycholog
y
1,861.4 1,904.1 1,906.5 1,918.1 1,845.0 1,847.7
Lower
507.7 488.8 473.8 479.2 483.7 477.4
Upper
1,149.6 1,202.0 1,225.1 1,233.7 1,158.2 1,180.5
Graduate
204.1 213.3 207.6 205.2 203.1 189.8
Religion
673.1 576.2 621.5 648.2 633.9 697.9
Lower
320.5 252.7 307.5 338.0 332.6 344.7
Upper
278.9 256.8 240.9 238.7 232.0 273.4
Graduate
73.7 66.7 73.1 71.5 69.3 79.8
Scientific Computing
231.5 286.5 61.9 61.3 60.9 68.6
Lower
165.8 215.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 4.4
Upper
21.6 26.6 18.8 16.4 13.6 15.2
Graduate
44.1 44.6 43.1 44.9 47.3 49
Statistics
736.5 754.7 783.2 835.8 852.0 907.2
Lower
595.3 585.4 579.9 595.7 584.7 619.4
Upper
54.7 80.9 87.2 100.1 100.7 108.3
Graduate
86.5 88.4 116.1 140.0 166.6 179.5
Interdepartmental Programs and Institutes
:
A
erospace Studies
13.4 13.5 14.3 10.9 12.9 16.4
Lower
6.9 6.4 7.0 5.3 6.3 5.2
Upper
6.5 7.1 7.3 5.6 6.6 11.2
44-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Annual Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment (National Standard FTE)
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
Interde
p
artm
e
ntal Pro
g
rams and Institute
s
(
continued
)
A
merican and Florida Studies
0.4 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.6
Upper
0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Graduate
0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.6
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics
5.1 8.7 11.5 11.8 11.7 5.1
Graduate
8.7 11.5 11.5 11.8 11.7 5.1
History and Philosophy of Science
9.5 14.2 13.2 17.4 18.7 18.7
Upper
14.2 12.6 12.6 16.5 17.8 18.2
Graduate
0.0 0.6 0.6 0.9 0.9 0.5
Honors
1.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.7
Lower
1.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Upper
0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.7
Militar
y
Science 25.3 24.6 28.8 26.9 21.1 22.5
Lower
9.6 11.3 11.3 11.9 7.6 8.4
Upper
15.0 17.5 17.5 15.0 13.5 14.1
Molecular Biophysics
25.2 26.8 33.8 30.2 27.2 24.5
Graduate
26.8 33.8 33.8 30.2 27.2 24.5
College of Business
T
ota
l
4,881.6 4,881.6 4,546.0 4,471.9 4,719.4 4,830.5
Lower
1,286.7 912.0 912.0 810.9 834.2 720.8
Upper
3,103.4 3,192.2 3,192.2 3,220.1 3,392.0 3,556.6
Graduate
507.6 441.8 441.8 440.9 493.2 553.1
A
ccountin
g
840.0 803.2 803.2 831.8 845.6 874.3
Lower
419.7 385.3 385.3 394.3 393.4 395.5
Upper
336.6 348.3 348.3 347.5 362.6 371
Graduate
83.7 69.6 69.6 90.0 89.6 107.8
Business Administration
12.4 10.1 2.4 0.0 0.0 1.0
Lower
3.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Upper
6.6 2.4 2.4 0.0 0.0 1.0
Dedman School of Hospitalit
y
1,292.7 1,453.1 1,044.0 683.5 538.6 287.8
Lower
855.7 448.8 448.8 221.1 206.2 102.7
Upper
597.4 595.2 595.2 462.4 330.6 177.2
Graduate
0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.8 7.9
Entrepreneurship, Strategy & Information Systems* 306.1
426.1 308.2
Lower
20.1 29.0 13.1
Upper
231.6 328.7 288.2
Graduate
54.4 68.4 6.9
* Entre
p
reneurshi
p
, Strategy & In
f
o. Sys. be
g
an as a de
p
artment in 2014
-
15. It combined
p
rograms
f
rom other de
p
artments in the College.
Finance
773.3 727.6 727.2 732.5 779.7 856.9
Upper
643.3 607.8 618.6 632.1 672.7 737.5
Graduate
130.0 119.8 108.6 100.4 107.0 119.4
Management Information Systems
0.5 0.4 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.0
Upper
0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0
Graduate
0.5 0.4 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0
Management
880.3 800.1 817.6 577.4 593.4 736.3
Lower
7.8 7.8 13.0 1.8 2.2 2.3
Upper
744.6 679.5 708.8 524.6 538.6 669.1
Graduate
127.9 112.8 95.8 51.0 52.6 64.9
Marketin
g
616.3 601.8 613.9 673.4 768.5 776.3
Upper
510.4 484.1 511.0 590.6 662.8 680.4
Graduate
105.9 117.7 102.9 82.8 105.7 95.9
Risk Mgmt/ Insurance, Real Est. 515.3
464.6 537.2 667.2 767.5 829.2
Lower
0.0 0.0 64.9 173.6 203.4
207.2
Upper
432.7 391.4 407.8 431.3 496.0
537.6
Graduate
82.6 73.2 64.5 62.3 68.1
84.4
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-45
Annual Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment (National Standard FTE)
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
College of Communication & Information
ota
2,370.3 2,327.1 2,277.6 2,232.6 2,286.3 2,179.0
Lower
482.2 501.0 468.7 514.7 589.1 573.0
Upper
1,135.8 1,115.5 1,168.9 1,114.3 1,153.8 1,072.3
Graduate
752.3 710.6 640.0 603.6 543.4 533.7
Communication
1,373.9 1,358.9 1,319.1 1,317.6 1,362.7 1,275.8
Lower
385.2 403.3 360.3 391.5 448.5 462.6
Upper
828.6 794.1 809.0 784.6 784.3 692.3
Graduate
160.1 161.5 149.8 141.5 129.9 120.9
Communication Disorders
409.8 414.3 424.3 435.3 409.6 399.5
Lower
81.1 82.2 86.7 92.7 91.2 67.8
Upper
114.7 117.3 127.4 120.2 121.6 130.6
Graduate
214.0 214.8 210.2 222.4 196.8 201.1
Information
586.6 553.9 534.2 479.7 514.0 503.7
Lower
15.9 15.5 21.7 30.5 49.4 42.6
Upper
192.5 204.1 232.5 209.5 247.9 249.4
Graduate
378.2 334.3 280.0 239.7 216.7 211.7
College of Criminology & Criminal Justice
975.5 968.8 1,090.5 1,037.0 1,009.9 988.7
Lower
83.9 90.2 105.4 92.5 62.1 64.9
Upper
754.4 747.0 844.5 783.4 759.5 758.7
Graduate
137.2 131.6 140.6 161.1 188.3 165.1
College of Education
ota
2,076.1 2,124.8 2,109.3 2,128.4 2,017.3 1,967.3
Lower
271.2 269.5 275.0 287.6 274.6 307.1
Upper
780.1 865.7 866.3 900.0 809.7 716.6
Graduate
1,024.8 989.6 968.0 940.8 933.0 943.6
Ed. Leadership & Policy Studies
344.8 319.3 310.5 304.8 332.4 359.2
Lower
57.2 55.5 53.3 58.4 74.5 97.5
Upper
18.3 21.5 24.4 19.7 25.5 22.5
Graduate
269.3 242.3 232.8 226.7 232.4 239.2
Ed. Psychology & Learning Systems
567.4 563.5 550.8 583.9 552.9 542.8
Lower
47.7 47.8 47.5 54.9 38.5 40.0
Upper
111.0 118.5 121.1 152.1 138.6 131.1
Graduate 408.7 397.2 382.2 376.9 375.8 371.7
School of Teacher Education
747.6 796.6 776.0 765.4 679.8 599.4
Lower
33.4 43.7 57.5 59.0 57.3 70.0
Upper
489.2 529.3 489.3 481.5 415.3 311.7
Graduate 225.0 223.6 229.2 224.9 207.2 217.7
Sport Management
416.3 445.4 472.0 474.3 452.2 465.9
Lower
132.9 122.5 116.7 115.3 104.3 99.6
Upper
161.6 196.4 231.5 246.7 230.3 251.3
Graduate 121.8 126.5 123.8 112.3 117.6 115
College of Engineering Tota
l
951.5 978.9 1,048.9 1,140.7 1,163.4 1,125.5
Lower
47.2 38.5 43.8 41.8 40.2 39.4
Upper
711.8 743.5 805.1 860.2 875.0 850.5
Graduate 192.5 196.9 200.0 238.7 248.2 235.6
Chemical & Biomedical Engineering
91.1 114.1 142.8 171.4 178.0 188.1
Lower
1.3 1.1 0.0 0.0 2.2 0
Upper
65.9 90.5 119.2 141.5 143.3 149.8
Graduate
21.4 23.9 22.5 23.6 29.9 38.3
Civil and Environmental Engineering
287.3 255.7 206.5 212.8 213.0 226.9
Lower
25.5 13.4 19.4 23.8 20.7 19.5
Upper
233.7 209.8 157.2 156.4 176.5 168.2
Graduate
28.1 32.5 29.9 32.6 29.7 25.3
46-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Annual Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment (National Standard FTE)
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
College of Engineering (continued)
Electrical & Computer Engineering
215.0 244.0 246.6 241.1 253.0 243.5
Lower
12.4 14.9 12.6 6.2 6.3 6.4
Upper
148.2 172.4 181.9 175.8 171.8 182.1
Graduate
54.4 56.7 52.1 59.1 65.4 64.5
Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering
82.8 83.3 96.3 122.0 133.7 111.7
Lower
8.0 9.1 9.8 9.4 9.5 9.4
Upper
47.2 46.9 56.1 60.7 72.3 67.1
Graduate
27.6 27.3 30.4 51.9 29.9 57.2
Mechanical Engineering
275.3 281.8 356.7 393.4 385.7 355.3
Lower
0.0 0.0 2.0 2.4 2.9 2.7
Upper
216.8 223.9 290.7 325.8 280.1 314.3
Graduate
58.5 57.9 64.0 65.2 235.6 68.7
College of Fine Arts
ota
1,350.4 1,250.7 1,238.0 1,175.6 1,242.40 1,242.4
Lower
494.7 447.9 467.8 462.0 505.1 505.1
Upper
568.1 532.4 496.3 442.8 468.4 468.4
Graduate
287.6 270.4 273.9 270.8 268.9 268.9
A
rt
329.7 296.4 280.3 282.2 313.7 313.7
Lower
199.5 173.3 149.0 148.9 141 141
Upper
104.2 105.7 111.0 106.0 150 150
Graduate
26.0 17.4 20.3 27.3 22.7 22.7
A
rt Education
70.7 73.8 73.5 71.7 78.6 78.6
Upper
2.6 1.8 0.9 2.7 4.6 4.6
Graduate
68.1 72.0 72.6 69.0 74 74
A
rt Histor
y
273.3 256.0 264.6 227.0 245.6 245.6
Lower
17.6 35.6 70.9 79.3 143.3 143.3
Upper
199.5 166.4 144.3 101.2 57.2 57.2
Graduate
56.2 54.0 49.4 46.5 45.1 45.1
Dance
214.1 207.6 186.0 176.8 144.5 144.5
Lower
113.2 103.7 95.6 90.3 67.1 67.1
Upper
75.5 79.9 68.7 59.8 52.9 52.9
Graduate
25.4 24.0 21.7 26.7 24.5 24.5
Interior Design
133.4 130.9 129.1 129.3 136.2 136.2
Lower
27.6 24.9 30.0 32.6 30.2 30.2
Upper
74.2 75.9 61.6 67.4 78.6 78.6
Graduate
31.6 30.1 37.5 29.3 27.4 27.4
School of Theatre
329.2 286.0 304.5 288.6 323.8 323.8
Lower
136.8 110.4 122.3 110.9 123.5 123.5
Upper
112.1 102.7 109.8 105.7 125.1 125.1
Graduate
80.3 72.9 72.4 72.0 75.2 75.2
College of Human Sciences
ota
2,042.6 1,955.8 1,914.6 1,773.4 1,693.9 1.667.2
Lower
594.0 547.2 513.8 542 489.9 468.2
Upper
1,280.3 1,237.7 1,229.1 1,083 1,073.3 1,063.4
Graduate
168.3 170.9 171.1 148.4 130.7 135.6
Family and Child Sciences
807.9 736.6 665.5 607.7 633.3 687.2
Lower
320.6 295.3 272.6 293.7 254.4 258.1
Upper
435.3 385.6 345.6 278.2 341.1 389.7
Graduate
52.0 55.7 47.3 35.8 37.8 39.4
Nutrition, Food, & Exercise Science
849.3 849.3 872.1 824.6 749.4 667.8
Lower
220.1 197.5 193.0 208.3 187.4 162.4
Upper
537.8 557.4 577.8 521.8 473.7 414.4
Graduate
91.4 94.4 101.3 94.5 88.3 91
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-47
Annual Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment (National Standard FTE)
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
Colle
g
e of Human Sciences (continued)
Retail Merch. & Product Development
385.4 369.9 377.0 341.1 311.2 312.2
Lower
53.3 54.4 48.2 40.0 48.1 47.7
Upper
307.2 294.7 305.7 283.0 258.5 1,063.4
Graduate
24.9 20.8 23.1 18.1 4.6 135.6
College of Law
905.5 880.8 870.1 816.0 755.6 737.1
Graduate
905.5 880.8 870.1 816.0 755.6 737.1
College of Medicine Tota
l
(non-M.D.)
45.1 52.5 53.2 59.3 54.2 66.0
Lower
1.1 1.2 1.1 4.5 0.9 8.7
Upper
1.2 3.0 4.5 4.7 4.5 10.5
Graduate
42.8 48.3 47.6 50.1 48.8 46.8
College of Medicine
16.5 19.3 18.7 17.4 15.0 20.1
Lower
1.1 1.2 1.1 0.9 0.9 7.3
Upper
1.2 2.0 4.5 3.5 3.6 2.7
Graduate
14.2 16.1 13.1 13.0 10.5 10.1
Health Sciences Interdisciplinar
y
28.6 33.2 34.5 41.9 39.2 45.9
Lower
0.0 0.0 0.0 3.6 0.0 1.4
Upper
0.0 1.0 0.0 1.2 0.9 7.8
Graduate
28.6 32.2 34.5 37.1 38.3 36.7
College of Motion Picture Arts
226.0 248.8 257.4 254.3 215.5 233.8
Lower
53.7 63.2 58.3 68.9 52.8 68
Upper
72.8 84.1 101.5 90.9 71.1 63.3
Graduate
100.3 101.5 97.6 94.5 91.6 102.5
College of Music
1,135.8 1,093.9 1,062.9 1,068.6 1,079.5 1,085.6
Lower
525.7 494.4 459.5 455.0 495.1 512.8
Upper
285.5 287.6 296.9 309.3 286.6 285
Graduate
324.6 311.9 306.5 304.3 297.8 287.8
College of Nursin
g
331.4 307.8 322.2 328.8 303.1 336.4
Upper
255.6 228.1 236.5 242.0 203.4 233.1
Graduate
75.8 79.7 85.7 86.8 99.7 103.3
College of Social Sciences & Public Polic
y
ota
4,355.0 4,202.6 4,170.2 4,235.8 4,232.6 4,254.3
Lower
1,530.2 1,453.9 1,415.8 1,496.9 1,507.6 1,401.6
Upper
2,098.6 2,052.8 2,070.0 2,085.0 2,091.3 2,204.2
Graduate
726.2 695.9 684.4 653.9 633.7 648.5
A
frican American Studies
30.2 24.2 17.1 26.4 23.5 32.9
Lower
19.0 17.1 12.7 17.1 20.6 21.8
Upper
11.2 7.1 4.4 9.3 2.9 11.1
A
sian Studies
4.4 0.5 0.7 2.8 0.8 0.1
Upper
0.6 0.2 0.4 2.4 0.0 0.0
Graduate
3.8 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.8 0.1
Demograph
y
4.7
2.1 1.3 1.9 2.5 2.1
Graduate 4.7
2.1 1.3 1.9 2.5 2.1
Economics 1,137.5
1,144.6 1,122.9 1,191.2 1,189.5 1,159.2
Lower 666.7
666.3 654.9 683.6 690.6 642.7
Upper 387.8
381.9 371.9 418.1 410.1 419.6
Graduate 92.0
96.4 96.1 89.5 88.8 96.9
Geograph
y
578.7 555.3 490.7 487.3 511.6 527.1
Lower
286.4 256.9 239.8 277.2 278.5 262.3
Upper
230.7 232.9 190.8 159.2 175.7 190.2
Graduate
61.6 65.5 60.1 50.9 57.4 74.6
Interdisciplinary Social/Health Sci.
4.1 2.6 2.9 3.9 12.0 21.1
Graduate
4.1 2.6 2.9 3.9 12.0 21.1
48-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Annual Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment (National Standard FTE)
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
Colle
g
e of Social Sciences & Public Polic
y
(continued)
International Affairs
73.7 94.4 93.3 156.4 169.1 172.6
Lower
0.0 0.0 0.0 5.2 32.6 33.8
Upper
80.9 101.9 111.5 126.7 112.7 116.6
Graduate
26.1 35.7 29.7 24.5 23.8 22.2
Political Science
641.2 571.8 563.1 690.3 665.6 691.0
Lower
260.6 240.5 202.6 186.1 184.1 190.3
Upper
536.4 471.4 498.5 415.1 395.9 411.2
Graduate
109.6 106.1 95.8 89.1 85.6 89.5
Russian & East European Studies
0.0 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.6 0.3
Graduate
0.0 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.6 0.3
School of Public Admin. & Policy
461.7 426.9 459.1 512.1 533.5 587.4
Upper
243.5 228.1 252.1 294.0 349.7 414.4
Graduate
218.2 198.8 207.0 218.1 183.8 173
Social Sciences, Interdisciplinar
y
641.2 571.8 563.1 35.6 46.2 50.6
Lower
0.0 0.0 3.5 6.1 2.4 4.5
Upper
6.7 6.5 6.0 18.6 36.1 43.2
Graduate
17.2 10.6 14.6 10.9 7.7 2.9
Sociolog
y
641.2 571.8 563.1 912.5 874.4 831.8
Lower
259.1 240.8 248.6 262.1 261.7 221.7
Upper
545.3 562.9 572.8 580.0 538.7 537.8
Graduate
71.5 74.6 71.9 70.4 74.0 72.3
Urban and Regional Plannin
g
641.2 571.8 563.1 215.1 203.3 178.1
Lower
38.4 32.3 53.7 59.5 37.1 24.5
Upper
64.5 59.9 61.6 61.6 69.5 60.1
Graduate
117.4 103.0 104.5 94.0 96.7 93.5
College of Social Work
822.2 842.7 843.7 832.0 795.8 762.0
Lower
7.2 10.1 8.3 0.8 0.8 0.9
Upper
264.5 262.6 272.5 262.7 223.2 200.2
Graduate
550.5 570.0 562.9 568.5 571.8 560.9
Registrar
0.0 0.0 12.2 31.0 25.9 24.2
Lower
0.0 0.0 2.7 14.6 17.4 16.4
Upper
0.0 0.0 9.5 16.4 8.5 7.5
Graduate
0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.3
Dedman School of Hospitalit
y
189.4
Lower
76.3
Upper
108.6
Graduate
4.5
T
he Graduate Schoo
l
0.0 0.0 4.1 13.1 15.4 15.9
Graduate
0.0 0.0 4.1 13.1 15.4 15.9
University Totals (Non-MD) 39,572.3
39,164.4 38,889.3 38,896 38,910.2 39,589.9
Lower 14,901.5
14,630 14,154.7 14,348.6 14,748.3 14,939.3
Upper
16,898.6
16,981 17,280 17,209.9 16,844.1 17,255.4
Graduate
7,772.2
7,553.4 7,454.6 7,337.5 7,317.8 7,395.6
College of Medicine (MD Headcount)
476
481 482 483 475 475
Note: A National Standard FTE is represented by 30 annual hours at the undergraduate class level; 24 annual hours at the graduate class level.
Source: Final Student Instruction Files, Total Student Credit Hours Report, All Campus
Online Resource: The student credit hour and FTE reports can be accessed online at http://ir.fsu.edu/sch.aspx
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-49
Annual FTE Enrollment by College (National Standard FTE)
College 2011-12
2012-13
2013-14
2014-15
2015-16
2016-17
College of Applied Studies 95.4
163.1
208.0
201.5
243.6
365.6
College of Arts & Sciences
17,007.1
16,868.4
16,860.4
17,094.0
17,122.3
17,518.7
College of Business 4,881.6
4,897.7
4,546.0
4,471.9
4,719.4
4,830.5
College of Communication & Information 2,370.3
2,327.1
2,277.6
2,232.6
2,286.3
2,179.0
College of Criminology & Criminal Justice 975.5
968.8
1,090.5
1,037.0
1,009.9
988.7
College of Education
2,076.1
2,124.8
2,109.3
2,128.4
2,017.3
1,967.3
College of Engineering 951.5
978.9
1,048.9
1,140.7
1,163.4
1,125.5
College of Fine Arts 1,350.4
1,250.7
1,238.0
1,175.6
1,176.5
1,242.4
Dedman School of Hospitality
189.4
The Graduate School
4.1
15.1
15.4
15.9
College of Human Sciences 2,042.6
1,955.8
1,914.6
1,773.4
1,693.9
1,667.2
College of Law 905.5
880.8
870.1
816.0
755.6
737.1
College of Medicine (non-M.D.) 45.1
52.5
53.2
59.3
54.2
66.0
College of Motion Picture Arts
226.8
248.8
257.4
254.3
215.5
233.8
College of Music 1,135.8
1,093.9
1,062.9
1,068.6
1,079.5
1,085.6
College of Nursing 331.4
307.8
322.2
328.8
303.1
336.4
College of Social Sciences & Public Policy 4,355.0
4,202.6
4,170.2
4,235.8
4,232.6
4,254.3
College of Social Work
822.2
842.7
843.7
832.0
795.8
762
.0
Registrar
31.0
25.9
24.2
University Totals (Non-MD) 39,572.3
39,164.4
38,889.3
38,896.0
38,910.2
39,589.9
College of Medicine (MD Headcount) 476
481
482
483
475
475
Source: Final Students Instruction File
Arts & Sciences
44.3%
Communication &
Information
5.5%
Human
Sciences
4.2%
Nursing
0.8%
Criminology
2.5%
Business
12.2%
Education
5.0%
Law
1.9%
Social Work
1.9%
Social Sciences & Public
Policy
10.7%
Medicine (non-MD)
0.2%
Music
2.7%
Motion Picture Arts
0.6%
Fine Arts
3.1%
Engineering
2.8%
Applied Studies
0.9%
Graduate School
0.0%
Registrar
0.1%
Hospitality
0.5%
2016-17 Annual FTE
50-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Headcount Summaries by Academic Department
FALL 2015 FALL 2016 FALL 2017
College / Department L U G
ota
L U G
ota
L U G
ota
App
lied Studies 12 216 59 287 9 221 78 308 5 219 81 305
Percent of University Headcoun
t
0.1
%
1.1
%
0.8
%
0.7
%
0.1
%
1.1
%
1.0
%
0.7
%
0.0% 1.1% 1.0% 0.7%
Public Safet
y
& Securit
y
4 82 0 86 4 91 0 9 2 90 0 92
Recreation, Tourism & Events 4 43 0 47 0 49 0 49 0 43 0 43
Professional Communication 4 91 11 106 5 81 12 98 3 86 15 104
Nursin
g
Anesthesia 0 0 48 48 0 0 66 66 0 0 66 66
A
rts & Sciences 3,212 5,806 1,770 10,788 3,173 5,962 1,797 10,932 3,171 6,430 1,797 10,496
Percent of University Headcoun
t
25.7
%
29.1
%
22.6
%
26.0
%
25.3
%
29.6
%
22.7
%
26.1
%
24.9
%
32.0
%
22.9
%
25.1
%
A
nthro
p
olo
gy
23 68 0 91 20 77 9 106 27 60 19 106
Biolo
g
ical Science 1,163 996 105 2,264 1,163 1011 112 2,286 922 1,012 109 2,043
Chemistr
y
& Biochemistr
y
238 322 162 722 214 308 157 679 193 298 164 655
Classics 8 31 43 82 9 27 45 81 5 21 41 67
Com
p
uter Science 255 601 144 1,000 286 702 158 1,146 308 711 168 1,187
Earth, Ocean & Atmos. Science 127 260 146 533 143 265 131 539 142 289 127 558
En
g
lish 315 941 171 1,427 292 982 166 1,440 272 838 160 1,270
Geo
p
h
y
sical Fluid D
y
namics 0 0 12 12 0 0 6 6 0 0 6 6
Histor
y
72 262 83 417 67 208 82 357 61 206 82 349
Histor
y
& Philoso
p
h
y
of Sci. 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 4 4
Interdisci
p
linary Humanities 52 256 8 316 62 274 7 343 57 237 9 303
Mathematics 173 311 156 640 155 322 152 629 146 305 121 572
Modern Lan
g
ua
g
es 35 142 73 250 28 140 77 245 270 772 74 214
Molecular Bio
p
hysics 0 0 18 18 0 0 19 19 0 0 18 18
Neuroscience (Biolo
gy
or Ps
y
ch.) 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 34 34
Philoso
p
h
y
19 88 48 155 21 84 56 161 33 78 59 170
Ph
y
sics 65 106 156 327 68 109 147 324 72 100 142 314
Psycholo
gy
630 1,267 161 2,058 604 1,312 163 2,079 622 1,368 147 2,137
Reli
g
ion 7 48 66 121 4 33 77 114 4 21 70 95
Scientific Com
p
utin
g
3 13 42 58 11 11 40 62 14 15 39 68
Sec. Science / Math Teachin
g
0 0 6 6 0 0 5 5 0 0 4 4
Statistics 22 65 167 254 21 73 186 280 20 85 200 305
Women's Studies 5 29 0 34 5 24 0 29 3 14 0 17
Business 2,336 3,453 536 6,325 2,349 3,637 623 6,609 2,234 3,488 652 6,374
Percent of University Headcoun
t
18.7
%
17.3
%
6.9
%
15.3
%
18.7
%
18.1
%
7.9
%
15.8
%
17.6
%
17.4
%
8.3
%
15.2
%
A
ccountin
g
157 539 73 769 256 515 96 867 330 421 96 847
Business Administration (PC) 0 59 0 59 0 52 0 52 6 79 0 85
Business Administration (MBA) 0 0 261 261 0 0 298 298 101 54 357 512
Business Administration (PhD) 0 0 43 43 0 0 46 46 0 0 45 45
Business Anal
y
tics, Info. S
y
stems,
Su
pp
ly Chain 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 140 209 47 396
Entre
p
reneurshi
p
, Strat., Info. S
y
s. 101 160 31 292 172 196 39 407
M
oved to BAISSC
Finance 352 924 32 1,308 636 1,041 34 1,711 699 1,123 24 1,846
Hos
p
italit
y
Administration 178 416 0 594 129 340 0 469 1 85 0 86
Mana
g
ement 201 349 44 594 292 397 1 690 332 399 69 800
Marketin
g
267 694 52 1,013 437 777 49 1,263 499 812 14 1,325
Risk M
g
mt/Insurance, Real
Estate and Le
g
al Studies 30 169 0 199 88 263 60 411 126 306 0 432
Business, NFA 1,050 143 0 1,193 339 56 0 395 Dis
p
ersed Abov
e
Communication & Information 694 1,019 599 2,312 621 1,049 592 2,262 617 1,020 605 2,242
Percent of University Headcoun
t
5.6
%
5.1
%
7.7
%
5.6
%
5.0
%
5.2
%
7.5
%
5.4
%
4.9% 5.1% 7.7% 5.4%
Communication 267 503 143 913 38 532 143 713 447 534 151 1,132
Communication Disorders 94 160 136 390 96 165 141 402 88 164 147 399
Communication, NFA 241 6 0 247 414 12 0 426 Dispersed Abov
e
Information Studies 92 350 320 762 73 340 308 721 82 322 307 711
Criminology & Criminal Justice 494 1,160 252 1,906 527 1,167 240 1,934 522 1,178 218 1,918
Percent of University Headcoun
t
4.0
%
5.8
%
3.2
%
4.6
%
4.2
%
5.8
%
3.0
%
4.6
%
4.1% 5.9% 2.8% 4.6%
Criminology & Crim. Justice 494 1,160 252 1,906 527 1,167 240 1,934 522 1,178 218 1,918
KEY: L – Undergraduate Lower; U – Undergraduate Upper; G – Graduate; NFA – Not Formally Admitted
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-51
Headcount Summaries by Academic Department
FALL 2015
FALL 2016
FALL 2017
College / Department
L
U
G
Total
L
U
G
Total
L
U
G
Total
Education
360
657
1,010
2,027
352
574
1,027
1,953
365
537
929
1,831
Percent of University Headcount
2.9%
3.3%
12.9%
4.9%
2.8%
2.9%
13.0%
4.7%
2.9%
2.7%
11.8%
4.4%
Ed. Psych. & Learning Systems
0
0
336
336
0
0
291
291
0
0
347
347
Sport Management, Recreation
Mgmt. & Physical Education
162
227
138
527
162
216
121
499
164
251
106
521
Ed. Leadership & Policy Studies
0
0
256
256
0
0
291
291
0
0
279
279
School of Teacher Education
198
430
280
908
190
358
257
805
201
286
197
684
Engineering
674
1,228
296
2,198
649
1,212
283
2,144
690
1,215
277
2,182
Percent of University Headcount
5.4%
6.2%
3.8%
5.3%
5.2%
6.0%
3.6%
5. 1%
5.4%
6.0%
3.5%
5.2%
Mechanical Engineering
196
364
73
633
203
374
71
648
226
368
80
674
Civil & Environmental Eng.
138
254
42
434
122
251
47
420
125
263
50
438
Chemical & Biomedical Eng.
163
263
36
462
166
248
41
455
189
241
38
468
Industrial & Manufacturing Eng.
49
96
63
208
46
106
39
191
48
112
34
194
Electrical & Computer Eng.
111
250
82
443
105
233
85
423
102
231
75
408
Engineering, NFA
17
1
0
18
7
0
0
7
0
0
0
0
Moran School of Entrepreneurship
61
46
0
107
Percent of University Headcount
0.5%
0.2%
0.0%
0.3%
Fine Arts
333
674
298
1,305
364
635
297
1,296
377
600
306
1,283
Percent of University Headcount
2.7%
3.4%
3.8%
3. 1%
2.9%
3.2%
3.7%
3. 1%
3.0%
3.0%
3.9%
3. 1%
Art
98
319
31
448
116
292
31
439
98
255
30
383
Art Education
0
0
74
74
0
0
79
79
0
0
85
85
Art History
17
60
53
130
22
46
53
121
21
45
59
125
Dance
37
35
24
96
41
36
27
104
39
46
27
112
Interior Design
71
103
32
206
76
95
25
196
88
102
19
209
Theatre
110
157
84
351
109
166
82
357
131
152
86
369
The Graduate School
0
0
19
19
0
0
19
19
0
0
19
19
Percent of University Headcount
0.0%
0.0%
0.2%
0.0+%
0.0%
0.0%
0.2%
0.0+%
0.0%
0.0%
0.2%
0.0%
Dedman School of Hospitality
137
272
0
409
Percent of University Headcount
1.1%
1.4%
0.0%
1.0%
Human Sciences
1,097
1,713
139
2,949
972
1,653
138
2,763
747
1,619
122
2,488
Percent of University Headcount
8.8%
8.6%
1.8%
7.1%
7.8%
8.2%
1.7%
6.6%
5.9%
8. 1%
1.6%
5.9%
Retail Merch./Product Dev.
154
330
6
490
155
455
33
643
126
326
3
455
Nutrition, Food &
Exercise Science
762
974
97
1,833
677
865
99
1,641
443
828
91
1,362
Family & Child Sciences
181
409
36
626
140
333
6
479
178
465
28
671
Law
0
0
614
614
0
0
600
600
0
0
605
605
Percent of University Headcount
0.0%
0.0%
7.9%
1.5%
0.0%
0.0%
7.6%
1.4%
0.0%
0.0%
7.7%
1.4%
Medicine
0
0
532
532
108
11
526
645
660
106
564
1,330
Percent of University Headcount
0.0%
0.0%
6.8%
1.3%
0.9%
0. 1%
6.6%
1.5%
5.2%
0.5%
7.2%
3.2%
Health Sciences Interdisc.
0
0
49
49
108
11
40
159
660
106
43
809
Medicine
0
0
483
483
0
0
486
486
0
0
521
521
Motion Picture Arts
38
74
63
175
42
63
70
175
36
66
67
169
Percent of University Headcount
0.3%
0.4%
0.8%
0.4%
0.3%
0.3%
0.9%
0.4%
0.3%
0.3%
0.9%
0.4%
Music
263
443
345
1,051
263
408
325
996
275
412
332
1,019
Percent of University Headcount
2. 1%
2.2%
4.4%
2.5%
2. 1%
2.0%
4. 1%
2.4%
2.2%
2.0%
4.2%
2.4%
Music
206
305
339
850
236
339
323
898
253
346
325
924
Music, Liberal Studies
57
138
6
201
27
69
2
98
22
66
7
95
Nursing
286
172
95
553
422
210
101
733
466
220
95
781
Percent of University Headcount
2.3%
0.9%
1.2%
1.3%
3.4%
1.0%
1.3%
1.8%
3.7%
1.1%
1.2%
1.9%
Social Sciences & Public Policy
1,080
3,077
649
4,806
1,149
3,085
675
4,909
1,109
3,128
647
4,884
Percent of University Headcount
8.6%
15.4%
8.3%
11.6%
9.2%
15.3%
8.5%
11.7%
8.7%
15.6%
8.2%
11.7%
African American Studies
3
6
0
9
3
8
0
11
3
7
0
10
Asian Studies
1
19
11
31
4
8
5
17
4
11
5
20
KEY: L Undergraduate Lower; U Undergraduate Upper; G – Graduate; NFA Not Formally Admitted
52-Students Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
1,122
1,241
1,322
1,373
1,203
1,166
1,180
1,195
1,269
Non-Degree
1,225
11,464
11,404
11,837
12,147
11,669
12,337
12,183
12,501
12,540
Lower
12,713
18,180
19,053
19,168
19,704
20,274
19,939
20,438
19,958
20,129
Upper
20,099
8,370
8,557
8,511
8,486
8,155
8,035
7,972
7,819
7,929
Graduate
7,863
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
35,000
40,000
45,000
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Headcount by Level - Fall Semesters
Headcount Summaries by Academic Department
FALL 2015
FALL 2016
FALL 2017
College / Department
L
U
G
Total
L
U
G
Total
L
U
G
Total
Social Sciences & Public Policy (continued)
Demography
0
0
6
6
0
0
8
8
0
0
9
9
Economics
193
465
65
723
194
493
79
766
171
532
82
785
Geography
45
224
55
324
38
188
70
296
28
153
60
241
International Affairs
309
720
58
1,087
325
687
57
1,069
298
680
64
1,042
Latin American/Caribbean Study
1
10
0
11
2
7
0
9
2
6
0
8
Political Science
377
644
86
1,107
423
675
83
1,181
489
738
76
1,303
School of Public Admin./Policy
0
0
161
161
0
0
145
145
0
0
129
129
Public Health
0
0
55
55
0
0
73
73
0
0
80
80
Russian & E. European Studies
0
3
4
7
0
2
4
6
1
1
7
9
Social Science
109
649
0
758
126
683
0
809
79
672
0
751
Sociology
42
337
63
442
34
334
61
429
34
328
55
417
Urban & Regional Planning
0
0
85
85
0
0
90
90
0
0
80
80
Social Work
86
211
543
840
62
197
538
797
59
157
547
763
Percent of University Headcount
0.7%
1.1%
6.9%
2.0%
0.5%
1.0%
6.8%
1.9%
0.5%
0.8%
7.0%
1.8%
Undergraduate Studies
1,536
55
0
1,591
1,478
45
0
1,523
1,426
72
0
1,498
Percent of University Headcount
12.3%
0.3%
0.0%
3.8%
11.8%
0.2%
0.0%
3.6%
11.2%
0.4%
0.0%
3.6%
Total Degree Seeking
12,501
19,958
7,819
40,278
12,540
20,129
7,929
40,598
12,713
20,099
7,863
40,675
Percent of University Headcount
100.0%
100.0%
100.0%
97.1%
100.0%
100.0%
100.0%
97.0%
100.0%
100.0%
100.0%
97.1%
9200-Non-degree seeking
0
0
0
1,195
0
0
0
1,269
0
0
0
1,225
Percent of University Headcount
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
2.9%
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
2.9%
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
2.9%
University Totals
12,501
19,958
7,819
41,473
12,540
20,129
7,929
41,867
12,713
20,099
7,863
41,900
KEY: L Undergraduate Lower; U Undergraduate Upper; G – Graduate; NFA Not Formally Admitted
Source: Fall Preliminary Student Instruction Files (SIFP)
Online Resource: The headcount reports can be accessed online at: http://ir.fsu.edu/enrollment.aspx
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-53
Headcount Summaries by College, Fall Semesters
Degree Sought Fall 2013 Fall 2014 Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017
% Change
2013 to 2017
University Totals 41,301 41,477 41,773 41,867 41,900
1.5%
Bachelor's - Lower 12,337 12,183 12,501 12,540 12,713
3.0%
Bachelor's - Upper 19,939 20,438 19,958 20,129 20,099
0.8%
Master's 4,045 4,020 3,892 4,003 4,026
-0.5%
Specialist's 114 99 123 129 104
-8.8%
Doctoral 2,688 2,726 2,725 2,748 2,715
1.0%
J
uris Doctoral 707 645 596 574 548
-22.5%
Medical Doctoral 481 482 483 475 470
-2.3%
Unclassified 1,166 1,180 1,195 1,269 1,225
5.1%
College of Applied Studies 129 299 285
308
305
136.4%
Bachelor's - Lower 3 34 27 9 5
66.7%
Bachelor's - Upper 126 253 248 221 219
73.8%
Master's 0 12 10 78 81
N/A
College of Arts & Sciences 10,593 10,696 10,959 10,932
10,496 -0.9%
Bachelor's - Lower 2,999 3,143 3,187 3,173
3,171 5.7%
Bachelor's - Upper 5,858 5,804 5,997 5,962
6,430 9.8%
Master's 500 485 509 517
531 6.2%
Doctoral 1,236 1,264 1,266 1,280
1,266 2.4%
College of Business 5,822 5,755 5,999 6,609
6,374 9.5%
Bachelor's - Lower 1,931 2,099 2,182 2,349
2,234 15.7%
Bachelor's - Upper 3,308 3,141 3,337 3,637
3,488 5.4%
Master's 524 456 424 577
607 15.8%
Doctoral 59 59 56 46
45 -23.7%
College of Communication & Information 2,531 2,479 2,466 2,262
2,242 -11.4%
Bachelor's
Lower 651 723 751 621
617 -5.2%
Bachelor's
Upper 1,065 1,003 1,020 1,049
1,020 -4.2%
Master's 711 654 607 529
534 -24.9%
Specialist's 10 12 7 6
3 -70.0%
Doctoral 94 87 81 57
68 -27.7%
College of Criminology & Criminal Justice 1,812 1,915 1,895 1,934
1,918 5.8%
Bachelor's - Lower 461 512 451 527
522 13.2%
Bachelor's - U
pp
er 1,181 1,217 1,227 1,167
1,178 -0.3%
Master's 106 118 142 165
155 46.2%
Doctoral 64 68 75 75
63 -1.6%
Moran School of Entrepreneurship
107 N/A
Bachelor's - Lower
61 N/A
Bachelor's - U
pp
er
46 N/A
College of Education 2,187 2,127 2,118 1,953
1,831 -16.3%
Bachelor's
Lower 430 414 398 352
365 -15.1%
Bachelor's
Upper 691 648 671 574
537 -22.3%
Master's 615 567 554 486
416 -32.4%
Specialist's 92 102 91 123
101 9.8%
Doctoral 359 396 404 418
412 14.8%
College of Engineering 2,051 2,183 2,268 2,144
2,182 6.4%
Bachelor's - Lower 683 772 728 649
690 1.0%
Bachelor's - Upper 1,123 1,165 1,245 1,212
1,215 8.2%
Master's 115 110 134 116
107 -7.0%
Doctoral 130 136 161 167
170 30.8%
College of Fine Arts 1,479 1,419 1,342 1,296
1,283 -13.3%
Bachelor's - Lower 382 363 320 364
377 -1.3%
Bachelor's - Upper 796 753 714 635
600 -24.6%
Master's 238 238 242 233
235 -1.3%
Specialist's 0 0 1 0
0 N/A
Doctoral 63 65 65 64
71 12.7%
54-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Headcount Summaries by College, Fall Semesters
Degree Sought Fall 2013 Fall 2014 Fall 2015 Fall 2016 Fall 2017
% Change
2013 to 2017
Dedman School of Hospitalit
y
N/
A
Bachelor's - Lower 137
N/A
Bachelor's - Upper 272
N/A
College of Human Sciences 3,280 2,972 2,949 2,763 2,488
-24.1%
Bachelor's - Lower 1,218 1,023 1,097 972
747
-38.7%
Bachelor's - U
pp
er 1,888 1,790 1,713 1,653
1,619
-14.2%
Master's 110 100 85 75 64
-41.8%
Doctoral 64 59 54 63 58
-9.4%
T
he Graduate School 16 18 19 19 19
18.8%
Master's 2 1 2 1 1
-50.0%
Doctoral 14 17 17 18 18
28.6%
College of La
w
709 665 614 600 605
-14.7%
Master's 2 20 18 26 57
2750.0%
J
uris Doctoral 707 645 596 574 548
-22.5%
College of Medicine 527 527 532 645 1,330
152.4%
Bachelor's
Lower 108
660
N/A
Bachelor's
Upper 11
106
N/A
Master's 12 13 12 12 51
325.0%
Doctoral 34 32 37 39 43
26.5%
Medical Doctoral 481 482 483 475 470
-2.3%
College of Motion Picture Arts 211 215 175 175
169 -19.9%
Bachelor's
Lower 46 46 38 42
36 -21.7%
Bachelor's
Upper 104 106 74 63
66 -36.5%
Master's 61 63 63 70 67
9.8%
College of Music 1,141 1,082 1,051 996 1,019
-10.7%
Bachelor's - Lower 280 267 263 263
275
-1.8%
Bachelor's - Upper 467 443 443 408
412
-11.8%
Master's 222 195 171 150 167
-24.8%
Doctoral 172 177 174 175 165
-4.1%
College of Nursing 406 388 553 733 781
92.4%
Bachelor's - Lower 94 90 286 422
466 395.7%
Bachelor's - U
pp
er 227 217 172 210
220 -3.1%
Master's 21 18 20 23 17
-19.0%
Doctoral 64 63 75 78 78
21.9%
College of Social Sciences & Public Policy 4,692 4,789 4,806 4,909 4,884
4.1%
Bachelor's - Lower 1,030 1,017 1,080 1,149
1,109
7.7%
Bachelor's - Upper 2,945 3,076 3,077 3,085
3,128
6.2%
Master's 477 454 419 434 415
-13.0%
Doctoral 240 242 230 241 232
-3.3%
College of Social Work 842 917 840 797 763
-9.4%
Bachelor's - Lower 84 91 86 62
59
-29.8%
Bachelor's - Upper 235 264 211 197
157
-33.2%
Master's 498 534 518 511 521
4.6%
Doctoral 25 28 25 27 26
4.0%
Special/Undecided 2,780 2,868 2,786 2,792 2,723
-2.1%
Bachelor's - Lower 1,525 1,605 1,536 1,478 1,426
-6.5%
Bachelor's - Upper 89 83 55 45 72
-19.1%
Unclassified 1,166 1,180 1,195 1,269 1,225
5.1%
Source: Fall Preliminary Student Instruction Files (SIFP)
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-55
Degrees Awarded by Program: 2016-17 (Summer, Fall, Spring)
CIP Code - Degree Program Bachelor’s Master's Doctoral Specialist JD MD Total
University Totals 8,611 2,076 417 58 213 116 11,491
College of Applied Studies 76 29 0 0 0 0 105
Percent of All University Degrees 0.009% 0.014% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.009%
090900 - Professional Communication 33 5 0 0 0 0 38
310301 - Rec. & Leisure Services Admin. 18 0 0 0 0 0 18
430107 - Public Safety and Security 25 0 0 0 0 0 25
513804 – Nursing Anesthesia 0 24 0 0 0 0 24
College of Arts & Sciences
2,203 292 181 0 0 0
2,676
Percent of All University Degrees 25.6% 14.1% 43.4% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 23.3%
030104 - Environmental Science 68 0 0 0 0 0 68
050108 - Middle Eastern Studies 3 0 0 0 0 0 3
050126 - Italian Studies 0 2 0 0 0 0 2
110101 - Computer & Information Science 127 39 5 0 0 0 171
131205 - Science Teaching 0 3 0 0 0 0 3
160399 - East Asian Languages & Cultures 34 0 0 0 0 0 34
160400 - Slavic 0 3 0 0 0 0 3
160402 - Russian 5 0 0 0 0 0 5
160501 - German 3 3 0 0 0 0 6
160901 - French 18 4 0 0 0 0 22
160902 - Italian 3 0 0 0 0 0 3
160905 - Spanish 17 7 2 0 0 0 26
161200 - Classics 10 6 6 0 0 0 22
161203 - Latin 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
230101 - English 393 14 28 0 0 0 435
231302 - Creative Writing 0 5 0 0 0 0 5
240103 - Humanities 114 0 3 0 0 0 117
260101 - Biological Sciences 372 8 7 0 0 0 387
260202 - Biochemistry 37 0 0 0 0 0 37
260206 - Molecular Biophysics 0 0 5 0 0 0 5
261102 - Biostatistics 0 2 2 0 0 0 4
261104 - Computational Biology 4 0 0 0 0 0 4
261104 - Computational Biology (Comp. Sci.) 4 0 0 0 0 0 4
261501 - Neuroscience (Biological Sciences) 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
261501 - Neuroscience (Psychology) 0 0 2 0 0 0 2
270101 - Mathematics 59 24 16 0 0 0 99
270501 - Statistics 26 36 9 0 0 0 71
303001 - Computational Science 3 6 3 0 0 0 12
380101 - Philosophy 21 5 4 0 0 0 30
380201 - Religion 25 5 3 0 0 0 33
400401 - Meteorology 14 9 5 0 0 0 28
400501 - Chemistry 34 42 19 0 0 0 95
400599 - Chemical Science 19 0 0 0 0 0 19
400601 - Geological Sciences 17 0 2 0 0 0 19
400607 - Oceanography 0 4 4 0 0 0 8
400801 - Physics 33 11 26 0 0 0 70
400899 - Physics, Interdisciplinary 4 0 0 0 0 0 4
409999 - Geophysical Fluid Dynamics 0 0 3 0 0 0 3
420101 - Psychology 568 35 20 0 0 0 623
430116 - Computer Criminology 11 1 0 0 0 0 12
450201 - Anthropology 24 0 0 0 0 0 24
521304 - Actuarial Science 36 0 0 0 0 0 36
540101 - History 101 14 6 0 0 0 121
College of Business 1,707 268 9 0 0 0 1,984
Percent of All University Degrees
19.8%
12.9%
2.2%
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
17.3%
520101 - Business Administration 60 111 9 0 0 0 180
520201 - Management
192
3
0
0
0
0
195
520301 - Accounting 221 59 0 0 0 0 280
520801 - Finance 478 36 0 0 0 0 514
520901 - Hospitality Administration 175 0 0 0 0 0 175
521201 - Management Information Systems 58 4 0 0 0 0 62
521401 - Marketing 406 34 0 0 0 0 440
521501 - Real Estate 40 0 0 0 0 0 40
521701 - Risk Management - Insurance 77 21 0 0 0 0 98
56-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Degrees Awarded by Program: 2016-17 (Summer, Fall, Spring)
CIP Code - Degree Program Bachelor’
s
Master's Doctoral Specialist
J
D MD
T
ota
l
College of Communication and Information 552 224 12 2 0 0 790
Percent of All University Degrees 6.4% 10.8% 2.9% 3.4% 0.0% 0.0% 6.9%
090702 - Media/Communication Studies
199 20 0
0 0 0
219
090900 - Professional Communication
72 39 0
0 0 0
111
090199 - Communication
0 0 5
0 0 0
5
110103 - Information Technolo
gy
196 21 0
0 0 0
217
250101 - Library & Information Studies
0 87 7
2 0 0
96
510204 - Communication Sciences & Disorders
85 57 0
0 0 0
142
College of Criminology & Criminal Justice 479 83 3 0 0 0 565
Percent of All University Degrees 5.6% 4.0% 0.7% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 4.9%
430104 - Criminolo
gy
468 83 3 0 0 0 554
430116 - Com
p
uter Criminolo
gy
11 0 0 0 0 0 11
College of Education
301 283 50 56 0 0 690
Percent of All University Degrees 3.5% 13.6% 12.0% 96.6% 0.0% 0.0% 6.0%
130301 - Curriculum and Instruction
0 95 7 1 0 0 103
130401 - Educational Leadershi
p
/Administration
0 15 4 17 0 0 36
130406 - Hi
g
her Education
0 28 2 1 0 0 30
130501 - Instructional Systems
0 29 7 1 0 0 37
130603 - Measurement & Statistics
0 3 3 0 0 0 6
130901 - Foundations of Education
0 6 4 0 0 0 10
131001 - S
p
ecial Education
26 0 0 0 0 0 26
131009 -
V
isual Disabilities
18 0 0 0 0 0 18
131101 - Counselin
g
& Human Systems
0 37 10 37 0 0 84
131202 - Elementary Education
69 0 0 0 0 0 69
131210 - Early Childhood Education
26 0 0 0 0 0 26
131305 - En
g
lish Education
28 0 0 0 0 0 28
131317 - Social Science Education
30 0 0 0 0 0 30
310504 - S
p
ort Mana
g
ement
104 59 6 0 0 0 169
422806 - Educational Psycholo
gy
0 11 7 0 0 0 18
College of Engineering
363 69 27 0 0 0 459
Percent of All University Degree
s
4.2
%
3.3
%
6.5
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
4.0
%
140501 - Biomedical Engineering
0
1
2
0
0
0
3
140701 - Chemical Engineering
62
7
6
0
0
0
75
140801 - Civil En
g
ineerin
g
87 10 2 0 0 0 99
140901 - Com
p
uter En
g
ineerin
g
33 0 0 0 0 0 33
141001 - Electrical En
g
ineerin
g
60 18 8 0 0 0 86
141901 - Mechanical En
g
ineerin
g
89 13 3 0 0 0 105
143501 - Industrial En
g
ineerin
g
32 20 6 0 0 0 58
College of Fine Arts
277 101 4 0 0 0 382
Percent of All University Degrees 3.2% 4.9% 1.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 3.3%
131302 -
A
rt Education
0 10 1 0 0 0 11
500301 - Dance
15 12 0 0 0 0 27
500408 - Interior Desi
g
n
40 18 0 0 0 0 58
500501 -
T
heatre
66 22 0 0 0 0 88
500702 - Studio Art
132 8 0 0 0 0 140
500703 - History & Criticism of Art
24 13 3 0 0 0 40
501002 -
A
rts Administration -
A
rt
0 5 0 0 0 0 5
512301 -
A
rt Thera
py
0 13 0 0 0 0 13
401001
T
he Graduate School: Materials Science 0 2 3 0 0 0 5
Percent of All University Degrees 0.0% 0.1% 0.7% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0+%
College of Human Sciences
734 33 16 0 0 0 783
Percent of All University Degree
s
9.0
%
2.0
%
4.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
7.0
%
190101 - Human Sciences
0 0 5 0 0 0 5
190701 - Family and Child Sciences
230
6
0
0
0
0
236
190901 - Clothin
g
, Textiles & Merchandisin
g
149 4 0 0 0 0 153
260908 - Exercise Physiolo
gy
292 16 4 0 0 0 312
510913 -
A
thletic Trainin
g
15 0 0 0 0 0 15
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-57
Degrees Awarded by Program: 2016-17 (Summer, Fall, Spring)
CIP Code - Degree Program Bachelor’s Master's Doctoral Specialist
J
D MD
T
otal
College of Human Sciences (continued)
734 33 16 0 0 0 783
Percent of All University Degree
s
9.0
%
2.0
%
4.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
7.0
%
511505 - Marria
g
e and the Famil
y
0 0 7 0 0 0 7
513101 - Food & Nutrition
13 7 0 0 0 0 20
513102 - Dietetics
35 0 0 0 0 0 35
College of La
w
0 17 0 0 213 0 230
Percent of All University Degrees 0.0% 0.8% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0% 0.0% 2.0%
220101 - La
w
0 0 0 0 213 0 213
220201 - Juris Master 0 4 0 0 0 0 4
220202 -
A
merican Law for Forei
g
n Lawyers 0 11 0 0 0 0 11
220207 - Environmental Law and Policy 0 2 0 0 0 0 2
College of Medicine
0 13 5 0 0 116 134
Percent of All University Degrees 0.0% 0.6% 1.2% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0% 1.2%
260102 - Biomedical Science
0 13 2 0 0 0 15
261501 - Neuroscience
0 0 3 0 0 0 3
511201 - Medicine
0 0 0 0 0 116 116
College of Motion Picture Arts 26 24 0 0 0 0 50
Percent of All University Degrees 0.3% 1.2% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.4%
500504 - Motion Picture Arts Writin
g
0 4 0 0 0 0 4
500602 - Motion Picture Arts 26 20 0 0 0 0 46
College of Music
158 94 46 0 0 0 298
Percent of All University Degrees 2.0% 5.0% 11.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 3.0%
131312 - Music Education
48 25 8 0 0 0 81
500901 - Music (Liberal Arts)
54 2 0 0 0 0 56
500903 - Music Performance
30 32 25 0 0 0 87
500904 - Music Theory & Com
p
osition
4 7 9 0 0 0 20
500905 - Musicolo
g
y
0 3 4 0 0 0 7
501002 -
A
rts Administration - Music
0 12 0 0 0 0 12
512305 - Music Thera
py
22 13 0 0 0 0 35
College of Nursing
104 13 19 0 0 0 136
Percent of All University Degree
s
1.2
%
0.6
%
4.6
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
1.2
%
513801 - Nursin
g
104 13 0 0 0 0 136
513818 - Nursing Practice
0
0
19
0
0
0
19
College of Social Sciences & Public Policy
1,513 261 39 0 0 0 1,813
Percent of All University Degrees 17.6% 12.6% 9.4% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 15.8%
030101
Environment and Societ
y
82 34 4 0 0 0 82
040301 - Urban & Re
g
ional Plannin
g
0 34 4 0 0 0 38
050103 -
A
sian Studies
11 3 0 0 0 0 14
050105 - Russian & East Euro
p
ean Studies
3 2 0 0 0 0 5
050134 - Latin American & Carib. Studies
5 0 0 0 0 0 5
440401 - Public Administration
0 69 11 0 0 0 80
450101 - Social Science
297 0 0 0 0 0 297
450501 - Demo
g
ra
p
h
y
0 8 0 0 0 0 8
450601 - Economics
245 14 2 0 0 0 261
450602 -
App
lied Economics
0 14 0 0 0 0 14
450701 - Geo
g
ra
p
h
y
61 3 4 0 0 0 68
450702 - Geo
g
ra
p
hic Information Science
0 16 0 0 0 0 16
450901 - International Affairs
312 30 0 0 0 0 342
451001 - Political Science
316 32 6 0 0 0 354
451101 - Sociolo
gy
176 13 12 0 0 0 201
512201 - Public Health
0 23 0 0 0 0 23
440701 - College of Social Work 104 270 3 0 0 0 377
Percent of All University Degrees 1.2% 13.0% 0.7% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 3.3%
440701
Social Wor
k
104 269 3 0 0 0 376
511503
Clinical/Medical Social Wor
k
0 1 0 0 0 0 1
Dedman School of Hospitalit
y
14 0 0 0 0 0 14
Percent of All University Degrees 0.2% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.1%
520901
Hos
p
itality Administration
14 0 0 0 0 0 14
Source: Final Student Information Files (SIF) - Summer 2016, Fall 2016 & Spring 2017
58-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Degrees Awarded by College by Year (Summer, Fall, Spring)
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
6 Year
Change
University Tota
l
10,911 11,042 11,032 11,440 11,459 11,491 5.3%
Baccalaureate 7,860 7,938 8,105 8,421 8,626 8,611 9.6%
Master's 2,142 2,316 2,065 2,153 2,064 2,076 -3.1%
Specialist 59 52 50 49 53 58 -1.7%
Doctorate 444 385 435 444 406 417 -6.1%
J
uris Doctorate 288 239 262 259 190 213 -26.0%
Medical Doctorate 118 112 115 114 120 116 -1.7%
College of A
p
plied Studies 18 69 81 104 105 N/A
Percent of All University Degrees
0.2% 0.6% 0.7% 0.9% 0.0+%
Baccalaureate 18 65 74 97 76 N/A
Master's 0 4 7 7 29 N/A
College of Arts & Sciences 2,262 2,539 2,481 2,744 2,730 2,676 18.3%
Percent of All University Degrees
20.7% 23.0% 22.5% 24.0% 23.8% 23.3%
Baccalaureate 1,789 2,048 2,063 2,204 2,257 2,203 23.1%
Master's 278 321 250 349 296 292 5.0%
Doctorate 195 170 168 191 177 181 -7.2%
College of Business 1,845 1,786 1,810 1,726 1,862 1,984 7.5%
Percent of All University Degrees
16.9% 16.2% 16.4% 15.1% 16.2% 17.3%
Baccalaureate 1,553 1,485 1,535 1,456 1,619 1,707 9.9%
Master's 281 293 256 257 231 268 -4.6%
Doctorate 11 8 19 13 12 9 -18.2%
College of Communication & Information 849 848 824 815 786 790 -6.9%
Percent of All University Degrees
7.8% 7.7% 7.5% 7.1% 6.9% 6.9%
Baccalaureate 476 487 497 533 514 552 16.0%
Master's 347 347 300 259 253 224 -35.4%
Specialist 4 2 6 5 1 2 -50.0%
Doctorate 22 12 21 18 18 12 -45.5%
College of Criminology & Criminal Justice 532 513 560 609 572 565 6.2%
Percent of All University Degrees
4.9% 4.6% 5.1% 5.3% 5.0% 4.9%
Baccalaureate 480 435 514 536 509 479 -0.2%
Master's 47 73 40 67 56 83 76.6%
Doctorate 5 5 6 6 7 3 -40.0%
College of Education 796 707 706 736 736 690 -13.3%
Percent of All University Degrees
7.3% 6.4% 6.4% 6.4% 6.4% 6.0%
Baccalaureate 333 279 278 311 306 301 -9.6%
Master's 343 331 333 323 312 283 -17.5%
Specialist 55 50 44 44 52 56 1.8%
Doctorate 65 47 51 58 66 50 -23.1%
College of Engineering 377 327 376 404 490 459 21.8%
Percent of All University Degrees
3.5% 3.0% 3.4% 3.5% 4.3% 4.0%
Baccalaureate 305 257 281 337 370 363 19.0%
Master's 52 55 72 48 99 69 32.7%
Doctorate 20 15 23 19 21 27 35.0%
College of Fine Arts 401 421 399 400 392 382 -4.7%
Percent of All University Degrees
3.7% 3.8% 3.6% 3.5% 3.4% 3.3%
Baccalaureate 297 305 301 300 277 277 -6.7%
Master's 98 110 85 95 109 101 3.1%
Doctorate 6 6 13 5 6 4 -33.3%
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-59
Degrees Awarded by College by Year (Summer, Fall, Spring)
2011-12
2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17
6 Year
Change
T
he Graduate Schoo
l
2 3 1 4 2 5 150.0%
Percent of All University Degrees
0.0+% 0.0+% 0.0+% 0.0+% 0.0+% 0.0+%
Master's 2 3 1 2 2 2
0.0%
Doctorate 0 0 0 2 0 3 N/A
College of Human Sciences 833 808 777 758 781 783 -6.0%
Percent of All University Degrees
7.6% 7.3% 7.0% 7.5% 6.8% 7.0%
Baccalaureate 772 747 705 790 737 734 -4.9%
Master's 50 47 57 54 38 33 -34.0%
Doctorate 11 14 15 14 6 16 45.5%
College of La
w
291 249 274 275 203 230 -21.0%
Percent of All University Degrees
2.7% 2.3% 2.5% 2.4% 1.8% 2.0%
Master's 3 10 12 16 13 17 466.7%
J
uris Doctorate 288 239 262 259 190 213 -26.0%
College of Medicine 136 129 135 134 140 134 -1.5%
Percent of All University Degrees
1.2% 1.2% 1.2% 1.2% 1.2% 1.2%
Master’s 13 13 13 14 12 13 0.0%
Doctorate 5 4 7 6 8 5 0.0%
Medical Doctorate 118 112 115 114 120 116 -1.7%
College of Motion Picture Arts 57 66 55 70 70 50 -12.3%
Percent of All University Degrees
0.5% 0.6% 0.5% 0.6% 0.6% 0.4%
Baccalaureate 30 34 31 44 45 26 -13.3%
Master's 27 32 24 26 25 24 -11.1%
College of Music 262 310 290 294 312 298 13.7%
Percent of All University Degrees
2.4% 2.8% 2.6% 2.6% 2.7% 3.0%
Baccalaureate 137 139 144 140 156 158 15.3%
Master's 85 125 102 104 120 94 10.6%
Doctorate 40 46 44 50 36 46 15.0%
College of Nursin
g
129 138 121 141 136 136 5.4%
Percent of All University Degrees
1.2% 1.2% 1.1% 1.2% 1.2% 1.2%
Baccalaureate 108 119 85 114 110 104 -3.7%
Master's 5 4 10 7 6 13 160.0%
Doctorate 16 15 26 20 20 19 18.8%
College of Social Sciences & Public Polic
y
1,799 1,831 1,783 1,753 1,797 1,813 0.8%
Percent of All University Degrees
16.5% 16.6% 16.2% 15.3% 15.7% 15.8%
Baccalaureate 1,468 1,477 1,477 1,439 1,507 1,513 3.1%
Master's 290 312 268 275 265 261 -10.0%
Doctorate 41 42 38 39 25 39 -4.9%
College of Social Work 340 349 371 396 346 377 10.9%
Percent of All University Degrees
3.1% 3.2% 3.4% 3.5% 3.0% 3.3%
Baccalaureate 112 108 129 143 122 104 -7.1%
Master's 221 240 238 250 220 270 22.2%
Doctorate 7 1 4 3 4 3 -57.1%
Dedman School of Hospitalit
y
14 N/A
Percent of All University Degrees
0.1%
Baccalaureate 14 N/A
Source: Final Student Instruction Files (SIF)
Online Resource: The degrees awarded reports can be accessed online at http://ir.fsu.edu/degreesawarded.aspx
60-Student Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Enrollment History: Headcount by Level
Fall Terms Since 1905
Year Undergraduate Graduate Other Total Year Undergraduate Graduate Other Total
1905 60 0 144 204
1906 54 0 166 220
1907 53 6 181 240
1908 64 5 188 257
1909 64 0 209 273
1910 86 2 192 280
1911 131 1 183 315
1912 146 5 227 378
1913 114 12 264 390
1914 110 7 268 385
1915 143 6 402 551
1916 159 3 457 619
1917 236 1 322 559
1918 321 1 276 598
1919 367 2 293 662
1920 357 1 307 665
1921 419 1 225 645
1922 694 7 76 777
1923 873 0 91 964
1924 1,108 0 100 1,208
1925 1,296 3 98 1,397
1926 1,272 5 84 1,361
1927 1,418 3 13 1,434
1928 1,563 12 19 1,594
1929 1,603 10 29 1,642
1930 1,709 10 68 1,787
1931 1,697 10 66 1,773
1932 1,740 18 34 1,792
1933 1,510 13 37 1,560
1934 1,574 16 37 1,627
1935 1,670 13 58 1,741
1936 1,759 14 50 1,823
1937 1,780 20 50 1,850
1938 1,784 30 56 1,870
1939 1,958 30 56 2,044
1940 1,946 27 56 2,029
1941 1,956 32 46 2,034
1942 1,841 21 69 1,931
1943 1,999 16 64 2,079
1944 2,177 20 68 2,265
1945 2,501 16 65 2,582
1946 2,528 19 36 2,583
1947* 3,870 104 41 4,015
1948 4,738 305 100 5,143
1949 5,014 515 80 5,609
1950 4,537 779 165 5,481
1951 4,532 778 166 5,476
1952 3,825 874 150 4,849
1953 3,899 847 282 5,028
1954 4,578 819 253 5,650
1955 5,304 819 292 6,415
1956 5,838 861 283 6,982
1957 6,037 888 278 7,203
1958 6,195 1,080 240 7,515
1959 6,714 1,194 271 8,179
1960 7,365 1,335 319 9,019
1961 7,985 1,432 418 9,835
1962 8,466 1,577 348 10,391
1963 9,020 1,669 372 11,061
1964 9,760 2,008 367 12,135
1965 10,576 2,177 447 13,200
1966 11,395 2,558 366 14,319
1967 11,817 3,167 218 15,202
1968 12,443 3,611 249 16,303
1969 13,054 3,679 287 17,020
1970 12,863 3,813 316 16,992
1971 13,729 3,905 733 18,367
1972 14,367 4,009 784 19,160
1973 14,935 3,940 1,515 20,390
1974 15,314 4,123 1,600 21,037
1975 15,685 4,171 1,808 21,664
1976 15,859 4,101 1,644 21,604
1977 15,350 4,137 1,412 20,899
1978 15,182 4,241 1,628 21,051
1979 15,593 4,151 1,717 21,461
1980 16,653 4,314 1,457 22,424
1981 16,972 4,286 1,105 22,363
1982 16,554 4,222 1,244 22,020
1983 15,871 4,071 1,123 21,065
1984 16,035 4,105 1,180 21,320
1985 16,151 4,191 1,416 21,758
1986 17,071 4,319 1,748 23,138
1987 18,062 4,352 1,577 23,991
1988 19,851 4,759 1,415 26,025
1989 21,300 5,182 1,595 28,077
1990 21,341 5,424 1,562 28,327
1991 21,300 5,512 1,795 28,607
1992 21,116 5,758 1,638 28,512
1993 21,318 5,715 1,636 28,669
1994 22,202 5,649 1,779 29,630
1995 22,554 5,856 1,858 30,268
1996 22,408 5,929 1,927 30,264
1997 22,850 5,903 1,766 30,519
1998 23,875 5,685 1,633 31,193
1999 25,146 6,215 1,966 33,327
2000 26,422 6,367 1,688 34,477
2001 27,125 6,317 2,020 35,462
2002 28,740 6,605 1,338 36,683
2003 29,297 6,851 1,180 37,328
2004 30,015 7,456 1,415 38,886
2005 30,418 7,926 1,308 39,652
2006 31,058 8,174 1,242 40,474
2007 31,508 8,529 1,028 41,065
2008 29,644 8,370 1,122 39,136
2009 30,457 8,557 1,241 40,255
2010 31,005 8,511 1,322 40,838
2011 31,851 8,486 1,373 41,710
2012 31,943 8,155 1,203 41,301
2013 32,276 8,035 1,166 41,477
2014 32,621 7,972 1,180 41,773
2015 32,459 7,819 1,195 41,473
2016 32,669 7,929 1,269 41,867
2017 32,812 7,863 1,225 41,900
*FSU returned to a co-educational institution in 1947 after having been a women’s college since 1905.
Source: Office of Institutional Research Internal Files (taken from FSCW catalogues and FSU Fact Books)
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-61
Residence of Alumni by State
State Alumni State Alumni State Alumni
Alabama 3,786
Alaska 256
Arizona 1,651
Arkansas 631
California 8,649
Colorado 3,610
Connecticut 1,119
Delaware 267
District of Columbia 1,001
Florida 203,428
Georgia 20,664
Hawaii 402
Idaho 252
Illinois 2,899
Indiana 1,124
Iowa 363
Kansas 539
Kentucky 1,141
Louisiana 1,504
Maine 364
Maryland 3,372
Massachusetts 2,006
Michigan 1,418
Minnesota 855
Mississippi 952
Missouri 1,174
Montana 243
Nebraska 257
Nevada 714
New Hampshire 414
New Jersey 2,231
New Mexico 585
New York 5,267
North Carolina 8,950
North Dakota 112
Ohio 2,102
Oklahoma 552
Oregon 1,129
Pennsylvania 2,548
Rhode Island 283
South Carolina 3,551
South Dakota 106
Tennessee 4,113
Texas 8,461
Utah 545
Vermont 225
Virginia 7,112
Washington 2,155
West Virginia 310
Wisconsin 792
Wyoming 131
Military APO/FPO 525
Guam 11
Puerto Rico 211
U.S. Virgin Islands 35
Foreign 1,699
State/Country Unknown 26,281
Deceased 26,948
Total - All Alumni 372,025
Source: Florida State University Alumni Association April 2018
62-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Residence of Alumni by Florida County
County Alumni
Alachua 2,709
Baker 123
Bay 6,293
Bradford 110
Brevard 5,084
Broward 15,540
Calhoun 405
Charlotte 560
Citrus 592
Clay 2,053
Collier 1,668
Columbia 588
Miami-Dade 12,816
De Soto 66
Dixie 71
Duval 11,274
Escambia 2,974
Flagler 526
Franklin 298
Gadsden 1,812
Gilchrist 114
Glades 24
Gulf 353
Hamilton 83
Hardee 88
Hendry 96
County Alumni
Hernando 629
Highlands 407
Hillsborough 12,616
Holmes 326
Indian River 1,106
Jackson 1,253
Jefferson 789
Lafayette 92
Lake 2,038
Lee 2,954
Leon 39,221
Levy 185
Liberty 264
Madison 363
Manatee 2,652
Marion 1,844
Martin 1,614
Monroe 648
Nassau 706
Okaloosa 2,691
Okeechobee 118
Orange 11,224
Osceola 931
Palm Beach 12,004
Pasco 2,491
Pinellas 9,804
County Alumni
Polk 3,295
Putnam 332
St. Johns 4,172
St. Lucie 1,131
Santa Rosa 1,735
Sarasota 3,123
Seminole 5,412
Sumter 390
Suwannee 464
Taylor 475
Union 51
Volusia 3,644
Wakulla 1,697
Walton 1,049
Washington 529
Florida – County Unknown 638
Total - Fla Residents 203,427
Source: Florida State University Alumni Association – April 2018
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-63
Panama City Campus Student Headcount Enrollment, Fall Semesters
The Panama City Campus of Florida State University began operations in 1967 when three universities started offering courses to area
students. The University of West Florida was assigned to administer the campus in 1971, and that administrative responsibility was transferred
to Florida State University in July, 1982. The Bay County Commission donated a 26 acre waterfront site for constructing new campus facilities
to replace buildings loaned by the Bay County School Board and Gulf Coast Community College. Construction of the new campus facilities
began in 1983, and the new buildings were ready for use during the 1987 spring semester. The Holley Academic Center opened in spring 2009
and includes 10 teaching laboratories.
The College of Applied Studies makes its home at the FSU-Panama City campus. The College was established to enable Florida State
University Panama City to respond to the educational needs of the citizens of Northwest Florida and beyond.
Students enrolled at the Panama City campus are served by over 40 full-time faculty, plus additional faculty who travel from the
Tallahassee campus (http://pc.fsu.edu/Faculty-Staff/Resident-Faculty-Directory).
Student Headcount Enrollment
FALL 2015 FALL 2016 FALL 2017
Colle
g
e / De
p
artment L U G
ota
L U G
ota
L U G
ota
Applied Studies 12 216 59 287 7 219 78 304 5 217 81 303
Percent o
f
Panama Ci
t
y
Headcoun
t
25.5
%
28.1
%
51.8
%
29.5
%
16.7
%
29.9
%
58.2
%
31.9
%
9
.
6
%
29.
6
%
6
4
.
3
%
3
2
.
2
%
Nurse Anesthesia 0 0 48 48 0 0 66 66 0 0 66 66
Professional Communication 4 91 11 106 4 81 12 97 3 86 15 104
Public Safety & Securit
y
4 82 0 86 3 90 0 93 2 90 0 92
Recreation, Tourism & Events 4 43 0 47 0 48 0 48 0 41 0 41
Arts & Sciences 13 256 32 301 11 251 38 300 23 252 37 312
Percent o
f
Panama Ci
t
y
Headcoun
t
27.7
%
33.3
%
28.1
%
3
1
.
0
%
26.2
%
34.2
%
28.4
%
3
1
.
4
%
4
4
.
2
%
34.
4
%
2
9
.4
%
3
3
.
2
%
Biolo
g
ical Science 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1
Com
p
uter Science 5 205 0 210 4 201 0 205 17 199 0 216
Histor
y
0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Psycholo
gy
8 50 32 90 7 50 38 95 5 53 37 95
Business 5 95 0 100 3 86 0 89 6 79 0 85
Percent o
f
Panama Ci
t
y
Headcoun
t
10.6
%
12.4
%
0.0
%
10.
3
%
7.1
%
11.7
%
0.0
%
9.
3
%
1
1
.
5
%
1
0
.
8
%
0.0
%
9.
0
%
A
ccountin
g
2 31 0 33 2 34 0 36 3 34 0 37
Business Administration 3 64 0 67 1 52 0 53 1 44 0 45
Finance 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 2
Mana
g
ement 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1
Education 0 60 1 61 1 45 0 46 1 33 0 34
Percent o
f
Panama Ci
t
y
Headcoun
t
0.0
%
7.8
%
0.9
%
6.3
%
2.4
%
6.1
%
0.0
%
4.8
%
1
.
9
%
4
.
5
%
0.0
%
3
.
6
%
School of Teacher Education 0 60 1 61 1 45 0 46 1 33 0 34
Engineering 10 86 1 97 9 78 2 89 8 80 3 91
Percent o
f
Panama Ci
t
y
Headcoun
t
21.3
%
11.2
%
0.9
%
10.0
%
21.4
%
10.6
%
1.5
%
9.3
%
1
5
.4
%
10.
9
%
2
.
4
%
9.
7
%
Chemical & Biomedical En
g
ineerin
g
0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0
Civil & Environmental En
g
ineerin
g
2 35 0 37 4 37 0 41 2 38 0 40
Industrial & Manufacturin
g
En
g
. 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Electrical & Com
p
uter En
g
ineerin
g
7 51 1 59 5 40 2 47 5 42 3 50
Mechanical En
g
ineerin
g
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1
Entrepreneurship, Moran School 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 4
Percent o
f
Panama Ci
t
y
Headcoun
t
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.5
%
0.0
%
0.4
%
Hospitality, Dedman School
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 3
Percent of Panama City Headcoun
t
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
1
.
9
%
0.
3
%
0.0
%
0.
3
%
Nursing 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 2
Percent o
f
Panama Ci
t
y
Headcoun
t
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.
0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.
0
%
3.8
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.
2
%
Social Sciences & Public Policy 2 35 0 37 2 37 0 39 0 48 0 48
Percent o
f
Panama Ci
t
y
Headcoun
t
4.3
%
4.6
%
0.0
%
3.
8
%
4.8
%
5.0
%
0.0
%
4.
1
%
0.0
%
6.5
%
0.0
%
5.
1
%
Social Science 2 35 0 37 2 37 0 39 0 48 0 48
Social Work 1 20 21 42 0 16 16 32 0 17 5 22
Percent o
f
Panama Ci
t
y
Headcoun
t
2.1
%
2.6
%
18.4
%
4.
3
%
0.0
%
2.2
%
11.9
%
3.
4
%
0.0
%
2.3
%
4.0
%
2.
3
%
Undecided 4 0 0 4 9 1 0 10 6 1 0 7
Percent o
f
Panama Ci
t
y
Headcoun
t
8.5
%
0.0
%
0.0
%
0.4
%
21.4
%
0.1
%
0.0
%
1.0
%
11.5
%
0.1
%
0.0
%
0.7
%
T
otal Degree Seeking 47 768 114 929 42 733 134 909 52 733 126 911
Percent o
f
Panama Ci
t
y
Headcoun
t
100.0
%
100.0
%
100.0
%
95.6
%
100.0
%
100.0
%
100.0
%
95.3
%
100.0
%
100.0
%
100.0
%
96.9
%
9200
-
N
on
-
degree seekin
g
0 0 0 43 0 0 0 45 0 0 0 2
9
Percent o
f
Panama City Headcount 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 4.4% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 4.
7
% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 3.1%
PANAMA CITY TOTALS 47 768 114 972 42 733 134 954 52 733 126 940
KEY: L–Undergraduate Lower; U–Undergraduate Upper; G–Graduate; NFA–Not Formally Admitted. Totals include non-degree seeking.
64-Students Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Panama City Campus Student Headcount Enrollment, Fall Semesters
Origin of Students
Nation
Fall
2015
Fall
2016
Fall
2017
State
Fall
2015
Fall
2016
Fall
2017
Florida
Count
y
Fall
2015
Fall
2016
Fall
2017
A
rmenia 0 1 1
A
labama 17 19 20
A
lachua 7 6 4
A
ustralia 0 1 0
A
laska 0 0 1 Baker 1 1 1
Brazil 0 1 2
A
rkansas 1 0 0 Ba
y
507 452 426
Canada 1 1 0
A
rizona 3 3 5 Brevard 19 23 15
China 1 0 0 California 1 3 4 Broward 14 15 17
Columbia 0 1 1 Connecticut 2 0 0 Calhoun 11 12 7
Costa Rica 0 0 1 DC 1 1 1 Charlotte 2 0 0
Cuba 1 1 1 Florida 896 867 836 Citrus 2 1 2
Czech Re
p
ublic 1 1 1 Geor
g
ia 8 15 19 Cla
y
0 1 1
Ecuador 0 0 1 Hawaii 1 0 0 Collier 1 0 1
E
gyp
t 1 0 0 Idaho 0 1 2 Miami-Dade 13 13 15
Estonia 1 1 1 Illinois 2 2 2 Dixie 1 1 0
Haiti 2 0 0 Indiana 1 1 1 Duval 8 16 19
India 1 1 2 Kansas 2 1 1 Escambia 8 11 7
Indonesia 1 0 0 Kentuck
y
1 1 1 Fla
g
ler 4 4 3
J
a
p
an 0 1 0 Louisiana 1 1 2 Franklin 3 6 8
Kazakhstan 1 1 2 Maryland 1 1 0 Gadsden 3 2 3
Korea, South 1 0 0 Michi
g
an 3 3 2 Gilchrist 1 0 0
Lebanon 0 1 0 Minnesota 0 1 1 Gul
f
16 14 11
Mexico 1 1 0 Mississi
pp
i 2 2 1 Hernando 2 4 3
Moldova 1 1 0 Missouri 0 1 1 Hi
g
hlands 1 0 1
New Zealand 1 1 0 Nebraska 1 0 0 Hillsborou
g
h 9 16 22
Phili
pp
ines 1 1 1 New
J
erse
y
0 1 1 Holmes 18 14 8
Puerto Rico 1 1 2 New Mexico 0 1 1 Indian River 0 1 1
Russia 2 1 1 New York 4 4 6
J
ackson 17 14 8
Serbia 1 0 0 North Carolina 1 2 3
J
efferson 2 1 0
Sweden 1 0 0 Ohio 1 1 2 Lake 1 5 3
T
rinidad/Toba
g
o 0 1 0 Oklahoma 1 1 0 Lee 4 4 3
T
urke
y
1 0 0 Pennsylvania 2 0 1 Leon 51 42 46
Ukraine 5 2 2 South Carolina 2 4 5 Libert
y
1 3 4
USA 944 930 920
T
ennessee 3 1 3 Manatee 4 3 4
US Vir
g
in Islands 0 1 0
exas 4 7 7 Marion 3 4 4
V
ietnam 1 2 1 Utah 0 0 2 Martin 1 0 1
ota
972 954 940
V
ir
g
inia 1 2 3 Monroe 2 1 1
Washin
g
ton 2 2 2 Nassau 0 1 2
Wisconsin 0 0 1 Okaloosa 41 41 39
W
y
omin
g
0 1 1 Oran
g
e 8 11 17
Non-USA 7
4 2 Osceola 3 2 1
ota
972 954 940 Palm Beach 14 9 9
Pasco 4 6 6
Pinellas 12 10 11
Polk 6 9 8
Putnam 1 0 1
Santa Rosa 2 4 7
Sarasota 3 1 2
Seminole 6 7 5
St.
J
ohns 2 1 3
St. Lucie 0 0 2
Sumter 0 1 1
Suwannee 1 1 1
T
aylor 3 1 0
V
olusia 2 5 5
Wakulla 1 2 3
Walton 29 38 30
Washin
g
ton 21 27 34
Non-Florida 69 83 102
Non-USA 7
4 2
ota
972 954 940
Source: Fall Preliminary Student Instruction Files (SIFP)
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-65
Panama City Campus Student Headcount Enrollment, Fall Semesters
By College 2013
2014* 2015* 2016* 2017*
A
pplied Studies 288 29.7% 284 33.2% 287 29.5% 304 31.9% 303 32.2%
A
rts & Sciences 163 16.8% 136 15.9% 301 31.0% 300 31.4% 312 33.2%
Business 134 13.8% 124 14.5% 100 10.3% 89 9.3% 85 9.0%
Communication & Info. 5 0.5% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0%
Crim. & Criminal Justice 9 0.9% 3 0.4% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0%
Education 96 9.9% 68 8.0% 61 6.3% 46 4.8% 34 3.6%
Engineering 122 12.6% 112 13.1% 97 10.0% 89 9.3% 91 9.7%
Entrepreneurship 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 4 0.4%
Hospitalit
y
0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 3 0.3%
Human Sciences 2 0.2% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0%
Nursing 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 2 0.2%
Social Sci. and Public Polic
y
55 5.7% 37 4.3% 37 3.8% 39 4.1% 48 5.1%
Social Work 48 5.0% 51 6.0% 42 4.3% 32 3.4% 22 2.3%
Special/Undecided 48
4.9% 40 4.7% 47 4.8% 55 5.8% 36 3.8%
ota
970 100.0% 855 100.0% 972 100.0% 954 100.0% 940 100.0%
By Gender 2013
2014* 2015* 2016* 2017*
Female 589 60.3% 581 59.9% 487 57.0% 502 51.6% 478 50.9%
Male 387
39.7% 389 40.1% 368 43.0% 470 48.4% 462 49.1%
T
otal 976 100.0% 970 100.0% 855 100.0% 972 100.0% 940 100.0%
By Level 2013
2014* 2015* 2016* 2017*
Freshman 0 0.0% 80 8.2% 54 6.3% 22 2.3% 28 3.0%
Sophomore 3 0.3% 34 3.5% 45 5.3% 25 2.6% 24 2.6%
J
unior 308 31.6% 275 28.4% 202 23.6% 226 23.3% 258 27.4%
Senior 486 49.8% 454 46.8% 430 50.3% 542 55.8% 475 50.5%
Graduate 122 12.5% 83 8.6% 85 9.9% 114 11.7% 126 13.4%
Unclassified 57
5.8% 44 4.5% 39 4.6% 43 4.4% 29 3.1%
T
otal 976 100.0% 970 100.0% 855 100.0% 972 100.0% 940 100.0%
By Ethnicit
y
2013 2014* 2015* 2016* 2017*
Non-Resident Alien 0 0.0% 2 0.2% 1 0.1% 0 0.0% 1 0.1%
Hispanic 41 4.2% 64 6.6% 64 7.5% 90 9.3% 100 10.5%
A
merican Indian 12 1.2% 10 1.0% 4 0.5% 4 0.4% 10 1.1%
A
sian 18 1.8% 13 1.4% 11 1.3% 23 2.4% 23 2.4%
Black 67 6.9% 84 8.7% 65 7.6% 75 7.7% 64 6.8%
Native Hawaiian 2 0.2% 4 0.4% 0 0.0% 3 0.3% 4 0.4%
White 804 82.4% 754 77.7% 672 78.6% 732 75.3% 686 73.0%
T
wo or More Races 22 2.3% 28 2.9% 27 3.2% 29 3.0% 38 4.0%
Not Reported 10
1.0% 11 1.1% 11 1.3% 16 1.6% 14 1.5%
ota
976 100.0% 970 100.0% 855 100.0% 972 100.0% 940 100.0%
*Administrative Campus Code of the student was used to identify Panama City Campus students. Previous reporting identified the campus
based on the campus code of the class.
Enrollment by Age - Fall 2017
Headcount Enrollment Percentage
Undergraduate
Graduate Other Total Undergraduate Graduate Other Total
20 and below 103 0 5 108 13.1% 0.0% 17.2% 11.5%
21-22 149 9 2 160 19.0% 7.1% 6.9% 17.0%
23-25 148 36 5 189 18.9% 28.6% 17.2% 20.1%
26-30 149 37 4 190 19.0% 29.4% 13.8% 20.2%
31-40 139 39 7 185 17.7% 31.0% 24.1% 19.7%
41 and above 97
5 6 108 12.4% 4.0% 20.7% 11.5%
ota
785 126 29 940 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
Note: All Panama City Campus data on these pages are extracted from the total campus figures used throughout this Fact Book.
Online resource: The FSU-Panama City campus website can be accessed online at: http://www.pc.fsu.edu/
66-Student Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Distance Learning Course Enrollment and Student Credit Hours
Enrollment in Web-based Distance Learning Course Sections by CIP Classification
A
cademic Year 2015-16
A
cademic Year 2016-17
CIP Classification
Undergraduate Graduate
ota
Percent Undergraduate Graduate
ota
Percent
03 - Natural Resources & Conservation 172 0 172 0.3% 373 0 373 0.6%
04 -
A
rchitecture and Related Services 321 41 362 0.7% 292 54 346 0.5%
09 - Mass Communication 2,826 136 2,962 5.9% 2,600 220 2,820 4.5%
10 - Communications Technologies 518 0 518 1.0% 665 0 665 1.1%
11 - Computer & Information Studies 2,588 0 2,588 5.2% 1,834 0 1,834 2.9%
13 - Education 1,276 1,730 3,006 6.0% 1,578 2,055 3,633 5.7%
14 - Engineering 6 158 164 0.3% 0 48 48 0.1%
16 - Foreign Languages 881 0 881 1.8% 898 0 898 1.4%
19 - Home Economics/Human Sciences 2,171 0 2,171 4.3% 3,037 0 3,037 4.8%
23 - Letters 52 0 52 0.1% 369 0 369 0.6%
24 - Liberal/General Studies 367 0 367 0.7% 935 0 935 1.5%
25 - Library & Information Studies 154 1,464 1,618 3.2% 293 1,502 1,795 2.8%
26 - Biological/Life Sciences 45 0 45 0.1% 0 0 0 0.0%
27 - Mathematics 1,113 0 1,113 2.2% 676 43 719 1.1%
30 - Multi/Interdisciplinary Science 0 0 0 0.0% 123 0 123 0.2%
31 - Parks, Recreation, Leisure & Fitness 651 70 721 1.4% 722 57 779 1.2%
38 - Philosophy and Religious Studies 549 0 549 1.1% 533 0 533 0.8%
40 - Physical Sciences 944 3 947 1.9% 1,491 9 1,500 2.4%
42 - Psycholog
y
768 24 792 1.6% 919 58 977 1.5%
43 - Protective Services 1,862 720 2,582 5.2% 2,272 708 2,980 4.7%
44 - Public Affairs 1,692 1,594 3,286 6.6% 2,243 1,751 3,994 6.3%
45 - Social Sciences 7,298 22 7,320 14.6% 7,429 12 7,441 11.8%
50 -
V
isual & Performing Arts 1,333 0 1,333 2.7% 2,447 0 2,447 3.9%
51 - Health Professions & Related Sci. 380 1,077 1,457 2.9% 653 1,241 1,894 3.0%
52 - Business and Management 13,024 1,292 14,316 28.6% 20,680 1,622 22,302 35.3%
54 - Histor
y
742 2 744 1.5% 808 11 819 1.3%
ota
41,733 8,333 50,066 100.0% 53,870 9,391 63,261 100.0%
Note: Due to duplicated counts, class section enrollment will differ from headcount enrollment
Student Credit Hour Production in Web-based Distance Learning Course Sections
Undergraduate Leve
l
Graduate Leve
l
A
cademic Year Fundable Non-Fund.
ota
Percent Fundable Non-Fund.
ota
Percent
Summer 2013 14,982 2,274 17,256 18.4% 5,369 2,332 7,701 30.9%
Fall 2013 34,732 4,562 39,294 41.9% 5,881 2,980 8,861 35.6%
Spring 2014 28,970
8,341 37,311 39.7% 5,372 2,984 8,356 33.5%
T
otal 2013-14 78,684 15,177 93,861 100.0% 16,622 8,296 24,918 100.0%
Summer 2014 18,342 3,359 21,701 20.6% 4,509 2,468 6,977 29.2%
Fall 2014 35,617 4,847 40,464 38.3% 5,969 2,735 8,704 36.4%
Spring 2015 37,173
6,276 43,449 41.1% 5,552 2,677 8,229 34.4%
T
otal 2014-15 91,132 14,482 105,614 100.0% 16,030 7,880 23,910 100.0%
Summer 2015 20,624 3,686 24,310 19.7% 5,055 2,192 7,247 28.6%
Fall 2015 40,144 7,242 47,386 38.4% 5,773 2,351 8,124 32.0%
Spring 2016 43,372
8,265 51,637 41.9% 7,115 2,872 9,987 39.4%
T
otal 2015-16 104,140 19,193 123,333 100.0% 17,943 7,415 25,358 100.0%
Summer 2016 28,970 4,715 33,685 21.3% 6,126 2,472 8,598 29.7%
Fall 2016 49,692 8,904 58,596 37.0%
7,015 2,912 9,927 34.3%
Spring 2017 55,615
10,477 66,092 41.7% 7,804 2,640 10,444 36.1%
T
otal 2016-17 134,277 24,096 158,873 100.0% 20,945 8,024 28,969 100.0%
*Includes all distance learning courses based on course technology indicator (primarily online).
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-67
Enrollment by Location (Campus, Site, International Location)
Headcount of Students by Course Location – 2017-18
Undergraduate Graduate Unclassified Total
Campuses:
Summer Fall Spring Summer Fall Spring Summer Fall Spring Summer Fall Spring
Main Campus - Tallahassee*
Leon County 16,201 31,739 30,301 5,019 7,649 7,332 660 713 669 21,880 40,101 38,292
Panama City, Florida Campus 556 791 788 96 120 110 41 34 47 693 945 945
Republic of Panama Campus 160 120 91 6 10 5 303 293 331 469 423 427
Sites in Florida:
Gainesville, Florida 0 1 0 33 16 26 1 0 0 34 17 26
Jacksonville, Florida 0 0 4 47 21 25 0 0 0 47 21 29
Orlando, Florida 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 135 0 0 135 0
Sarasota, Florida 0 0 0 13 45 52 0 0 0 13 45 52
St. Petersburg, Florida 0 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 4
Sites Outside Florida:
New York, New York 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 0
Taos, New Mexico 19 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 21 0 0
International Programs:
Beijing, China 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0
Belfast, Ireland 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
Bimini/Eleuth., Bahamas 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Cetamura, Italy 9 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 11 0 0
Chiriqui, Rep. of Panama 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0
Dublin, Ireland 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0
Dubrovnik, Croatia 3 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0
Florence, Italy 168 31 46 4 1 1 5 2 6 177 34 53
Leysin, Switzerland 35 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 35 0 0
London, England 242 65 56 54 0 9 32 26 35 328 91 100
Moscow, Russia 10 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 11 0 0
New Delhi, India 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0
Oxford, England (Law) 0 0 0 29 0 0 0 0 0 29 0 0
Paris, France 32 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 33 0 0
Prague, Czech. Republic 28 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 30 0 0
San Jose, Costa Rica 17 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 18 0 0
Sydney, Australia 7 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 12 0 0
Tianjin, China 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 15 0 0
Valencia, Spain 297 55 122 0 0 0 21 21 33 318 76 155
Other International 70 1 0 5 0 1 3 0 0 78 1 1
Total International Programs 947 152 225 109 2 12 65 49 74 1,121 203 311
Total FSU Enrollment 17,883 32,812 31,413 5,323 7,863 7,552 1,072 1,225 1,121 24,278 41,900 40,086
* The main campus headcount listed above are those students who take their entire courseload at FSU's main campus in Tallahassee. These
include Leon County facilities offering courses to Engineering, Nursing, and Social Work students among others. Below are the students who
took at least one course on FSU's main campus or other Tallahassee/Leon County locations.
Undergraduate Graduate Unclassified Total
Summer Fall Spring Summer Fall Spring Summer Fall Spring Summer Fall Spring
Main Campus - Tallahassee*
Leon County 16,452 31,886 30,445 5,138 7,677 7,412 660 721 683 22,250 40,284 38,540
Source: Summer Final Student Instruction File (SIF), Spring and Fall Preliminary Student Instruction Files (SIFP)
Online Resource: The International Programs’ website can be accessed online at: international.fsu.edu
Faculty and Staff
Photo: FSU Photo Services
Gregory Erickson
Biological Science
2018 University Distinguished Teacher
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Faculty and Staff-69
Faculty Characteristics and Citations
Of 1,883.9 filled FTE faculty positions (including College of Medicine), 28.7% hold the rank of Professor, 17.3% are Associate
Professors, 16.5% are Assistant Professors, and 37.5% are other faculty.
The median age for tenured faculty is 57; the eldest of these is 81, the youngest is 35. The median age for tenure-earning faculty is
38; the eldest of these is 79, the youngest is 25. 93% of instructional faculty hold a doctoral, professional, or terminal degree.
A total of 1,974 full-time (1,182 men and 792 women) and 422 part-time (206 men and 216 women) comprise Florida State
University’s staff whose primary responsibility is instruction, research and/or public service. Of the full-time staff, minorities make
up 21.3% of these staff members. 69.3% are white and 9.4% are non-resident aliens.
Ellen T. Zwilich (Music, 1983) and Robert Olen Butler (Fiction, 1993) are Pulitzer Prize winners on staff at Florida State University.
Members of the National Academy of Sciences to Serve on Staff at Florida State University
Lloyd M. Beidler, Biological Science
Donald L. Caspar, Biological Science (Emeritus)
Paul A. M. Dirac, Physics
Zachary Fisk, Physics
Lev P. Gor’kov, Physics
Laura Greene, Physics (currently on staff)
Louis N. Howard, Mathematics (Emeritus)
Michael Kasha, Chemistry
Harold W. Kroto, Chemistry
Robert Sanderson Mulliken, Chemical Physics
J. Robert Schrieffer, Physics (Emeritus)
Melvin E. Stern, Oceanography
J. Herbert Taylor, Biological Science
Members of the National Academy of Engineering to Serve on Staff at Florida State University
David Larbalestier, Superconducting Materials (currently on staff)
Thomas Lipo, Engineering (currently on staff)
Simon Ostrach, Engineering
Members of the National Academy of Medicine to Serve on Staff at Florida State University
Jill Quadagno, Gerontology (Emeritus) Norman Anderson (currently on staff)
Members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences to Serve on Staff at Florida State University
Roy Baumeister, Psychology (currently on staff)
Lloyd M. Beidler, Biological Science
Donald L. Caspar, Biological Science (Emeritus)
Zachary Fisk, Physics
Louis N. Howard, Mathematics (Emeritus)
Frances James, Biological Science (Emeritus)
Michael Kasha, Chemistry
Alan Marshall, Chemistry (currently on staff)
Simon Ostrach, Engineering
J. Robert Schrieffer, Physics (Emeritus)
Melvin E. Stern, Oceanography
Joe Travis, Biological Science (currently on staff)
Ellen T. Zwilich, Music (currently on staff)
Lev Gor’kov - Foreign Honorary, Physics (currently on staff)
Greg Boebinger, NHMFL (currently on staff)
Nobel Laureates to Serve on Staff at Florida State University
Konrad E. Bloch, Human Sciences
James M. Buchanan, Economics
Paul A. M. Dirac, Physics
Harold W. Kroto, Chemistry
Robert Sanderson Mulliken, Chemical Physics
J. Robert Schrieffer, Physics (Emeritus)
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship Award Winners to Serve on Staff at Florida State University:
1950 - Michael Kasha
1955 - Raymond K. Sheline
1957 - Orville Goodwin Harrold, Jr.
1958 - François Bucher
1961 - Louis N. Howard
1961 - Arthur Deshaies
1964 - Bruno Linder
1966 - J. Robert Schrieffer
1970 - Melvin Ernest Stern
1974 - Bertram H. Davis
1980 - Ellen T. Zwilich
1983 - Michael Ruse
1993 - Robert Olen Butler
1994 - Jill Quadagno
1994 - Donald L. D. Caspar
1999 - Kathleen M. Erndl
2000 - Richard L. Greaves
2002 - John Kelsay
2002 - Gary Taylor
2003 - Thomas Joiner
2003 - David Kirby
2005 - Dale A. Olsen
2005 - Mark Wingate
2009 - Jawole Willa Jo Zollar
2010 - Barbara Hamby
2010 - Ladislav Kubik
2013 - Bryan Cuevas
2016 - James Kimbrell
2017 - Antonio Mendez Esparza
Recent Fulbright Scholars to Serve on Staff at Florida State University:
2017-18 - Valliere T. Richard Auzenne, College of Motion Picture Arts 2018-19 - Joseph B Schlenoff, Chemistry
2017-18 - Machelle Denine Madsen Thompson, College of Social Work 2018-19 -
Iris Angelika Junglas, College of Business
2017-18 - Bruce R Locke, Chemical Engineering 2018-19 - Christopher J Coutts, Urb. and Reg. Planning
2017-18 - Bruce T Lamont, Business Administration 2018-19 -
Katarzyna Bugaj, College of Music
2017-18 - Ming Cui, Family and Child Sciences 2018-19 - Anne E Barrett, Sociology
2018-19 - Micah Lee Vandegrift, University Libraries 2018-19 -
Igor V Alabugin, Chemistry
Source: Office of Institutional Research; Office of Faculty Recognition
70-Faculty and Staff Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
Faculty Positions
Nine-Month Filled FTE Faculty Positions
Academic
Year
Professor
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Instructor
Other
All Ranks
2010-11
456.4
351.4
238.7
2.00
133.3
1,181.7
2011-12
447.6
327.6
213.0
1.00
120.4
1,109.6
2012-13
444.3
335.1
231.5
1.00
129.5
1,141.5
2013-14
461.5
322.1
252.0
1.00
140.1
1,176.6
2014-15
459.5
317.0
273.8
0.00
137.4
1,187.6
2015-16
450.6
317.5
283.0
0.00
154.0
1,205.2
2016-17
447.5
308.0
287.0
0.00
147.1
1,189.6
2017-18
468.3
291.3
291.0
0.00
151.3
1,201.8
2017-18 Nine- & Twelve-Month Filled FTE Faculty Positions by College
College
Professor
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Other
All
Ranks
Arts & Sciences
216.0
127.0
96.0
150.3
589.3
Business
32.0
19.0
20.0
27.0
98.0
Communication & Information
21.7
11.9
18.0
23.0
74.5
Criminology & Criminal Justice
10.0
3.0
5.0
1.5
19.5
Education
17.0
22.0
25.0
20.7
84.7
Engineering
25.0
18.0
18.0
12.5
73.5
Entrepreneurship
1.0
0.0
0.0
4.0
5.0
Fine Arts
28.0
24.0
25.0
15.0
92.0
Hospitality
3.5
0.9
3.0
3.0
10.4
Human Sciences
14.0
5.0
10.0
14.7
43.7
Law
16.0
9.0
5.0
15.0
45.0
Motion Picture Arts
1.0
1.5
0.0
20.8
23.3
Music
39.2
20.0
17.0
7.5
83.7
Nursing
4.0
4.0
7.0
12.0
27.0
Social Sciences & Public Policy
45.0
18.0
36.0
27.9
126.9
Social Work
6.0
6.0
4.0
13.9
29.9
Adm., LSI, PC, Others
18.6
7.0
2.0
293.5
321.2
Total
497.9
296.3
291.0
662.3
1,747.6
Note: Beginning in 2015-16, Filled Faculty FTE includes E&G funded, and non-E&G funded (C&G and Auxiliary) faculty. Faculty positions reported exclude
FSU's College of Medicine. See page 74 of this book for College of Medicine faculty positions.
Source: Operating Budget File 2017-18
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
Nine-Month Filled Faculty Positions by Rank
2012-13 to 2017-18
Professor
Associate Professor
Assistant Professor
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Faculty and Staff-71
Fall Headcount & Annual Fundable Student FTE per Filled Faculty Positions
Fall Headcount & Standard Student FTE per Filled Faculty FTE Positions
2008-09
2009-10
2010-11
2011-12
2012-13
2013-14
2014-15
2015-16
2016-17
2017-18
Total (Fall) Headcount
39,136
40,255
40,838
41,710
41,301
41,477
41,773
41,473
41,867
41,900
Graduate (Fall) Headcount
8,370
8,557
8,511
8,486
8,155
8,035
7,972
7,819
7,929
7,863
Total (Annual) Student FTE
37,670
38,787
39,263
40,048
39,645
39,371
39,379
39,385
40,065
40,113
Graduate (Annual) Student FTE
8,049
8,136
8,187
8,248
8,034
7,937
7,821
7,793
7,870
7,712
9-Month Filled FTE Positions
1,259
1,232
1,205
1,111
1,142
1,178
1,189
1,206
1,190
1,203
Headcount per 9-month filled
31.1
32.7
33.9
37.5
36.2
35.2
35.1
34.4
35.2
34.8
Graduate HC per 9-month filled
6.6
6.9
7.1
7.6
7.1
6.8
6.7
6.5
6.7
6.5
Student FTE per 9-month filled
21.4
22.5
23.2
25.5
24.4
23.4
23.2
22.8
33.7
33.4
Graduate FTE per 9-month filled
4.4
4.5
4.5
5.0
4.7
4.4
4.4
4.3
6.6
6.4
9- & 12-Mo. Filled FTE Positions
1,597
1,565
1,540
1,464
1,509
1,558
1,563
1,917
1,873
1,884
Headcount per 9- & 12-mo. filled Fac.
24.5
25.7
26.5
28.5
27.4
26.6
26.7
21.6
22.4
22.2
Grad. HC per 9- & 12-mo. filled Fac.
5.2
5.5
5.5
5.8
5.4
5.2
5.1
4.1
4.2
4.2
Student FTE per 9- & 12-mo. filled
16.9
17.7
18.2
19.3
18.5
17.7
17.6
14.3
21.4
21.3
Graduate FTE per 9- & 12-mo. filled
3.5
3.5
3.6
3.8
3.5
3.3
3.3
2.7
4.2
4.1
Tenured Faculty
822
825
829
817
827
822
821
832
833
834
Headcount per Tenured Faculty
47.6
48.8
49.3
51.1
49.9
50.5
50.9
49.8
50.3
50.2
Grad. HC per Tenured Faculty
10.2
10.4
10.3
10.4
9.9
9.8
9.7
9.4
9.5
9.4
Student FTE per Tenured Faculty
32.8
33.6
33.7
34.7
33.7
33.5
33.6
33.0
48.1
48.1
Graduate FTE per Tenured Faculty
6.7
6.7
6.6
6.7
6.4
6.3
6.3
6.2
9.4
9.2
*Beginning in 2015-16, Filled Faculty FTE includes E&G funded, and non-E&G funded (C&G and Auxiliary) faculty.
Notes: The College of Medicine faculty and fall headcount are included in this report. FTE is defined by the national standard, and does not include M.D. Instruction.
Source: Operating Budget File, Tenure and Benefits Survey, Preliminary (fall headcount) and Final (student FTE) Student Instruction Files
700
800
900
1,000
1,100
1,200
1,300
1,400
1,500
1,600
1,700
1,800
1,900
2,000
20,000
22,000
24,000
26,000
28,000
30,000
32,000
34,000
36,000
38,000
40,000
42,000
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
Y2Y1
Fall Headcount and Filled FTE Positions
Total Fall Student Headcount (Y1)
9- &12-Month Filled Faculty FTE (Y2)
9-Month Filled Faculty FTE (Y2)
Annual Student FTE (Y1)
Tenured Faculty (Y2)
72-Faculty and Staff Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
Mean Salary by Rank for Nine-Month Filled Faculty, 2017-18
College
Professor
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Other
Arts & Sciences
$127,833
$86,304
$82,982
$47,866
Business
$178,627
$164,773
$161,059
$79,457
Communication & Information
$119,634
$94,934
$80,350
$74,077
Criminology & Criminal Justice
$144,155
$95,519
$77,689
Education
$117,832
$86,721
$74,610
$63,559
Engineering
$142,043
$103,243
$91,865
Entrepreneurship
$121,804
$82,128
Fine Arts
$94,290
$78,039
$64,466
$57,824
Hospitality
$131,789
$107,670
$60,241
Human Sciences
$131,529
$91,645
$77,198
$68,100
Law
$208,519
$166,011
$125,781
$72,258
Motion Picture Arts
$154,051
$80,569
$134,308
Music
$99,212
$73,840
$68,720
$71,164
Nursing
$129,722
$95,346
$84,033
$79,781
Social Sciences & Public Policy
$140,279
$102,667
$88,781
$81,939
Social Work
$119,515
$86,834
$81,306
$61,449
Nine-month Mean
$132,108
$90,763
$77,973
$84,585
Note: Average faculty salaries calculated on filled, full-time positions only. The overall nine-month mean includes faculty in non-academic areas.
Faculty positions reported exclude College of Medicine. See page 74 of this book for College of Medicine mean salaries.
Source: Operating Budget File 2017-18
$0
$20
$40
$60
$80
$100
$120
$140
$160
$180
$200
FSU Avg.A&S BUS C&I CRM EDU ENG ENT FA HSP HSC LAW MP MUS NUR SSC SWK
Thousands
Professor
Associate Professor
Assistant Professor
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Faculty and Staff-73
Faculty Salary Trends
Nine-Month Filled Faculty Average Salary by Rank
Percent
Associate
Percent
Assistant
Percent
Year
Professor
Increase
Professor
Increase
Professor
Increase
2002-03
$85,173
4.8%
$59,981
3.2%
$54,627
3.4%
2003-04
$88,150
3.5%
$61,202
2.0%
$55,925
2.4%
2004-05
$89,092
1.1%
$62,495
2.1%
$58,105
3.9%
2005-06
$92,222
3.5%
$65,384
4.6%
$60,094
3.4%
2006-07
$98,609
6.9%
$68,792
5.2%
$65,410
8.9%
2007-08
$100,431
1.9%
$70,661
2.7%
$66,393
1.5%
2008-09
$101,364
0.9%
$70,836
0.3%
$67,504
1.7%
2009-10
$104,603
3.2%
$72,880
2.9%
$70,639
4.6%
2010-11
$103,696
-0.9%
$73,755
1.2%
$71,900
1.8%
2011-12
$108,176
4.3%
$75,779
2.7%
$75,746
5.4%
2012-13
$109,378
1.1%
$76,674
1.2%
$77,229
2.0%
2013-14
$114,574
4.8%
$78,495
2.4%
$81,255
5.2%
2014-15
$115,641
0.9%
$81,337
3.6%
$81,835
0.7%
2015-16
$120,467
4.2%
$85,163
4.7%
$83,867
2.5%
2016-17
$127,745
6.0%
$91,048
6.9%
$87,034
3.8%
2017-18
$132,108
3.4%
$95,341
4.7%
$86,977
-0.1%
Note: Beginning in 2015-16, Filled Faculty FTE includes E&G funded, and non-E&G funded (C&G and Auxiliary) faculty. Average faculty
salaries calculated on filled, full-time positions only; does not include the College of Medicine (see page 74 for College of Medicine mean salaries).
Source: Operating Budget File
$60
$70
$80
$90
$100
$110
$120
$130
$140
2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
Average Salary Thousands
Nine-Month Filled Faculty Average Salary by Rank
2008-09 to 2017-18
Professor
Associate Professor
Assistant Professor
74-Faculty and Staff Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
College of Medicine Faculty
Nine- & Twelve-Month State Funded Filled FTE Faculty Positions for the College of Medicine
Year
Professor
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Instructor
Other
All Ranks
2011-12
35.5
26.6
20.5
1.0
15.0
98.6
2012-13
34.9
28.0
21.8
1.0
18.3
103.9
2013-14
35.9
28.0
20.1
1.0
20.3
105.2
2014-15
35.0
29.5
20.1
0.0
19.0
103.6
2015-16
34.6
32.0
23.3
0.0
35.0
124.8
2016-17
41.2
34.3
19.8
0.0
39.4
134.7
2017-18
43.1
30.1
19.8
0.0
43.4
136.3
College of Medicine Average Faculty Salary
12-Month Faculty
Associate
Assistant
Professor
Professor
Professor
Other
2010-11
$200,995
$155,365
$139,953
$93,484
2011-12
$204,045
$139,411
$122,717
$96,539
2012-13
$208,125
$144,015
$117,668
$92,926
2013-14
$207,676
$145,674
$116,189
$90,182
2014-15
$209,797
$145,287
$113,157
$93,935
2015-16
$217,471
$154,797
$112,100
$86,492
2016-17
$219,982
$155,158
$116,687
$90,955
2017-18
$225,073
$161,703
$117,926
$88,236
Note: The College of Medicine 9-month faculty (Professors, Associate Professors, Assistant Professors) were restructured to a 12-month contract beginning in 2011-12.
Beginning in 2015-16, Filled Faculty FTE and Filled Faculty Average Salary includes E&G funded, and non-E&G funded (C&G and Auxiliary) faculty.
Source: Operating Budget File
10
20
30
40
50
2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
Nine & Twelve-Month Filled College of Medicine Faculty Positions by Rank
Professor
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
$110,000
$150,000
$190,000
$230,000
2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
12-Month Medical Faculty Average Salary
Professor
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Faculty and Staff-75
Florida State University defines "Instructional Faculty" in salary surveys and studies as 9- and 12-month faculty with limited or
no administrative responsibilities who have one of the following characteristics:
Ranked faculty titles of Eminent Scholar, Professor, Associate Professor, Assistant Professor, Instructor, or Lecturer (including
those with administrative titles of assistant dean, chair, associate/assistant chair, associate/assistant program director); or
Non-ranked faculty who teach more than one course including those with titles of Associate-In, Assistant-In, and Research
Associate/Scholar Scientist, and College of Medicine Faculty Administrator.
Sources of Doctoral Degree, Instructional Faculty
The universities listed below are those from which four or more instructional faculty earned their doctorate. Over
92% of full-time instructional faculty at FSU have an earned doctorate. This table was last updated in 2018.
University Number University Number
Arizona State University 15
Brown University 11
California Inst. of Technology 7
Carnegie Mellon University 5
Columbia University 14
Cornell University 11
Duke University 13
Florida State University 235
Harvard University 20
Indiana University 28
Iowa State University 7
Johns Hopkins University 6
Massachusetts Institute of Technology 7
Michigan State University 16
New York University 15
North Carolina State University 8
Northwestern University 12
Nova Southeastern University 4
Ohio State University 20
Pennsylvania State University 24
Princeton University 15
Purdue University 14
Rice University 5
Rutgers University 12
Stanford University 18
SUNY - Stony Brook 8
Syracuse University 5
Texas A & M University 10
University of Alabama 6
University of Alabama-Birmingham 4
University of Arizona 10
University of British Columbia (Canada) 5
University of California - Berkeley 29
University of California - Davis 4
University of California - Irvine 4
University of California - Los Angeles 16
University of California - San Diego 6
University of California - Santa Barbara 5
University of Chicago 25
University of Cincinnati 4
University of Florida 34
University of Georgia 20
University of Illinois 30
University of Iowa 7
University of Kansas 6
University of Kentucky 6
University of Maryland 6
University of Massachusetts - Amherst 6
University of Miami 8
University of Michigan 24
University of Minnesota 13
University of Missouri 9
University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill 25
University of Notre Dame 7
University of Pennsylvania 17
University of Pittsburgh 5
University of Rochester 10
University of Southern California 10
University of Tennessee 11
University of Texas - Austin 33
University of Toronto (Canada) 4
University of Utah 5
University of Virginia 17
University of Washington 9
University of Western Ontario (Canada) 4
University of Wisconsin - Madison 20
Vanderbilt University 8
Virginia Polytechnic & State University 8
Washington University - St. Louis 5
Yale University 12
Source: Office of Institutional Research; CDS Instructional Faculty
76-Faculty and Staff Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Tenured Faculty by Age, 2017-18
Tenured Faculty 25-30 31-35 36-40 41-45 46-50 51-55 56-60 61-65 66-70 71-75 76+ Total
Arts and Sciences 0 0 9 48 59 51 57 52 36 20 15 347
Business 0 1 2 7 11 7 3 9 8 2 1 51
Communication & Information 0 0 0 2 8 7 2 7 7 1 1 35
Criminology & Criminal Justice 0 0 1 1 4 1 0 1 0 3 1 12
Education 0 0 1 10 6 5 3 7 6 3 0 41
Engineering 0 0 2 6 6 8 7 6 4 1 0 40
Entrepreneurship 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 2
Fine Arts 0 0 1 7 4 6 11 6 11 3 2 51
Hospitality 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 4
Human Sciences 0 0 1 0 3 3 3 4 3 2 0 19
Law 0 0 6 3 3 1 4 4 3 1 0 25
Medicine 0 0 2 3 4 6 8 6 5 1 0 35
Motion Picture Arts 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 3
Music 0 0 0 2 9 12 9 10 12 4 1 59
Nursing 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 2 1 0 7
Social Sciences & Public Policy 0 0 3 13 10 9 7 7 5 3 4 61
Social Work 0 0 0 3 1 0 2 3 2 2 0 13
Other Departments and Offices* 0
0 0 2 3 3 6 2 7 6 0 29
Total 0 1 28 108 132 121 125 127 114 53 25 834
Tenure Earning Faculty 25-30
31-35 36-40 41-45 46-50 51-55 56-60 61-65 66-70 71-75 76+ Total
Arts and Sciences 8 30 43 18 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 103
Business 4 8 6 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 24
Communication & Information 1 4 5 5 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 20
Criminology & Criminal Justice 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6
Education 2 8 12 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 28
Engineering 0 3 11 4 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 21
Fine Arts 0 4 6 3 3 4 2 2 1 0 0 25
Hospitality 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
Human Sciences 2 2 3 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 12
Law 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
Medicine 0 0 2 1 3 3 0 0 1 0 0 10
Motion Picture Arts 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
Music 0 1 7 5 6 0 0 0 0 0 1 20
Nursing 0 0 2 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 7
Social Sciences & Public Policy 0 14 15 6 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 37
Social Work 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
Other Departments and Offices* 0
0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3
Total 18 82 116 55 31 17 3 2 2 0 1 327
* Other departments and offices include: Office of Distance Learning, The Graduate School, ISPA, LSI, National High Magnetic Field Lab., Office of the
President, Office of the Provost, Office of Research, PC Campus, Center for Civic Education & Service, and Undergraduate Studies.
Source: Office of Institutional Research (Employee File)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81
Number of Tenured Faculty
Tenured
Tenure-Earning
The Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Faculty-77
Faculty Senate
The nature of faculty involvement in the governance system of Florida State University is set forth in the Constitution of
the University, which designates the Faculty Senate as the basic legislative body of the institution. This structure has been in place
since May 1931, when an amendment to the institution's constitution establishing the Senate was adopted by the general faculty
and approved by the Board of Control of the state. A number of major amendments have been made since that time relating to
elections, committees, and other matters. Prior to 1974 the President of the University was the presiding officer of the Senate,
but an amendment that year changed the procedure to stipulate that the Senate elect annually its own President from the elected
Senators comprising the body.
The Faculty Senate is composed of at least one elected representative from each college and school and one
representative each from the Librarians and the Developmental Research School. Except for the two latter representatives, only
full-time instructors, assistant professors, associate professors, and professors are eligible for representation in and election to the
Senate. Senators serve two-year terms which begin at the April meeting of the Senate, at which time the President of the Senate is
elected. The Steering Committee is composed of seven members elected by the voting members of the Senate to staggered two-
year terms; the President of the Senate serves as chair of the committee.
The Faculty Senate formulates measures for maintaining a comprehensive educational policy and for maximum use of the
University's intellectual resources. It determines and defines University-wide policies on academic matters, including Liberal
Studies policy, admission, grading standards, and requirements for the awarding of degrees. The Senate may also formulate
opinions on any subject of interest to the University and adopt resolutions thereon.
Presidents of the Faculty Senate
Wayne C. Minnick 1973-74
Fred L. Standley 1974-75
Wayne C. Minnick 1975-76
James E. Pitts 1976-77
Gregory R. Choppin 1977-78
James E. Pitts 1978-79
Clifford K. Madsen 1979-80
Fred L. Standley 1980-81
Katherine B. Hoffman 1981-82
H. Frederick Kreimer 1982-83
Steve Edwards 1983-85
*H. Frederick Kriemer 1984-85
Merrill B. Hintikka 1985-87
**James E. Pitts 1987-88
Leo Sandon 1988-90
Alan Mabe 1990-92
Fred Leysieffer 1992-94
Marilyn Young 1994-96
Marie Cowart 1996-98
Robley Light 1998-00
Karen Laughlin 2000-02
Valliere Richard Auzenne 2002-05
James Cobbe 2005-07
Jayne Standley 2007-09
Eric C. Walker 2009-11
Sandra Lewis 2011-13
Gary Tyson 2013-15
Susan Fiorito 2015-17
Todd Adams 2017-
* Elected Senate President for the remainder of Dr. Edwards’ term when Edwards became the Dean of the Faculties.
** After the death of Dr. Hintikka on January 1, 1987, Dr. Pitts was authorized to fulfill functions of the President for the
remainder of the term. Dr. Pitts was elected President for the 1987-88 term.
2018-2019 Steering Committee
Todd Adams (President) Arts and Sciences
Kristine Harper (Vice Chair) Arts and Sciences
Bridgett Birmingham Strozier Library
Eric Chicken Arts and Sciences
Petra Doan Social Sciences
Charles Hofacker Business
Nancy Rogers Music
Jayne Standley Music
Online Resource: The Faculty Senate’s website can be accessed online at: http://facsenate.fsu.edu/
78-Faculty and Staff Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Full-Time Employees by Occupational Category, Ethnicity & Gender, Fall 2017
Occupational Category
Asian
Black
Hispanic
American
Indian
Hawaiian/
Pacific
White
Non-Res.
Alien
Multi-
Racial
Total
Total Full-Time Employees 306 1,179 324 16 8 4,334 210 87 6,464
Female 110 616 175 5 2 2,121 75 53 3,157
Male 196 563 149 11 6 2,213 135 34 3,307
Faculty - Instructional, Research, Public Service 222 80 92 4 0 1,368 186 22 1,974
Female 71 47 43 1 0 549 65 16 792
Male 151 33 49 3 0 819 121 6 1,182
Librarians, Other Teaching, Instr. Support 16 84 54 2 1 437 4 9 607
Female 10 55 33 1 1 296 2 8 406
Male 6 29 21 1 0 141 2 1 201
Management 2 28 11 0 1 263 1 4 310
Female 0 16 2 0 0 130 1 3 152
Male 2 12 9 0 1 133 0 1 158
Business & Financial Operations 10 174 47 0 2 636 2 15 886
Female 8 120 39 0 1 451 2 10 631
Male 2 54 8 0 1 185 0 5 255
Computer, Engineering, & Science 29 47 26 2 3 502 12 11 632
Female 8 15 4 0 0 117 2 1 147
Male 21 32 22 2 3 385 10 10 485
Community Service, Legal Arts, & Media 10 70 40 2 0 357 4 11 494
Female 5 39 21 0 0 174 2 5 246
Male 5 31 19 2 0 183 2 6 248
Healthcare Practitioners & Technical 5 22 5 1 0 80 1 1 115
Female 3 18 4 0 0 55 1 0 81
Male 2 4 1 1 0 25 0 1 34
Service 2 426 14 2 1 176 0 3 624
Female 0 173 6 1 0 45 0 2 227
Male 2 253 8 1 1 131 0 1 397
Office and Administrative Support 8 180 30 3 0 363 0 11 595
Female 5 133 23 2 0 298 0 8 469
Male 3 47 7 1 0 65 0 3 126
Natural Resources, Construction, & Maint. 2 64 5 0 0 149 0 0 220
Female 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 6
Male 2 64 5 0 0 143 0 0 214
Production, Transportation & Moving 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 7
Female 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Male 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 7
Source: IPEDS, 2017-18 Human Resources Survey
White
White
American Indian, Native
Alaskan, or Hawaiian
Asian
Asian
Hispanic
Hispanic
Multiracial
Black
Black
Non-Resident Alien
Non-Resident Alien
Female Male
0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 2,500 3,000
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Faculty and Staff-79
State Appropriated Employee Raise Information - Percentages
YEAR FACULTY A & P CAREER SERVICE/USPS
1991-92 e 0.00 * 0.00 0.00
1992-93 0.00 * 0.00 0.00
1993-94 b 3.00 t 3.00 3.00
1994-95 c 4.00 t 4.00 4.00
1995-96 a 3.00 t 3.00 3.00
1996-97 a 3.00 t, p 3.00 3.00
1997-98 a All 12-month Employees All 9-month Employees All 10-month Employees
$1,200 (if salary is < $20,000) $900 (if salary is < $15,000) $1,000 (if salary is < $16,666)
$1,000 (if salary is $20,001 to $36,000) $750 (if salary is $15,001 to $27,000) $834 (if salary is $16,667 to $30,000)
2.78% (if salary is > $36,000) 2.78% (if salary is > $27,000) 2.78% (if salary is > $30,000)
1998-99 b Out of Unit Faculty** Out of Unit A&P*** Out of Unit USPS****
$1,200 (if salary is < $20,000) $1,200 (if salary is < $20,000) $1,200 (if salary is < $20,000)
$1,000 (if salary is $20,001 to $36,000) $1,000 (if salary is $20,001 to $36,000) $1,000 (if salary is $20,001-$36,000)
2.78% (if salary is > $36,000) 2.78% (if salary is > $36,000) 2.78% (if salary is > $36,000)
1999-00 b 2.80 j 2.80 ($1,000 minimum) 2.80 ($1,000 minimum)
2000-01 b 2.50 2.50 2.50
2001-02 c 2.50 k 2.50 ($600 minimum) 2.50 ($600 minimum)
2002-03 b 2.50 l 2.50 ($600 minimum) 2.50 ($600 minimum)
2003-04 d 2.00 m 2.00 m 2.00 m
2004-05 0.00 n 0.00 n 0.00 n
2005-06 i 3.60 3.60 3.60
2006-07 b 3.00 3.00 3.00
2007-08 0.00 n 0.00 n 0.00 n
2008-09 0.00 0.00 0.00
2009-10 0.00 0.00 0.00
2010-11 0.00 0.00 0.00
2011-12 0.00 0.00 0.00
2012-13 0.00 0.00 0.00
2013-14 b $1,400 (if salary <= $40,000) $1,400 (if salary <= $40,000) $1,400 (if salary <= $40,000)
$1,000 (if salary >$40,000) $1,000 (if salary > $40,000) $1,000 (if salary > $40,000)
2014-15 0.00 0.00 0.00
2015-16 0.00 0.00 0.00
2016-17 0.00 0.00 0.00
2017-18 0.00 0.00 0.00
Notes:
a Effective January 1
b Effective October 1
c Effective November 1
d Effective December 1
e 3% raises for 1991-92 were to be effective January 1, 1992; financial cutbacks moved this to February 14 before being completely rescinded. On March 11, 1993,
the Florida Supreme Court ruled the legislature did not have the authority to rescind the raises and that in-unit employees were due back pay for January 1 -
June 30, 1992.
i Effective August 1 for 12-month employees; August 9 for 9-month faculty.
t $5,000 permanent rate adjustments were awarded to 130 faculty through the Teacher Incentive Program.
p 9% permanent rate adjustment was awarded to 41 professors under the Professor Excellence Program.
* Faculty promotions paid from available funds.
** For in-unit faculty, there is a $500 minimum for 9-month, $667 for 12-month; promotions; & the remaining amount of the 2.788% pool is for dept merit.
*** For in-unit A&P, there is a merit pool of 2.788%.
**** For in-unit USPS: AFSCME employees get 3% across the board with a $1,000 minimum; PBA steps are adjusted by the top two tiers of the three tier plan; FNA
steps are going up by 3%.
j For in-unit faculty, there is a $500 min. for 9-month, and $667 min. for 12-month.
k Faculty average. Includes merit, minimums, and most of the cost of promotions; in-unit faculty minimums were $600 for 9-month and $800 for 12-month; out-
of-unit faculty minimum was $600 for 12-month
l Faculty minimums were $450 for 9-mo., $500 for 10-mo. & $600 for 12-mo. Cost of promotions was paid from rate/salary provided for vacant salary positions.
m Faculty minimum/maximum increases were $375/$1,050 for 9-month, $417/$1,167 for 10-month, and $600/$1,400 for 12-month. Cost of promotions was
paid from rate and salary provided for vacant salary positions. The minimum/maximum increases for A&P and Career Service/USPS employees were
$500/$1,400.
n $1,000 one-time bonus
Source: FSU Budget Office
Online Resource: Position and rate information is available on the Budget Office website at http://budget.fsu.edu/Positions-Rate
Awards and Honors
Photo: FSU Photography Services
2018-19 Lawton Distinguished Professor
Pamela L. Perrewé
Management
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Awards and Honors-81
Eminent Scholar Chairs
Eminent Scholar Chairs have been established to attract outstanding faculty to the Florida State University to provide excellence in teaching
and research in a designated scholarly field. These Chairs are established through contributions from the private sector and matching funds from the
State of Florida. As of July 2017, Florida State University had the following Eminent Scholar Chairs.
Eminent Scholar Chair Department Person Filling Chair
Ada-Belle Winthrop-King in French Modern Languages Martin Munro
Bank of America in Finance (formerly Barnett Bank) Finance James Ang
Ben Weider in Napoleonic and French Revolutionary Studies History Rafe Blaufarb
Burt Reynolds in Regional and Professional Theatre Theatre Visiting - Heather Provost
Charlotte Edwards Maguire, M.D. Endowed Chair in Geriatrics Medicine Ken Brummel-Smith
Curtis Mayes Orpheus Chair in Musicology Music Denise Von Glahn
DeVoe L. Moore & Family for the Study of Critical Issues in
Economic Policy and Government Economics/Social Sciences Keith Ihlanfeldt
Don Fuqua in Engineering and Science Mechanical Engineering Farrukh Alvi
Edward Ball in International Law Law Frederick Abbott
Embarq in Engineering Electrical & Computer Engineering Jim Zheng
Eminent Scholar Chair in Family & Child Sciences Family & Child Sciences/Human Sciences Francis D. Fincham
Fannie Wilson Smith in Banking Finance David Humphrey
Francis Eppes Eminent Scholar Psychology Roy Baumeister
Frank & Yolonde Fowler in Biological Sciences Biological Sciences Peter Frasere
FSCW / Conradi Memorial Eminent Scholar Psychology Karl Anders Ericsson
George R. Langford Family in Arts and Sciences Classics Visiting - Susan Rotroff
Gus A. Stavros in Economic Education Economics/Education James D. Gwartney
Harold & Barbara Chastain in Real Estate Risk Mgmt/Insur., Real Estate & Bus. Law Visiting – G. Stacy Sirmans
Haywood & Betty Taylor in Business Administration Management Pamela L. Perrewe
Jerry Collins in Public Administration Public Administration & Policy Richard Feiock
Jim and Betty Ann Rodgers in Medicine Biomedical Sciences/Medicine Pradeep Bhide
John & Hallie Quinn for Renewal of American Heritage
and American Free Enterprise Social Sciences/Economics R. Mark Isaac
John R. Kerr in Marketing Marketing Joe Cronin
LeRoy Collins in Civic Education and Political Science Political Science Carol Weissert
Lucille P. and Elbert B. Shelfer in Music Music Multiple (17)
Marcus Bailey and Betty Graves Shelfer in Music Theatre Music/Music Theatre Douglas Fisher
Maximillian E. and Marion O. Hoffman in Theatre Theatre Kevin Covert
Patty Hill Smith in Finance Finance Yingmei Cheng
Payne H. and Charlotte Hodges Midyette in Insurance Risk Mgmt/Insur., Real Estate & Bus. Law Patricia Born
Pearl S. Tyner Distinguished Professor Dance Gerri Houlihan
Reubin O’D. Askew in Florida Government and Politics Public Administration & Policy Frances Berr
Richard W. Ervin in Law Law Amit Agarwal
Rod and Hope Brim in Economics Economics David A. Macpherson
Ronald and Carolyn Hobbs in Statistics Statistics Deb Sinha
Sir M. James Lighthill in Mathematics & Computational Science Mathematics Mohammed Hussaini
Syde P. Deeb in Political Science Political Science William D. Berry
Thomas L. Williams, Jr. in Information & Management Sciences Management Information Systems Bruce Lamont
Tobias Simon Chair in Public Law Law Fernando Teson
University Eminent Scholar Chair in Engineering Engineering Lou Cattafesta
William H. & Lucyle T. Werkmeister in Philosophy Philosophy Alfred Mele
William H. & Lucyle T. Werkmeister in Philosophy Philosophy Michael Ruse
William R. & Lenore Mote in Fisheries Ecology & Enhancement Biological Science Pete Peterson
William R. & Lenore Mote in Marine Biology Biological Science Visiting - Peter Edmunds
Unnamed Chair Communication John Mayo
Unnamed Chair Communication Marilyn Young
Unnamed Chair Communication Ed Worting
Unnamed Chair Information/Library Science Ronald Blazek
Unnamed Chair Information/Library Science Thomas Hart
Unnamed Chair Information/Library Science Jane Robbins
Wiley and Lucilla Housewright in Music Music Rotating
Bernard F. Sliger in Engineering Engineering Vacant
Joy S. Jinks in Community & Organizational Change Urban and Regional Planning Vacant
Mildred and Claude Pepper in Social Gerontology Sociology/Aging Vacant
Mina Jo Powell in Neuromuscular & Neurological Sciences Medicine Vacant
SunTrust in Trust and Investment Management Finance Vacant
University Eminent Scholar Chair NHMFL Vacant
Vincent V. & Agatha Thursby Visual Arts & Dance Vacant
82-Awards and Honors Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Eppes, Daisy Parker Flory and McKenzie Professors
Eppes Professors
The Eppes professorship is named after Francis Eppes, the grandson of President Thomas Jefferson, who played a vital role in
convincing the Florida Legislature to locate The Seminary West of the Suwannee, FSU's institutional predecessor, in Tallahassee.
Over and above professors holding the university's Eminent Scholar chairs, the Francis Eppes Professorship is the ultimate
honor, given to a few professors who are ranked at the very top of their field, who portray genuine leadership qualities and who
are committed role models for their students. The Eppes professors are often deemed "Super Professors" because of the high
quality of their character, vision and intellect.
Eppes Professor Department Date of Designation
Charles R. McClure Information Studies August 9, 1999
Ellen T. Zwilich Music August 9, 1999
Gerald R. Ferris Management August 8, 2000
Leonard L. LaPointe Communication Disorders August 8, 2000
Robert O. Butler English/Creative Writing August 8, 2000
Suzanne Farrell Dance August 8, 2000
John T. Scholz Political Science August 8, 2001
Max D. Gunzburger Scientific Computing August 8, 2002
Roy F. Baumeister Psychology December 23, 2002
Philip Froelich Oceanography August 8, 2003
Harold M. Kroto Chemistry & Biochemistry October 1, 2004
David C. Larbalestier Mechanical Engineering/NHMFL July 1, 2006
Barbara R. Foorman School of Teacher Education August 9, 2006
Daisy Parker Flory Alumni Professors
The award was established in 1985 to honor Dr. Daisy Parker Flory, Professor of Political Science, who was Dean of the Faculties
from 1973 until her retirement in 1984. The award is given to recognize and honor faculty who have contributed to the
University through their exemplary and sustained service to students, faculty, discipline/profession, and community.
Daisy Parker Flory Alumni Professors Department Date of Designation
Clifford K. Madsen Music 1985-86
Fred Standley English 1985-86
Patricia Y. Martin Sociology 1989-90
McKenzie Professors
These awards, funded by Sarah P. and W. Guy McKenzie, Sr. (formally funded by the FSU Foundation), honor full-time, tenured
professors who exemplify high standards of performance in teaching, research and service.
McKenzie Professors Department Date of Designation
Janet G. Burroway English 1987
Thomas R. Dye Government; Policy Sciences 1987
Jaako Hintikka Philosophy 1987
Louis N. Howard Mathematics 1987
William O. Winstead Music 1987
Karen J. Berkley Psychology 1989
David K. Kirby English 1989
Christopher Hunter Mathematics 1991
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Awards and Honors-83
The President & Provost’s Named Professorship Program
Named Professorships are a means of recognizing and honoring outstanding faculty in the colleges of Florida State University.
Named in 1999-2000
T
itle of Named Professorship College Department
William J. Cloonan Richard L. Chapple Prof. of Modern Languages & Linguistics Arts & Sciences Modern Languages & Ling.
Nancy T. de Grummond M. Lynette Thompson Professor of Classics Arts & Sciences Classics
Zachary Fisk Paul A. M. Dirac Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Stanley E. Gontarski Sarah Herndon Professor of English Arts & Sciences English
Vasken Hagopian Joseph E. Lannutti Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Frances C. James Pasquale Graziadei Professor of Biological Science Arts & Sciences Biological Science
Neil T. Jumonville William Warren Rogers Professor of History Arts & Sciences History
David E. Loper George W. Devore Professor of Geological Sciences Arts & Sciences Geological Sciences
Alan G. Marshall Kasha Professor of Chemistry Arts & Sciences Chemistry & Biochemistry
Joseph R. McElrath William Hudson Rogers Professor of English Arts & Sciences English
Richard L. Pfeffer Carl-Gustaf Rossby Professor of Meteorology Arts & Sciences Meteorology
Melvin E. Stern V. W. Ekman Professor of Oceanography Arts & Sciences Oceanography
Walter R. Tschinkel Margaret Y. Menzel Professor of Biological Science Arts & Sciences Biological Science
Richard K. Wagner Alfred Binet Professor of Psychology Arts & Sciences Psychology
Jack T. Fiorito J. Frank Dame Professor of Management Business Management
Carol A. Darling Margaret Rector Sandels Professor of Human Sciences Human Sciences Family & Child Sciences
Richard R. Portman Gordon Sawyer Professor of Recording Arts MP Arts Motion Picture Arts
Andre Thomas Owen F. Sellers Professor of Music Music Music
William D. Berry Marian D. Irish Professor of Political Science Social Sciences Political Science
David A. MacPherson Abba Lerner Professor of Economics Social Sciences Economics
Willa Jo (Jawole) Zollar Nancy Smith Fichter Professor of Dance Visual Arts & Dance Dance
Named in 2000-2001
T
itle of Named Professorship College Department
Wendy Bishop Kellogg W. Hunt Professor of English Arts & Sciences English
John L. Bryant Orville G. Harrold Professor of Mathematics Arts & Sciences Mathematics
John A. Corrigan Edwin S. Gaustad Professor of Religion Arts & Sciences Religion
John G. Dorsey Katherine Blood Hoffman Professor of Chemistry Arts & Sciences Chemistry & Biochemistry
Marc E. Freeman Lloyd M. Beidler Professor of Biological Science Arts & Sciences Biological Science
William F. Herrnkind Robert K. Godfrey Professor of Biological Science Arts & Sciences Biological Science
Robert A. Holton Matthew Suffness Professor of Chemistry Arts & Sciences Chemistry & Biochemistry
Thomas E. Joiner Bright-Burton Professor of Psychology Arts & Sciences Psychology
John E. Kelsay Richard L. Rubenstein Professor of Religion Arts & Sciences Religion
Kirby W. Kemper John David Fox Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
William T. Lhamon George M. Harper Professor of English Arts & Sciences English
Nancy H. Marcus Mary Sears Professor of Oceanography Arts & Sciences Oceanography
Ian W. McKeague Ralph A. Bradley Professor of Statistics Arts & Sciences Statistics
Sheila Ortiz-Taylor Francis G. Townsend Professor of English Arts & Sciences English
Joseph F. Owens Guenter Schwarz Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Mark F. Pietralunga Victor Oelschläger Professor of Modern Languages Arts & Sciences Modern Languages & Ling.
Mark A. Riley Raymond K. Sheline Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Friedrich K. Stephan Curt P. Richter Professor of Psychology & Neuroscience Arts & Sciences Psychology
W. Jeffrey Tatum Olivia Nelson Dorman Professor of Classics Arts & Sciences Classics
Joseph K. Torgesen Robert M. Gagne Professor of Psychology & Education Arts & Sciences Psychology
K. Michele Kacmar Charles A. Rovetta Professor of Management Business Management
Amy M. Wetherby L. L. Schendel Professor of Communication Disorders Communication Communication Disorders
Marilyn J. Young Wayne C. Minnick Professor of Communication Communication Communication
Joseph C. Beckham Allan Tucker Prof. of Educational Policy Studies & Leadership Education Ed. Leadership & Policy Studies
Namas Chandra Krishnamurty Karamcheti Professor of Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
Michael H. Peters Elvin J. Dantin Professor of Engineering Engineering Chemical Engineering
Hsu-Pin (Ben) Wang Simon Ostrach Professor of Engineering Engineering Industrial & Manufacturing Eng.
Emily M. Haymes C. Etta Walters Professor of Exercise Science Human Sciences Nutrition, Food & Exercise Sci.
Robert J. Moffatt Georgia Alice Stamford Professor of Exercise Science Human Sciences Nutrition, Food & Exercise Sci.
Douglas W. Kiefer Donald Brittain Professor of Cinematography MP Arts Motion Picture Arts
Frank Kowalsky Joseph A. White Professor of Music Music Music
Jayne M. Standley Ella Scoble Opperman Professor of Music Music Music
Melissa A. Hardy Raymond F. Bellamy Professor of Sociology Social Sciences Sociology
David W. Rasmussen James H. Gapinski Professor of Economics Social Sciences Economics
C. Aaron McNeece Walter W. Hudson Professor of Social Work Social Work Social Work
Cynthia J. Hahn Gulnar K. Bosch Professor of Art History Visual Arts & Dance Art History
84-Awards and Honors Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
The President & Provost’s Named Professorship Program
Named in 2001-2002
T
itle of Named Professorship College Department
Bruce T. Boehrer Bertram H. Davis Professor of English Arts & Sciences English
Allan J. Clarke Adrian E. Gill Professor of Oceanography Arts & Sciences Oceanography
Elbio R. Dagotto Edward A. Desloge Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Naresh S. Dalal Dirac Professor of Chemistry Arts & Sciences Chemistry & Biochemistry
William K. Dewar Pierre Welander Professor of Oceanography Arts & Sciences Oceanography
William Ross Ellington Michael J. Greenberg Professor of Biological Science Arts & Sciences Biological Science
Roberto G. Fernandez Dorothy Lois Breen Hoffman Prof. of Modern Lang. & Ling. Arts & Sciences Modern Languages & Linguistics
Alan R. Lang R. Robert Browning Professor of Psychology Arts & Sciences Psychology
Sharon E. Nicholson Heinz and Katharina Lettau Professor of Climatology Arts & Sciences Meteorology
Doron Nof Fridtjof Nansen Professor of Oceanography Arts & Sciences Oceanography
William H. Outlaw, Jr. Peter H. Homann Professor of Biological Science Arts & Sciences Biological Science
Stephan von Molnar Robert A. Kromhout Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Mark D. Winegardner Janet G. Burroway Professor of English Arts & Sciences English
Sherwood W. Wise, Jr. Lyman D. Toulmin Professor of Geological Sciences Arts & Sciences Geological Sciences
Ronald E. Goldsmith Richard M. Baker Professor of Marketing Business Marketing
Gary R. Heald Theodore Clevenger, Jr., Professor of Communication Communication Communication
Thomas G. Blomberg Sheldon L. Messinger Professor of Criminology Criminology Criminology & Criminal Justice
Shridhar K. Sathe D. K. Salunkhe Professor of Food Science Human Sciences Nutrition, Food & Exercise Sciences
John B. Ruhl Joseph Story Professor of Law Law Law
Roy E. Delp Walter S. James Professor of Voice Music Music
John M. Geringer Lewis V. Pankaskie Professor of Music Music Music
Isaac W. Eberstein Charles Meade Grigg Professor of Sociology Social Sciences Sociology
Named in 2002-2003
T
itle of Named Professorship College Department
Howard A. Baer J. Daniel Kimel Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
R. Bruce Bickley Griffith T. Pugh Professor of English Arts & Sciences English
Philip L. Bowers Dwight B. Goodner Professor of Mathematics Arts & Sciences Mathematics
James S. Brooks Grace C. and William G. Moulton Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
William C. Burnett Carl Henry Oppenheimer Professor of Oceanography Arts & Sciences Oceanography
Jeffrey P. Chanton John Widmer Winchester Professor of Oceanography Arts & Sciences Oceanography
Robert J. Contreras James C. Smith Professor of Psychology Arts & Sciences Psychology
Timothy A. Cross Earl Frieden Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry Arts & Sciences Chemistry & Biochemistry
John J. Fenstermaker Fred L. Standley Professor of English Arts & Sciences English
Marie E. Krafft Martin A. Schwartz Professor of Chemistry Arts & Sciences Chemistry & Biochemistry
John R. Quine Charles W. McArthur Professor of Mathematics Arts & Sciences Mathematics
Thomas M. Roberts Robert B. Short Professor of Biological Science Arts & Sciences Biological Science
Pamela K. Coats Robert C. Earnest Professor of Finance Business Finance
Marcy P. Driscoll Leslie J. Briggs Professor of Educational Research Education Ed. Psychology & Learning Systems
Adam J. Hirsch David M. Hoffman Professor of Law Law Law
Carolyn A. Bridger John Boda Professor of Music Music Music
S. Douglass Seaton Warren D. Allen Professor of Music Music Music
Charles E. Connerly William G. & Budd Bell Prof. of Urban & Regional Planning Social Sciences Urban & Regional Planning
Named in 2003-2004
T
itle of Named Professorship College Department
Bettye Ann Case Olga Larson Professor of Mathematics Arts & Sciences Mathematics
Jack E. Crow John and Geraldine P. Schuler Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Dean Falk Hale G. Smith Professor of Anthropology Arts & Sciences Anthropology
Robert J. Gellately Earl Beck Professor of History Arts & Sciences History
Hunt Hawkins James M. McCrimmon Professor of English Arts & Sciences English
Ruby E. Krishnamurti J. Stewart Turner Professor of Oceanography Arts & Sciences Oceanography
Efstratios Manousakis Donald Robson Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Mary E. Pohl Laura Jepsen Professor of Anthropology Arts & Sciences Anthropology
Amanda Porterfield Robert A. Spivey Professor of Religion Arts & Sciences Religion
Per Arne Rikvold James Gust Skofronick Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Joseph B. Schlenoff Leo Mandelkern Professor of Polymer Science Arts & Sciences Chemistry & Biochemistry
Samuel L. Tabor Norman P. Heydenburg Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
David B. Whalley E.P. Miles Professor of Computer Science Arts & Sciences Computer Science
Xiaolei Zou Jule Charney Professor of Meteorology Arts & Sciences Meteorology
Howard Goldstein Donald M. Baer Professor of Comm. Sciences & Disorders Communication Communication Disorders
Robert A. Reiser Robert M. Morgan Professor of Instructional Systems Education Ed. Psychology & Learning Systems
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Awards and Honors-85
The President & Provost’s Named Professorship Program
2003-2004 (cont.)
T
itle of Named Professorship College Department
Emmanuel G. Collins John H. Seely Professor of Mechanical Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
Alice-Ann Darrow Irvin Cooper Professor of Music Music Music Therapy
Eliza T. Dresang Eliza Atkins Gleason Professor of Information Studies Information Studies Information Studies
Eric P. Ohlsson Charles O. DeLaney Professor of Music Music Music
Colleen L. Muscha Don Stowell, Jr. Professor of Theatre Theatre Theatre
Thomas L. Anderson Jessie Lovano-Kerr Professor of Art Education Visual Arts & Dance Art Education
Lynda J. Davis Nellie-Bond Dickinson Professor of Dance Visual Arts & Dance Dance
Named in 2004-2005
T
itle of Named Professorship College Department
Paul Cottle Steve Edwards Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Henry Fuelberg David W. Stuart Professor of Meteorology Arts & Sciences Meteorology
Kenneth Roux Kurt G. Hofer Professor of Biological Science Arts & Sciences Biological Science
Gershon Tenenbaum Benjamin S. Bloom Professor of Education Education Ed. Psychology & Learning Systems
Justin Schwartz Jack E. Crow Professor of Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering/NHMFL
Bryan Goff Robert T. Braunagel Professor of Music Music Music
Patrick Meighan Alfred N. Tipton Professor of Music Music Music
Frances Berry Frank Sherwood Professor of Public Administration Social Sciences Public Administration and Policy
Richard Feiock Augustus B. Turnbull Professor of Public Administration Social Sciences Public Administration and Policy
Robert Jay Turner Marie E. Cowart Professor of Epidemiology and Sociology Social Sciences Sociology
Named in 2005-2006
T
itle of Named Professorship College Department
Bernd A. Berg Paul A. Dirac Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Neil H. Charness William G. Chase Professor of Psychology Arts & Sciences Psychology
Raymond R. Fleming John Francis Dugan Prof. of Modern Languages & Ling. Arts & Sciences Modern Languages & Linguistics
Harrison B. Prosper Kirby Kemper Professor of Physics Arts & Sciences Physics
Kenneth A. Taylor Donald L. D. Caspar Professor of Biological Sciences Arts & Sciences Biological Science
Lori J. Walters Harry F. Williams Professor of French Arts & Sciences Modern Languages & Linguistics
Kathleen Yancey Kellogg W. Hunt Professor of English Arts & Sciences English
Rolf A. Zwaan F. C. Donders Professor of Psychology Arts & Sciences Psychology
Theodore G. Chiricos William J. Wilson Prof. of Criminology & Criminal Justice Criminology Criminology & Criminal Justice
Pamela S. Carroll Dwight L. Burton Professor of English Education Education Middle & Secondary Education
Steven W. Van Sciver John H. Gorrie Professor of Mechanical Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
Nicholas F. Mazza Patricia V. Vance Professor of Social Work Social Work Social Work
Named in 2008-09
T
itle of Named Professorship College Department
Eric Baumer Allen E. Liska Professor of Criminology Criminology Criminology & Criminal Justice
Tim Sass Charles & Joan Haworth Professor of Economics Social Sciences Economics
Source: Office of Faculty Development and Advancement
86-Awards and Honors Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Robert O. Lawton Distinguished Professors
The Robert O. Lawton Distinguished Professor award is the highest honor faculty can bestow on a colleague.
This award was first presented in 1957-58 and was known as the Distinguished Professor award until 1981 when it was
renamed in honor of the late Vice President for Academic Affairs Robert O. Lawton. At that time past recipients also
were designated Lawton Distinguished Professors.
Year Recipient Department Year Recipient Department
1957-58 William Hudson Rogers English
1958-59 Marian Doris Irish Government
1959-60 Anna Forbes Liddell Philosophy
1960-61 Ernest Max Grunwald Chemistry
1961-62 Wiley Lee Housewright Music
1962-63 Michael Kasha Chemistry
1963-64 Dorothy Hoffman Modern Languages
1964-65 Carlisle Floyd, Jr. Music
1965-66 Betty Monaghan Watts Food and Nutrition
1966-67 Raymond K. Sheline Chemistry
1967-68 Gregory R. Choppin Chemistry
1968-69 Eugene D. Nichols Mathematics Ed.
1969-70 Earl Frieden Chemistry
1970-71 Ralph Allan Bradley Statistics
1971-72 Lloyd Mumbauer Beidler Biological Science
1972-73 Kellogg Wesley Hunt English
1973-74 I. Richard Savage Statistics
1974-75 Daniel Ralph Kenshalo Psychology
1975-76 Richard Gordon Fallon Theatre
1976-77 Elena Nikolaidi Music
1977-78 Richard L. Rubenstein Religion
1978-79 Seymour L. Hess Meteorology
1979-80 George M. Harper English
1980-81 Harry M. Walborsky Chemistry
1981-82 Robert Gilmer Mathematics
1982-83 Robert M. Gagne Ed Research, Dev,
& Foundations
1983-84 J. Herbert Taylor Biological Science
1984-85 Leo Mandelkern Chemistry
Frank Proschan Statistics
1985-86 T.N. Krishnamurti Meteorology
1986-87 Daniel Simberloff Biological Science
1987-88 Werner Herz Chemistry
1988-89 Clifford K. Madsen Music
1989-90 Richard L. Greaves History
1990-91 Donald Robson Physics
1991-92 Nancy Smith Fichter Dance
E. Imre Friedmann Biological Science
1992-93 James C. Smith Psychology
1993-94 Jayaram Sethuraman Statistics
1994-95 Kurt G. Hofer Biological Science
1995-96 Janet G. Burroway English
Source: Office of the President
1996-97 Joseph Travis Biological Science
1997-98 De Witt Sumners Mathematics
1998-99 Myles Hollander Statistics
1999-00 James J. O'Brien Meteorology &
Oceanography
2000-01 Christopher Tam Mathematics
2001-02 Nancy H. Marcus Oceanography
2002-03 Kirby W. Kemper Physics
2003-04 David Kirby English
2004-05 Not Awarded
2005-06 Jayne M. Standley Music Therapy
2006-07 Alan G. Marshall Chemistry &
Biochemistry
2007-08 Walter Tschinkel Biological Science
2008-09 Stanley Gontarski English
2009-10 Richard K. Wagner Psychology
2010-11 Thomas E. Joiner Psychology
2011-12 Jawole Willa Jo Zollar Dance
2012-13 Naresh S. Dalal Chemistry &
Biochemistry
2013-14 Shridhar K. Sathe Nutrition, Food &
Exercise Science
2014-15 Mark A. Riley Physics
2015-16 Max D. Gunzburger Scientific Computing
2016-17 Joseph B. Schlenoff Chemistry &
Biochemistry
2017-18 Jeffrey Chanton Earth, Ocean and
Atmospheric Sci.
2018-19 Pamela L. Perrewé Management
The Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Awards and Honors-87
Florida State University Distinguished Teachers
The Distinguished Teacher award is the university's top award for teaching.
Year Recipient Department
1990 Ronald J. Clark Chemistry
Kurt G. Hofer Biological Science
Donald D. Horward History
Clifford K. Madsen Music
Edward K. Mellon Chemistry
1991 James P. Jones History
William T. Lhamon English
Michael Rashotte Psychology
William Rogers History
Leo Sandon Religion
1992 Janet G. Burroway English
1993 David B. Levenson Religion
1994 James C. Smith Psychology
1995 Stephen P. Leach Computer Science
1996 Eric C. Walker English
1997 Carol A. Darling Family & Child Sciences
1998 Kenneth A. Goldsby Chemistry
1999 Dennis Moore English
2000 Robert Reiser Educational Research
2001 John Fenstermaker English / American & Florida Studies
2002 Not Awarded
2003 Shridhar K. Sathe Nutrition, Food, & Exercise Science
2004 Karen B. Everage Mathematics
2005 Charles Ouimet Medicine
2006 Pamela Carroll Middle & Secondary Education
2007 David Kirby English
2008 William Christiansen Finance
2009 Mark Ziegler Communication
2010 Pamela K. Coats Finance
2011 Jill Quadagno Sociology
2012 Lenore McWey Family & Child Sciences
2013 Matthew Shaftel Music
2014 Annette Schwabe Sociology
2015 Patricia Spears Terebelski Biological Science
2016 Lisa Scott Communication Science & Disorders
2017 Arthur A. Raney Communication
2018 Gregory Erickson Biological Science
Source: Office of the President
88-Awards and Honors Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
University Teaching Awards
Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Awards were first awarded in 1962-63 and were then designated as the Coyle E. Moore, Jr.
Awards. They were continued (and overlapped) as the George Miller Teaching Awards in 1966-67 and 1967-68, the Amoco/Standard Oil
Foundation Awards from 1967 through 1977, the President's Teaching Awards from 1977-78 through 1984-85, and beginning in 1985-86, they
were designated as the University Teaching Awards.
The Coyle E. Moore, Jr. Award
1962-63 1963-64 1964-65
James P. Jones History William W. Rogers History Katherine Hoffman Chemistry
1965-66 1966-67 1967-68
Steve Edwards Physics Michael J. Shaara English Ingrid Tiesler Modern Languages
The George Miller Teaching Award
1966-67 1967-68
Eva May Atwood Modern Languages Robley Light Chemistry
Amoco/Standard Oil Foundation Awards
1967 1968 1969
Homer A. Black Business (Accounting) Richard Baker, Jr. Marketing Harrison Chase Geography
Donald D. Horward History Joann James Modern Languages William H. Heflin Foreign Language Ed.
Dorothy M. Schlitt Science Education Robert J. Kansky Mathematics Education William H. Long Meteorology
1970 1971 1972
Azzurra B. Givens Modern Languages Ronald J. Clark Chemistry Joyotpaul Chaudhuri Government
Edward K. Mellon Chemistry Carolyn J. Schluck Elementary Education W. W. de Grummond Classics
Charles T. Wellborn Religion Jerome H. Stern English Jeanne L. Ryan Habilitative Science
1973 1974 1975
John J. Carey Religion David L. Ammerman History William T. Lhamon English
Marilyn P. Gombosi Music Janet G. Burroway English Hans S. Plendl Physics
Kay Judkins Clothing & Textiles James C. Smith Psychology Robert Rubanowice History
1976 1977
Eugene J. Crook English Richard L. Chapple Modern Languages
Robert Carter Morris Physics Leo Sandon, Jr. Religion
Marjorie Sparkman Nursing George Weaver Psychology
President’s Teaching Awards
1977-78 1978-79 1979-80
James P. Jones, Jr. History Sydney R. Grant Educational Research John R. Albright Physics
Clifford K. Madsen Music Colleen J. Kirk Music Patricia A. Dore Law
H. Peter Stowell English James C. Moore Audiology & Kurt G. Hofer Biological Sciences
Speech Pathology
1980-81 1981-82 1982-83
Joyce L. Carbonell Psychology Robert C. Clark Childhood, Reading, Janice L. Flake Curriculum & Instruction
Mildred W. Ravenell Law & Special Education Sandra W. Rackley Communication
Patricia Rose Art E. Joe Nosari Finance Calvin E. Zongker Home & Family Life
Michael E. Rashotte Psychology
1983-84 1984-85
Fanchon F. Funk Educational Leadership Edward A. Desloge Physics
John A. Payne Audiology & John J. Fenstermaker English
Speech Pathology Warren B. Nation Marketing
William W. Rogers History
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Awards and Honors-89
University Teaching Awards
University Teaching Awards
1985-86 1986-87 1987-88
Hans P. Braendlin Modern Languages Phillip L. Bowers Mathematics David L. Balkwill Biological Science
William J. Cloonan Modern Languages Victor Carrabino Modern Languages James K. Brewer Educational Research
John A. Degen Theatre Doris H. Clark Library & Information Studies Amy Brown Music
Nancy de Grummond Classics Eugene J. Crook English Donna Crowley Communications
Emily T. Haymes Movement Sc. & Physical Ed. Thomas Dye Political Science Carol Darling Home & Family Life
Janet E. Kodras Geography James H. Gapinski Economics John Elam Biological Science
Duane A. Meeter Statistics Glorida A. Grizzle Public Administration Nan Goggin Studio Art
Robert A. Reiser Educational Research Louis Howard Mathematics Leon Golden Classics & Humanities
Michael M. Richey Theatre Patricia Johnson Human Services & Studies Richard Greaves History
Timothy C. Verdon Art History David Levenson Religion Sally Hansen-Gandy Family & Child Sciences
Barbara W. White Social Work
Robert Neuman Art History Wolfgang Heil Mathematics
Fred Standley English Jeanne D. Heitmeyer Clothing, Textiles, & Merch.
Jayne M. Standley Music Donald Horward History
Sheila O. Taylor English Maxine Jones History
Patricia Martin Sociology
William Oldson History
Paul Piccard Political Science
David Quadagno Movement Sc. & Physical Ed.
Thomas Schaefer Accounting
Eric Walker English
James Wyatt Modern Languages
1988-89 1989-90 1990-91
Howard D. Baker Psychology Michael Armer Sociology Thomas G. Blomberg Criminology
Franklin B. Brown Chemistry Stephen P. Baginski Accounting Stephen E. Celec Finance
Charles W. Ehrhart Law Karen Berkeley Psychology Richard L. Hagen Psychology
Kenneth A. Goldsby Chemistry Wm. A. Christiansen Finance James J. Hoffman Management
Christopher Hunter Mathematics
Paul R. Elliot Biological Science Sam W. Huckaba Mathematics
William R. Jones Religion & Black Studies Bruce T. Grindal Anthropology Kathleen A. Kemp Political Science
George E. Judy Theatre Anita S. Hollander Accounting Dianne F. Montgomery Social Work
Stephen P. Leach Computer Science
James Orcutt Sociology Donna M. Nudd Communication
William F. Marzluff Chem. & Molecular Biophy. Glenn Parker Political Science Manuel L. Ponce Interior Design
Jerome H. Stern English Bruce Rengers Nutr., Food, & Movement Sc. Terrence W. Tilley Religion
James D. White Criminology Joe M. Richardson History Denise A. Tucker Nursing
Mary Shannahan Nursing Kathryn Weathersby History
Theodore P. Williams Biological Science
1991-92 1992-93 1993-94
Jon S. Bailey Psychology Gary A. Benesh Finance Brenda L. Cappuccio Modern Languages
Bruce T. Boehrer English Wendy Bishop English Karen Cunningham English
John L. Bryant Mathematics Daniel R. Boroto Psychology Robert E. Deyle Urban & Regional Planning
Karen M. Burgess Mathematics Bonnie L. Braendlin English Roberto G. Fernandez Modern Languages
Anne M. Bush Art E. Wayne Hill Family, Child & Consumer Sc. Susan S. Fiorito Clothing, Textiles & Merch.
Thomas D. Clark Information Mgmt. Sciences Bruce Holzman Music Kate W. Gelabert Theatre
Larry C. Dennis Physics Susan I. Hruska Computer Science Frances C. James Biological Science
Phillip E. Downs Marketing Elizabeth Jakubowski Curriculum & Instruction Neil T. Jumonville History
Stephen C. Foster Chemistry John R. Kerr Marketing K. Michele Kacmar Management
Lorie A. Fridell Criminology & Crim. Justice
Emma H. Kittles Clothing, Textiles & Merch. John E. Kelsay Religion
S. E. Gontarski English John P. Lunstrum Childhood Education William E. Leparulo Modern Languages
Nancy R. Green Nutr., Food, & Movement Sc. Dennis D. Moore English Rochelle A. Marrinan Anthropology
Hunt Hawkins English Philip D. Morgan History Charles C. Ouimet Psychology
Jack E. Hokanson Psychology Jerome S. Osteryoung Finance William H. Outlaw, Jr. Biological Science
David W. Kirby English Norma C. Presmeg Curriculum & Instruction Barbara C. Palmer Ed. Theory & Practice
Frank Kowalsky Music Anne E. Rowe English David F. Powell Law
Judith L. Irvin Educational Leadership Diana Scott Childhood Education Thomas M. Roberts Biological Science
Larry W. Isaac Sociology Emmanuel I. Shargel Educational Foundations Bawa S. Singh History
Edward A. Love Art Lee P. Stepina Management Dale L. Smith Political Science
Betty Jo McCarty Childhood Education Jeffrey Tatum Classics Antoine E. Spacagna Modern Languages
Urban B. Ozanne Marketing Andre Thomas Music Grayson H. Wheatley Curriculum & Instruction
Pamela L. Perrewe Management Walter R. Tschinkel Biological Science
Jill B. Quadagno Sociology Bruce W. Tuckman Educational Research
Joseph A. Travis Biological Science Lori J. Walters Modern Languages
Barton J. Wechsler Public Administration
Charles H. Wolfgang Childhood Education
Paul L. Wilkens Management
90-Awards and Honors Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
University Teaching Awards
University Teaching Awards (continued)
1994-95 1995-96 1996-97 1997-98
Paolo B. Aluffi - Mathematics H. Glenn Boggs, II - Risk Management Allen W. Bathke, Jr. - Accounting Doris Abood - Nutr., Food & Movement Sci.
William J. Cloonan - Modern Languages Judy K. Bowers - Music Annette Blackwelder - Mathematics Jon S. Bailey - Psychology
Valerie J. Conner - History Robert N. Braswell - Industrial Engineering Karen M. Burgess - Mathematics Michael B. Bakan - Music
Lynda J. Davis - Dance Pamela S. Carroll - Curriculum & Instruction John L. Bryant - Mathematics Marilyn Barger - Civil Engineering
John A. Degen - Theatre Carol A. Darling - Family & Child Sciences James E. Croft - Music Tessa Bartholomeusz - Religion
Steven Gey - Law Walter Dick - Educational Research Nancy de Grummond - Classics Thomas Blomberg - Criminology
Virginia P. Green - Ed. Theory & Practice Dean H. Gatzlaff - Risk Management Isaac W. Eberstein - Sociology Simon C. Capstick - Physics
William R. Jones - Black Studies Joey F. George - Information & Mgmt Sci. Kathleen M. Erndl - Religion Roy E. Delp - Music
Wallace A. Kennedy - Psychology Larry Gerber - Music Stanley E. Gontarski - English Kenneth A. Dodaro - Mathematics
Stephen Leach - Computer Science Elizabeth Goldsmith - Textiles & Consumer Sci. Richard L. Hagen - Psychology Piotr G. Fajer - Biological Science
Darrell E. Levi - History Jean Graham-Jones - Modern Languages Jeanne Heitmeyer - Textiles & Consumer Sci. Lorie A. Fridell - Criminology
Jean M. Lickson - Theatre Cathy W. Levenson - Nutrition, Food & James J. Hoffman - Management Thomas J. Harrison - Electrical Engineering
James B. Meyer - Psychology Movement Science Allen W. Imershein - Sociology Janet E. Kodras - Geography
Maxine Montgomery - English Christopher Lonigan - Psychology David Kirby - English Victoria MacDonald - Education Foundations
Mary Ann Moore - Textiles & Consumer Sci. K. Myers-Pietralunga - Interior Design Richard N. Mariscal - Biological Science & Policy Studies
Donald A. Nast - Finance Joe L. Mott - Mathematics Bruce Menchetti - Special Education Ian W. McKeague - Statistics
John D. Neill, III - Accounting Sheila Ortiz-Taylor - English Gregory A. Riccardi - Computer Science Sally E. McRorie - Art Education
William O. Oldson - History Valentina Pichugin - Modern Languages Shridhar Sathe - Nutr., Food & Movement Sci. Stefan C. Norrbin - Economics
John A. Payne - Communications Joe M. Richardson - History S. Douglass Seaton - Music Jerome Osteryoung - Finance
David M. Quadagno - Biological Science Alvin Stauber - Risk Management William Snyder - Educational Leadership Daniel J. Pullen - Classics
Paul W. Strait - History De Witt L. Sumners - Mathematics Barry Solomon - Communication Robert H. Reeves - Biological Science
David Van Winkle - Physics Robert G. Turner - Finance Richard K. Wagner - Psychology Jane L. Reimers - Accounting
Eric C. Walker - English Frank A. Vickory - Risk Management Virginia G. Walker - Comm. Disorders V. Sambamurthy - Information & Mgmt. Sci.
C. Walters-Chapman - Family & Child Sci. George E. Weaver - Psychology David S. Warmath - Neuroscience W. Jeffrey Tatum - Classics
Edward Wynot, Jr. - History Thomas M. Welsh - Dance
1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02
Winnifred Adolph - Modern Languages Margaret Baldwin - Law Ljubisa Adamovich - Economics H. Glenn Boggs - Risk Mgmt/Insurance
Jon Ahlquist - Meteorology Carol Batker - English Paolo Aluffi - Mathematics Robert N. Braswell - Industrial Engineering
Michael Blaber - Chemistry Wendy Bishop English Thomas L. Anderson - Art Education Carolyn Bridger - Music
James Brey - Communication George Blakely - Studio Art R. Bruce Bickley, Jr. - English Joyce Carbonell - Women’s Studies/Psych.
Karen Clarke - Music Shannon Burkes - Religion William Cloonan - Modern Languages Scottye Cash - Social Work
Betty Dessants - History William Christiansen - Finance Pamela K. Coats - Finance Thomas Cornille - Family & Child Sciences
Kevin Eastman - Risk Mgmt. & Insurance Allan Clarke - Oceanography Paul D. Cottle - Physics Jodee Dorsey - Nutrition, Food & Exer. Sci.
Nina Efimov - Modern Languages Billy Close - Criminology Donna J. Crowley - Comm. Disorders Donna Fletcher - Rec. & Leisure Services
John Fenstermaker - English Barry Diskin - Risk Mgmt. & Insurance Jean Dangler - Modern Languages Sam Huckaba - Mathematics
Raymond Fleming - Modern Languages John Drew - Music John A. Degen - Theatre David F. Johnson - English
Jonathan Grant - History Donald Hodges - Philosophy Jorge Delva - Social Work James P. Jones - History
Chanta Haywood - English John McMichael - Mathematics Martin K. Foys - English Aaron Feng Lan - Modern Languages
Gary Heald - Communication David Macpherson - Economics Elizabeth Goldsmith - Text. & Consumer Sci. Barry Faulk - English
Larry Isaac - Sociology Robert Marshall - Risk Mgmt. & Insurance Ronald E. Goldsmith - Marketing Mark Messersmith - Art
Brenda Jarmon - Social Work Ann Mullis - Family & Child Sciences Ladislav Kubik - Music James Orcutt - Sociology
Frank Johnson - Psychology Jay Rayburn - Communication Patricia Y. Martin - Sociology Kislaya Prasad - Economics
Joseph McElrath - English Sue Reid - Public Admin. & Policy Thomas S. McCaleb - Economics Pamela Ryan - Music
Timothy Moerland - Biological Science Samuel Rickless - Philosophy James McLaughlin - Textiles & Consumer Sci. David Whalley - Computer Science
Hans-Friedrich Mueller - Classics Adam Sarty - Physics Patrick Meighan - Music James L. Wyatt - Modern Languages
William Outlaw, Jr. - Biological Science Martin Schwartz - Chemistry Richard J. Morris - Communication Disorders
Suzanne Parker - Political Science James Sickinger - Classics Jorge Piekarewicz - Physics
Richard Portman - M.P., TV & Rec. Arts Kaisheng Song - Statistics John R. Reynolds - Sociology
Mark Riley - Physics James Wooland - Mathematics Don E. Schlagenhauf - Economics
Douglas ZahnStatistics Edward D. Wynot, Jr. - History
Mark T. Ziegler - Communication
2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06
Barbara Allison - Family & Child Sciences Reb Braddock - M.P., TV & Rec. Arts Jon Ahlquist - Meteorology Leslie Aspinwall - Middle & Secondary Ed.
Albert Barcilon - Meteorology Leigh Edwards - English Michael Buchler - Music Jose Blanco - Textiles & Consumer Sci.
George Bates - Biological Sciences David Gaitros - Computer Science Pamela Carroll - Middle & Secondary Ed. Michael Brady - Marketing
Allen Bathke - Accounting Nancy Greenbaum - Chemistry Peter Dalton - Philosophy William Christiansen - Finance
Robert Clark - Elementary Education Larry Isaac - Sociology Kimberly Harris - Hospitality Lance deHaven-Smith - Public Admin.
Patrick Dunnigan - Music Victoria-Maria MacDonald - Frank Johnson - Psychology Lise Diez-Arguelles - Management
Lloyd Epstein - Biological Sciences Ed. Leadership & Policy Studies David Kangas - Religion Kathleen Erndl - Religion
Laurel Fulkerson - Classics Richard Morton - Accounting Martin Kavka - Religion Deborah Floyd - Childhood Ed., Reading
Elizabeth Jakubowski - Middle & Sec. Ed. Michael Peters - Chemical Engineering Jeffrey Keesecker - Music & Disability Services
Maxine Jones - History Gary Smith - Finance Daniel Klooster - Geography Kenneth Goldsby - Chemistry
Danuta Leszczynska - Civil Engineering Mark Winegardner - English Frank Kowalsky - Music Deborah Hasson - Middle & Secondary Ed.
Jean LicksonTheatre Vickie Lake - El. & Early Childhood Ed. Sally Karioth - Nursing
Timothy Logan - Chemistry Cathy Levenson - Nutr., Food & Exer. Sci. Jon Maner - Psychology
Bryan Loney - Psychology Steven Mills - Family & Child Sciences Alfred Mele - Philosophy
Michael Meredith - Biological Sciences Dennis Moore - English Anthony Morgan - Dance
Maxine Montgomery - English Linda M. Rogers - Mathematics Ricardo Navarro - Interior Design
Joseph Owens - Physics Michael Rychlik - Middle & Secondary Ed. John Parks - Music
Pushkala Raman - Marketing Zeina Schlenoff - Modern Languages David Quadagno - Biological Sciences
Cristina Rios - Elementary Education Matthew Shaftel - Music Arthur Raney - Communication
Jayne Standley - Music James Simpson - Industrial Engineering S. Slaveva-Griffin - Classics
Oliver Steinbock - Chem. & Biochemistry Michelle Stebleton - Music Nora Underwood - Biological Sciences
Frank Vickory - Risk Mgmt/Ins & R.E. Kimberly VanWeelden - Music Lisa Wakamiya - Modern Languages
Denise Von Glahn - Music Paul Marty - Information James Whyte - Nursing
Peng Xiong - Physics Robert Reeves - Biological Sciences Thomas Wright - Music
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Awards and Honors-91
University Teaching Awards
University Teaching Awards (continued)
2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10
Doris Abood - Nutrition, Food & Exer. Sci. Paolo Aluffi - Mathematics Natalya Baldyga - Theatre Michael Bakan - Music
Igor Alabugin - Chemistry & Biochem. Cheryl Beeler - SM, RM & Physical Ed. Allen Bathke - Accounting Bruce Billings - Accounting
Jon Bailey - Psychology Radha Bose - Statistics Randy Blass - Management G. Curtis Bridgeman - Law
Billy Barbour - Panama City Campus Joseph Calhoun - Economics Terence Coonan - Center-Human Rights Joyce Carbonell - Psychology
Frederick Davis History Billy Close - Criminology & Criminal Justice Angela Davis - Teacher Education Amy Chan Hilton - Civil Engineering
James Doran - Finance Jerome Cronin - Marketing Jonathan Grant - History Katharine Davis - Teacher Education, PC
Henry Fuelberg - Meteorology Nanna Cuchens - Nursing James Jones - History Gregory Dudley - Chemistry & Biochem.
Michele Garber - Nutr., Food & Exer. Sci. Norma "Jeanne" Dexter - Mgmt, Pan. City Kelley Kline - Psychology, PC Campus Leigh Edwards - English
Elizabeth Goldsmith - Textiles/Cons. Sci. Andrew Epstein - English Amy Koehlinger - Religion Susan Fiorito - Textiles & Consumer Sci.
Bruce Grindal - Anthropology Donna Fletcher - SM, RM & Physical Ed. Marie Krafft - Chemistry & Biochemistry Kathy Froelich - Teacher Education
Evan Jones - Music Larry Gerber - Music Victoria Meyer - MP, TV & Recording Arts George Huston - Accounting
Edward Klatt - Medicine Steven Gey - Law Tom Miller - Biological Sciences Carrie Lane - Psychology
Lenore McWey - Family & Child Sciences Frank Gunderson - Music Lynn Panton - Nutrition, Food & Exer. Sci. Timothy Logan - Chemistry & Biochem.
Donna Nudd - Communication Sandra Halvorson - Commun., Pan. City Mark Pietralunga - Modern Languages Janice McCabe - Sociology
Jorge Piekarewicz - Physics Monica Hurdal - Mathematics John Reynolds - Sociology David McNaughton - Philosophy
Susan Porterfield - Nursing Alexander Jimenez - Music Cristina Rios - Teacher Ed., PC Campus Vincent Mikkelsen - History
Mark Riley - Physics Darrin McMahon - History David Rowell - Theatre Steve Paris - Mathematics
Pamela Robbins - History Jeff Patterson - Accounting Eugene Ryerson - Medicine Ebrahim Randeree - Library & Info. Stds.
Deana Rohlinger - Sociology Carolyn Piazza - Childhood Ed., Reading Shridhar Sathe Nutr., Food & Exer. Sci. Allen Romano - Classics
Lisa Scott - Communication Disorders & Disability Services Annette Schwabe - Sociology Chris Schatschneider - Psychology
Jon Stallins - Geography Steven Ramsier - Statistics Patricia Spears - Biological Science Timothy Stover - Classics
Julie Stierwalt - Communication Disorders Nat Stern - Law Kathryn Tillman - Sociology Robert Wagoner - Dance
Thomas Welsh - Dance Denise Tucker - Nursing Molly Wasko - Mgmt. Information Systems Kathleen Yancey - English
Susan Wood - Middle & Secondary Ed. William Woodyard - RM, RE & Bus. Law Kaifeng Yang - Public Administration
Mark Zeigler - Communication
2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14
Jon Ahlquist - Earth, Ocean & Atmos. Sci. Alexander Aviña - History Jennifer Atkins - School of Dance Joseph Neil Abell - Social Work
Margaret Ashmore - Social Work Jason Barabas - Political Science Michael Buchler - College of Music Allen Blay - Accounting
Deborah Bish - Music R. Blackwell-Flanagan - Ed Leadership Eric Coleman - Political Science Judy Bowers - College of Music
Elizabeth Chamblee Burch - Law Reb Braddock - Motion Picture Arts Nancy de Grummond - Classics William Christiansen - Finance
Robin Craig - Law Joab Corey - Economics James Dever - Management Angela Davis - Teacher Education
Ming Cui - Family & Child Sciences Barbara Cottrell - College of Nursing Roberto Fernandez - Modern Languages William Dewar - Earth, Ocean & Atmos. Sci
Kristie Fleckenstein - English John Dorsey - Chemistry & Biochemistry Laurel Fulkerson - Classics Andrew Epstein - English
Lora Holcombe - Economics Patrick Dunnigan - College of Music Adam Gaiser - Religion Read Gainsford - College of Music
David F. Johnson - English Gregory Erickson - Biological Science Michele GarberNutr., Food & Exer. Sci. Ishkhan Grigorian - Mathematics
Mark Kearley - Chemistry & Biochemistry Kevin Fenton - College of Music Young-Suk Kim - Teacher Education Monica Hurdal - Mathematics
Steven Kelly - Music Timothy Glenn - School of Dance Eric Klassen - Mathematics Lynn Jones - Art History
Toni Kirkwood-Tucker - Teacher Ed. Kristine Harper - History Feng Lan - Modern Languages Kelley Kline - Psychology (Panama City)
Murray Krantz - Family & Child Sciences Gerrie Houlihan - School of Dance David Landau - College of Law Sandra Lewis - Teacher Education
Mark Licht - Psychology Neil Jumonville - History Alfred Mele - Philosophy Andrei Malaev - Theatre
Daniel Maier-Katkin - Criminology David Kirby - English Dennis Moore - English Donna Nudd - Communication
Rick McCullough - Dance Okenwa Okoli - Industrial Engineering Richard Morris - Comm. Sci. & Disorders Michael Ormsbee - Nutr, Food & Exer Sci.
Brian G. Miller - Chemistry & Biochemistry Timothy Parrish - English William Parker - Earth, Ocean & Atmos. Sci. Jorge Piekarewicz - Physics
Jill Pable - Interior Design Pamela Robbins - History Amy Polick - Psychology, PC Campus Mark Pietralunga - Modern Languages
Zeina Schlenoff - Modern Languages Robert Romanchuk - Modern Languages Nancy Rogers - College of Music Arthur Raney - Communication
Michael Shatruk - Chemistry & Biochem. Lisa Scott - Comm. Science & Disorders Jonathan Sheppard – History Patricia Spears Terebelski - Biology
Helge Swanson - Teacher Education Holly Sudano - Accounting Katie Showman - Economics Julie Stierwalt - Comm. Science & Disorders
Stephen Tripodi - Social Work Lisa Waxman - Interior Design Phyllis Underwood - Teacher Education Jennifer Wells - English
James Tull - Earth, Ocean & Atmos. Sci. Lisa Weinberg - Sociology Jeanne Wanzek - Teacher Education
Shelbie Witte - Teacher Education Eric Wiedegreen - Interior Design Thomas Welsh - School of Dance
James Wooland - Mathematics
2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
Shawn Bayern - Law Bruce Billings - Accounting Whitney Bendeck - International Affairs Samer Al-Saber - School of Theatre
Billy Close - Criminology & Crim. Justice Nicholas BonesteelPhysics Anthony Ciarlariello - Motion Picture Arts Paolo Annino - College of Law
Jonathan Dennis - Biological Science Joseph Calhoun - Economics Ronald Doel - History Randy Blass - Management
Emily DuVal - Biological Science Anne Coldiron - English Gregory Erickson - Biological Science Christy Chatmon - College of Comm. & Info.
Leigh Edwards - English George “Bob” Garner - ESIS Debra Fadool - Biological Science Russell Clayton School of Communication
Xujun Feng - Modern Languages Ilana Goldman - School of Dance Alisha Gaines - English Vanessa Dennen - Ed. Psych. & Learning Sys.
Kenan Fishburne - Interior Design Susan Hellstrom - Arts and Sciences Melissa Hanson - Law Bridget DePrince - Chemistry & Biochemistry
Henry Fuelberg - Earth, Ocean & Atmos. Sci Munir Humayun - EOAS Lucas Hopkins - Marketing John Dorsey - Chemistry & Biochemistry
Jonathan Grant - History James Justus - Philosophy Mark Kearly - Chemistry & Biochemistry Nina Efimov - Modern Languages
Lydia Hanks - Hospitality Administration Laura Keller - Biological Science David Kirby - English Mary Frances Hanline - School of Teacher Ed.
Robinson Herrera - History Christine Koontz - School of Information Leonard LaPointe - Comm. Sci. & Disorders Kenneth Hanson - Chemistry & Biochemistry
Orenda Johnson - Psychology Nathaniel Line - Hospitality Admin. David Markell - Law Alexander Jiménez - College of Music
Aline Kalbian - Religion Mallory Lucier-Greer - Family & Child Sci. Jason Maurer - Motion Picture Arts Dale Jordan - School of Theatre
Raphael Kampmann - Civil Engineering Martin Mende - Marketing Rick McCullough - Dance Justin Kennemur - Chemistry & Biochemistry
Kaitlin Lansford - Comm. Sci. & Disorders John Myers - School of Teacher Education Lenore McWey - Family & Child Sciences Maxine Montgomery - English
Wayne Logan - Law M. Nair-Collins - Behavioral Sci. & Social Med. Katherine Mooney - History Antje Muntendam - Modern Languages
Thomas Miller - Biological Science Takemichi Okui - Physics Stephen Paris - Mathematics Jeremiah Murphy - Physics
Irene Padavic - Sociology Jennifer Proffitt - School of Communication Spencer Pierce - Accounting Justin Sevier - College of Law
Jeff Paterson - Accounting Marlo Ransdell - Interior Arch. & Design Ebrahim Randeree - Information Holly Sudano - Accounting
Steven Ramsier - Statistics John Reynolds - Sociology Linda Schrader - Educational Leadership Phyllis Underwood - School of Teacher Ed.
Deana Rohlinger - Sociology Timothy Stover - Classics Mark Spottswood - Law Lisa Waxman - Interior Design
Nat Stern - Law Brian Stults - Criminology and Crim. Justice Kunihiko Taira - Mechanical Engineering Gwen Welliver - School of Dance
Miles Taylor - Sociology John Taylor - Industrial Engineering Melina Vastola - Computer Science
Kathryn Tilman - Sociology Geoffrey Thomas - Anthropology Kathleen Yancey - English
Kaifeng Yang - Public Admin. & Policy Mary Ziegler - College of Law
92-Awards and Honors Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Developing Scholar Awards
1977-78 1978-79 1979-80
Robert L. Conn Finance Jayne M. Alley Music Karyl J. Louwenaar Music
James Gapinski Economics Burton M. Atkins Government Randolph R. Rill Chemistry
Daniel S. Simberloff Biological Science Virgil L. Goedken Chemistry Leo Sandon Religion
Gunther Stamm Art James D. Orcutt Sociology William R. Thompson Government
Friedrich K. Stephan Psychology
Susan B. Thomas Child Development
1980-81 1981-82 1982-83
Scott C. Flanagan Government Robert W. Fichter Art Nancy de Grummond Classics
Marc E. Freeman Biological Science William F. Marzluff Chemistry Nancy R. Green Nutrition & Food Science
Dale A. Olsen Music Glenn R. Parker Government Penelope E. Mason Art History
Marie W. Osmond Sociology William E. Pelham, Jr. Psychology Thomas S. McCaleb Economics
Joseph Torgesen Psychology H. Peter Stowell English Gerald W. McDonald Sociology
Robert A. Reiser Ed. Research, Development Joseph F. Owens, III Physics
& Foundations
1983-84 1984-85 1985-86
Meinrat O. Andreae Oceanography Ronald C. Braswell Finance Gregory G. Dess Management
Russell J. Dalton Political Science Allan J. Clarke Oceanography W. Ross Ellington Biological Science
Larry W. Isaac Sociology Mark J. Martinko Management Kathleen A. Kemp Political Science
Gerald P. Schatten Biological Science Samuel L. Tabor Physics S. Douglass Seaton Music
Harold E. Van Wart Chemistry Joseph Travis Biological Science Timothy C. Verdon Art History
1986-87 1987-88 1988-89
Pamela K. Coats Finance David Balkwill Biological Science George W. Bates Biological Science
Dennis W. Duke Physics Lawrence Dennis Physics Glen H. Doran Anthropology
Melissa A. Hardy Sociology Marta Harley English Marcy Driscoll Educational Research
Christopher Lingle Biological Science Sharon Nicholson Meteorology David R. Peterson Finance
Charles M. Tolbert Sociology Isaac Eberstein Center for the Study Bernd A. Berg Physics & Supercomputer
of Population
1989-90 1990-91 1991-92
Anthony J. Arnold Geology Timothy A. Cross Chemistry William Dewar Oceanography
Pamela P. Peterson Finance Sharon J. Derry Psychology Marie E. Kraft Chemistry
Janet E. Kodras Geography Efstratios Manousakis Physics David Levinthal Physics
Michael Meredith Biological Science Phillip D. Morgan History Jean Mitchell Economics
Amy Wetherby Communication Disorders Charles Ouimet Psychology
1992-93 1993-94 1994-95
Paul D. Cottle Physics Bruce T. Boehrer English Howard A. Baer Physics
John E. Kelsay Religion N. Chandrasekaran Mechanical Engineering Wendy Bishop English
Pamela E. Perrewe Management Angelo M. Collins Curriculum & Instruction Jeffrey Chanton Oceanography
Bruce Stiftel Urban & Regional Planning Neil S. Lundberg Geology Jerzy Cioslowski Chemistry
W. Jeffrey Tatum Classics Lori J. Walters Modern Languages Sam Huckaba Mathematics
Robert T. Walker Geography
1995-96 1996-97 1997-98
Elbio Dagotto Physics Pedro Arce Chemical Engineering Emmanuel Collins, Jr. Mechanical Engineering
Stuart E. Dryer Biological Science Timothy Moerland Biological Science Piotr G. Fajer Biological Science
Bruce R. Locke Chemical Engineering Michael Overton Human Science K. Michele Kacmar Management
Joseph B. Schlenoff Chemistry Harrison Prosper Physics Adriana Moreo Physics
Linda Vinton Social Work Justin Schwartz Mechanical Engineering Christopher J. Patrick Psychology
1998-99 1999-00 2000-01
Paolo Aluffii Mathematics Kathleen Erndl Religion Michael Chapman Chemistry
Richard Lee Hyson Psychology Elna Green History Cathy Levenson Nut, Food & Exer. Sci.
David Johnson English Thomas Joiner Psychology Don Levitan Biological Sciences
Jeffrey Mondak Political Science Evan Ringquist Political Science Christopher Lonigan Psychology
Peter Wainwright Biological Science Rolf Zwaan Psychology Nathan Stoltzfus History
2001-02 2002-03 2003-04
Susan Blessing Physics Nicholas Bonesteel Physics Farrukh Alvi Mechanical Engineering
Michael Bakan Music Darryl Dickson-Carr English Vladimir
James Sickinger Classics David J. Ketchen Management Dobrosavljevic Physics
Michael Mascagni Computer Science Will Moore Political Science Zuoxin Wang Psychology
Jean Graham-Jones Modern Languages Paul Trombley Biological Science
Donald Odita Art
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Awards and Honors-93
Developing Scholar & Distinguished Research Professor Awards
Developing Scholar Awards (continued)
2004-05 2005-06 2006-07
Jerold Pope Music Carol Anne Clayson Meteorology Richard Bertram Mathematics
Jorge Piekarewicz Physics Thomas Houpt Biological Sciences Darrin McMahon History
John Bertot Information Studies Joel Kostka Oceanography Laura Reina Physics
Amy Sang Chemistry & Biochemistry Anuj Srivastava Statistics Oliver Steinbock Chemistry & Biochemistry
David Houle Biological Science Daniel Vitkus English Gary Tyson Computer Science
2007-08 2008-09 2009-10
Gregory M. Erickson Biological Science Frederick Davis History Stephanie Al Otaiba Teacher Education
Debra Fadool Biological Science Robin Goodman English Julianna Baggott English
Hong Li Chemistry & Biochemistry Mark Horner Geography Carol Connor Psychology
Peng Xiong Physics Jon Maner Psychology Min Deng Biological Science
Kun Yang Physics Jill Pable Interior Design Gregory Dudley Chemistry & Biochemistry
Louis St. Laurent Oceanography Ingo Wiedenhoever Physics
2010-11 2011-12 2012-13
Matthew J. Goff Religion Alexander Volya Physics Meegan Hanson English
Mohamed Kabbaj Biomedical Sciences Carlos Bolanos Psychology Susan Latturner Chemistry & Biochemistry
Michael P. Kaschak Psychology Kathleen McCullough Risk Mgmt/Ins, Real William Oates Mechanical Engineering
Piyush Kumar Computer Science Estate & Legal Stds. Wei Yang Chemistry & Biochemistry
Kathryn H. Tillman Sociology Hengli Tang Biological Sciences
Chad Van Iddekinge Management
Svetla Slaveva-Griffin Classics
2013-14 2014-15 2015-16
Joseph Hellweg Religion Jeanne Wanzek Center for Reading Rsrch. Walter Boot Psychology
Brian Miller Chemistry & Biochemistry Ken Knappenberger Chemistry & Biochemistry Eric Coleman Political Science
Michael Shatruk Chemistry & Biochemistry Michael Roper Chemistry & Biochemistry James Justus Philosophy
Young-Suk Kim Teacher Education Marcia Mardis School of Information Scott Stagg Chemistry & Biochemistry
Ming Ye Scientific Computing Yiyuan She Statistics Changchun Zeng Industrial Engineering
2016-17 2017-18
Jonathan Dennis Biological Science Sara Hart Psychology
Fengfeng Ke Ed. Psych. & Learning Sys. Kunihiko Taira Mechanical Engineering
Alan Lemmon Scientific Computing M. Elizabeth Stroupe Biological Science
Emily Lemmon Biological Science Robert Spencer Earth, Ocean & Atmos. Sci.
Takemichi Okui Physics
Distinguished Research Professor Awards
1991 1992 1993
William Harper Studio Art Daniel B. Eisenberg Modern Languages Bruce L. Benson Economics
James O’Brien Meteorology/Oceanography David E. Loper Mathematics Pasquale P. Graziadei Biological Science
Christopher Tam Mathematics Glenn R. Parker Policy Sciences De Witt L. Sumners Mathematics
1994 1995 1996
Kirby W. Kemper Physics John L. Bryant Mathematics Myles Hollander Statistics
Charles B. Nam Sociology Marc E. Freeman Biological Science Frances James Biological Science
Ralph V. Turner History Joseph F. Owens, III Physics Melvin Stern Oceanography
1997 1998 1999
Richard Pfeffer Meteorology Sharon Nicholson Meteorology David Balkwell Biological Science
Joseph Torgesen Psychology Vasken Hagopian Physics Barry Hirsch Economics
Steven Van Sciver Mechanical Engineering John Myles Sociology Alan Marshall Chemistry
2000 2001 2002
Stanley Gontarski English Timothy Cross Chemistry John Fenstermaker English
Robert Holton Chemistry Allan Clarke Oceanography Samuel Tabor Physics
Dale Olsen Music Kenneth Taylor Biological Sciences
2003 2004 2005
Nar S. Dalal Chemistry & Biochemistry Karen Berkley Psychology James Brooks Physics
Doron Nof Oceanography Pamela Perrewé Business Namas Chandra Mechanical Engineering
Walter Tschinkel Biological Sciences Jayne Standley Music Ken Roux Biological Sciences
2006 2007 2008
Jeffrey Chanton Oceanography Thomas Joiner Psychology Nancy de Grummond Classics
John Kelsay Religion Mark A. Riley Physics Efstratios Manousakis Physics
Stephan von Molnar Physics Shridhar K. Sathe Nutr., Food & Exercise Sci. Joseph Schlenoff Chemistry & Biochemistry
Richard Wagner Psychology Mark Winegardner English
94-Awards and Honors Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Distinguished Research, Graduate Faculty, Undergraduate Research
Distinguished Research Professor Awards (continued)
2009 2010 2011
Suzanne Johnson Medical Hum./Social Sci. William Burnett Oceanography Christopher Lonigan Psychology
Harrison Prosper Physics Bruce Locke Chemical Engineering Hsu-Pin “Ben” Wang Industrial Engineering
R. Jay Turner Sociology Per Arne Rikvold Physics Kathleen B. Yancey English
Amy Wetherby Clinical Sciences Huan-Xiang Zhou Physics
2012 2013 2014
Bernd Berg Physics Rufina Alama Chemical Engineering Dean Falk Anthropology
Zuoxin Wang Psychology Brad Schmidt Psychology Darrin McMahon History
Eric Chassignet Earth, Ocean & Atmos. Sci. David Whalley Computer Science Anuj Srivastava Statistics
Gary Taylor English
2015 2016 2017
David Gilbert Biological Science Betsy Jane Becker Education Psychology John Corrigan Religion
Alan Spector Psychology Jorge Piekarewicz Physics Laura Reina Physics
Bruce Thyer Social Work
2018
Pamela Keel Psychology
Hedi Mattoussi Chemistry and Biochemistry
Graduate Faculty Mentor Award
2004-05 2005-06 2006-07
Jonathan Grant History Thomas Joiner Psychology Thomas C.S. Keller, III Biological Science
Donald Horward History Mark Winegardner English Tiruvalam Krishnamurti Meteorology
James P. Jones History Lisa Waxman Interior Design Alan R. Lang Psychology
Clifford Madsen Music Gerald Ferris Management Irene Padavic Sociology
James O’Brien Meteorology David Whalley Computer Science Jayne Standley Music
2007-08 2008-09 2009-10
Henry Fuelberg Meteorology Nancy de Grummond Classics Stephanie Al Otaiba Teacher Education
Don Levitan Biological Science William Hillison Accounting Carol Anne Clayson Meteorology
Maricarmen Martinez Humanities Frank Kowalsky Music Yun-Hwa Hsieh Nut, Food & Exer. Sci.
Pamela Perrewe Management Richard Liang Industrial Engineering Norman Schmidt Psychology
Anuj Srivastava Statistics Daniel McGee Statistics
2010-11 2011-12 2012-13
Joseph Beckham Ed. Leadership/Policy St. Reb Braddock Motion Picture Arts Vanessa Dennen Ed. Psychology & LS
Nina Efimov Modern Languages Michael Brady Marketing Debra Fadool Biological Science
Richard Feiock Public Administration Stanley Gontarski English Robert Hart Earth, Ocean, Atmos.
Amy Sang Chemistry & Biochemistry Richard Hyson Psychology Geoffrey Strouse Chemistry & Biochem.
Phillip Steinberg Geography Valerie Scoon Motion Picture Arts Zuoxin Wang Psychology
2013-14 2014-15 2015-16
Kevin Beaver Criminology Anne Barrett Sociology Nicholas Cogan Mathematics
Ming Cui Family & Child Sciences John Geringer Music Education David Gilbert Biological Science
Arthur Raney Communication Michael Shatruk Chemistry & Biochemistry Michael Leeser Modern Languages
Alysia Roehrig Educational Psychology Valerie Shute Ed. Psych. & Learning Sys. Lenore McWey Family & Child Sciences
Kathleen Yancey English Anuj Srivastava Statistics Daniel Mears Criminology
2016-17 2017-18
Richard Bertram Mathematics Geoffrey Strouse Chemistry
Eric Chicken Statistics Gretchen Sunderman Modern Languages
Kathy Guthrie Leadership & Social Change Mark Winegardner English
Jill Pable Interior Design Jesse Cougle Psychology
Jorge Piekarewicz Physics Michael Ormsbee Nut, Food & Exer. Sci.
Undergraduate Research Mentor Award
2012-13 2013-14 2014-15
Igor Alabugin Chemistry & Biochemistry Elizabeth Stroupe Biological Science Charles Upchurch History
Ashby Plant Psychology
2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
Stephen McDowell Communication & Info. Laura Weingarden Art History Meredith McQuerry Retail, Merch, and Prod. Dev.
The Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Awards and Honors-95
University Advising Awards
University Advising Awards
1989-90 1990-91 1991-92
Bettye Case Mathematics Christy Baker Social Work Kenneth Goldsby Chemistry
James Cobbe Economics Ann Durham English Sally Hansen-Gandy Home Economics Ed.
Gary Fournier Economics Lorie Fridell Criminology Barbara Jones Undergraduate Studies
Henry Fuelberg Meteorology Geraldine Frost Social Sciences Emilie Morlock Honors/Scholars Program
Phillip Leamon Curriculum & Instruction Stephen Leach Computer Science Judith Parsons Arts & Sciences
Lloyd Price Communication Disorders Deborah Perry History Phyllis Straus Art
George Weaver Psychology Paul Piccard Political Science Shirley Wilder Education
Ruth Williams Psychology
1992-93 1993-94 1994-95
Linda Forsythe Undergraduate Studies Jon Ahlquist Meteorology Melanie Booker Biological Science
Diane Morris Psychology Jon Bailey Psychology Sue Capitani Study Abroad Programs
Judy Waters Criminology Donna Bostwick Business Administration Linda Mahler Undergraduate Studies
George Buzyna Mechanical Engineering
Dante Laudadio Hospitality Administration
Kathleen Smith Medical Sciences
Lisa Velez Davis Arts & Sciences
1995-96 1996-97 1997-98
Michelle Bushong Computer Science Robert Braswell Industrial Engineering Christine Boyd Academic Advising Center
Sandra Lewis Special Education David Butler Interior Design Rickey Spain Computer Science
Marina Sarg-Mendez Psychology Virginia Walker Communication Disorders Phyllis Straus Art
1998-99 1999-00 2000-01
Carol Bullock Economics Alice Earp Undergraduate Studies Patricia Stith Retention Center
Jane Clendinning Music Susan Garis Business
Deborah Perry History
2001-02 2002-03 2003-04
Bonnie Greenwood Human Sciences Elizabeth Foster Medicine (Psychology) Doug Mikutel Advising First (UG Studies)
Brett Kemker Communication Disorders Pamela Graham Social Work Nikki Raimondi Advising First (UG Studies)
M. Kim Maddox Social Work Robert Reeves Biological Sciences
Thomas McCaleb Economics Shridhar Sathe Nutr., Food & Exercise Sci
.Judy Nunez Theatre Chiang Shih Mechanical Engineering
Phyllis Straus Art
2004-05 2005-06 2006-07
T. Berne-Anderson Medicine Nancy Benavides Law David Butler Interior Design
Carol Bullock Economics Ann DelRossi Social Sciences Stephanie Cameron English
Scott Thorp Information Kimberly Hicks Business Norma Dexter Panama City Campus
Deborah Perry History William Hudson Multicultural Stud. Affairs
2007-08 2008-09 2009-10
D. Craig Filar Biological Science Kimberly Amos-Tata Nursing Igor Alabugin Chemistry and Biochemistry
Henry Fuelberg Meteorology Jeff Badger Biological Science Shellie Camp Chemistry and Biochemistry
Susan Glaser College of Education Robert Lovins Military Science Mary LePoer Modern Languages
Robbin Hand Sociology Mark Roof Business
Janice Lindsley College of Business
Betty Stanton Computer Science
2010-11 2011-12 2012-13
Tanya Hayes Perry Undergraduate Studies Eric Crosier Exploratory Studies Will Leparulo College of Engineering
Jessica Rollins Business Brandy Haddock English Fabian Tata CARE
Sean Hawkeswood Advising FirstEnglish
2013-14 2014-15 2015-16
Cathy Badger Student-Athlete Academic Samantha Spiers Social Work Emily Saras Office of National Fellowships
Esther Diaguila Computer Science
Kacy King Student-Athlete Academic
Korey Lowry Human Sciences
2016-17 2017-18
Shellie Camp Arts and Sciences Lauren Dimmer Psychology
Jessica Ridgway Elizabeth Kistner Economics
Clayton Retail, Merch. & Prod. Dev. Schanell Hylton
Mathis College of Business
Adrienne Stephenson The Graduate School
96-Awards and Honors Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Other Faculty and University Dignitary Honors and Awards
President’s Technology Awards
The President’s Technology Awards were awarded annually from 1998-99 through 2001-02. Please refer to earlier editions of the Florida State University Fact
Book for a complete list of winners.
Robert A. Holton Award for Research Excellence
The Robert A. Holton Award for Research Excellence was awarded to Robert Holton in 2000.
President’s Continuing Education Awards
The President’s Continuing Education Awards were awarded annually from 1990-91 through 2003-04. Please refer to earlier editions of the Florida State
University Fact Book for a complete list of winners.
Distinguished University Scholars
The Distinguished University Scholars President’s Continuing Education Awards were awarded annually from 2007-08 through 2014-15. Please refer to earlier
editions of the Florida State University Fact Book for a complete list of winners.
Honors Thesis Mentor Award
1994-95 1995-96 1996-97
Marie Osmond Sociology Anthony Arnold Geology David B. Levenson Religion
1997-98 1998-99 1999-00
Tessa Bartholomeusz Religion Colleen Kelley Psychology Doron Nof Oceanography
2000-01 2001-02 2002-03
Mark G. Cooper English Mark Zeigler Communication Edward Nahmias Philosophy
2003-04 2004-05 2005-06
Kenneth Goldsby Chem. & Biochemistry William Belford English Steven McClung Communication
Suzanne M. Sinke History
2006-07 2007-08 2008-09
Joseph Hellweg Anthropology Susanne Cappendijk Biological Sciences Philip Steinberg Geography
Lisa Scott Communication Disorders Cathy Levenson Nutrition, Food & Exer. Sci. Carla Wood Jackson Commun. Disorders
2009-10 2010-11 2011-12
David Kirby English Jesse Cougle Psychology Walter Boot Psychology
Irene Padavic Sociology Daniel Maier-Katkin Criminology & Crim. Justice Ingo Wiedenhöver Physics
2012-13 2013-14 2014-15
Wu-Min Deng Biological Science Jonathan Dennis Biological Science Richard Hyson Psychology
Jon Maner Psychology Pamela Keel Psychology Brian Chadwick Biological Science
2015-16 2016-17 2017-18
Sara Hart Psychology Karl Anders Ericsson Psychology Nick Cogan Mathematics
Lorilee Medders Risk Mgmt/Ins, Real Estate Megan MacPherson Comm. Sci. & Disorders
& Legal Stds
Ralph Stair Prize for Innovation in Education (biennial award)
2013 2015 2017
Todd Bacile Business Machelle Madsen Rabieh Razzouk Learning Systems Institute
Michael Neal English Thompson Social Work
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Distinguished Service Award
1986 William R. Jones Black Studies 2003 Earle Lee Boys’ Choir
1987 Na'im Akbar Psychology 2004 Roberta Christie International Center
1988 David L. Ammerman History 2005 Angela Richardson C.A.R.E.
1989 Douglas G. St. Angelo Political Science 2006 Retha Bowman Building Services
Maxine D. Jones History 2007 Davis Houck Communication
1990 Melvin T. Stith Marketing 2008 Jose Rodriguez Medicine
1991 Joe M. Richardson History 2009 Tamara Bertrand Jones Student Affairs
1992 Sandra Rackley Undergraduate Studies 2010 Maxine Montgomery English
1993 Freddie Groomes Human Resources 2011 Vanessa Solomon Leadership & Civic Ed.
1994 R. Bruce Bickley, Jr. English 2012 Jimmy Pastrano Leadership & Civic Ed.
1995 Fred Seamon Public Administration 2013 Kendall Campbell College of Medicine
1996 Andre J. Thomas Music 2014 Penny Ralston Human Sciences
1997 Sheila Ortiz-Taylor English 2015 Rhea Lathan English
1998 Joy M. Bowen Student Affairs 2016 Bruce Lamont ESIS
1999 Jawole Willa Jo Zollar Dance 2017 Darryl Marshall Financial Aid
2000 Edward Love Sculptor Okenwa Okoli Engineering
2001 Billy R. Close Criminology 2018 Fabian Tata C.A.R.E.
2002 Jenice Rankins Nutr., Food & Exercise Sci. Joedreka Brown Speights Medicine
Source: Office of the President; Office of the Provost
The Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-97
Ross Oglesby Award
The Ross Oglesby Award is presented each year on Homecoming weekend by the Garnet and Gold
Key to a faculty or staff member who has given distinguished service to students and to the university.
1973 Stephen S. Winters Dean, Basic Studies and Professor of Geology
1974 Robert O. Lawton Special Asst. to the President & Professor of English
1975 Thomas G. Wright Professor, Music
1976 Sara K. Srygley Professor, Library Science
1977 Bernard F. Sliger President
1978 Katherine B. Hoffman Professor, Chemistry
1979 Sherrill W. Ragans Director, Housing
1980 John J. Carey Professor, Religion
1981 Daisy P. Flory Dean of the Faculties
1982 Richard G. Fallon Dean and Professor, Theatre
1983 Bobby E. Leach Vice President, Student Affairs
1984 Merrill B. Hintikka Associate Professor, Philosophy
1985 Sandra W. Rackley Associate Professor, Communication
1986 James A. Hayes Dean of Students
1987 Gilbert Lazier Dean, School of Theatre
1988 William P. Barco Associate Director, Alumni Affairs
1989 Sally J. Karioth Associate Professor, Nursing
1990 Ray Solomon Dean, College of Business
1991 Kurt G. Hofer Professor, Biological Science
1992 Stephen MacNamara Director, Collins Center
1993 Nancy A. Turner Director, Oglesby Union
1994 Maxine Jones Associate Professor, History
1995 Robert Braswell Professor, Engineering
1996 Robert Reeves Associate Professor, Biological Science
1997 Clifford K. Madsen Professor, Music
1998 Kenneth A. Goldsby Associate Professor, Chemistry
1999 Joseph Beckham Chairman, Dept. of Educational Leadership
2000 Mark G. Striffler Associate Director, Oglesby Union
2001 Betty Lou Joanos Associate Director, FSU Alumni Association
2002 Max Carraway University Registrar
2003 Reubin Askew Alumnus and Former Governor of Florida
2004 Mark Bertolami Director of Facilities Planning
2005 Alicia Crew Director of Campus Recreation
2006 William Woodyard Associate Professor, Business Law & Real Estate
2007 Mark Edenfield FSU Police Department
2008 Timothy Matherly Associate Professor, Management
2009 Thomas Kent “TK” Wetherell President
2010 Lawrence G. “Larry” Abele Provost
2011 Susan Blessing Professor, Physics
2012 Linda Mahler Associate Dean, Undergraduate Studies
2013 Mary Coburn Vice President for Student Affairs
2014 Laura Osteen Center for Leadership and Social Change
2015 Joseph B. Schlenoff Chemistry and Biochemistry
2016 Craig Filar National Fellowships
2017 Eva Killings University Dining
Online Resource: The Garnet and Gold Key’s website can be accessed online at: http://sga.fsu.edu/ggkey.shtml
98-Awards and Honors Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Honorary Degrees Awarded
Year Name Field of Distinction Doctoral Title
1912 Rowena Longmire Education Master of Arts
1935 Ruth Bryan Owen Rhode Public Service Laws
1950 Henri Bonnet International Affairs Humane Letters
Mark Frederick Boyd Medicine Science
1952 Wouter Bleeker Science Science
1955 William Morrison Robinson, Jr. History Humanities
1956 Millard Fillmore Caldwell Public Service Laws
LeRoy Collins Public Service Laws
William George Dodd Education Literature
Spessard Lindsey Holland Public Service Laws
Philip Wylie Literature Literature
1957 Doak Sheridan Campbell Education Laws
Ernst von Dohnanyi Music Music
George A. Smathers Public Service Laws
1959 J. Velma Keen Business Laws
1960 Cyril O. Houle Education Laws
1961 Glen T. Seaborg Science Science
Vivian Ahlsweh Williams Literature Literature
1962 Leonard J. Brass Science Science
Thomas B. Swann Business/Public Service Laws
1963 Pablo Casals Music Music
Luther H. Hodges Public Service/Business Laws
Karl Zerbe Art Fine Arts
1964 Cecil Farris Bryant Public Laws
Edwin A. Menninger Science Science
Dorothy Barclay Thompson Journalism Humane Letters
1965 Arthur Statan Adams Science/Public Service/Education Laws
J. J. Daniel Law/Business Laws
Robert J. Van de Graaff Science Science
1968 Michael E. DeBakey Medicine Science
Lamar Dodd Art & Education Fine Arts
Robert L. Shaw Music Music
1969 Lucius D. Battle Public Service Humane Letters
Andres Segovia Music Music
1970 Alan S. Boyd Public Service Laws
Audrey Wood Liebling Literature Humane Letters
Gregor Piatigorsky Music Music
Nelson Poynter Public Service Humane Letters
Paul M. Rudolph Architecture Fine Arts
1971 Ed V. Komarek Science Science
1972 Wilbur J. Cohen Education Humanities
John Mackay Shaw Poetry Humanities
1973 Karl Dietrich Bracher History Humane Letters
William D. McElroy Science Science
Allen Morris Public Service Humane Letters
Julia V. Morton Science Science
1975 Philip Handler Science Humanities
Helen Hayes MacArthur Theatre Humane Letters
King Hussein I (Hashemite-Jordan) Public Service Humane Letters
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Awards and Honors-99
Honorary Degrees Awarded
Year Name Field of Distinction Doctoral Title
1976 Chester H. Ferguson Education/Public Service Humane Letters
Stephen C. O'Connell Education/Law Humane Letters
1977 Mae Knight Clark Education Humane Letters
Lee Strasberg Theatre Fine Arts
Herbert Spencer Zim Science/Education Science
1978 Lillian Gordy Carter Public Service Humane Letters
Michael Butler Yeats International Affairs Laws
William H. Werkmeister Philosophy Humane Letters
1979 Rev. Charles K. Steele, Sr. Public Service Humane Letters
William Styron Literature Literature
1980 B. K. Roberts Public Service/Law Humane Letters
1981 Burt Reynolds Theatre Humane Letters
1982 Roger L. Stevens Theatre Humane Letters
1983 Ricardo De La Espriella Public Service Laws
Beth Walton Moor Public Service Humane Letters
William C. Norris Business/Public Service Humane Letters
1984 Rafael Caldera Public Service/Education Humane Letters
John P. McGovern Medicine Science
1985 Claude Pepper Public Service Humane Letters
1986 Don Fuqua Public Service/Science Science
Daisy Parker Flory Public Service Humane Letters
Joseph Papp Theatre Humane Letters
1988 Reubin Askew Public Service Humane Letters
Toshiaki Ogasawara Public Service Humane Letters
1989 George Langford Business/Public Service Humane Letters
G. William Miller Finance/Public Service Humane Letters
1990 D. Burke Kibler Business/Public Service Humane Letters
1991 Gunther Schuller Music Music
Gus A. Stavros Business/Public Service Humane Letters
Robert Edward Turner, III Business/Public Service Humane Letters
Marguerite Neel Williams Public Service Humane Letters
Ada Belle Winthrop-King Modern Languages Humane Letters
1992 Louise Ireland Humphrey Public Service Humane Letters
Oscar Arias Sanchez Public Service Humane Letters
1993 Walter Lanier "Red" Barber Public Broadcasting Humane Letters
D. Allan Bromley Public Service Science
1994 Betty Mae Jumper Public Service Humane Letters
Simon Ostrach Space Science/Engineering Engineering Science
Rosa L. Parks Civil Rights Humane Letters
1995 C. DuBose Ausley Public Service Humane Letters
1996 William R. Mote Marine Science Science
Sir James Lighthill Mathematics Science
1997 Russell V. Ewald Public Service Humane Letters
Louis J. Hector Public Service Humane Letters
Ben Weider Public Service Humane Letters
James M. Moran Business Humane Letters
Richard W. Ervin Public Service Laws
Charles B. Reed Education Humane Letters
1998 Rod M. Brim, Sr. Business Humane Letters
John Paul Stevens U. S. Supreme Court Laws
Godfrey Smith Business Humane Letters
100-Awards and Honors Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Honorary Degrees Awarded
Year Name Field of Distinction Doctoral Title
1999 Mart Pierson Hill Public Service Humane Letters
Carl A. DeSantis Business Humane Letters
Thomas F. Petway, III Business Humane Letters
2000 James C. Smith Public Service Humane Letters
2001 Ann Reinking Dance/Theatre/Film Fine Arts
Reid B. Hughes Business/Public Service Humane Letters
2002 Charlotte Edwards Maguire Medicine/Public Service Humane Letters
2003 Herbert F. Morgan Public Service Humane Letters
2005 DeVoe L. Moore Business/Public Service Humane Letters
Carlisle Floyd Music/Opera Humane Letters
Jim Shore Business/Public Service Laws
2006 Tom Brokaw Broadcasting & Journalism Humane Letters
2007 Mary Lou Norwood Public Service Humane Letters
Albert J. Dunlap Business Humane Letters
Mark S. Wrighton Chemistry Humane Letters
Kitty B. Hoffman Chemistry Science
Edward W. Rabin Business MBA
2008 Ernest Cook Medicine Humane Letters
Charles A. Smith Business MBA
2009 Paul Kagame Public Service Laws
2012 Lee Corso Media and Communication Humane Letters
Edward O. Wilson Evolutionary Biology Humane Letters
Judith A. Dunlap Philanthropy Humane Letters
Tommie Wright Music Music
2013 Margaret "Maggie" Allesee Choreography Humane Letters
2014 Robert "Bobby" Bowden Athletics/Public Service Humane Letters
Louise Jones Gopher Public Service Humane Letters
2015 Lucy Ho Public Service Humane Letters
2016 Christopher Still Art Humane Letters
Grace Dansby Philanthropy/Public Service Humane Letters
Source: Office of the President
The James D. Westcott Distinguished Service Medal
The President of the University, having received the advice and consent of the Faculty Senate Steering Committee, may award to
appropriate persons The James D. Westcott Distinguished Service Medal. A recipient of the Westcott Medal will be a person
whose distinguished service merits exceptional recognition and whose life and work exemplifies the Vires, Artes, and Mores,
which the University seeks to nurture in its students.
Year Westcott Medal Recipient
1989 Governor T. LeRoy Collins
1991 Representative Herbert F. Morgan
Dr. Augustus B. Turnbull III
1995 Senator Robert M. Johnson
Dr. Norman E. Thaggard
2003 Dr. Steve Edwards
2007 Louise Jones Gopher
2009 David Coburn
Support Services
Photo: Oglesby Union
Oglesby Union
Construction on the Oglesby Union began in 2018. An anticipated opening will occur in Fall 2020.
102-Support Services Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Institutes & Research Centers
Institutes and Research Centers are entities proposed by universities, the Legislature, or the Florida Board of Education (FBOE);
approved by the Board of Governors (BOG) and/or the Chancellor or a university president (depending on the type of institute/center); and
established by the universities for the purpose of coordinating intra- and/or inter-institutional research, service, and training activities that
supplement and extend existing departmental instruction, research, and service programs. In some instances, institutes/centers are established
by law, in which case they operate in accordance not only with State University System policies, rules, and procedures, but also with state
statutes. The institutes and centers, along with their directors, are listed below. This list is accurate as of August 2018.
INSTITUTE OR CENTER DIRECTOR(S)
Center for Academic and Professional Development Mr. William H. Lindner
The Frederick L. Jenks Center for Intensive English Studies Dr. Patrick Kennell
Learning Systems Institute Dr. Jeffrey Milligan
Institute of Science and Public Affairs
John Scott Dailey Florida Institute of Government Dr. Jeff Hendry
Institute of Science and Public Affairs Dr. Stephen Hodge
Florida Resources and Environmental Analysis Center Dr. Stephen Hodge
Center for Biomedical and Toxicological Research Dr. Christopher Teaf
and Hazardous Waste Management
Center for Economic Forecasting and Analysis Dr. Julie Harrington
Florida State Climate Center Mr. David Zierden and Mr. Daniel Brouillette
Florida Conflict Resolution Consortium and FCRC Consensus Center Dr. Robert M. Jones
Center for Prevention and Early Intervention Policy Dr. Mimi Graham
Center for the Advancement of Human Rights Dr. Terence Coonan
The Florida Center for Prevention Research
Drs. Thomas Bowermeister and Steven Brooks
Institute for Cooperative Environmental Research (inactive) Dr. Roy Herndon
Center for Information Management and Educational Services Dr. Rebecca Augustyniak
Center for Higher Education Research, Teaching and Innovation Dr. Thomas K. Wetherell
Center on Better Health and Life for Underserved Populations (Joint Center Dr. Penny Ralston
with the College of Human Sciences)
Institute for Academic Leadership Dr. Lawrence G. Abele
College of Applied Studies (Panama City Campus, FL)
Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) Institute Dr. John Smith
College of Arts and Sciences
Institute of Molecular Biophysics Dr. Piotr Fajer
Statistical Consulting Center Dr. Steve Ramsier
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Institute Dr. Kevin Speer
Antarctic Marine Geology Research Facility Dr. Vincent Salters
Institute for Cognitive Sciences Dr. Michael Kaschak
Institute on Napoleon and the French Revolution Dr. Rafe Blaufarb
Center for Ocean-Atmospheric Prediction Studies Dr. Eric Chassignet
Institute for Fishery Resource Ecology (inactive) Dr. Felicia C. Coleman
Institute on World War II and the Human Experience Dr. G. Kurt Piehler
Center for Humanities and Society Dr. John Kelsay
Winthrop-King Institute for Contemporary French and Francophone Studies Dr. Martin Munro
Middle East Studies Center Dr. Zeina Schlenoff
Karst Environmental Center Dr. Bill Hu
Center for Security and Assurance in IT (C-SAIT) Dr. Michael Burmester
Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine (Joint Center with College Dr. Daniel Vera
of Medicine)
College of Business
Real Estate Research Center Dr. Dean Gatzlaff
Center for Risk Management Education and Research Dr. Lynne McChristian
Human Resource Management Center Dr. Darren Brooks
Institute for Applied Business Research Mr. Jeffery Horton
Jim Moran Institute for Global Entrepreneurship Dr. F. Randy Blass
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Support Services-103
Institutes & Research Centers
INSTITUTE OR CENTER DIRECTOR(S)
College of Business (continued)
Carl DeSantis Center for Executive Management Education Dr. Frederick Bonney
The Florida Catastrophic Storm Risk Management Center Dr. Jack Nicholson
College of Communication and Information
Communication Research Center Dr. Jay Rayburn
L.L. Schendel Speech and Hearing Clinic Dr. Lisa Scott
Center for Hispanic Marketing Communication Dr. Sindy Chapa
FSU Project Management Center Dr. John DuBard
Institute for Intercultural Communication and Research (Joint Institute Drs. Stephen McDowell and
with Student Affairs) Cynthia Green
Communication and Early Childhood Research and Practice Center Dr. Juliann Woods
Information Use Management and Policy Institute Dr. Charles McClure
Institute for Digital Information and Scientific Communication Dr. Gregory Riccardi
College of Criminology and Criminal Justice
Center for Criminology and Public Policy Research Dr. Thomas Blomberg
College of Education
Center for the Study of Technology in Counseling and Career Development Drs. Casey Dozier and Debra Osborn
Hardee Center on Leadership and Values Dr. Kathy Guthrie
Center for Sport, Health and Equitable Development Dr. Joshua I. Newman
Center for Education Research in Mathematics, Engineering and Science Dr. Sherry Southerland
Center for Postsecondary Success Dr. Shouping Hu
FAMU–FSU College of Engineering
Center for Intelligent Systems, Control and Robotics Dr. Emmanuel Collins
High Performance Materials Institute Dr. Richard Liang
Energy and Sustainability Center Dr. Juan Ordonez
Florida Center for Advanced Aero-Propulsion Dr. Lou Cattafesta
Aeropropulsion, Mechatronics and Energy Center Dr. Chiang Shih
Center for Accessibility and Safety for an Aging Population Dr. John Sobanjo
Center for Transportation and Public Safety Dr. Lisa Spainhour
College of Fine Arts
Maggie Allesee National Center for Choreography Ms. Carla Peterson
College of Human Sciences
Center for Couple and Family Therapy Dr. Kristen Greene
Florida State University Family Institute Dr. Frank Fincham
Center for Advancing Exercise and Nutrition Research on Aging Dr. Bahram Arjmandi
Institute of Sports Sciences and Medicine (Joint Institute with the College of Medicine) Dr. Chester Ray
Center on Better Health and Life for Underserved Populations (Joint Center Dr. Penny Ralston
with Institute of Science and Public Affairs)
College of Law
Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine and Law (Joint Center with Dr. Marshall Kapp
the College of Medicine)
College of Medicine
Center for Underrepresented Minorities in Academic Medicine Dr. Leslie Beitsch, Interim
Center of Excellence for Patient Safety Dr. Leslie Beitsch
Florida Blue Center for Rural Health Research and Policy Dr. Gail Bellamy
Center on Medicine and Public Health Dr. George Rust
Center for Behavioral Health Integration Dr. Heather Flynn
Autism Institute Dr. Amy Wetherby
Center on Global Health Dr. Daniel Van Durme
Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine and Law Dr. Marshall Kapp
(Joint Center with the College of Law)
Institute of Sports Sciences and Medicine (Joint Center with the College of Dr. Chester Ray
Human Sciences)
104-Support Services Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Institutes & Research Centers
INSTITUTE OR CENTER DIRECTOR(S)
College of Medicine (continued)
Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine (Joint Center with Dr. Daniel Vera
the College of Arts and Sciences)
Center for Brain Repair Dr. Pradeep Bhide
Center for Child Stress and Health Dr. Elena Reyes
Center for Translational Behavioral Research Dr. Silvie Naar
College of Music
Center for Music Research Dr. John Geringer
Center for Music of the Americas Dr. Denise Von Glahn
Institute for Infant and Child Medical Music Therapy Dr. Jayne Standley
College of Nursing
Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare Center for Research and Evidence Based Practice Dr. Eileen Cormier
Center for Indigenous Nursing Research for Health Equity Dr. John Lowe
College of Social Sciences and Public Policy
Pepper Institute on Aging and Public Policy Dr. Anne Barrett
Center for Demography and Population Health Dr. Karin Brewster
DeVoe L. Moore Center for the Study of Critical Issues
in Economic Policy and Government Dr. Samuel Staley
Center for the Study of Democratic Performance Dr. William Berry
Claude Pepper Center Dr. Larry Polivka
Florida Center for Public Management Dr. Ben Green
Florida Public Affairs Center/Center for Disaster Risk Policy Dr. David Merrick
Gus A. Stavros Center for the Advancement of
Free Enterprise and Economic Education Drs. James Gwartney and Joseph Calhoun
LeRoy Collins Institute Dr. Carol Weissert
Center for Civic and Nonprofit Leadership Dr. Ralph Brower
L. Charles Hilton Center for the Study of Economic Prosperity and
Individual Opportunity Dr. Shawn Kantor
College of Social Work
Institute for Social Work Research Dr. James Clark
Institute for Family Violence Studies Dr. Karen Oehme
Trinity Institute for the Addictions (inactive) Dr. James Clark
Florida Institute for Child Welfare Dr. Jessica Pryce
Center for the Study and Promotion of Communities, Families and Children Dr. Ellen Piekalkiewicz
Dedman School of Hospitality
International Center for Hospitality Research and Development Dr. Woo G. Kim
International Programs
Florida-Costa Rica Linkage Institute (FLORICA) Ms. Gisela Fisher
Jim Moran School of Entrepreneurship
Center for Retail, Merchandising and Product Development Ms. Ann Langston
Themed Experience Institute Dr. Peter Weishar
Provost, Office of the
Institute for Successful Longevity Dr. Neil Charness
Research, Office of the Vice President for
Center for Advanced Power Systems Dr. Roger McGinnis, Sr.
Future Fuels Institute Dr. Ryan Rodgers
Florida Climate Institute (Joint Center with the University of Florida) Dr. Eric Chassignet
Health Equity Research Institute Dr. Penny Ralston
Student Affairs, Office of the Vice President for
Florida Center for Interactive Media Mr. Mike Ferguson
Institute for Intercultural Communication and Research (Joint Center Drs. Stephen McDowell and
with the College of Communication and Information) Cynthia Green
Source: Office of the Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs
The Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Students-105
University Libraries
University Libraries provide collections, resources and services to enhance the learning, teaching, research, and
service activities of the Florida State University. The Libraries’ collections include nearly 3.75 million titles and the web
site offers access to more than 400 databases and 200,000 electronic journals. Materials not available online or at the
libraries may be requested through interlibrary loan or through the statewide UBorrow system, offering FSU faculty and
students access to millions of books from 40 other state university and college libraries. The Library Express Delivery
Service delivers books and articles to faculty, post-docs, graduate, teaching and research assistants on a daily basis.
University Libraries had approximately 1.5 million* visitors in 2016-17. In the month of October 2016 alone,
Strozier and Dirac had over 200,000 visitors. Strozier Library, FSU’s largest library, is open 134 hours each week to
provide around-the-clock research assistance and other services like free academic tutoring and a robust range of
academic support throughout the day and late into the night. Students and faculty have a choice of learning spaces, from
the Scholars Commons’ quiet Reading Room to the 24-hour coffee shop to the buzz of the Undergraduate Commons.
Library faculty offer classes and consultations to teach critical research and thinking skills reaching over 22,000
participants. Seven other campus libraries offer many of the same services and resources that are customized to
complement the disciplines they serve. For distant learners and other off-campus library users, online research services
are available, and the library staff offers outreach to residence halls and buildings across campus.
The FSU Libraries include 7 libraries on campus: the Robert Manning Strozier Library, Paul A. M. Dirac Science
Library, Mildred and Claude Pepper Library, Warren Allen Music Library, College of Law Legal Research Center, College
of Medicine Medical Library, and the College of Engineering Library. Library materials and services are also available at
the FSU Panama City Campus and the Ringling campus in Sarasota, as well as International Programs study centers in
London, Florence, Valencia, and Panama.
*includes Strozier, Dirac, Claude Pepper, Engineering, Law, Medicine, FSUPC, Ringling, Music, Republic of Panama Libraries, and the
Heritage Museum for FY 2016-17.
2012-2013 2013-2014 2014-2015
2015-2016 2016-2017
Library Collections
Print Volumes in Libraries 2,327,396 2,442,180
2,818,724 2,330,541 1,753,658
E-books 376,227 393,863
1,244,589 1,609,376 1,929,123
Databases 887 1,047
1,064 1,144 434*
Electronic Journals 86,570 95,299
119,385 125,007 224,836
* previous database numbers counted multiple access points.
Public Services
Reference Transactions 136,219 79,187
89,755 59,012 46,662
Classes Taught 1,096 1,050
944 1,030 1,134
Library-Managed Tutoring Sessions 4,118 3,017
7,964 2,592 4,917
Financial Information
Staff Salaries
(including Student Assistants) $7,882,702 $7,855,731
$8,755,996 $8,934,572 $8,747,997
Expenditures for Books
and Related Materials $8,909,355 $9,440,934
$9,445,719 $10,410,115 $10,246,013
Total Library Expenditures $17,507,305 $17,931,468
$18,919,092 $20,599,073 $19,975,277
Library Expenditure per Student $423.90 $432.33
$452.90 $496.69 $477.11
Library Expenditures as a Percentage
of University Totals (% of E&G) 4.21% 3.46%
3.36% 3.44% 3.49%
Note: Includes figures for all university libraries.
Source: Strozier Library
Online Resource: The University Libraries’ website can be accessed at: www.lib.fsu.edu
106-Support Services Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Florida State University Buildings - Some Facts
BUILDINGS OF FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY
SOME HISTORY, SOME FACTS, SOME DESCRIPTIONS
Many buildings on campus remain today from the pre-Florida State University era; however, none are still standing from the
nineteenth century. The current university is built from a core of buildings that remain from the years of the Florida State College for
Women. The oldest building on campus, Bryan Hall, was built during the days of the Florida Female College, immediately prior to the
FSCW designation.
BRYAN HALL
Bryan Hall, the oldest existing structure on the Florida State University campus, was originally built in 1908 and named in
honor of United States Senator William James Bryan. The building served as a residence hall until 1969 when a fire in the Westcott
Building forced administrators to seek office space in Bryan Hall. Although some offices later returned to Westcott, others remained
until the construction of the University Center made the hall available for restoration as a residence hall. The two-year renovation
project was completed in January 1997 and the building was opened again as a residence hall in August 1997.
WESTCOTT BUILDING
The Westcott Building and Westcott Auditorium were constructed in 1909 and occupied in 1911. Westcott was known as the
Administration Building until 1936 when it was officially named the James D. Westcott, Jr. Memorial Building by the Board of Control,
the governing body of higher education in Florida at the time. James D. Westcott, Jr. was born in Tallahassee in 1893 and served the
State of Florida as Attorney General and as a Supreme Court Justice. The Westcott Building burned in 1969, and when it was
renovated, the fourth floor, previously an attic, was added as regular office space. In 1971, the Westcott Auditorium was named the
Ruby Diamond Auditorium after Miss Ruby Diamond who attended Florida State College for Women and later became a benefactor of
the University. In 2008, the auditorium was closed for renovation. It reopened in October of 2010 as the Ruby Diamond Concert Hall.
REYNOLDS HALL
Reynolds Hall was constructed in 1913 and named for Melissa E. Cochrane Reynolds, the first Lady Principal of The Florida
State College for Women. Reynolds Hall was one of five historic residence halls to be renovated in a multi-million dollar project.
During the renovation, the historical and aesthetic value of the building was preserved, in addition to providing up-to-date comfort and
safety for students. Reynolds reopened in 1996 as a residence hall.
WILLIAM JOHNSTON BUILDING
Constructed in 1913, for over 60 years this building was known as the Dining Hall. When first constructed, it housed all the
food operations including a bakery, creamery, and cannery. The eastern portion of the building, called the Suwannee Arcade, was the
informal dining facility, while the western portion of the building contained two grand formal dining rooms with the President's private
dining area above and between. At one time, all the dormitories and the infirmary were connected to the dining hall by a series of
arcades, making it possible for students to reach the dining facilities and avoid any inclement weather. The Suwannee Arcade was
restored and reopened in Spring 2006 as a student dining facility. The west wing of the Johnston Building was renovated and reopened
in fall 2011. The building was named in the early 1980s for William H. Johnston.
BROWARD HALL
Broward Hall was constructed in 1917 and is one of the oldest residence halls on campus. It was named for Napoleon
Bonaparte Broward, the 19th governor of Florida from 1905 to 1909, during whose term the Buckman Act reorganized higher
education in the state and designated the Tallahassee school as the Florida State College for Women. Broward Hall was reopened in
August 1998 as a coeducational hall after being closed for two years of renovation.
FRANCIS EPPES HALL
This building was constructed in 1918 and is one of the last remaining classroom buildings on campus from the pre-FSU era.
After serving as the home to Education programs for its early years, it was known simply as the Psychology Building until the
university’s sesquicentennial celebration in 2001, when it was named in honor of Francis Eppes. Eppes, a seven-term Tallahassee mayor
and grandson of U.S. President Thomas Jefferson, led the effort to locate the Seminary West of the Suwannee River, the forerunner of
FSU, in Tallahassee. Once the school opened, Eppes served 11 years on the school's board of directors, including eight years as
president of the board. In 2008, the Psychology Department moved to its new building on the west side of campus. Eppes Hall was
fully renovated in 2012 and became the home to the College of Criminology and Criminal Justice in 2013.
REGIONAL REHABILITATION CENTER
This building was originally constructed in 1919 as the College Infirmary. As the College and Tallahassee grew, its role changed
from student hospital to campus clinic, and is remembered as the Clinic Building. In 1966, a new student health center was built and
the Clinic was given to various departments for use as office space. In the mid-1970s, the building was renovated, and the back half of
the building, with its connecting arcade, was demolished. In June of 2012, the Regional Rehabilitation Center was demolished and was
replaced in the fall of 2013 by the Honors, Scholars, and Fellows House.
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Support Services-107
Florida State University Buildings - Some Facts
JENNIE MURPHREE HALL
This building was constructed in 1921 and was a women’s dormitory until 2015. The hall was named for Mrs. Jennie
Murphree, a native of Tallahassee and the wife of Albert A. Murphree, the first president of Florida Female College. Today, the beauty
of the Jacobean Revival architecture remains intact while the interior boasts state-of-the-art systems. The building was renovated in
1993, and became coeducational in 2015.
DODD HALL
Dodd Hall was constructed in 1923. It was the library for FSCW and then FSU until 1956 when a new modern library was
constructed. It is named for William George Dodd who joined the faculty of Florida State College for Women in 1910, became the
head of the Department of English and went on to serve as the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences for Florida State University.
In 1982 the main library portion of the building was renovated and named the Pepper Library in honor of Claude and Mildred Pepper.
The library has since been relocated to the Claude Pepper Center, and replaced by the Werkmeister Reading Room. In 1993, the Dodd
Hall Auditorium was added to the building. Inscribed over the entrance to Dodd Hall in gold letters is "The Half of Knowledge, is to
Know Where to Find Knowledge."
GILCHRIST HALL
Gilchrist Hall was constructed in 1925 and named after Albert Waller Gilchrist, the 20
th
governor of Florida, who gave
unwavering support to the Florida State College for Women as a state agency. Its gabled terra cotta roof, Gothic stonework and gently
curved entrance clearly recall medieval monastic architecture. This collection is reflected in the hall’s main lounge, which features an
intricately carved fireplace, dark multi-toned tile flooring, and grapevine motif doorway moldings. In August, 1998, Gilchrist reopened
as a coeducational hall, after being closed for two years of renovation.
WILLIAMS BUILDING
This building was constructed in 1926. It was known as the History Building until 1963 when it was named in honor of Arthur
Williams. Dr. Williams, historian and Bible scholar, was the only vice president that Florida State College for Women ever had.
Conradi Auditorium, located in a wing of this building, is named for Augusta Conradi, wife of Dr. Edward Conradi who served as
President of Florida State College for Women for 32 years. In 2001, extensive renovation of the Williams Building was completed.
While the renovation resolved many of the building’s notable design quirks, its historical appearance was maintained.
MONTGOMERY GYM
This building, constructed in 1938 as the physical education facility of Florida State College for Women, contains a heated
indoor swimming pool, basketball court, and at the time of its completion, a bowling alley. The facility has been the home of the
synchronized swimming team, The Tarpons, since its beginning. The bowling alley no longer exists but the pool, renovated in the mid-
1980s, still is in operation. The building was named for Dr. Katherine Williams Montgomery, Miss Katie, as she was known to all, a
1918 graduate of FSCW. In 1920 she became an instructor of Physical Education at the College and in 1923 was named director of
Physical Education. Dr. Montgomery died on October 1, 1958-the day she was to have retired officially from her duties at the Florida
State University. In early 2004, major renovations to Montgomery Gym were completed.
LONGMIRE BUILDING
This building was constructed in 1938 and was known for many years as the Alumni Building. It was originally constructed as a
dormitory/hotel for visitors and returning alumni. The building had a working kitchen in the basement, with a large dining room and
small parlor. The large dining room and parlor were used as reception rooms by the Alumni Association. The building was named for
Miss Rowena Longmire. Miss Longmire was an English professor and also served as faculty advisor to the Alumni Association of
FSCW, and in 1917 was president of the Alumni Association.
LANDIS HALL
Landis Hall was completed in 1939 and was originally designated as a Seniors Hall. The building later became a coed facility.
Landis Hall was named for Cary D. Landis, who was an Attorney General during the 1930s. The dormitory was renovated and
reopened in fall 2006. Landis Hall sits at the south end of the courtyard known as Landis Green, with Strozier Library situated at the
other end. Landis Hall is home to the FSU Honors Community. To celebrate Heritage Day in 2005, the Landis Green Legacy Fountain
was unveiled. The fountain commemorates the history of the university with three sculptures representing the era between 1915-1947
and three depicting present day life on campus.
Source: Special reports; University Housing Office; Physical Plant Office
Online Resources: The University Housing Office’s website can be accessed online at: www.housing.fsu.edu
FSU Facilities Design and Construction can be accessed online at: www.facilities.fsu.edu/depts/designConstr/
108-Support Services Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
FSU Buildings - Gross Square Feet and Number of Rooms
This listing of buildings contains all buildings owned or leased by Florida State University as of April 2018.
Code
Building Name
Sq. Ft.
Rms
Site 1 - Main Campus
12,149,246
33,055
0001
Westcott Building
155,325
652
0002
Diffenbaugh Building
95,911
341
0003
Williams Building
65,519
281
0004
Dodd Hall
54,366
242
0005
Eppes Hall
28,831
151
0006
Kellogg Building
45,939
226
0007
Fine Arts Building
109,393
272
0008
Bellamy Building
158,157
694
0009
Biomedical Research Facility
57,985
208
0010
Turnbull Conference Center
73,127
147
0011
Shaw Building (Main Campus)
24,645
119
0012
Murphree Hall
74,958
284
0013
Reynolds Hall
71,647
252
0014
Bryan Hall
36,795
141
0015
Broward Hall
37,149
151
0016
Gilchrist Hall
65,762
245
0017
Johnston Building
180,124
419
0019
Shores Building
53,849
173
0020
Dirac Science Library
110,780
348
0023
Rovetta - Building A
67,516
218
0025
Montgomery
94,628
237
0026
Leach Center
140,990
173
0028
Thagard Building
44,811
251
0030
Central Utilities Plant
23,880
45
0032
Law - Roberts Hall
72,869
161
0033
Satellite Utilities Plant No.1
5,940
2
0035
Hoffman Teaching Lab
72,598
130
0036
Rogers Building
60,328
262
0037
Fisher Lecture Hall
9,844
41
0038
Dittmer Chemistry Lab
147,223
604
0039
Biology Unit I
80,661
304
0040
Duxbury Hall
66,543
205
0041
Keen Building
78,685
265
0042
Collins Research Building
55,312
137
0044
Rogers Hall
66,127
177
0045
Richards Building
26,060
49
0046
Salley Hall
125,176
612
0047
Law Library
57,099
100
0048
Law Rotunda
20,273
58
0049
Dodd Lecture Hall
12,380
29
0050
Stone Building
126,189
460
0051
Oglesby Union - Turner Bldg.
80,260
185
0052
Rovetta Building B
74,705
225
0054
Housewright Music Building
108,464
286
0055
Carothers Hall
68,565
298
0057
Pepper Building
43,863
120
0070
Parking Garage #1 Woodward
304,921
141
0072
Longmire Building
39,463
169
0074
Landis Hall
106,822
382
0075
McCollum Hall
86,441
578
0076
Tanner Hall
26,138
102
0077
Mendenhall Building A
84,663
207
0078
Mendenhall Building B
17,523
44
0079
Speicher Tennis Center
20,836
24
0085
Cawthon Hall
93,987
319
0086
Pearl Tyner Welcome Center
4,739
32
0089
Kuersteiner Music Building
92,158
405
0091
Mcintosh Track & Field Bldg.
21,488
106
0100
Campbell Stadium
667,555
329
0113
Carraway Building
40,417
118
0114
Engineering Lab Building
0
36
0115
Howser Stadium
75,788
145
0116
Love Building
100,189
389
0117
Haskin Circus Complex
6,072
15
0120
Track Storage & Rest Rooms
1,153
8
0121
Harpe/Johnson Building
19,722
60
Code
Building Name
Sq. Ft.
Rms
0122
Track Press Box - Bleachers
257
3
0132
Tully Gym
91,893
179
0134
Strozier Library
229,453
435
0135
Sandels Building
71,505
259
0141
Starbucks
1,839
8
0146
Kasha Laboratory
50,802
182
0193
Oglesby Union - Crenshaw Bldg.
14,742
18
0194
Oglesby Union - Activities
47,300
166
0195
Oglesby Union - Moore Aud.
12,536
27
0196
Oglesby Union - Davis Building
60,936
112
0199
Oglesby Union Post Office
26,690
71
0202
Law -Hobby-Harrison/Cawthon
2,330
12
0203
Law - Caldwell (V. Gr.)
5,185
24
0204
Law - Damon (V. Gr.)
3,678
25
0205
Law - Ausley (V. Gr.)
3,665
21
0220
Bus Stop - Northside Acad.Way
84
1
0223
University Center - Bldg. A
252,050
1,022
0224
University Center - Bldg. B
238,350
405
0225
University Center - Bldg. C
261,576
842
0226
University Center - Bldg. D
205,023
568
0237
Central Util. Plant Storage
290
1
0238
C.U.P. Fuel Pump Building
100
1
0240
Marching Chiefs Tower & Field
250
1
0249
Zone 3 Maintenance
1,666
14
0254
Sports Clubs Fields Facility
2,763
9
0255
Westcott Welcome Center
154
3
0258
Gate Control Booth - Univ. Ctr
51
1
0260
Askew Building (Student Life)
60,944
241
0264
Middle East Center (Mod. Lang)
1,682
18
0292
Flammable Storage
255
1
0293
Hazardous Waste Facility
1,327
5
0294
Hecht House
16,970
88
0375
Bus Stop - Academic Way
271
1
0378
Parking Garage #2 - Traditions
236,577
23
0379
Student Services Building
51,478
191
0385
Stiles/Smith Team Bldg.
18,184
74
0386
W.S./S. Concessions
794
3
0387
W.S./S. Restrooms
1,012
2
0388
W.S./S. Ticket/Security Bldg
348
2
0389
Women's Softball Batting Cage
14,469
8
0390
Women's Soccer Pressbox/Seat
777
6
0391
Women's Softball/Pressbox
777
6
0392
Women's Softball Home Dugout
448
2
0393
Women's Softball Visit. Dugout
448
2
0394
Stavros Center
5,526
39
0431
Mendenhall Maintenance Annex
1,178
9
0433
Black Student Union
4,260
18
0435
Bus Stop - Chieftan Way
271
1
0436
Theatre (Fine Arts) Annex
15,843
79
0437
E.A.P. Facility
3,382
36
0438
Art Teaching Labs
6,617
24
0443
Marriage And Family Clinic
2,362
17
0445
Seminole Dining Services
3,383
35
0454
Library Technical Services
14,575
21
0456
Howser Ticket & Concession
3,177
17
0457
Howser Batting Tunnel
9,399
1
0458
Howser Grounds Maintenance
1,492
3
0459
Howser North Gate
265
1
0465
Alumni Center Facility
20,940
74
0467
FDLE Mail Facility
9,892
12
0469
Postal and Receiving
14,532
24
0470
The Lab - Building A
5,873
20
0471
The Lab - Building B
2,914
7
0476
State Storage Warehouse
16,872
21
0478
Master Craftsman Studio
5,393
22
0480
Motor Pool Gas Pumps Cover
1,036
1
0485
Bus Stop - Stadium Dr
962
1
Code
Building Name
Sq. Ft.
Rms
0486
M.L.Track Restrooms
1,852
5
0488
West Dining Facility
19,055
34
0490
Warehouse 3 - Labor & Const.
13,452
15
0491
Warehouse 4 - Parking Services
8,280
24
0495
Ragans Hall 1 (A)
52,515
298
0496
Ragans Hall 2 (B)
50,362
244
0497
Ragans Hall 3 (C)
51,462
293
0498
Ragans Hall 4 (D)
52,512
295
0499
Heritage Tower
4
1
0819
Basketball Training Facility
55,739
131
0945
Stadium Place - Training Center
11,000
37
0950
Human Rights Center
2
2021
Jim Moran Building (Ballard Bldg)
23,852
88
4000
Cage Wash Facility
11,081
33
4001
COM - Thrasher Bldg (Med Sch)
156,631
617
4002
COM - Research Building
147,789
444
4003
COM - Auditorium
8,164
10
4004
Psychology Dept. Building
179,191
714
4005
Psychology Dept. Auditorium
7,281
13
4006
Parking Garage #3 - Spirit Way
520,885
48
4007
King Life Science Building
183,281
492
4008
Chemical Science Laboratories
175,881
615
4009
Classroom Building (HCB)
109,841
134
4011
Dunlap Success Center
48,662
205
4012
President's House
16,334
80
4013
Satellite Utilities Plant No.2
7,921
2
4014
Parking Garage #4 - Call St
295,730
33
4016
President’s Event Storage
1,159
3
4020
Wildwood Hall South
80,257
321
4021
Wildwood Hall North
80,105
318
4022
Traditions Hall
243,708
371
4023
DeGraff Hall East
85,751
332
4024
DeGraff Hall West
84,102
326
4025
Parking Garage #5 - St. Augustine
279,863
34
4027
Alpha Delta Pi Pavilion
4,900
1
4028
Parking Garage #6 - W Pensacola
332,934
73
4029
Honors, Scholars & Fellows
40,007
133
4030
Health & Wellness Center
177,114
617
4031
Global & Multicultural Center
42,979
158
4033
Child Development Center
6,351
73
4034
Bill’s Bookstore
12,000
1
4040
Law School Advocacy Center
58,618
224
4041
Warren Building
36,969
227
4060
Dorman Hall
107,128
953
4061
Deviney Hall
102,860
932
4062
Azalea Hall
130,733
1011
4063
Magnolia Hall
113,238
1020
4076
Tanner Equipment Shed
1,474
1
4077
Maintenance Gas Pumps
900
1
4078
Maintenance Shed 1
780
1
4079
Maintenance Shed 2
832
1
4080
Maintenance Shed 3
1,023
1
4088
Civic Ctr. Bat House
15
1
4090
Indoor Practice Facility
96,131
27
4091
Practice Fields Tower
36
1
4104
Psy-Com Utility Bldg.
794
1
4114
Kemper Lab (OGZEB)
2,576
14
4130
Wellness Parking Booth
26
1
4190
Vending Hut - Union
320
2
4191
Vending Hut - Chieftan Way
173
2
4192
Vending Hut - Salley
734
3
4193
Kiosk - Murphree & Call
131
1
4223
Garnet-N-Go
1,806
9
4225
Bus Stop - University Center
942
1
4240
Whitcomb Facility (Band)
1,347
3
4241
Campus Garden Shed
65
1
4242
Campus Garden Pavilion
551
1
Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu Support Services-109
FSU Buildings - Gross Square Feet and Number of Rooms
Code
Building Name
Sq. Ft.
Rms
4249
Zone 3 Maintenance Storage
230
1
4385
Soccer Storage Facility
120
1
4446
Westside Courts Pavilion
1,574
4
4490
Labor & Construction Storage
676
1
4501
Recycling Ctr.- Bldg. 1
19,555
29
4502
Recycling Ctr.- Bldg. 2
4,682
27
4503
Recycling Ctr.- Bldg. 3
2,551
8
4504
Recycling Ctr.- Bldg. 4
4,150
11
4546
Tucker (Civic) Center
490,182
709
4985
Osceola Duplex - Dunwoody
1,938
1
Site 2 - FSU Ball Marine Laboratory
26,973
150
0262
Marine Lab-Grads/Gift Shop
1,338
12
0405
Marine Lab-Guest House
1,670
17
0406
Marine Lab-ADP/Boating
2,396
10
0407
Marine Lab-Classroom/Lab
2,416
9
0408
Marine Lab-Main Lab Building
6,032
29
0409
Marine Lab-North Dorm
750
8
0410
Marine Lab-South Dorm
750
8
0411
Marine Lab-Well (Pump) House
78
1
0412
Marine Lab-Electrical Vault
216
1
0441
Marine Lab-Greenhouse North
1,248
1
0442
Marine Lab-Greenhouse South
1,248
1
0462
Marine Lab-Admin Building
5,681
33
2200
Marine Lab-Fuel Pump Canopy
276
1
2201
Marine Lab-Sat Storage
61
1
2202
Marine Lab-Carpenter Shop
413
1
2203
Marine Lab-Flammable Storage
112
1
2204
Marine Lab-Hughes Storage
138
1
2205
Marine Lab-Thistle Storage
138
1
2206
Marine Lab-Security
98
1
2207
Marine Lab-Storage Stats Prog
61
1
2208
Marine Lab-Dock Storage South
61
1
2209
Marine Lab-Storage Stallings
61
1
2210
Marine Lab-Storage Maintenance
112
1
2211
Marine Lab-Storage Callinectes
61
1
2212
Marine Lab-Storage Grubbs
61
1
2213
Marine Lab-Storage Seawater
112
1
2214
Marine Lab-Herrnkind House
900
1
2215
Marine Lab- Faculty Storage
485
5
Site 4 - Alligator Point
2,205
12
0101
Alligator Pt. - Pres. Cottage
2,205
12
Site 5 - Mission Road Station
14,773
49
0230
Mission Road - New Greenhouse
2,188
4
0366
Mission Road - Greenhouse
5,320
3
0367
Mission Road - Main House
7,265
42
Site 7 - FSU Reservation
29,370
96
0277
Rez Gate House
80
1
0278
Rez Caretaker’s Residence
1,143
9
0279
Rez Storage - Cabin 6
591
1
0280
Rez Administration Building
2,131
16
0281
Rez Waterfront & Operations
3,377
17
0282
Rez Conference Ctr. - Cabin 4
5,971
22
0283
Rez Dock Cover
1,998
2
0284
Rez Recreation Building
4,014
8
0285
Rez Staff Residence - Cabin 5
1,200
1
0286
Rez Dorm - Cabin 6
1,197
4
0287
Rez Dorm - Cabin 7
1,197
5
0288
Rez Boat House
1,640
3
0289
Rez Storage - Cabin 7
591
1
7016
Rez Renegade Pavilion
200
1
7017
Rez Large Pole Shed
1,600
1
7018
Rez Gold Pavilion
100
1
7019
Rez Chickee
50
1
7020
Rez Garnet Pavilion
50
1
7021
Rez Covered Shed/Parking
120
1
7022
Rez High Ropes Pavilion
1,520
0
7023
High Ropes Course
600
0
Code
Building Name
Sq. Ft.
Rms
Site 8 – Southwest Campus
287,786
622
0018
Public Broadcast Center
53,013
169
0056
Opera Scene Shop
7,355
6
0058
Golf Course - Driving Range
195
1
0059
Golf Course - Restroom
149
2
0061
Storage Bldg. - Mag Lab
4,941
2
0062
Middleton Golf Center
29,725
96
0063
Golf Course - Maintenance
5,539
9
0064
Farm - Theater Scene Storage
6,150
6
0065
Farm - Radiation Storage
5,370
1
0066
Farm - Lab Animal Resources
5,545
18
0068
Farm - Animal Pen
2,634
1
0088
Nursery - Grounds Greenhouse
3,145
1
0157
Alumni VL1 - Office
12,114
49
0169
Alumni Vl Child Devlop. Ctr.
7,157
26
0170
Alumni Vl Maint. Shed
1,907
2
0295
Warehouse - Property Records 1
7,051
12
0297
Warehouse - Property Records 2
6,910
2
0298
Warehouse - Housing Storage 1
7,030
8
0300
Warehouse - Housing Storage 2
7,079
1
0329
Alumni Vl Infant Day Care
1,535
6
0330
Alumni Vl Toddler Day Care
2,413
17
0361
Farm Roofing Material Storage
749
4
0364
Nursery - Screened Greenhouse
1,701
1
0365
Nursery - Plant Storage
2,640
1
0368
Nursery - Wireshed Storage
169
1
0370
Warehouse - Weatherly Facility
4,080
3
0371
Nursery - Carport
370
1
0373
Golf Course - Practice Lab
1,884
6
0382
Nursery - Bldg 1 - Office
400
3
0383
Nursery - Bldg 2 - Purple
116
1
0384
Nursery - Bldg 3 - Tools
66
1
0395
Nursery - Bldg 4 - Fertilizer
100
1
0434
Nursery - Office - Trailer
708
5
0492
Warehouse - Business Services
8,055
11
0493
Warehouse Surplus
6,356
1
8001
IM Fields Control Bldg.
6,321
22
8002
IM Fields Maintenance Bldg.
6,950
15
8003
IM Fields Softball Control
4,313
21
8004
IM Fields Rec Sportsplex Bldg
7,012
25
8008
Morcom Aquatics Center
8,372
38
8009
Morcom Aquatics Mech. Bldg
2,457
6
8010
Multi-Purpose Education Facil.
47,238
15
8018
WFSU-TV Transmitter Bldg
466
1
8060
Golf Course - Storage
93
1
8061
Golf Course - Fuel Storage
66
1
8062
Golf Course - Fertilizer Storage
66
1
8088
Nursery - Bat House
81
1
Site 9 - Sarasota (Ringling Museum)
558,296
1,212
0450
Ctr. For The Performing Arts
105,359
348
9001
Ringling-Art Museum
133,859
141
9002
Ringling-Ca' d'Zan
27,225
146
9003
Ringling-Circus Museum
39,977
47
9004
Ringling-Grounds Bldg.
5,871
12
9005
Ringling-Caretaker's House
2,852
13
9006
Ringling-North Gatehouse
814
3
9007
Ringling-Pumphouse
639
1
9010
Ringling-West Wing
48,290
113
9011
Ringling-Banyan Cafe
5,298
1
9014
Ringling-Pumphouse #2
450
1
9018
Ringling-Utilities Plant
6,341
6
9019
Ringling-Visitor’s Pavilion
47,367
137
9020
Ringling-Tibbals Learning Ctr.
60,921
89
9021
Ringling-Johnson-Blalock Ct.
70,123
138
9022
Ringling-Facilities Admin.
2,454
12
9023
Ringling-Pumphouse #3
56
1
9024
Ringling-Bolger Playspace 3-LV
300
2
9025
Ringling-Bolger Playspace TP
100
1
Code
Building Name
Sq. Ft.
Rms
Site 10 PC Branch Campus
212,082
588
1004
P.C. - Tractor Storage
240
1
1005
P.C. - Barron Bldg.
27,600
110
1006
P.C. - Office Bldg. (B North)
9,681
52
1007
P.C. - Tech. Bldg (B South)
27,741
65
1008
P.C. - Bay Building (Bldg. C)
13,340
25
1009
P.C. - Auditorium
4,716
17
1010
P.C. - WFSG-TV Trans. Bldg
1,600
4
1012
P.C. - Bland Conference Ctr.
3,550
10
1014
P.C. - Admin. Services Ctr.
18,250
57
1015
P.C. - Holley Academic Ctr.
105,364
247
Site 12Bellevue
106,594
302
4500
Carnaghi Arts Building
105,560
298
4500
Carnaghi Arts Building A
421
2
4500
Carnaghi Arts Building B
421
1
4500
Carnaghi Arts Building C
192
1
Site 13Ridgeway
67,723
284
8050
FHP Academy
43,564
117
8051
FHP Dorm
24,159
167
Site 17FAMU/FSU Engineering
225,008
585
0527
FAMU/FSU Engin. Bldg. B
98,520
275
0577
FAMU/FSU Engin. Bldg. A
126,488
310
Site 18Innovation Park
858,727
2,360
0022
Mag Lab - General Science
201,654
603
0069
DC Magnet Building
98,962
90
0269
Mag Lab - NMR Building
30,050
77
0380
NW Regional Data Center
23,952
47
0804
I.P. - Sliger (Bernard F.) #1
40,521
143
0813
I.P. - Johnson (Robert M.)
41,807
132
0814
I.P. - Shaw (Frank) Building
42,111
130
0824
Research Foundation Bldg. A
84,834
293
0825
Research Foundation Bldg. B
87,477
403
0826
CAPS Dielectrics Lab
1,215
1
0827
CAPS Medium Voltage Lab
3,721
1
0849
CAPS High-Bay Lab
5,215
2
0854
Materials Research Building
50,238
121
0855
AME Bldg
61,726
131
0856
AME Utilities Building
5,222
8
0860
Technology Services Building
80,022
178
Site 19Gadsden County (Critchfield Hall)
0466
Critchfield Hall (Recording)
14,400
60
Site 21Downtown
2000
Challenger Learning Center
39,169
100
Site 30 Panama City (Panama) Study Center
0803
City of Knowledge
11,304
37
Site 40 Capitol Center
4042
Winchester Bldg.
21,518
113
Site 41NW (Commonwealth Blvd)
92,158
319
3401
FSURF Entrepreneurial Building
38,823
103
3402
FSU Research Complex
19,421
110
3403
Maryland Building
33,914
106
Site 42 North Campus
3801
Facility for Arts Research
26,498
103
Site 66 Tallahassee Regional Campus
6020
Killearn Center Bldg A
20,000
125
Site 67 Immokalee
2600
Collier (Immokalee) Clinic
39,716
165
All Other Sites
11,041
549
University Total Square Feet
14,814,587
University Total Rooms
40,886
Source: FSU Facilities Department
Online: http://www.facilities.fsu.edu
110-Support Services Florida State University Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Net Assignable Square Footage (NASF) by College
An assignable classification is determined by functionally usable space. The standards for the categories listed are used by the
Florida Board of Governors based on federal room classification standards (the Facilities Inventory and Classification Manual
maintained by the National Center for Education Statistics). The table does not include residential halls.
College / Department
Classrooms
Class
Labs
Open
Labs
Research
Labs
Study
Office &
Conference
College of Arts & Sciences
22,349
60,947
14,239
380,716
15,978
337,109
College of Business
162
1,355
8,427
0
1,739
48,599
College of Communication & Information
2,339
4,263
8,688
2,941
2,203
38,771
College of Criminology & Criminal Justice
1,360
0
1,849
0
0
13,779
College of Education
1,538
154
2,052
0
954
47,967
College of Engineering
16,716
24,951
8,297
34,162
6,608
38,300
College of Fine Arts
8,150
76,200
35,073
18,909
4,129
42,162
The Graduate School
0
0
0
20,816
0
7,975
College of Human Sciences
483
14,640
8,039
3,070
524
16,499
College of Law
917
316
1,471
0
33,197
42,741
College of Medicine
6,808
10,466
12,844
49,587
5,016
96,503
College of Motion Picture Arts
297
9,220
3,625
2,301
797
8,403
College of Music
5,979
39,688
7,825
2,191
14,793
19,498
College of Nursing
2,743
5,352
592
349
3,337
12,074
College of Social Sciences & Public Policy
0
1,712
1,913
0
763
35,601
College of Social Work
0
0
0
2,427
0
16,771
Centralized or General Purpose Classrooms
281,671
52,059
1,420
3,892
3,717
26,954
University Libraries
753
0
3,242
524
213,794
24,763
Athletics
1,900
0
1,045
217
0
64,089
Student Union/Center
0
0
1,460
0
289
16,367
Undergraduate Studies
1,783
0
0
0
0
0
Total
355,948
301,323
122,101
522,102
307,838
954,925
College / Department
Special
Use
General
Use
Support
Health
Care
Total, all
Categories
College of Arts & Sciences
20,909
9,656
3,753
0
865,656
College of Business
0
6,820
0
0
67,102
College of Communication & Information
5,958
731
22
0
65,916
College of Criminology & Criminal Justice
0
530
0
0
17,518
College of Education
6,177
871
0
0
59,713
College of Engineering
2,685
306
6,371
0
138,396
College of Fine Arts
0
36,729
20,465
400
242,217
The Graduate School
0
1,035
0
0
29,826
College of Human Sciences
895
1,678
0
0
45,828
College of Law
0
6,469
0
0
85,111
College of Medicine
11,905
7,850
162
30,440
231,581
College of Motion Picture Arts
0
0
360
0
25,003
College of Music
222
46,232
4,767
0
141,195
College of Nursing
0
1,099
0
0
25,546
College of Social Sciences & Public Policy
0
0
0
0
39,989
College of Social Work
1,083
147
0
0
20,428
Centralized or General Purpose Classrooms
79,452
55,023
0
0
504,188
University Libraries
201
1,944
562
0
245,783
Athletics
248,981
32,533
4,175
9,200
362,140
Student Union/Center
426
106,484
2,799
0
127,825
Undergraduate Studies
0
0
0
0
1,783
Total
378,894
316,137
43,436
40,040
3,342,744
Source: FSU Facilities Department
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Support Services-111
Florida State University Site and Acreage Holdings
Florida State University Sites
Site Gross Total
Code County Name of Site Square Ft. Buildings Rooms Acres
1 Leon Main Campus 12,149,246 217 33,055 485.0
2 Franklin FSU Ball Marine Laboratory 26,973 28 150 78.0
3 Leon Cascade Lake 0 0 0 79.4
4 Franklin Alligator Point 2,205 1 12 23.5
5 Leon Mission Road Station 14,773 3 49 13.7
6 Leon Plant Street 0 0 0 1.0
7 Leon FSU Reservation 29,370 21 96 61.5
8 Leon Southwest Campus 287,786 46 622 599.2
9 Sarasota Sarasota (Ringling Museum) 558,296 19 1,212 56.9
10 Bay Panama City Branch Campus 212,082 10 588 25.6
12 Leon Belle Vue 106,594 3 302 15.3
13 Leon Ridgeway 67,723 2 284 2.8
17 Leon FAMU/FSU College of Engineering 225,008 2 585 22.2
18 Leon Innovation Park 858,727 16 2,360 49.3
19 Gadsden Gadsden County (Critchfield Hall) 14,400 1 60 2.0
20 Leon Southwood (FSU Research School) 0 0 0 50.4
21 Leon Kleman Plaza (Downtown) 39,169 2 100 0.6
23 Leon Heritage Grove 0 0 0 37.6
27 Leon WFSU TV Tower 2,041 2 4 0.3
30 Non-Fla Panama Canal Center 11,304 0 37 0.0
31 Non-Fla Florence Center 1,000 0 1 0.0
32 Non-Fla London Center 1,000 0 466 0.0
33 Non-Fla Valencia Center 1,000 0 1 0.0
34 Non-Fla CERN International Laboratory 0 0 1 0.0
40 Leon Capitol Center 21,518 6 113 0.0
41 Leon Commonwealth Blvd. (NW Campus) 92,158 3 319 13.8
42 Leon North Campus 26,498 1 103 5.0
61 Volusia Medicine – Daytona Beach 0 0 0 0.0
62 St. Lucie Medicine – Fort Pierce 0 0 0 0.0
63 Orange Medicine – Orlando Regional 0 0 0 0.0
64 Escambia Medicine – Pensacola Regional 0 0 1 0.0
65 Sarasota Medicine – Sarasota Regional 0 0 18 0.0
66 Leon Medicine – Tallahassee 20,000 0 125 0.0
67 Collier Immokalee 39,716 1 165 9.4
68 Jackson Medicine – Marianna Rural 0 0 0 0.0
69 Non-Fla Medicine – Thomasville, Georgia 0 0 0 0.0
73 Non-Fla Roaming Classes (International) 4,000 0 4 0.0
74 Leon Tallahassee Memorial 2,000 0 53 0.0
Total 14,814,587 384 40,886 1,632.5
Florida State University Sites by County
Gross
County Site Codes Square Ft. Buildings Rooms Acres
Bay 10 212,082 10 588 25.6
Collier 67 39,716 1 165 9.4
Franklin County 2, 4 29,178 29 162 101.5
Gadsden County 19 14,400 1 60 2.0
Leon County 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 12, 13, 17, 18, 20,
21, 23, 27, 40, 41, 42, 66, 74 13,942,611 324 38,170 1,437.1
Sarasota County 9, 65 558,296 19 1,230 56.9
Non-Florida and
Various 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 61, 62, 63, 64, 68, 69, 73 18,304 0 511 0.0
Total All Locations 14,814,587 384 40,886 1,632.5
Source: University Space Management Systems as of March 2018
Online Resource: The Florida State University Facilities’ website can be accessed online at: www.facilities.fsu.edu
112-Support Services The Florida State University Office of Institutional Research ir.fsu.edu
Center for Academic and Professional Development (CAPD)
The Center for Academic & Professional Development was established to extend the resources of the Florida State
University. Housed in the Augustus B. Turnbull III Florida State Conference Center, the experienced CAPD staff
support a variety of learning opportunities as they provide services to colleges, departments, and students on campus
and online.
Professional Development and Test Preparation Courses
CAPD offers continuing education workshops and online courses that assist many professionals in maintaining their licenses or to stay
competitive. These include courses in web design and development and a Certificate in Financial Planning, to provide the skills needed
to be successful in today’s work environment. The Center offers test prep courses for the GMAT, GRE and LSAT designed by a team
of former standardized exam question writers and preparation experts to focus students on acceptance to graduate school.
Academic Programs
CAPD provides academic credit courses, including part-time degree and certificate programs, for the nontraditional student and
continues to identify and develop new course offerings to support lifelong learners. Courses are offered on and off campus and online.
Specialized courses and teacher institutes are held each summer, including the FSU Holocaust Institute for Educators, the Orff-
Schulwerk Music Teacher Education Course, and the Art Therapy Program. CAPD also coordinates returning student scholarship for
students 23 years of age or older and administers summer camps for college departments.
Conferencing
The Augustus B. Turnbull III Florida State Conference Center, located at 555 West Pensacola Street, adjacent to FSU’s five-story St.
Augustine parking garage, hosts small meetings to large international conferences. Center event coordinators assist clients with planning
on-site events and registration for attendees. The three-story Jacobean style Center is approximately 47,000 square feet and has 11
meeting spaces, including a 350-seat auditorium, a 280-seat dining room (with catering kitchen), an elegant atrium, 7 breakout rooms, an
executive boardroom, a business meeting room, a training room, a full service video studio, and administrative offices. The Conference
Center provides the latest in technology infrastructure to support on-site and off-site event presentations. In addition, recording of
events through live webcasts are converted to online learning materials for training purposes. To learn more, visit at:
http://learningforlife.fsu.edu
.
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Support Services-113
Division of Student Affairs
The Florida State University Division of Student Affairs empowers and supports all students to achieve their full potential. The Division of
Student Affairs includes the following departments:
Campus Recreation
“Find What Moves You” in Campus Recreation. The department supports members of the FSU community in their pursuit of lifelong wellness by
proving a diverse array of high-quality recreational programs, services, and facilities. Two fitness facilities, the Bobby E. Leach Center and the Fitness
and Movement Clinic, offer a variety of fitness and wellness services to students, faculty, and staff. Cardiovascular and strength training equipment along
with free weights is available to all patrons. Over eighty group fitness classes are available each week. Nationally certified trainers offer personal training.
The Leach Center also contains a sixteen-lane, twenty-five-yard lap pool, spa and sauna, indoor jogging track, basketball and racquetball courts. Aquatics
staff provides health and safety instruction (CPR/AED, First Aid, and Lifeguard training), adult and youth swim lessons, and other certification
programs. Access to all Campus Recreation facilities is free for students. Faculty, staff, alumni, and affiliates may purchase daily access passes or recurring
memberships. The FSU Reservation (the “Rez”) is a 73-acre lakefront facility located five minutes from campus, where patrons can enjoy kayaking,
canoeing, sailing, or stand-up paddle boarding on Lake Bradford. Sunning, swimming, sand volleyball, disc golf, a climbing wall, and picnic pavilions are
also available. Additionally, a high and low challenge (ropes) course is available for teambuilding and leadership development events facilitated by the
FSU Challenge Program. The Outdoor Pursuits program at the Rez provides students the opportunity to enjoy outdoor adventure trips around the
region including backpacking, kayaking, climbing, mountain biking, and paddling. Over forty Intramural Sport (IM) leagues are offered, from flag football
to soccer and basketball to kickball. Leagues are available for men’s, women’s and co-ed teams with various divisions to accommodate a wide range of
skill and talent levels. Nearly 2,000 students participate in one of over forty Sport Clubs. The clubs provide various instructional, recreational, and
competitive opportunities for the more dedicated athlete. Students can also enjoy pick-up games virtually any time at FSU’s award-winning Rec
SportsPlex outdoor sports facility, the Main Campus Fields, and Westside Courts.
Career Center
Nationally recognized for its comprehensive career services, the Florida State University Career Center provides students and alumni with the resources
to prepare them for career success. With individualized career advising, a library offering over 3,000 information resources, employability skills
workshops, and mock interviews, The Career Center helps students plan their careers. Career advisors, career liaisons, and staff assist students and
alumni with choosing a major, researching occupations and employers, identifying internship opportunities, exploring post-graduate study, and
developing job search strategies. No appointment is necessary to speak with a career advisor or career liaison. For students who would like to map out
their career plans, The Career Center offers a one to three credit hour course, SDS 3340, Introduction to Career Development. This course gives students
resources to help them make a successful transition to their next destination. The Career Center also provides a zero-credit (0 hour) course, SDS 3208
Experiential Learning that allows students to document experiences of internships, research, leadership, etc. on their transcript. The Career Center links
students directly with employers through career fairs, on-campus interviewing and a powerful network of Florida State alumni, parents, and friends of
the University. These opportunities allow students to network with employers nationwide and apply for positions. Students can also apply for career-
related work experience, such as internships, part-time and summer jobs, externships, volunteer opportunities, or full-time jobs through Handshake, an
extensive online jobs database. FSU students can stand out from the competition by taking advantage of Career Center tools. The Career Portfolio
allows students in all academic disciplines to learn about, build and manage their skills and accomplishments through an online portal. Students can
make themselves more marketable to employers or graduate programs by participating in the Garnet & Gold Scholar Society, a unique program that
facilitates involvement and recognizes engaged, well-rounded students who excel within and beyond the classroom. The Career Center also offers
customized mock interviews, where students can practice and improve their interviewing performance, as well as workshops covering employability and
career readiness skills, including job searching, writing résumés and cover letters, interviewing, going to graduate school, and more.
Center for Academic Retention and Enhancement (CARE)
Florida State University and the Center for Academic Retention and Enhancement (CARE) are committed to recruiting, retaining, and graduating
economically and educationally disadvantaged students who have the potential to do college level work. CARE is designed to provide first-time-in-
college students from socially and/or economically disadvantaged backgrounds with services such as a limited number of exclusive, full-credit Liberal
Studies courses, academic advising, college life coaching, financial aid and literacy advising, academic tutoring, a computer lab, learning skills workshops,
graduate school preparation, and cultural enrichment activities. The Center promotes a caring environment for students to discuss their academic,
personal, and/or social concerns with a friendly, supportive staff. The Center provides a high-school-to-college Summer Bridge Program that includes
intensive academic and social orientation to the University, introduction of participants to the responsibilities and opportunities of college life,
encouragement of the development of useful study habits, and assistance with recognizing potential for success. The Student Support Services (SSS)
program is designed to provide supplemental academic support and preparation for post-graduation career and educational planning for qualified
students. The Student Support Services-STEM program provides qualified students majoring in a STEM field with additional tutoring, workshops, and
post-graduation planning. In addition, through the Unconquered Scholars Program, CARE provides additional academic and engagement support
activities for students who were a part of dependency care, foster care, or homeless before their enrollment at FSU.
Pre-Collegiate Programs:
College Reach Out Program (CROP) is a state-funded program established to identify, motivate, and prepare disadvantaged middle and high school
students to pursue post-secondary education. Through supplemental academic assistance, enrichment activities, educational field trips, and college tours,
CROP prepares students for the rigors of a college education.
The University Experience Program is the summer residential component of CROP offering high school students from disadvantaged socioeconomic
backgrounds the opportunity to visit the Florida State University campus during the summer. They attend courses and take part in cultural enrichment
and college exposure activities.
The Upward Bound Program (UBP) is a federally funded program that serves high school students from low socio-economic backgrounds. Located at
Gadsden County High School, Upward Bound offers developmental opportunities to students through a variety of educational activities, including an
on-site computer lab dedicated to UBP participants. UBP staff also assists students in the development of personal and social skills that will help them
complete high school and continue their formal education in a post-secondary setting.
114-Support Services Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Division of Student Affairs
Center for Global Engagement
The Mission of the Center for Global Engagement (CGE) is to facilitate international diversity and foster global understanding and awareness within the FSU
community. The CGE provides immigration services and ongoing support to over 2,700 international students, visiting scholars and international faculty. The
CGE is committed to enhancing FSU’s internationalization initiatives and offers several certificate programs designed to help develop a more interculturally
competent campus community. The Global Partners Certificate Program provides training and workshops to increase intercultural competence for faculty and
staff, and the Global Citizenship Certificate helps undergraduate students prepare for today’s global society through a combination of academic classes and co-
curricular activities. The CGE collaborates with Academic Affairs on two signature programs that increase international diversity and international study
opportunities. FSU’s Global Exchange Program provides students with the opportunity to study at one of over 40 international partner universities around the
world and allows students from our partner universities to study at FSU for one or two semesters. The Special Academic Program serves as a path to graduate
school for students from over 27 partners who study for two semesters as non-degree students and then apply to FSU graduate programs. The CGE also offers
the Intercultural Program Series and the Engage Your World Intercultural Dialogue Series to provide all students with many enriching co-curricular opportunities
to learn more about other cultures and current global issues.
Center for Leadership & Social Change
With a mission to transform lives through leadership education, identity development, and community engagement, the Center for Leadership & Social Change
works toward the following vision: Students and alumni are responsible citizens and effective leaders. They are aware of and engaged in the world around them
and use their talents and means to create a more just and humane society. Students are aware of their values and multiple identities, including ability, age, class,
ethnicity, faith structure, gender identity expression, nationality, race, sexual orientation, and socioeconomic status. They recognize the intersection of these
identities and acknowledge that multiculturalism enhances the quality of life. From this understanding, students belong to and create intercultural communities
that benefit from the value of difference. Students and alumni are known and respected for their leadership acumen and public service tradition. In their personal,
professional, and creative communities, they readily seek and accept opportunities for life-long learning, meaningful influence, and positions of trust. The center
offers more than 40 programs related to service, leadership education, and identity development.
Dean of Students Department
The primary focus of the Dean of Students Department is to support the academic mission of Florida State University and the Division of Student Affairs by
providing services, programs, resources, and advocacy for the needs and interests of all students. This includes advocacy for students reporting alleged
harassment, discrimination, academic concerns, and students in crisis. Staff members provide educational opportunities for students to develop their values,
decision-making skills, and leadership capabilities through a variety of mechanisms, including alcohol or other drug meetings, academic accommodation meetings,
and crisis interventions. Case Management Services works with students to provide emotional support, brief crisis counseling, advocacy, and identify immediate
needs, making appropriate referrals to campus and community resources. Cases are monitored, as needed, to ensure individuals receive the support necessary to
improve their life situation. New Student & Family Programs facilitates a welcoming and inclusive transition to Florida State University for all new students and
their families. Orientation is the first program that helps ease the transition to Florida State University and college life. New Student & Family Programs also
offers Seminoles in the City; First Year ‘Nole e-Newsletter; Ask a ‘Nole, and Family Connection. The Student Disability Resource Center (SDRC) serves as the
primary advocate for students with disabilities and a resource for the University community on disability-related issues. Through the provision of academic
accommodations, testing support, assistive technologies, accessible transportation services and a space for students to feel part of the FSU community the SDRC
creates an environment of success. In addition to the SDRC Testing Center, the SDRC maintains the Theodore and Vivian Johnson Adaptive Technology Lab,
a facility that houses computers and adaptive equipment, which help students with disabilities to successfully meet the requirements of their academic programs.
The Office of Student Rights and Responsibilities administers student disciplinary procedures in accordance with the Student Conduct Code and maintains official
disciplinary records. An emphasis is placed upon educating students about their rights and responsibilities as members of the University community. The Victim
Advocate Program provides confidential advocacy to victims of all types of crimes. An advocate is on-call twenty-four hours a day to respond to Florida State
University students, faculty, and staff who are victimized, and to any person victimized on Florida State University’s campus. The services offered include
emotional support, court accompaniment, crisis intervention, instructor notification, academic support, referrals, and educational programming for the campus
community. The Withdrawal Services staff provides support to students and their families when a student’s enrollment is unexpectedly interrupted for personal,
medical, or mental health reasons, and/or other crises.
Oglesby Union
The Union supports the FSU community by providing educational experiences which enhance student engagement. The Union honors each individual and
values diversity & inclusion and offers opportunities for involvement, provides services and conveniences that members of the university community need in
their daily lives and creates an environment for getting to know and understand others through formal and informal associations. The Oglesby Union department
is comprised of the Administration & Facility Operations, Art Center, Askew Student Life Center Cinema and Games, Crenshaw Lanes, Bowling and Billiards,
Flying High Circus, Fraternity and Sorority Life, Student Activities & Programs, Student Organizations & Involvement, Union Productions, and Club Down
Under.
The FSU Flying High Circus is an engagement activity that provides unique performance opportunities for students and supports University town & gown
relationships. The circus features a variety of acts ranging from high wire to juggling and is part of the Oglesby Union. Annual shows occur in the fall and spring.
Circus camps are offered in the summer on the main campus and at Callaway Gardens in Pine Mountain, GA.
The Oglesby Union buildings are being demolished during summer 2018 to make way for a new Oglesby Union which is anticipated to open fall 2020. Temporary
space and alternate campus locations are being used to maintain the programs and services offered to the university community.
Oglesby Union Services available:
Askew Student Life Center (ASLC): Cyber Café * Gamers club and video programs * Movie Theatre - Student Life Cinema * Information Desk
Haskin Circus Complex: Flying High Circus shows and camps
Oglesby Union Davis/Turner/Moore Buildings: Art Center * Fraternity and Sorority Life Office * Guest Services/Information Desk * Union Board * ATM’s
* Kaplan Education Center * Krentzman Lounge * Moore Auditorium * Union Ballrooms and meeting space * Seminole Dining Food Court
Student Services Building (SSB) 2nd floor: Conference Meeting Rooms * Information Desk and Lost & Found
Thagard Building 4th floor: Club Down Under/Union Productions Events * Clubs and Organizations * Student Activities Center *
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Support Services-115
Division of Student Affairs
Student Government Association
The Student Government Association (SGA) is the student’s voice at Florida State University. The mission of SGA is to providequality leadership for, and
accountability to, its constituency by recognizing that strength arises from diversity, engagement, and dialogue”. All students are members of SGA, and hundreds
serve in an elected and appointed positions, gathering hands-on experiential administrative, programming, and leadership skills. SGA provides representation,
programs, services, and advocacy within the University structure to all Florida State University students. SGA focuses on leadership and identity development,
belonging and inclusion, civic engagement and participation, and financial responsibility and stewardship, supporting traditions, initiatives, and communities that
benefit the student body. The Congress of Graduate Students (COGS) is an elected body of all post-baccalaureate, graduate, professional and doctoral students
at the University. COGS is a unified voice and advocate for all graduate related matters. It also offers travel grants to graduate students, funds graduate
organizations, and sponsors a variety of programs and services for students. The SGA annually allocates approximately $13 million of activity and service fees.
SGA funds or partially funds activities of the student senate, the executive branch, student government agencies, and numerous student organizations and
University units. Those units receiving funds include the Campus Recreation, Oglesby Union, COGS, Homecoming, the Child Care Center, the Golden Tribe
Lecture Series, the Asian American Student Union, the Black Student Union, Class Councils, the Center for Participant Education, the Hispanic/Latino Student
Union, the Inter-Residence Hall Council, the Office of Governmental Affairs, the Pride Student Union, the Women Student Union, the Veterans Student Union,
First Responders Unit, SAFE (escort service), the SGA Student Publications Office, the SGA Office of Governmental Affairs, WVFS V-89 (student-run radio
station), College Leadership Councils, the Student Sustainability Initiative, and countless student organization events and travel opportunities. This means that a
majority of events on campus are free to FSU students.
University Housing
University Housing provides exceptional living opportunities for students to succeed academically. University Housing offers over 6,700 on-campus beds that
are suites or apartments for full-time, degree-seeking, fee-paying students. Approximately 85% of the First Year class lives on campus. Residence hall staff
provide resources and seek to create living environments that foster the lifelong learning of every resident through the promotion of responsible citizenship,
scholarship, appreciation of differences, personal wellness, and involvement. Approximately 480 students live within eight different academic living learning
communities. First year students who live on campus earn higher GPAs and retain at a higher rate than those who live off.
FSU Childcare and Early Learning Programs provide, for a fee, care and educational experiences at the Copeland Center for approximately 133 children, ages
six weeks to four years of age. Children of Florida State University students, faculty, staff, alumni, as well as children of the greater community are eligible for
services, however priority for enrollment is given to FSU students, faculty and staff. Childcare and Early Learning Development Programs also provide sites for
research by faculty members and graduate students in a variety of areas as well as a laboratory setting in which students may observe, complete
practicums/internships, or work with young children. The Childcare and Early Learning Programs are highly credentialed with full-time professional faculty
leading the classrooms.
University Counseling Center
The University Counseling Center (UCC), a department in the Division of Student Affairs, provides counseling services and programs to help students resolve
psychological issues and personal concerns that interfere with academic progress, social development, and emotional well-being. Our goal is to help students
function to the best of their abilities and make the most of their years at FSU. Because student fees cover these services, there is no out-of-pocket expense for
any visit for all currently enrolled FSU Students. UCC services are provided by licensed psychologists, licensed mental health counselors, licensed clinical social
workers and trainees on varying levels. These services include but are not limited to brief individual therapy, group therapy, crisis intervention, consultation, and
referrals. Outreach presentations on mental-health topics and life skills are available to students, residence halls, student organizations, faculty, and staff. The
UCC sponsors RENEW (Realizing Everyone’s Need for Emotional Wellness), a peer-educator student organization whose mission is the promotion of
emotional health and coping skills to FSU students. Students can receive individual instructional sections by RENEW members on various topics including time
management, stress management, and test anxiety. Enrolled students may initiate counseling services by walking in to the UCC during regular office hours and
requesting to speak with a clinician. When meeting with a clinician at walk-in, the clinician will determine the best plan for meeting the individual student’s mental
health needs. In addition, students who are experiencing a mental health crisis at a time outside of the UCC’s regular office hours have the option of calling the
UCC’s after-hours service at 850-644-TALK and immediately speaking with a clinician. Records of visits to the UCC as well as after-hours crisis calls are strictly
confidential and are not included in the student’s University records. Confidential information will not be released to anyone without written permission, unless
there appears to be clear and imminent danger to the student or others. Students who are aware that they will require longer-term treatment are encouraged to
make arrangements for private care in the community before entering the University. However, if necessary, the University Counseling Center’s staff will make
referrals for ongoing treatment in the Tallahassee community. Treatment outside the center will be at the student’s expense.
University Health Services
University Health Services (UHS) provides a coordinated continuum of care through prevention, intervention and treatment services. Services include general
medical care, priority care, women’s care, psychiatry, allergy injection clinic, immunizations, nutrition, confidential HIV testing, diagnostic imaging, physical
therapy, and a medical response unit. UHS bills the student’s insurance for any charges incurred. The UHS Center for Health Advocacy and Wellness (CHAW)
assists students in their academic success through individual, group, and population-based health and wellness initiatives. CHAW addresses environmental factors
that reduce risk and educates students about healthy lifestyles. CHAW also offers internships and educational opportunities; and mentors, trains, and advises
peer health educators while encouraging creativity and leadership. UHS clinical staff includes board-certified physicians, psychiatrists, advanced registered nurse
practitioners, physician assistants, licensed practical nurses, x-ray technologists, registered nurses, and dietitians. The health center has more than one hundred
full-time employees and also employs many part-time and student staff members. All students must meet State Board of Education immunization requirements.
Immunization requirements for FSU are explained in the Health Compliance checklist which can be found at http://www.uhs.fsu.edu under the “Admission
Health Requirements” tab. All incoming full-time students are required to have health insurance coverage. As a condition of their admittance to Florida State
University, all non-United States citizens on a J-1 or F-1 visa must have appropriate health insurance regardless of their credit hour load. Information about
insurance policies available for students is posted on the student insurance web site at http://www.studentinsurance.fsu.edu or by calling the Health Compliance
Office at (850) 644-3608. Additional services in the Health and Wellness building include dental, chiropractic, massage and Quest diagnostics lab.
Source: Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs
Online Resource: The Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs’ website can be accessed at studentaffairs.fsu.edu
116-Support Services Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
University Housing
Fall Fall Fall Fall Fall Fall Fall Fall Fall Fall 2017
Residence Hall 2009
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Capacity
Azalea ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 433 433
Broward 135 134 135 135 135 135 135 133 127 135
Bryan 131 131 131 131 131 131 131 131 130 131
Cawthon 297 297 297 297 297 297 296 297 296 297
DeGraff 706 706 705 705 706 706 700 705 703 706
Deviney 242 252 248 257 252 258 431 431 433 433
Dorman 281 289 288 301 288 293 439 439 438 433
Gilchrist 229 229 229 229 229 229 229 227 228 229
Jennie Murphree 326 325 325 326 323 328 327 327 323 328
Kellum 538 547 537 537 535 551 * * * *
Landis 403 403 403 403 402 403 401 401 403 403
Magnolia ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** 478 479
McCollum 194 196 196 196 196 196 196 196 196 196
Ragans 554 555 555 555 554 554 555 555 554 555
Reynolds 238 236 238 239 238 238 237 237 231 239
Rogers ** ** ** ** 176 173 176 176 175 184
Salley 582 579 582 577 580 580 566 566 560 570
Smith 550 570 563 556 547 571 548 * * *
Traditions
275 276 277 276 276 275 276
Wildwood 706 706 706 705 705 706 705 704 701 706
Total 6,112 6,155 6,138 6,424 6,570 6,626 6,348 5,801 6,684 6,733
*Residence Hall was closed. Kellum Hall closed in 2015, and Smith Hall closed in 2016.
**Rogers Hall was opened to include upperclassmen undergraduates in 2013. Azalea and Magnolia were opened in 2017.
Notes: The residence halls listed do not include Alumni Village (graduate facility, closed in summer 2014) or when Rogers Hall was graduate-only.
Deviney Hall and Dorman Hall were razed and rebuilt, and opened again to residents in 2015.
Source: University Housing. Online Resource: The University Housing’s website can be accessed at: http://housing.fsu.edu.
Azalea
Broward
Bryan
Cawthon
DeGraff
Deviney
Dorman
Gilchrist
Jennie Murphree
Landis
Magnolia
McCollum
Ragans
Reynolds
Rogers
Salley
Traditions
Wildwood
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
Fall 2017 Occupancy
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Support Services-117
Office of Financial Aid
The FSU Office of Financial Aid exists to assist students with securing federal, state and institutional financial aid to
achieve their degree. Each year, the FSU Office of Financial Aid awards and administers more than 280 million dollars in financial
aid to eligible students. Students receive aid in the form of scholarships, grants, work study, and loans -- funds that help them to
focus on their education and complete their degree so that they can go into the world with purpose.
Types of Aid Available:
Loans
Need-based Scholarships and Grants
Direct Subsidized Stafford Loans Federal Pell
Direct Unsubsidized Stafford Loans SEOG
Direct PLUS Loans State scholarships/grants
Federal Perkins Loans Private scholarships
College/university scholarship or grant aid
In order to award aid, a school must first establish an estimated cost of attendance. This includes fixed amounts, such as
tuition and fees, as well as amounts that must be estimated such as room, board, books, transportation, and personal expenses.
Need-based aid, such as Federal Grants, Work-Study, Federal Loans, State Grants, and University Grants can be awarded
up to the amount of need established through the federal formula. Loans such as the Federal Unsubsidized Stafford Loan and the
Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students (PLUS) or Graduate PLUS loan can be awarded beyond the calculated need, up to the
amount of the cost of attendance. The total of all aid awarded cannot exceed the cost of attendance as established by the school.
The budgets below are approximate and represent two semesters (fall 2018 and spring 2019) of regular study (13 credits
per semester) at the main campus. The actual budgets used to award aid may vary slightly to comply with any regulatory changes
that are made after initial estimation. These budgets are for the purpose of awarding financial aid, and may not represent the
actual cost for each individual student, as enrollment and lifestyle choices will impact actual expenses. Tuition includes a
differential fee that is applied to all undergraduate students who began enrollment after July 2007 (exception - students who have
Florida Pre-Paid Tuition plan active as of 7/1/2007).
Estimated Undergraduate Costs for 2018-19 Academic Year
Florida Residents Non-Florida Residents
On/Off Campus
Living with Parents On/Off Campus Living with Parents
Tuition/Fees $5,616 $5,616 $18,746 $18,746
Room (Housing) $6,588 $3,294 $6,588 $3,294
Board (Food/Meals) $4,078 $2,040 $4,078 $2,040
Books/Supplies $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000
Transportation $1,246 $1,246 $2,514 $2,514
Personal $3,600
$3,600 $3,600 $3,600
Total $22,128 $16,796 $36,526 $31,194
Florida State University’s Student Financial Aid statistics as reported to the U.S. Department of Education’s
Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS)
2016-17 Academic Year
Undergraduates
FTICs
Total Number of Students (cohort established in Fall 2016) 32,933 6,123
Number of students awarded grant or scholarship aid* 29,110 5,480
Average amount of aid $5,164 $6,628
Number of students awarded Pell grants 10,036 1,635
Average amount of aid $4,069 $4,595
Number of students awarded Federal student loans 13,619 2,150
Average amount of aid $7,358 $6,726
*Count grants/scholarships from the federal government, state/local government, the institution, and other sources:
Source: Office of Financial Aid
Online Resource: The Office of Financial Aid’s website can be accessed at: http://financialaid.fsu.edu/
118-Support Services Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Intercollegiate Athletics
The “Seminoles” is the official designation of Florida State University men’s and women’s athletic teams. The symbol of university
athletics at FSU is Osceola. The official colors are Garnet and Gold. Florida State competes in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) for
all sports.
Florida State University Seminoles
2016-17 ACC and NCAA Team Results
Director’s Cup Final Ranking (Stan Wilcox – A.D.): 13th nationally
Baseball (Mike Martin): ACC Champions; 5th College World Series
Basketball - Men (Leonard Hamilton): ACC – 2nd; NCAA 3 Seed West
Basketball - Women (Sue Semrau): ACC – 2nd; NCAA Elite Eight
Cross Country - Men (Bob Braman): ACC – 5th; NCAA Regional – 5th
Cross Country - Women (Kelly Phillips): ACC – 9th; NCAA Regional – 7th
Football (Jimbo Fisher): ACC – 8th; Orange Bowl Champions
Golf - Men (Trey Jones): ACC – 4th; NCAA Championships – 14th
Golf - Women (Amy Bond): ACC – 2nd; NCAA – 20th
Soccer (Mark Krikorian): ACC Champions; NCAA – 14th
Softball (Lonni Alameda): ACC Champions; NCAA – 10th
Swimming - Men (Frank Bradley): ACC – 5th; NCAA – 31st
Swimming - Women (Frank Bradley): ACC – 8th; NCAA – 28th
Tennis - Men (Dwayne Hultquist): ACC – 6th; NCAA – 2nd Round
Tennis - Women (Jennifer Hyde): ACC – 9th; NCAA – 2nd Round
Track & Field - Indoor Men (Bob Braman): ACC – 3rd; NCAA – 58th
Track & Field - Outdoor Men (Bob Braman): ACC-3rd; NCAA – 51st
Track & Field - Indoor Women (Bob Braman): ACC – 3rd
Track & Field - Outdoor Women (Bob Braman): ACC – 2nd; NCAA – 19th
Beach Volleyball (Brooke Niles): CCSA Champions, NCAA- 2nd
Volleyball (Chris Poole): ACC – 2nd; NCAA – Sweet Sixteen
2016-17 ACC Team Champions (4): Soccer, Beach Volleyball (CCSA), Softball, Baseball (Tournament)
All-time Team National Champions (17) (NCAA champion except where noted)
1951 - Men’s Gymnastics
1952 - Men’s Gymnastics
1955 - Men’s Volleyball (awarded by the US Volleyball Association - USVA)
1957 - Men’s Volleyball (awarded by the USVA)
1958 - Men’s Volleyball (awarded by the USVA, unofficial sport at FSU in 1958)
1981 - Softball (awarded by the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women - AIAW)
1981 - Women’s Golf (awarded by the AIAW)
1982 - Softball (awarded by the AIAW)
1984 - Women’s Track (Outdoor)
1985 - Women’s Track (Indoor)
1993 - Football
1999 - Football
2006 - Men’s Track (Outdoor)
2007 - Men’s Track (Outdoor)*
2008 - Men’s Track (Outdoor)
2013 - Football
2014 - Women’s Soccer
2018 - Softball
* Championship vacated by the NCAA
Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu Support Services-119
Intercollegiate Athletics
2016-17 Coach of the Year Honors
Lonni Alameda: ACC Softball Coach of the Year
Amy Bond: ACC Women’s Golf Coach of the Year
John Proctor: Female Diving Coach of the Year
2016-17 Player of the Year (POY) Honors
Football: Tarvarus McFadden – Jack Tatum Award (Top Cornerback Nationwide), DeMarcus Walker – ACC Defensive Player of the Year,
Roderick Johnson – Jacob’s Blocking Trophy
Diving: Molly Carlson – ACC Female Diver of the Year
Women’s Basketball: Shakayla Thomas – ACC Player of the Year, Chartrice White – ACC Sixth Player of the Year
Softball: Jessie Warren – ACC Player of the Year, ACC Defensive Player of the Year; Jessica Burroughs – ACC Pitcher of the Year
Indoor Track and Field – Men (1): Darryl Haraway – ACC Championship Co-Track Most Valuable Performer
Outdoor Track and Field – Men (1): Armani Wallace – ACC Championship Co-Field MVP
Outdoor Track and Field – Women (1): Gleneve Grange – ACC Championship Field MVP
Beach Volleyball (2): Victoria Paranagua/Vanessa Freire – CCSA Championship MVP
2016-17 Rookie of the Year Honors
Football: Rookie & Offensive Rookie of the Year: Deondre Francois (Coaches & Media)
Women’s Indoor Track & Field: Eleonora Omoregie – ACC Freshman of the Year
Beach Volleyball: Francesca Goncalves – CCSA Freshman of the Year
2016-17 All-American Honors (athletes mentioned on any team by any publication are listed)
Baseball (3): Tyler Holton, Quincy Nieporte, Drew Mendoza
Basketball
- Men (1): Jonathan Isaac
Basketball
- Women (3): Leticia Romero, Shakayla Thomas
Football (6): Dalvin Cook, DeMarcus Walker, Tarvarus McFadden, Roderick Johnson, Brian Burns, Ricky Aguayo
Golf
- Men (2): Cristobal Del Solar, Harry Ellis
Golf - Women (2): Matilda Castren, Morgane Metraux
Soccer (1): Cassie Miller, Kirsten Crowley, Natalia Kuikka
Softball (4): Jessie Warren, Jessica Burroughs, Morgan Klaevemann, Alex Powers
Swimming & Diving
- Men (1): Dylan Grisell
Swimming & Diving
- Women (1): Natalie Pierce, Tayla Lovemore, Ayla Bonniwell, Molly Carlson
Track & Field - Men (6): Montel Nevers, Austin Droogsma, Darryl Haraway, Carlos Becker III, Armani Wallace, Emmanuel Onyia
Track & Field Women (10): Eleonora Omoregie, Jogaile Petrokaite, Melissa-Maree Farrington, Kellion Knibb, Veronika Kanuchova,
Gleneve Grange, Peta-Gay Williams, Shanice Love, Eleonora Omoregie, Cortney Jones
Volleyball - Indoor (2): Milica Kubura
2016-17 Academic Highlights for Student Athletes
ACC Weaver-James-Corrigan Postgraduate Scholarship Award (3): Melanie Keil, Elle Cooper, Thaxter Hensley
CoSIDA Academic All-American (2): Morgan Klaevemann, Dylan Grisell
CoSIDA Academic All-District (4): Morgan Klaevemann, Dylan Grisell, Shaquania Dorsett, Melanie Keil
ACC Scholar-Athlete of the Year (2): Alex Powers, Macy Jerger (CCSA)
Academic All-ACC (68): Drew Carlton, Drew Mendoza, Trent Forrest, Brittany Brown, Leticia Romero, Ivey Slaughter, Chatrice White,
Macy Jerger, Bryce Kelley, Steven Cross, Carmela Cardama Baez, Catherine Blaney, Emma Koivisto, Kirsten Crowley, Natalia Kuikka, Kaycie
Tillman, Dylan Grisell, Aidan Faminoff, Connor Kalisz, Jason McCormick, Joe Plechy, Tyler Roberge, Cassidy Gebhart, Natalie Pierce, Molly
Carlson, Ayla Bonniwell, Lydia Ware, Jamal Pitts, Humberto Freire, Kellion Knibb, Shauna Helps, Melissa-Maree Farrington, Carmela
Cardama Baez, Safia Morgan, Harry Ellis, Josh Lee, Matilda Castren, Amanda Doherty, Lydia Gumm, Kim Metraux, Morgane Metraux, Lucas
Poullain, Sydney Broderick, Ellie Cooper, Meghan King, Morgan Klaevemann, Dani Morgan, Alex Powers, Anna Shelnutt, Melanie Keil,
Hailey Luke, Katie Horton, Milica Kubura, Gabriella Castaneda, Daniela Schippers, Chad DaCosta, Brandon Tirado, Carmela Cardama Baez,
Shaquania Dorsett, Melissa-Maree Farrington, Shauna Helps, Kellion Knibb, Shanice Love, Kayla Maczuga, Safia Morgan, Eleonora
Omoregie, Jogaile Petrokaite, Peta-Gay Williams.
Source: Florida State University Sports Information Office
Online Resource: The Florida State Athletic Department’s website can be accessed online at www.seminoles.com
120-Support Services The Florida State University – Office of Institutional Research – ir.fsu.edu
Florida State University Flying High Circus
There has been an FSU Flying High Circus for almost as long as there has been a Florida State University.
When the Florida State College for Women went coeducational in 1947, one of the new faculty members was Jack
Haskin. As a high school coach in Pontiac, Illinois, Haskin had staged student gymnastic exhibitions. He wanted to
start an activity at the new university which would allow men and women to participate together. His idea was the
circus.
The Flying High Circus is a self-supporting activity. No student activity fees, tuition payments, university or
state funds go towards circus activities. Unlike many other athletic endeavors, the students receive no tuition
waivers or university scholarships for their long hours of practice for the nationally famous shows that bring credit to
FSU.
The acts in the Flying High Circus have evolved from "circus activity" to "circus professionalism.”
Performances are often of such high caliber that professional contracts are sometimes offered to student performers,
especially on the flying trapeze. In the circus, you will see tricks attempted and completed that are more difficult than
many you would see in other American or European circuses. Examples include the triple somersault on the flying
trapeze (accomplished by two performers at FSU), the seven man pyramid on the high wire (which has only been
performed by two other groups), double back somersaults on the skypole and many more. Some acts are unique to the
FSU Circus or are rarely done elsewhere such as triple aerial high casting and three-lane breakaway. Other acts are
traditional circus classics. There are no animal acts in the Circus.
Few of the student performers had any previous circus training before coming to Florida State, although some
have had related training such as springboard diving or gymnastics. Many receive their first introduction to the circus
through the one-hour course on circus activities offered for credit by the university, but more enter the circus as a
result of personal contact with other circus members. Training for the various acts is provided by one full-time coach, a
member of the FSU Circus as a student, and a staff of paid and volunteer student assistants. Different acts are added to
the show or removed from the show as performers with particular strengths and talents join the circus, learn new acts
and different tricks, and then graduate. No two shows are alike.
A significant difference from professional circuses is the use of safety nets and safety lines. These will not help
a performer complete a trick, but they do provide an extra margin of security for the student performers. The FSU
Circus emphasizes the performances, not the risks. An additional measure of safety is provided by having the students
do all the rigging. Since the performers rig their own acts in practice, they become more aware of the importance of
correct rigging since they will be working on equipment that they have set up. Because of these safety features, the use
of progressive learning techniques, and the high caliber of the students involved, the Flying High Circus maintains a
high reputation for safety.
And, yes, they really do it "just for fun." Only one semester hour of credit for the circus activities course can be
earned by an undergraduate on a one-time basis and many performers have never taken the course. The participants
work on their own time practicing at the circus lot after classes or working on conditioning or juggling skills at home in
the evenings and on the weekends. In addition, they must maintain a "C" average to appear in the home shows on
campus and "C+" average to travel on the road shows, far above that required for other athletic endeavors. Yes, grades
are not a problem; their collective average has always been one of the highest for students in any extracurricular activity
in the University, even though many of the students are in demanding fields such as pre-medicine, nursing, computer
science, and accounting.
Source: 43rd Home Show Program
Appendix
Photo: FSU News Photo Gallery
Argo, representing knowledge and wisdom, is a long-standing
symbol of FSU dating back to spring of 1901.
Source: FSU Heritage Protocol
College / Department / Program Major Code : Major Code Description BACH MAST ADVM SPEC DOCT PROF
College of Applied Studies
Communication (AP)
Professional Communication 463001: Professional Communication (P.C. Campus only) 090900
463002: Corporate and Public Communication (P.C. Campus only) 090900
Nursing
Nurse Anesthesia 468001: Nurse Anesthesia 513804
Public Safety
Public Safety and Security 462011: Police Science
430107
462012: Law Enforcement Operations 430107
462013: Law Enforcement Intelligence 430107
462014: Crime Scene Investigations 430107
Recreation (AP)
Recreation and Leisure Services Admin.
461004: Recreation and Leisure Services Administration 310301*
Recreation, Tourism, and Events 461005: Recreation, Tourism, and Events 310301
College of Arts and Sciences
Anthropology
Anthropology 110510: Anthropology 450201 450201 450201
Arts and Sciences
Neuroscience 111150: Cell and Molecular Neuroscience 261501*
111150: Neuroscience - Biology
261501
115501: Neuroscience 261501
Secondary Science and/or Mathematics Teaching 112210: Secondary Science and/or Mathematics Teaching
131205
112211: Science Teaching 131205
112212: Community College Science Teaching 131205
Biological Science
Biological Sciences 111110: Biological Science 260101 260101 260101
111111: Biology/FSU-Teach 260101
Computational Biology 111112: Computational Biology - Biology 261104
Chemistry and Biochemistry
Biochemistry 111612: Biochemistry 260202
Chemical Science 111620: Chemical Science 400599
111621: Chemical Sciences/FSU-Teach 400599
Chemistry 111610: Chemistry 400501 400501 400501
111611: Analytical Chemistry
400501 400501
111612: Biochemistry 400501 400501
111613: Inorganic Chemistry
400501 400501
111614: Nuclear Chemistry 400501 400501
111615: Organic Chemistry
400501 400501
111616: Physical Chemistry 400501 400501
111617: Environmental Chemistry 400501
111618: Materials Chemistry 400501
Classics
Classics 111910: Classics 161200
111911: Classical Civilizations 161200 161200
111912: Classics and Religion 161200
111913: Classical Archaeology 161200 161200
111915: Greek and Latin 161200 161200
111919: Ancient History 161200
Greek 111920: Greek 161202 161202
Latin 111930: Latin 161203 161203
Computer Science
Computer Science 116610: Computer Science 110101* 110101 110101
116611: Computer Science - BA 110101*
116612: Computer Programming and Applications 110101*
116620: Computer and Network Systems Administration 110101
116630: Software Engineering
110101* 110101
116640: Information Security 110101
116645: Cyber Security 110101
Computational Biology 116650: Computational Biology - Computer Science 261104
Computer Criminology 116660: Cyber Criminology - Computer Science 430116 430116
Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science
Environmental Science 116030: Environmental Science and Policy 030104
116031: Environmental Science 030104
116032: Environmental Science/FSU-Teach 030104
Geology 116010: Geology 400601 400601 400601
Meteorology 116040: Meteorology 400401 400401 400401
116050: Applied Geosciences/FSU-Teach 400401
Oceanography 116020: Oceanography 400607 400607
116021: Biological Oceanography 400607 400607
116022: Chemical Oceanography 400607 400607
116023: Geological Oceanography 400607 400607
116024: Physical Oceanography 400607 400607
116026: Aquatic Environmental Sciences 400607
116027: PSM in Aquatic Environmental Science 400607
English
Creative Writing 114216: Creative Writing (MFA) 231302
English 114210: English 230101
230101 230101
114212: Literature 230101 230101 230101
114215: Creative Writing 230101 230101
114217: English / Business
230101
114218: Creative Writing with an Emphasis in Business 230101
114219: Editing, Writing, and Media 230101
Florida State University Degree Program Inventory (August 2018)
Degree Level Offered at FSU by Degree CIP
Appendix A - Degree Program Inventory - Page 1
College / Department / Program Major Code : Major Code Description BACH MAST ADVM SPEC DOCT PROF
Florida State University Degree Program Inventory (August 2018)
Degree Level Offered at FSU by Degree CIP
History
History 115210: History 540101 540101 540101
115211: Public History 540101
Middle Eastern Studies
115220: Middle Eastern Studies 050108
History/Philosophy of Science
History and Philosophy of Science 115310: History and Philosophy of Science 540104
Humanities
American and Florida Studies
115915: American Studies 050102 050102
Interdisciplinary Humanities 115910: Humanities 240103 240103 240103
115912: Women's Studies 240103
115914: Digital Humanities 240103
Institute of Molecular Biophysics
Molecular Biophysics 117710: Molecular Biophysics 260206
117711: Biochemistry, Molecular and Cell Biology
260206
117712: Computational Structural Biology 260206
Mathematics
Actuarial Science 116820: Actuarial Science 521304
Mathematics 116810: Mathematics 270101 270101 270101
116811: Applied and Computational Mathematics 270101 270101 270101
116813: Financial Mathematics 270101 270101
116815: Biomathematics 270101 270101 270101
116816: Mathematics/FSU-Teach 270101
Modern Languages and Linguistics
East Asian Languages and Cultures 117170: Chinese Language and Culture 160399 160399
117171: Japanese Language and Culture 160399 160399
117172: Chinese and Japanese 160399
117173: Chinese/Business 160399
117174: Japanese/Business 160399
French 117110: French 160901 160901 160901
117111: French / Business 160901
117112: French and Russian 160901
117113: French and Spanish 160901
117114: French and German 160901
117115: French and Italian 160901
French and Francophone Studies
117116: French and Francophone Studies 050124
German 117120: German 160501 160501
117121: German / Business 160501
117122: German and Russian 160501
117123: German and Spanish 160501
117124: German and Italian 160501
117125: German Studies 160501
Italian 117160: Italian 160902
117161: Italian / Business 160902
117162: Italian and Russian 160902
117163: Italian and Spanish 160902
Italian Studies 117164: Italian Studies 050126
Middle Eastern Studies 117180: Middle Eastern Studies 050108
Russian 117130: Russian 160402
117131: Russian / Business 160402
117132: Russian and Spanish 160402
Slavic 117150: Slavic 160400
Spanish 117140: Spanish 160905 160905 160905
117141: Spanish/Business 160905
Philosophy
Philosophy 117610: Philosophy 380101 380101 380101
Physics
Chemical Physics
117810: Chemical Physics 400508 400508
Physical Science (formerly Physics, Interdisciplinary) 118140: Physical Science 400899
118151: Physical Science/FSU-Teach
400899
Physics 118110: Physics 400801 400801 400801
118111: Physics and Astrophysics 400801
118112: Physics and Materials 400801
Psychology
Neuroscience 118440: Behavioral Neuroscience 261501*
118440: Neuroscience - Psychology
261501
Psychology 118409: Psychobiology 420101
118410: Psychology 420101* 420101 420101
118412: Clinical Psychology 420101 420101
118414: Cognitive Psychology 420101
420101
118415: Developmental Psychology 420101
420101
118416: Social Psychology 420101
420101
118417: Applied Behavior Analysis (PC Campus) 420101
Religion
Religion 118610: Religion 380201 380201 380201
118611: Religion and Classics 380201
Scientific Computing
Computational Science 114010: Computational Science 303001 303001 303001
114011: Prof Science Master’s in Computational Science 303001
114012: Prof Science Master’s in Computational Science 303001
114020: Computational Science (Atmospheric Science) 303001
114021: Computational Science (Biochemistry) 303001
114022: Computational Science (Biological Science) 303001
114023: Computational Science (Geological Sciences) 303001
114024: Computational Science (Material Science) 303001
114025: Computational Science (Physics) 303001
114026: Computational Science (Fire Dynamics) 303001
114027: Computational Science (Geophysical Fluid Dynamics) 303001
Appendix A - Degree Program Inventory - Page 2
College / Department / Program Major Code : Major Code Description BACH MAST ADVM SPEC DOCT PROF
Florida State University Degree Program Inventory (August 2018)
Degree Level Offered at FSU by Degree CIP
Statistics
Biostatistics 119311: Biostatistics 261102 261102
Statistics 119310: Statistics 270501 270501 270501
119312: Statistical Data Science 270501
College of Business
Accounting
Accounting 210110: Accounting 520301*
210111: Assurance Services
520301
210112: Accounting Information Systems 520301
210113: Taxation 520301
210114: Corporate Accounting
520301
210115: Assurance and Advisory Services 520301
210116: Accounting - Generalist 520301
Business Administration
Business Administration 211310: Business Administration (B offered at PC Campus) 520101* 520101 520101
211311: Accounting 520101
211312: Finance 520101
211313: Management Information Systems
520101
211314: Management 520101
211315: Marketing 520101
211316: Risk Management and Insurance 520101
211317: Hospitality and Tourism Management 520101
211321: Entrepreneurship
520101*
216820: Entrepreneurship 520101*
211322: Organizational Behavior and Human Resources 520101
211323: Strategic Management
520101
211324: Strategy 520101
211390: On Campus MBA
520101
Business Administration Joint Degrees 217774: Business Administration / Social Work 520101
Business Analytics, Information Systems and Supply Chain
Business Analytics 217013: Business Analytics 521301
Management Information Systems 217010: Management Information Systems 520101
217012: Management Information Systems 521201* 521201
216514: Management Information Systems
521201* 521201
216810: Management Information Systems 521201* 521201
Finance
Finance 214310: Finance 520801* 520801
Hospitality
Hospitality Management 215710: Hospitality Management 520901*
215711: Professional Golf Management 520901*
215712: Global Club Management 520901*
Management
Management 216610: Management 520201* 520201
216611: Hospitality and Tourism 520201
216612: Human Resource Management 520201*
216615: Risk Management / Insurance 520201
Marketing
Marketing 216710: Marketing 521401* 521401
216711: Professional Sales 521401*
216712: Retail Management 521401
Risk Management/Insurance, Real Estate and Legal Studies
Risk Management - Insurance 216210: Risk Management-Insurance 521701*
Risk Management 216215: Risk Management 521701
Real Estate 216220: Real Estate 521501*
College of Communication and Information
School of Communication
Communication 410103: Media Production
090199*
410105: Advertising 090199*
410111: Mass Communication 090199 090199
410112: Speech Communication 090199
410114: Communication Theory and Research 090199
410115: Media/Communication Studies
090199*
410120: Public Relations 090199*
410125: Professional Communication 090199
410133: Integrated Marketing and Management Communication 090199
410135: Corporate and Public Communication 090199
410136: Media and Communication Studies 090199
410137: Digital Media Production 090199*
Communication and Digital Media Studies 410151: Media/Communication Studies 090702*
410152: Media and Communication Studies 090702
410153: Digital Media Production 090702*
410154: Public Interest Media and Communication 090702
Professional Communication 410140: Advertising 090900*
410141: Public Relations 090900*
410142: Integrated Marketing and Management Communication 090900
School of Communication Science and Disorders
Communication Science and Disorders 418510: Communication Science and Disorders 510204* 510204 510204
510204
School of Information
Information 416522: Library Studies
110401 110401 110401
416523: Information Studies 110401 110401 110401
416524: Information Studies/School Media 110401
Information Technology 416530: Information Technology 110103 110103
416540: Information Communication and Technology 110103
School of Information Joint Degrees
417771: Juris Master / Master of Science in Information Technology 110103
Library and Information Studies
416510: Library Studies 250101 250101 250101
416520: Information Studies 250101 250101 250101
416521: Information Studies/School Media 250101
Appendix A - Degree Program Inventory - Page 3
College / Department / Program Major Code : Major Code Description BACH MAST ADVM SPEC DOCT PROF
Florida State University Degree Program Inventory (August 2018)
Degree Level Offered at FSU by Degree CIP
College of Criminology and Criminal Justice
Criminology
Criminology 349410: Criminology 430104 430104 430104
349411: Criminal Justice Studies 430104
Computer Criminology 349412: Cyber Criminology - Criminology 430116
Criminology Joint Degrees
347773: Criminology / Social Work 430104
347775: Criminology / Public Administration 430104
347776: Juris Master / Master of Science in Criminology 430104
College of Education
Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Educational Leadership and Policy 220604: Educational Leadership/Administration 130401 130401 130401
220605: Educational Policy, Planning and Analysis
130401 130401 130401
220614: Education Policy and Evaluation 130401 130401 130401
Foundations of Education 220609: International and Multicultural Education 130901 130901 130901
220613: History and Philosophy of Education
130901 130901 130901
Higher Education 220602: Higher Education 130406 130406 130406
Research and Evaluation Methods
220601: Program Evaluation 130601 130601
Educational Psychology and Learning Systems
Counseling and Human Systems 220305: School Psychology 131101
131101
220309: Combined Program-Counseling Psychology and School 131101
220314: Career Counseling 131101
131101
220315: Mental Health Counseling
131101 131101
220316: School Counseling 131101 131101
Educational Psychology 220306: Learning and Cognition 422806 422806 422806
220312: Sports Psychology 422806 422806
Instructional Systems and Learning Technologies 220307: Instructional Systems
130501 130501 130501
220308: Learning Design and Performance Technology 130501
220311: Instructional Systems and Learning Technologies 130501 130501
130501
220313: Open and Distance Learning
130501
220317: Performance Improvement and Human Resource Development 130501
Measurement and Statistics 220301: Measurement and Statistics 130603 130603 130603
Rehabilitation Counseling
220326: Rehabilitation Counseling 512310 512310
School of Teacher Education
Curriculum and Instruction 220980: Special Education 130301 130301 130301
220981: Special Education Studies 130301
220982: Special Education Teaching 130301
220983: Visual Disabilities 130301 130301
220984: Elementary Education 130301 130301 130301
220985: Early Childhood Education 130301 130301 130301
220986: English Education 130301 130301 130301
220987: English Teaching
130301
220989: Foreign and Second Language Education 130301 130301 130301
220990: Mathematics Education 130301 130301 130301
220992: Reading Education and Language Arts 130301 130301 130301
220993: Science Education 130301 130301 130301
220994: Social Science Education 130301 130301 130301
220995: Social Science Teaching
130301
Early Childhood Education 220918: Early Childhood Education 131210
Elementary Education 220919: Elementary Education 131202*
English Education 220903: English Education 131305 131305 131305 131305
220930: English Teaching 131305
Mathematics Education 220904: Mathematics Education 131311 131311 131311 131311
220906: Middle Grades Mathematics Education 131311
220950: Mathematics Teaching 131311
Multilingual / Multicultural Education 220907: Multilingual / Multicultural Education 131306 131306 131306 131306
220923: Foreign and Second Language Teaching 131306
Science Education 220908: Science Education 131316 131316 131316
Secondary Science and/or Mathematics Teaching 220940: Science or Mathematics Teaching/FSU-Teach 131205
Social Science Education 220909: Social Science Education 131317 131317 131317 131317
220931: Social Science Teaching 131317
Special Education 220911: Special Education 131001 131001 131001
220921: Special Education Studies 131001
220922: Special Education Teaching 131001* 131001
Visual Disabilities 220913: Visual Disabilities 131009* 131009 131009
220914: Visual Disabilities Studies 131009*
220915: Visual Disabilities Education 131009*
Sport Management
Recreation and Leisure Services Admin.
220404: Recreation and Leisure Services Administration 310301*
Sport Management 220410: Sport Management 310504* 310504 310504
College of Engineering
Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Biomedical Engineering 556080: Biomedical Engineering 140501 140501 140501
Chemical Engineering 556010: Chemical Engineering 140701 140701 140701
556011: Chemical - Environmental Engineering
140701
556012: Chemical - Bioengineering 140701
556013: Chemical - Materials Engineering 140701
556014: Chemical - Biomedical Engineering 140701
Civil and Environmental Engineering
Civil Engineering 555010: Civil Engineering 140801 140801 140801
555020: Environmental Engineering-Civil 140801
555030: Civil Engineering - MEng 140801
Electrical and Computer Engineering
Computer Engineering 558020: Computer Engineering 140901
Electrical Engineering 558010: Electrical Engineering 141001 141001 141001
Appendix A - Degree Program Inventory - Page 4
College / Department / Program Major Code : Major Code Description BACH MAST ADVM SPEC DOCT PROF
Florida State University Degree Program Inventory (August 2018)
Degree Level Offered at FSU by Degree CIP
Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
Industrial Engineering 557010: Industrial Engineering 143501 143501
143501
557011: Engineering Management 143501
557012: Global Manufacturing
143501
557013: Engineering Management in Orthotics and Prosthetics 143501
557014: Systems Engineering 143501
Mechanical Engineering
Mechanical Engineering 554010: Mechanical Engineering 141901 141901 141901
554011: Computational Materials Science and Mechanics
141901
554012: Sustainable Energy 141901
554013: Mechanical Engineering - Panama City 141901
College of Fine Arts
Art
Graphic Design
420630: Graphic Design 500409*
Studio Art 420610: Studio Art 500702* 500702
420620: Studio Art (BA) 500702
Art Education
Art Education 420711: Art Education 131302
131302 131302
420714: Art Teaching
131302
420715: Museum Education and Visitor-Centered Exhibitions 131302 131302
Art Therapy 420713: Art Therapy 512301
Arts Administration 420712: Arts Administration - Art 501002
Art History
History and Criticism of Art 420810: Art History 500703 500703 500703
420811: Museum and Cultural Heritage Studies 500703
Interior Architecture and Design
Interior Design 422610: Interior Design 500408* 500408
422612: Interior Design/MFA 500408
School of Dance
Dance 422810: Dance 500301* 500301
422812: Studio and Related Studies 500301
422813: American Dance Studies 500301
School of Theatre
Theatre 428010: Theatre 500501* 500501 500501
428015: Costume Design 500501
428020: Acting 500501* 500501
428025: Directing 500501
428035: Lighting Design
500501
428040: Scenic Design 500501
428045: Technical Production 500501
428050: Theatre Management 500501
428060: MS for Theatre Educators 500501
428080: Musical Theatre - Theatre
500501*
428081: Music Theatre - Theatre 500501
College of Human Sciences
Family and Child Sciences
Family and Child Sciences 255315: Family and Child Sciences 190701 190701
255312: Family Relations
190101
255320: Child Development 190101
Marriage and Family Therapy 255360: Marriage and Family Therapy 511505
Human Sciences
Human Sciences 250010: Human Sciences
190101
252055: Human Development and Family Science 190101
Nutrition, Food and Exercise Sciences
Athletic Training 254491: Athletic Training 510913*
Dietetics 254411: Dietetics 513102*
Exercise Physiology 254465: Exercise Science 260908
254466: Sports Sciences 260908
254467: Exercise Physiology 260908 260908
260908
254468: Sports Nutrition 260908
Exercise Science
254451: Exercise Science 260908
254452: Sports Sciences 260908
254453: Exercise Physiology 260908 260908 260908
254454: Sports Nutrition 260908
254455: Exercise Science 310505
254456: Sports Sciences 310505
254450: Exercise Physiology 310505 310505 310505
254457: Sports Nutrition 310505
Food and Nutrition 254410: Dietetics 513101
254440: Food and Nutrition Science 513101
254445: Nutrition and Food Science 513101
254445: Nutrition and Food Science 190101
Neuroscience
254470: Neuroscience - Movement Science 261501
254475: Neuroscience - Nutrition Science 261501
Retail, Merchandising, and Product Development
Retail, Merchandising and Product Development 252025: Apparel Design 190101
252035: Retail Merchandising 190101
252045: Textile Product Development 190101
252020: Apparel Design and Technology 190901 190901
252021: Apparel Design and Technology 190901 190901
252030: Merchandising 190901 190901
252031: Merchandising 190901 190901
252040: Textiles 190901 190901
252041: Textiles 190901 190901
252080: Global Merchandising and Product Development 190901
252081: Global Merchandising and Product Development 190901
252070: Retail, Merchandising, and Product Development 190901
Appendix A - Degree Program Inventory - Page 5
College / Department / Program Major Code : Major Code Description BACH MAST ADVM SPEC DOCT PROF
Florida State University Degree Program Inventory (August 2018)
Degree Level Offered at FSU by Degree CIP
College of Law
Law School
American Law for Foreign Lawyers 313420: American Law for Foreign Lawyers 220202
Business Law 313430: Business Law 220205
Environmental Law and Policy 313421: Environmental Law and Policy 220207
Juris Master 313423: Juris Master 220201
313424: Health Care Regulation 220201
313425: Legal Risk Management and HR Compliance 220201
Law 313410: Law 220101
Law School Joint Degrees
313411: Law (Business) 220101
313412: Law (Economics) 220101
313413: Law (International Affairs) 220101
313414: Law (Public Administration) 220101
313415: Law (Urban and Regional Planning) 220101
313416: Law (Social Work) 220101
313417: Law (Library and Information Studies) 220101
313418: Law (Family and Child Sciences) 220101
313419: Law (Sport Management) 220101
313422: Law (Oceanography) 220101
317771: Juris Master / Master of Science in Information Technology 220201
317776: Juris Master / Master of Science in Criminology 220201
College of Medicine
Health Sciences Interdisciplinary
Biomedical Sciences 620100: Biomedical Sciences 260102
620101: Research in Biomedical Sciences
260102
620102: Bridge to Clinical Medicine 260102
620110: Neuroscience - BMS 260102
Interdisciplinary Medical Sciences 620120: Clinical Professions 510000
620122: Patient Care in the Community 510000
620124: Health Management, Policy, and Information 510000
Neuroscience 620112: Neuroscience - BMS 261501
Physician Assistant Practice 620130: Physician Assistant Practice 510912
Medical School
Medicine 621201: Medicine 511201
College of Motion Picture Arts
Film School
Motion Picture Arts 400102: Motion Picture Arts - Production 500602* 500602
400103: Animation and Digital Arts 500602*
Motion Picture Arts Writing 400111: Motion Picture Arts - Writing 500504
College of Music
Music
Arts Administration 447208: Arts Administration - Music 501002
Music - Liberal Arts 449300: Music - Liberal Arts 500901 500901
449320: Jazz 500901
449321: Sacred Music 500901
449322: Commercial Music 500901
Music Education 447250: Music Education 131312* 131312 131312
447251: Choral Music Education 131312*
447252: Instrumental Music Education 131312*
Music Performance 447209: Piano Pedagogy 500903* 500903
447210: Music Performance
500903* 500903 500903
447211: Brass 500903* 500903 500903
447212: Harp 500903* 500903 500903
447213: Organ 500903* 500903 500903
447214: Percussion 500903* 500903 500903
447215: Piano 500903* 500903 500903
447216: Strings 500903* 500903 500903
447217: Voice 500903* 500903 500903
447218: Woodwinds 500903* 500903 500903
447219: Harpsichord 500903* 500903 500903
447221: Jazz Studies 500903
447222: Guitar
500903*
447231: Brass Performance 500903* 500903 500903
447232: Harp Performance 500903* 500903 500903
447233: Organ Performance 500903* 500903 500903
447234: Percussion Performance 500903* 500903 500903
447235: Piano Performance 500903* 500903 500903
447236: String Performance 500903* 500903 500903
447237: Voice Performance 500903* 500903 500903
447238: Woodwind Performance 500903* 500903 500903
447239: Harpsichord Performance
500903* 500903 500903
447241: Guitar Performance 500903*
447280: Choral Conducting 500903
447281: Instrumental Conducting 500903
447285: Accompanying 500903
447290: Music Theatre - Music 500903* 500903
Music Theory and Composition 447220: Music Composition 500904* 500904 500904
447270: Music Theory 500904 500904 500904
Music Therapy 447260: Music Therapy 512305* 512305
Musicology 447271: Musicology 500905 500905
Opera Production 447240: Opera
500908
447242: Opera Production 500908
Appendix A - Degree Program Inventory - Page 6
College / Department / Program Major Code : Major Code Description BACH MAST ADVM SPEC DOCT PROF
Florida State University Degree Program Inventory (August 2018)
Degree Level Offered at FSU by Degree CIP
College of Nursing
Nursing
Doctor of Nursing Practice 247320: Nursing Practice - Health Systems Leadership
513818
247321: Nursing Practice - Family Nurse Practitioner 513818
Nursing 247310: Nursing 513801* 513801
247312: Nursing (RN-BSN) 513801
247313: Nursing - Accelerated BSN 513801
247315: Nursing - Nurse Educator 513801
247316: Nurse Leader 513801
247318: Nursing - Veterans BSN 513801
College of Social Sciences and Public Policy
African-American Studies
African-American Studies 328110: African-American Studies 050201
Asian Studies
Asian Studies 321710: Asian Studies 050103 050103
321711: Asian Studies/Business 050103
Demography
Demography 328910: Demography 450501
Economics
Applied Economics
322215: Applied Economics 450602
Economics 322210: Economics 450601* 450601 450601
322211: Applied Economics
450601*
Geography
Environment and Society 324625: Environment and Society 030101
Geographic Information Science 324640: Geographic Information Science 450702
Geography 324610: Geography 450701 450701 450701
324620: Environmental Studies
450701
324630: Geographic Information Systems 450701
Health Policy Research
Public Health 326120: Public Health 512201 512201
International Affairs
International Affairs 329910: International Affairs (M at PC Campus) 450901 450901
Political Science
Political Science 324910: Political Science 451001 451001
451001
324911: Applied American Politics and Policy 451001
Public Administration
Public Administration 325110: Public Administration 440401 440401
Russian/East European Studies
Russian and East European Studies 328710: Russian and East European Studies 050105 050105
Social Sciences
Latin-American and Caribbean Studies 328820: Latin-American and Caribbean Studies 050134
328821: Latin-American and Caribbean Studies/Business 050134
Social Science
328810: Social Science 450101 450101
Sociology
Sociology 329010: Sociology 451101 451101 451101
329011: Applied Social Research 451101
329012: Sociology of Aging and Health 451101
Urban and Regional Planning
Urban and Regional Planning 329720: Urban and Regional Planning 040301 040301
Social Sciences Joint Degrees
327770: Urban and Regional Planning / Public Health 040301
327771: Urban and Regional Planning / Demography 040301
327772: Public Administration / Social Work 440401
327775: Public Administration / Criminology 440401
327777: Urban and Regional Planning / Public Administration 040301
327778: Public Administration / Health Policy Research
440401
327779: Urban and Regional Planning / International Affairs 450901
College of Social Work
Social Work
Social Work 338910: Social Work 440701 440701
338911: Social Work (BSW) 440701*
Social Work Joint Degrees
337772: Social Work / Public Administration 440701
337773: Social Work / Criminology
440701
337774: Social Work / Business Administration 440701
Dedman School of Hospitality
Dedman School of Hospitality
Hospitality Management 205710: Hospitality Management and Tourism 520901*
205712: Global Club Management and Leadership 520901*
205776: Global Club Management and Leadership, Conditional 520901
205786: Hospitality Management and Tourism, Conditional 520901
Jim Moran School of Entrepreneurship
Jim Moran School of Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship 640110: Commercial Entrepreneurship 520701*
640120: Social Entrepreneurship 520701*
Retail, Merchandising, and Product Development 252071: Retail, Merchandising, and Product Development 190901
640210: Retail Entrepreneurship 190901
Appendix A - Degree Program Inventory - Page 7
College / Department / Program Major Code : Major Code Description BACH MAST ADVM SPEC DOCT PROF
Florida State University Degree Program Inventory (August 2018)
Degree Level Offered at FSU by Degree CIP
Graduate Studies
Graduate School
Materials Science and Engineering 680001: Materials Science
401001
680010: Materials Science/Chemical and Biomedical Engineering 401001
680011: Materials Science/Civil and Environmental Engineering 401001
680012: Materials Science/Electrical and Computer Engineering 401001
680013: Materials Science/Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering 401001
680014: Materials Science and Engineering 401001 401001
680015: Materials Science/Mechanical Engineering
401001
680020: MSandE/Chemical and Biomedical Engineering 401001 401001
680021: MSandE/Civil and Environmental Engineering 401001 401001
680022: MSandE/Electrical and Computer Engineering 401001 401001
680023: MSandE/Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering 401001 401001
680025: MSandE/Mechanical Engineering 401001 401001
680030: Materials Science/Chemistry and Biochemistry 401001
680031: Materials Science/Physics 401001
680032: Materials Science/Scientific Computing 401001
680040: MSandE/Chemistry and Biochemistry 401001 401001
680041: MSandE/Physics 401001 401001
680042: MSandE/Scientific Computing 401001 401001
680043: MSandE/Biological Science 401001 401001
NOTES:
*Limited access program
Indicates removal pending some action not yet finalized, or temporary suspension, or major not published.
BACH MAST ADVM SPEC DOCT PROF
Total Degree Programs: 104 112 1 12 70 3
Fields Offered at FSU (includes removal pending and temporarily suspended): 294 315 1 40 176 14
Appendix A - Degree Program Inventory - Page 8
Appendix B – Glossary of Terms Page 1
Glossary of Terms
Academic Year - Usually, consecutive fall and spring semesters, currently August through April; sometimes, however, summer semester
is included in the term "academic year." In Florida, the summer term precedes fall and spring semesters in the school year.
Administrative and Professional (A&P) - A pay plan for middle and upper level administrative and professional positions. This pay plan
category combines administrative employees, who are responsible for formulating, interpreting, and implementing policies that affect
the activities of the University, with professional employees, whose responsibilities are on a recognized level of comparability with the
instruction and research personnel of the University.
Articulation Agreement - The articulation agreement between all 28 Florida state/community colleges and the twelve state universities
enables students to complete an associate in arts degree at any Florida state/community college and be admitted automatically into
available upper division programs for the last two years of course work at any of the twelve state universities.
Board of Education, State - Board consisting of the Commissioner of Education and seven appointed members. This Board oversees
Florida’s education from kindergarten through graduate school (K-20) and the 13-member Boards of Trustees for each of the 12 public
universities. See page 9 for a complete list of the board members.
Board of Governors, Florida - A 17-member board which coordinates the State University System and supports the role of the 11
individual University Boards of Trustees. The Florida Board of Governors is composed of 14 appointed members, the Commissioner
of Education, the Chair of the Advisory Council of Faculty Senates, and the President of the Florida Student Association. See page 9 of
this Fact Book for a complete list of the board members. More information can be found online at: flbog.org
Board of Trustees, Florida State University - A 13-member board which governs Florida State University. It is composed of six
members appointed by the Governor, five members appointed by the Florida Board of Governors, the chair of the Faculty Senate, and
the president of the student body. The trustees are appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate, and serve for
staggered four-year terms. The board of trustees performs duties as assigned by law or by rule of the Florida Board of Education. See
page 8 for a complete list and brief biography of the board members. More information can be found online at: trustees.fsu.edu
Chancellor of the State University System - Functions as Chief Executive Officer of the SUS. Responsible for the formulation of plans
and programs and for providing overall direction and management to all areas of the SUS within authority delegated by the Board of
Governors. Plans and initiates programs concerning all phases of operations within the SUS. Acts as Chief Budget Officer.
CIP (Classification of Instructional Programs) Discipline Code - These codes represent a nationally used, common taxonomy for the
classification of higher education degree programs. The CIP classification describes content of the programs at three levels with each
providing varying levels of detail. A directory of the CIP codes can be found online at: nces.ed.gov/ipeds/cipcode
Common Course Numbering System - Developed in 1978, the common course numbering system is a statewide system of prefixes and
numbers for courses offered by all postsecondary and participating private institutions in Florida. Its purpose is to make transferring
easier by identifying equivalent courses, all of which carry the same prefix and last three digits; the title of the course may vary at
different institutions.
Contracts and Grants (C&G) Budget - A budget entity which deals primarily with sponsored research activities and federally-funded
educational grants. Also called Sponsored Research budget.
Credit Hour - College credit is the type of credit assigned to courses or course equivalent learning that is part of an organized and
specified program leading to a graduate, baccalaureate, or associate degree. One (1) college credit is based on the learning expected
from the equivalent of fifteen (15) fifty-minute periods of classroom instruction. Credits for such things as laboratory instruction,
internships, and clinical experience are determined by the institution based on the proportion of direct instruction to the laboratory
exercise, internship hours, clinical practice hours (Source: 6A-10.033 (1)(a), FAC).
Educational and General (E&G) Budget - A budget entity which provides instructional programs leading to formal degrees, and for
research and public service programs.
Faculty Assignments, Commitments, and Effort Certification Tracking (FACET) - System for tracking how an employee spent his/her
paid university time during the period on each major academic function/activity. Reporting is on a basis of 100% of total time (in
whole numbers), and portions of that time, regardless of the level of funded semester or monthly FTE.
Faculty - This category includes all individuals in the educational program who hold the title of Professor, Associate Professor, Assistant
Professor, and Instructor, including those with titles preceded by the term “visiting,” “adjunct,” “clinical,” or any other designation.
The collective bargaining agreement currently in force includes in the faculty population all Developmental Research School (university
lab school) personnel, all University Librarian classifications, staff physicists, and the President.
Fiscal Year - A 12-month period running from July 1 through the following June 30.
Appendix B – Glossary of Terms Page 2
Glossary of Terms
Florida Endowment Trust Fund for Eminent Scholars - The Trust Fund established in the State Treasury for Eminent Scholars
provides the opportunity for each state university to match and receive challenge grants to create endowments for selected
eminent scholars to occupy Chairs within the university.
FTIC (first-time-in-college) - An entering freshman, or a first-year student attending college for the first time at the undergraduate
level. Includes students enrolled in the fall term who attended college for the first time in the prior summer term. Also includes
students who entered with advanced standing (college credits earned before graduation from high school).
Full-time Equivalent (FTE) Student Calculation FactorsIn 2016, the Florida Board of Governors adopted the national standard
for Student Full-time Equivalent. All FTE calculations in the Fact Book (including previous years) were updated to the new
standard. For undergraduate credit hours, the annual sum is divided by 30. For graduate credit hours, the annual sum is divided
by 24. Medical (MD) hours (Grad III) are excluded in the credit hour calculation, but the MD Headcount is added to the total
generated FTE.
Full-Time Equivalent (FTE) Employee - A numerical designator for an appointment based on 100% for full time. An FTE for a
full-time employee is 1.00. (Two people each serving in half-time faculty positions would equal, together, one FTE position.)
Full-Time Equivalent (FTE) Student - A measure of student enrollment based on the number of student credit hours for which
students enroll. See definition of Full-time Equivalent FTE Student Calculation Factors for other FTE equivalencies.
Full-Time Student - Generally classified as an undergraduate student taking 12 hours or more in the fall or spring, 9 hours or
more in the summer; or a graduate student taking 9 hours or more in the fall or spring, 6 hours or more in the summer.
Instruction and Research Data File (IRDF) - A file generated from the Faculty Assignments, Commitments, and Effort
Certification Tracking (FACET) file which contains detailed data on course section, enrollment, and credit hours, as well as
funding and demographic information on instructors.
IPEDS (Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System) - IPEDS is the core postsecondary education data collection program
in the U.S. Department of Education's National Center for Education Statistics (NCES). It was designed to help NCES meet its
mandate to report full and complete statistics on the condition of postsecondary education in the United States. It is a single,
comprehensive data collection system developed to encompass all institutions and organizations whose primary purpose is to
provide postsecondary education. IPEDS is built around a series of interrelated surveys to collect institution-level data in such
areas as enrollment, program completions, faculty and staff, and financing.
Major Code - A six-digit number assigned to an area of study designated as the student's major field. For internal classifying and
reporting, the major code was replaced in Fall 2013 by the Academic Plan which is an alpha-numeric representation of the student
major and degree type, combined.
Major Field of Study - Students are classified as majors according to their selection of a primary field of study. This field must be
selected from approved degree programs and university approved majors within each degree program.
Occupation Code - A four-digit code which indicates the title and general description of the position to which a person is
appointed. Occupation codes range from 0001 to 9179 and 9199 to 9499 for regular salaried positions. The range 9180-9198 is
reserved for student related titles. Graduate assistants, post doctorates and fellows are appointed to classifications within this
range. All codes within this latter range are paid through OPS funds. Faculty, A&P, and USPS may be appointed on OPS in the
entire range of occupation codes; this, however, is limited primarily to faculty appointments.
Operating Budget - An expenditure plan developed for each fiscal year. The plan must conform to the annual
allocation/appropriation and list estimated expenditures by budget category for the year.
Other Personal Services (OPS) - This is one of two sources of salary funds. Persons paid from OPS are performing temporary
work of some nature. There is no continuing obligation on the part of the state toward persons on OPS appointments.
Preliminary Headcount Enrollment - The enrollment taken from the official data files of the university as of the end of the 28th
calendar day of the term. This figure includes all students, fundable and non-fundable, who are on the Student Instruction File.
Race/Ethnicity - Categories used to describe groups to which individuals belong, identify with, or belong in the eyes of the
community. The categories do not denote scientific definitions of anthropological origins. They are used to categorize U.S.
citizens, resident aliens, and other eligible non-citizens.
Appendix B – Glossary of Terms Page 3
Glossary of Terms
Race/Ethnicity Categories - Beginning in 2010, a new methodology for reporting race/ethnicity was required by the U.S. Department of
Education (https://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/Section/ana_Changes_to_25_2007_169). United States citizens and resident aliens are asked to
first designate ethnicity as: Hispanic or Latino
or
Not Hispanic or Latino. Second, individuals are asked to indicate one or more races
that apply among the following: American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian or Other
Pacific Islander, or White.
State Fundable Student Credit Hours - Those student credit hours for which the University receives funding by the state.
Student Classification Level (from Student Information File) - Students are classified on division levels as follows:
Lower Division: A student who has earned fewer than 60 semester credit hours, or a student who has
not been admitted to upper division.
Upper Division: A student who has earned 60 or more semester credit hours, or has an associate of arts
(AA) degree, or is working toward an additional bachelor's degree.
Beginning Graduate: A graduate student who has been formally admitted to a graduate degree program but
who is not an advanced graduate student.
Advanced Graduate: A graduate student who has been formally admitted to a recognized Doctoral or Post-
Masters degree program.
Unclassified: A student not admitted to a degree program, or not seeking a degree.
Student Course Loads (FSU Bulletin) - Students are classified on the basis of semester hours earned as follows:
Freshman: Zero to 29 semester hours
Sophomore: 30 to 59 semester hours
Junior: 60 to 89 semester hours and all lower division requirements
Senior: 90 semester hours or student seeking a second bachelor’s degree
Graduate: Any student admitted to a graduate program
Unclassified: Any student not yet admitted to a degree program, including:
Special Non-Degree Seeking without Baccalaureate Degree
Special Non-Degree Seeking with Baccalaureate Degree
Provisional
Transient
High School Students
Student Credit Hours - A measure which is equal to the product of the number of students enrolled in a course section times the
number of credit hours for the course section. Student Credit Hours for which the University receives funding by the state are
called State Fundable Student Credit Hours (SFSCH). Not all SCH are fundable - for instance, credit hours produced by some fee
waivers and by students enrolled for audit are not state fundable.
Lower Level SCH: Hours generated by courses numbered between 1000 and 2999.
Upper Level SCH: Hours generated by courses numbered between 3000 and 4999.
Graduate I Level SCH: Hours generated by courses numbered between 5000 and 8999 and not Graduate II or
Graduate III courses.
Graduate II Level SCH: Hours generated by courses numbered between 5000 and 8999 and student’s
classification level is Advanced Graduate or the degree level sought is Advanced
Master’s, Specialist, Juris Doctorate, or Doctorate. The student program category
must be an authorized Doctoral degree program.
Graduate III Level SCH: Hours generated by courses numbered between 5000 and 9999 and course section
type is Medical.
Student Instruction File (SIF) - A Florida Board of Governor's required file prepared five times annually (summer final, fall
preliminary, fall final, spring preliminary, spring final) which contains specific data on all students, enrollments, course sections,
degrees, and credit hours.
Tenure - The condition attained by a faculty member through highly competent scholarly activities which assures the faculty
member security of employment and immunity from reprisals or threats due to an intellectual position or belief which may be
unpopular, and which guarantees annual reappointment for that faculty member until voluntary resignation, retirement, or
removal for adequate cause.