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Dallas College Garland Center

Dallas College is a public community college with seven campuses in Dallas County, Texas.[1] It serves more than 70,000 students annually in degree-granting, continuing education, and adult education programs.

Dallas College offers associate degree and career/technical certificate programs in more than 100 areas of study[2] as well as a bachelor's degree in education.[3] It is one of the largest community college systems in Texas.

History

Dallas College was founded as the Dallas County Junior College District in 1965, and became known as the Dallas County Community College District (DCCCD) in 1972. The first campus, El Centro College, was established in 1966 in downtown Dallas. Bill J. Priest served as the founding chancellor from 1965 until his retirement in 1981.[4]

Consolidation

In February 2020, the Dallas County Community College District announced a plan to consolidate its seven constituent institutions, which at the time were separately accredited, into one accredited institution with multiple campuses. The move was primarily aimed at simplifying the enrollment process and graduation requirements. Students originally needed to complete at least 25% of credits at one campus; the merger removed this requirement.[5]

The merger was approved by accreditor SACSCOC on June 12, 2020.[6] In tandem, the district changed its name to Dallas College, repositioning its former constituent institutions as campuses (e.g., Brookhaven College became Dallas College Brookhaven Campus).[7]

The merger was controversial among faculty, as it resulted in layoffs, changes to campus culture,[8] and a more centralized governance structure. In particular, the college eliminated its rolling three-year faculty contracts in favor of one-year contracts, which substantially weakened job security for full-time faculty.[9] In October 2021, roughly a year after the consolidation, full-time faculty passed a resolution of no confidence against then-chancellor Dr. Joe May.[10]

Service area

As defined by the Texas Legislature, the official service area of Dallas College consists of Dallas County and the Carrollton-Farmers Branch Independent School District, a portion of which is in adjacent Denton County.[11]

Dallas College maintains an "open-door" admissions policy regarding new students, allowing many people to attend college who otherwise might not be able to do so.

Campuses

Шаблон:OSM Location map Dallas College has seven primary campuses. Prior to the 2020 consolidation, each of these institutions were separately accredited.

# Campus Opened City/Neighborhood Mascot Colors
1 Brookhaven 1978 Farmers Branch Bears Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Color box
2 Cedar Valley 1977 Lancaster Suns Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Color box
3 Eastfield 1970 Mesquite Harvester Bees Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Color box
4 El Centro 1966 Downtown Dallas Eagles Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Color box
5 Mountain View 1970 Oak Cliff, Dallas Lions Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Color box
6 North Lake 1977 Las Colinas, Irving Blazers Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Color box
7 Richland 1972 Lake Highlands, Dallas Thunderducks Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Color box

Centers

In addition to the seven campuses, Dallas College has Centers which either serve surrounding communities or are used for specific purposes.[12] Prior to the 2020 consolidation, each center was associated with a specific campus.

Center City/Neighborhood
Bill J. Priest Deep Ellum, Dallas
Cedar Hill Cedar Hill
Coppell Coppell
Culinary, Pastry and Hospitality Northwest Dallas
Downtown Design Downtown Dallas
Downtown Health Sciences Downtown Dallas
Garland Garland
Irving Irving
Lancaster Workplace Development Oak Cliff, Dallas
Pleasant Grove Pleasant Grove, Dallas
South Dallas Training South Dallas
West Dallas West Dallas
Workforce Redbird, Dallas

Administration

The Dallas College board of trustees consists of seven members who are entrusted with governing the district. The board defines the vision of the district, serves as a liaison between the district and the community, approves annual budgets and sets policies, among other responsibilities. Board members are elected officials who serve six-year terms without compensation.[13]

References

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External links

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