Schools

FSC Selected For 2020 Community Engagement Classification

Farmingdale State College is one of 119 U.S. colleges and universities to receive the 2020 classification from the Carnegie Foundation.

Farmingdale State College President John S. Nader. FSC was selected for the 2020 Carnegie Engagement Classification.
Farmingdale State College President John S. Nader. FSC was selected for the 2020 Carnegie Engagement Classification. (Farmingdale State College)

FARMINGDALE, NY — Farmingdale State College is one of 119 U.S. colleges and universities to receive the 2020 Carnegie Community Engagement Classification, an elective designation indicating institutional commitment to community engagement, according to the college. The Carnegie Foundation recently announced the honors.

Farmingdale is the only SUNY school on Long Island, and one of only two academic institutions on the island, to receive the classification. Farmingdale is one of nine SUNY schools to currently hold this designation.

Only 359 colleges and universities, in 37 states and U.S. territories, hold this award, representing only 10 percent of all academic institutions. Farmingdale is one of only 44 schools recognized for the first time.

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"It is a tremendous achievement to earn the Elective Carnegie Community Engagement
Classification endorsement," Farmingdale State College President John S. Nader said via press release. "Our faculty and staff have invested enormous efforts to engage our students with leading firms and non-profit institutions."

The classification is awarded following a process of self-study by each institution, which is then
assessed by a national review committee led by the Swearer Center for Public Engagement at
Brown University, the administrative and research home for the Carnegie Community
Engagement Classification.

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"These newly-classified and re-classified institutions are doing exceptional work to forward their public purpose in and through community engagement that enriches teaching and research while also benefiting the broader community," says Mathew Johnson, executive director of the Swearer Center.

One of the categories Farmingdale had to document was demonstrating the depth and breadth
of interactive partnerships that indicate reciprocity and mutual benefit. Among those are:

  •  School of Business, Department of Urban Horticulture – Landscape development students participated in a service-learning opportunity to create a sensory garden at Clark Botanic Garden.
  • School of Arts & Sciences, Social Science Research Institute – Students from several disciplines participated in social-justice internships at local community organizations, such as Erase Racism and Family Service League.
  • School of Engineering Technology, Renewable Energy and Sustainability Center – Training is provided to develop an ambitious workforce training program to meet the needs of the clean-energy industry.
  • School of Health Sciences, Department of Dental Hygiene – "Give Kids a Smile" offers hundreds of children free oral health care, provided by students and faculty.
  • Farmingdale State College – Farmingdale has provided a one-half acre parcel of land to Island Harvest in order to grow produce for food-insecure LI families. Student and faculty volunteers participate in the program.

Says Allison Puff, academic program manager in the provost’s office: "This classification recognizes FSC’s strong culture of civic responsibility and engaged learning, which has led to incredible partnerships with Long Island institutions such as D3LLC, Canon, PSEG, Henry Schein, Habitat for Humanity, and The Asthma Coalition of Long Island. All our partnerships allow FSC to provide quality learning experiences for students, and give something back to the Long Island community at the same time."

Of the 119 institutions classified in 2020, 44 have been recognized for the first time, and 75
have been re-classified, from the 2010 and 2015 cycles.

These 119 institutions join another 240 that earned the classification during the 2015 selection
process, for a total of 359 campuses that are holders of this designation.

Among the 2020 recipients of the classification, 67 are public institutions and 52 are private. For Carnegie’s Basic Classification, 52 are classified as research universities, 39 are Master’s colleges and universities, 22 are baccalaureate colleges, three are community colleges, and three have a specialized focus—arts, medicine and other health professions.

These institutions represent campuses in 37 states and U.S. territories.

"Community engagement opportunities can be life changing for our students," Nader said. "The Carnegie Classification affirms the College’s dedication to student success and to our engagement in the Long Island Region."

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