About Us
History of the College
SCC opened its classrooms in January of 1964.
Many thought that the College would not be able to recruit enough
students in the middle of the academic year when most colleges
started their courses in the fall, but they were wrong. From the
first day, the College was over-enrolled, with more than 850 students.
Classes were held at Shoreline High School in the evenings and
on weekends.
There was much work to be accomplished in the
early days of the College. Recruiting and hiring trained faculty
and staff, developing curriculum, and planning new buildings were
just some of the key work challenges of the day.
Thanks to the Boeing family, Shoreline Community
College acquired 80 acres of land on which to build their first
building. Old photos provide a glimpse of the 'wilderness' in which
the College broke ground for its first building - the library.
Soon after, the administration building and the student union building
followed. Portable buildings were installed to accommodate classes
until capital funds could be released for the construction of new
buildings.
Today, 40 years after the first student enrolled
at Shoreline Community College , the mission of the school remains
much the same. Traditionally, less than 25% of the national population
receives a baccalaureate degree, leaving 75% of our community with
high school degrees or no degree at all.
The College, along with all 34 community colleges
in the Washington state system, is focused on providing education
to the community at large. It is not surprising that community
colleges find themselves "stretched to their limits." Every community
college continues to develop professional/technical training to
move students straight into the workforce, and certificate programs
(less than two years) that upgrade existing skills or provide an
initial foundation for a specific career. Additionally, they develop
adult basic education programs to prepare students to enter college,
English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) for our ever-growing immigrant
population, high school completion programs, and Continuing Education / Continuing Education
for personal enrichment and more. The initial goal of providing
two-year transfer education can not be forgotten.
Shoreline Community College is grateful to the
community for its ongoing support and to the Washington State Legislature
for focusing on the needs of citizens for higher education. Over
time, the College will continue to look for the means to educate
its students in a way that is effective and efficient and will
look to its 50th anniversary as the next major milestone.
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