About TCUTexas Christian University is a major private teaching and research university with the residential, person-centered environment unusually found on a small college campus. While accomplishing its mission of educating individuals to think and act as ethical leaders and responsible citizens in the global community, the University provides the unique TCU experience. This experience gives students an uncommon balance of at least four factors:
Comprising seven academic divisionsAddRan College of Liberal Arts, M.J. Neeley School of Business, the College of Communication, the College of Education, the College of Fine Arts, Harris College of Nursing & Health Sciences, and the College of Science & EngineeringTCU is independent and self-governing. Nationally recognized Division I-A athletics contributes to the vital collegiality of the campus. Of the 20 sportsfootball and baseball for men; volleyball, rifle, equestrian, and soccer for women; and basketball, cross country, track, tennis, golf, and swimming and diving for men and womenseveral are ranked in the nation's Top 25. International study, an institutional priority at TCU, provides students an opportunity to live and learn abroad. The Center for International Studies: TCU Abroad offers a wide range of academic programs, including summer courses led by TCU faculty members and semester programs in London, Seville and Florence. Other study abroad opportunities include partner programs and exchange programs in various locations around the world. The school that was to be TCU was born in the troubled years following the Civil War. In 1869, young brothers Addison and Randolph Clark began holding classes in the village of Fort Worth, from which cattle trails ranged northward. In 1873, they moved 40 miles away to establish AddRan Male and Female College at bucolic Thorp Spring. Inclusion of women in the title is arguably the first instance of coeducation in the Southwest. After 20 years, the school affiliated with the Christian Churches of Texas and became AddRan Christian College. Moved to Waco in 1895, the school changed its name in 1902 to Texas Christian University. Fire destroyed its main building in 1910, and the University returned to Fort Worth and opened in its present location in 1911. Its future was assured in 1923 with a gift by Mrs. Mary Couts Burnett. With a controlled enrollment of about 8,700 students, TCU draws from all 50 states and more than 75 countries. Of the 479 full-time faculty, 54 percent are tenured; the student-faculty ratio is about 14:1. The 283-acre campus, located only a few miles from downtown Fort Worth, houses more than 3,300 students and offers a full range of activities and recreational facilities for students. In short, higher education may be a business to some, but at TCU, we consider it our mission: To educate individuals to think and act as ethical leaders and responsible citizens in the global community.
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