TENNESSEE TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY


'Tennessee Technological University', popularly known as 'Tennessee Tech', is an accredited public university located in Cookeville, Tennessee, a small city approximately seventy miles (110 km) east of Nashville. It was formerly known as Tennessee Polytechnic Institute (1915), and before that as Dixie College, the name under which it was founded as a private institution in 1911. It places special emphasis on undergraduate education in fields related to engineering and technology, although degrees in education, liberal arts, agriculture, nursing, and other fields of study can be pursued as well. Additionally, there are graduate offerings in engineering, education, business, and the liberal arts. It is operated by the Tennessee Board of Regents, and its athletic teams compete in the Ohio Valley Conference.
Tennessee Tech is ranked among the Top 11 Public Schools in the South in U.S. News & World Report's 2006 edition of "America's Best Colleges." It was also ranked among the Top Public Schools in the South in the 2002, 2003 and 2005 college guides. The Princeton Review also listed TTU as a "Best College Value" in 2006. TTU is one of "America's 100 Best College Buys" as reported by Institutional Research & Evaluation, Inc. in 2006.
Tennessee Tech today enrolls 7,569 undergraduate and 2,164 graduate students, and its campus has 87 buildings on 235 acres (0.95 km²) centered along Dixie Avenue in north Cookeville. The average class size is twenty six students and the student to faculty ratio is 18:1. Less than one percent of all classes are taught by teaching assistants with the rest of the classes being taught by professors. The ethnic breakdown of the undergraduate student population is: 88.2% White/Caucasian, 4.1% African American, 1.5% Asian/Pacific Islander, 1.3% Hispanic, 0.3% American Indian/Alaskan Native, and 4.6% Other.

Contents
Buildings on campus
Educational or Administrative
Dormitories/residence halls
Academics
Departments
Programs
Research Centers
Athletics
Men's
Women's
On Campus Groups
Honors Societies
Religious Organizations
Fraternities
Sororities
Points of interest
Notable alumni
Campus lore
References
External links

Buildings on campus


Educational or Administrative


★ Roaden University Center (RUC)

★ Bartoo Hall (Department of Curriculum and Instruction)

★ Brown Hall (Mechanical, Electrical, and Computer Engineering)

★ Bruner Hall (Mathematics, Physics, and Computer Science)

★ Bryan Fine Arts (Music and Art)

★ Clement Hall (Basic Engineering)

★ Derryberry Hall (Administration)

★ Henderson Hall (English literature, History)

★ Johnson Hall (Business - named after past Business School Dean, Louis Johnson)

★ Kittrell Hall (Earth Sciences)

★ T.J. Farr Building (Education, Psychology, and Honors Program)

★ Foster Hall (Chemistry)

★ Matthews Daniel Hall (Psychology, Sociology, Philosophy, & Political Science )

★ Pennebaker Hall (Biology)

★ Prescott Hall (Chemical, Civil, and Industrial Engineering)

South Hall (Agriculture and Human Ecology)

★ The Hooper-Eblen Center ("The Hoop")

★ Volpe Library (named after past TTU President Angelo Volpe)
Dormitories/residence halls


★ Browning Hall (Men's)

★ Cooper Hall (Coed)

★ Crawford Hall (Women's)

★ Dunn Hall (Coed)

★ Ellington Hall (Coed)

★ Evins Hall (Men's)

★ Jobe Hall (Business)

Marshall Hall (Engineering)

★ Maddox Hall (Coed)

★ McCord Hall (Coed)

★ MS Cooper Hall (International students)

★ Murphy Hall (Honors)

★ New Hall (Freshmen Only)

★ Pinkerton Hall (Coed)

★ Warf Hall (Coed)

★ White Hall (Engineering)

Academics


Departments


Accounting & Law

Agriculture

Biology

Chemical Engineering

Chemistry

Civil and Environmental Engineering

Computer Science

★ Decision Sciences & Management

Earth Sciences

★ Economics, Finance, and Marketing

Education

Electrical and Computer Engineering

★ English & Communications

Foreign Languages

History

Human Ecology

Industrial & Systems Engineering

★ Manufacturing & Industrial Technology

Mathematics

Mechanical Engineering

★ Music & Art

Nursing

Physics

★ Psychology

★ Sociology, Philosophy, & Political Science

★ Web Design

★ World Cultures & Business
Programs


★ Cooperative Education

★ Distance MBA

Honors

Military Science
Research Centers


Center for Energy Systems Research (CESR)

Center for Manufacturing Research (CMR)

Center for the Management Utilization & Protection of Water Resources

Center for Teaching & Learning in Science, Technology, Engineering, & Mathematics (STEM)

Athletics


The Golden Eagles compete in the following sports:
Men's


★ Basketball

★ Football

★ Baseball

★ Cross Country

★ Golf

★ Tennis

★ Rifle
Women's


★ Basketball

★ Softball

★ Soccer

★ Volleyball

★ Cross Country

★ Track

★ Tennis

★ Golf

On Campus Groups


Honors Societies


Alpha Kappa Delta - Sociology

Alpha Lambda Delta - Freshman

Alpha Mu Gamma - Foreign Languages

Alpha Psi Omega - Theatre

Beta Alpha Psi - Accounting, Finance, and Information Systems

Beta Beta Beta - Biology

Beta Gamma Sigma - Business

Chi Epsilon - Civil Engineering

Delta Tau Alpha - Agriculture

Eta Kappa Nu - Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering

Kappa Delta Pi - Education

Kappa Mu Epsilon - Mathematics

Kappa Omicron Nu - Human Ecology

Mortar Board - Senior

Omega Chi Epsilon - Chemical Engineering

Omicron Delta Epsilon - Economics

Omicron Delta Kappa - Leadership

Order of Omega - Greek system

Phi Alpha Theta - History

Phi Kappa Phi - Scholastic

Pi Kappa Delta - Speech and Debate

Pi Sigma Alpha - Political Science

Pi Tau Sigma - Mechanical Engineering

Psi Chi - Psychology

Scabbard and Blade -ROTC

Sigma Pi Sigma - Physics

Sigma Tau Delta - English

Sigma Theta Tau - Nursing

Tau Beta Pi - Engineering
Religious Organizations


Baptist Collegiate Ministries

Campus Outreach

Canterbury Club

Chi Alpha

Fellowship of Christian Athletes

Intervarsity Christian Fellowship

LDS Student Association

Newman Campus Ministry

Presbyterian Student Association

Reformed University Fellowship

University Christian Student Center

Wesley Foundation
Fraternities


Alpha Gamma Sigma

Alpha Kappa Psi

Alpha Phi Alpha

Kappa Alpha

Kappa Sigma

Omega Psi Phi

Phi Delta Theta

Phi Gamma Delta

Pi Kappa Alpha

Sigma Alpha Epsilon

Sigma Chi

Sigma Phi Epsilon

Tau Kappa Epsilon

Theta Tau
Sororities


Alpha Delta Pi

Alpha Kappa Alpha

Delta Gamma

Delta Sigma Theta

Kappa Delta

Phi Mu

Zeta Tau Alpha

Zeta Phi Beta

Points of interest



Gerald D. Coorts Memorial Arboretum

Notable alumni



Harry Stonecipher, former CEO of Boeing, McDonnell Douglas, and Sundstrand.

★ General Carl Stiner, Commander United States Special Operations Command from June 1990 to May 1993.

Frank Omiyale, professional football player for the Atlanta Falcons in the NFL

Bill McDaniel, professional baseball player for the Boston Redsox in MLB

Mike Hennigan, professional football player for the Detroit Lions and New York Jets in the NFL

Rodney Atkins, Country Singer

Jim Youngblood, former professional football player for the Los Angeles Rams in the NFL

★ Jonathan Smallwood, established novelist

★ Jeff Wolfe, invented silent velcro

★ David Bilyeu, watched ''The Big Lebowski'' more than anyone, ever

Campus lore



★ "Dammit the Dog": a former university president once said "dammit" to a dog in front of a crowd. He covered by saying that was the dog's name. The dog has his own tombstone, an operable fire hydrant, on TTU campus opposite Derryberry Hall.

★ T.J. Farr Building is one of the few buildings on campus not called "Hall." It is said this is because when you say "Farr Hall" in the south, people think you're referring to something other than an academic building, namely a ''Fire Hall''.

★ The golden eagle atop Derryberry Hall was stolen by students from a hotel in Monteagle, Tennessee. After being retrieved by the owner of the hotel many different times, the hotel owner later donated the statue to the university. The governor officially pardoned the students involved.

★ The "Blizzard" is a tradition which started in 1985 when students celebrated the first successful shot made by Tennessee Tech in a basketball game against MTSU by throwing showers of "Tech Squares" (toilet paper) into the air. Since MTSU moved to the Sun Belt Conference, the Blizzard is now performed against Austin Peay State University.

References


http://www.tntech.edu/studentprofile.html
http://www.tntech.edu/traditions.html

External links



Tennessee Technological University

TTUSports.com

Appalachian Center for Craft

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