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reflections
Skidmore College - The Facts

The College

Founded: 1903

Location: Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

Program: Four-year, private, nondenominational, coed, liberal arts

Degrees: B.A., B.S., M.A. (Master of Arts in Liberal Studies)

Degree Programs: 65

Top Majors: Business, English, Art, Psychology, Government, Foreign Language, Biology

Double Majors: 16% of Class of 2009

Minors: 42% of Class of 2009
The Students 

Enrollment on campus: 2,400 students, from 47 states and 46 countries

Gender Mix: 41% men, 59% women

Selectivity: Admission offered to 42% of applicants for the Class of 2013

Financial Aid: 40% of students

Median SAT/ACT/Admitted Students of Fall 09: SAT 1320 ACT 30

Academic Calendar: Spring and Fall Semesters, optional Summer Terms

Retention (1st to 2nd year): 93%

Graduation Rate: 78% (4 years), 80% (6 years)

 

 
General
 
On Campus Housing: 100% of freshmen and 82% of students overall

Athletics: NCAA Division III Liberty League, 19 intercollegiate sports; club sports and intramurals; fitness and recreation

Costs 2009-2010: $39,600 tuition; $6376 room; $4,400 board; $820 required fees. Total $51,196.

Endowment: $226 million

The Classroom

Full-time Faculty: 249, 80% hold the doctoral or highest degree in their fields

Student-Faculty Ratio: 8 to 1

Average Class Size: 17

Study Abroad: Nearly 60% of graduating seniors, more than 40 countries





Skidmore College—Did you Know?
  • Skidmore was named in 2007 by the Newsweek/Kaplan College Guide as one of America’s “25 New Ivies.”
  • Originally located in downtown Saratoga Springs, Skidmore built an entirely new campus in the 1960s.
  • Each fall, 36 students begin their first year at Skidmore in the London First-Year Experience program.
  • Salmagundi, the internationally acclaimed quarterly journal of humanities and social sciences, has been published at Skidmore since 1969.
  • Skidmore has three merit-based scholarships: the Filene Music Scholarship, the Porter Presidential Scholarship in Science and Mathematics, and the Scholarship in Science and Mathematics.
  • Skidmore sponsors its own foreign study programs in China, England, France and Spain.
  • The College has nearly 100 student clubs and organizations.
  • The Princeton Review consistently ranks WSPN (91.1 FM) among the nation’s top college radio stations.
  • Scribner Library holdings include one of the extremely limited editions of Edward Curtis' The North American Indian, an epic work comprising of 20 volumes of illustrated text and twenty portfolios of large-size photogravures.
  • Skidmore’s dramatic Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery, opened in 2000, hosts public events on its rooftop patio, including a Friday evening concert series during the summer.
  • Students can cook their own meals in the expansive new dining hall, or graze food stations offering, international foods, stone-hearth pizza, homemade pasta, diner classics, vegetarian and vegan and deli and bakery.
  • Students voted in 1981 to change the College’s athletic mascot to the Thoroughbred.