97 collections related to North Carolina State University -- Administration
Filters: 1960-19691920-19291870-18791990-1999North Carolina State University -- Administration
Digital content available
North Carolina State University. Office for Equal Opportunity and Equity
Size: 55.25 linear feet (110 archival boxes, 1 halfbox) Collection ID: UA 005.009
The Office for Equal Opportunity and Equity Records contain correspondence, memoranda, meeting minutes, reports, publications, and other material related to the administrative functions of the Affirmative Action Office (later the Office for Equal Opportunity and Equity). The bulk of the material involves efforts by North Carolina ...
MoreThe Office for Equal Opportunity and Equity Records contain correspondence, memoranda, meeting minutes, reports, publications, and other material related to the administrative functions of the Affirmative Action Office (later the Office for Equal Opportunity and Equity). The bulk of the material involves efforts by North Carolina State University to comply with federal statutory and regulatory requirements prohibiting discrimination. Also included are records of the Disability Services Office, which became part of the Office for Equal Opportunity in 1999. Most of the Disability Services material, comprising student records, is restricted, and will be deaccessioned according the disposition instructions for GU 323 (Services to Students with Disabilities) of the University of North Carolina (System) General Records Retention and Disposition Schedule. The position of affirmative action officer was created within the Office of the Provost in 1972. It carried the title assistant provost for affirmative action from 1974, and became associate provost in 1982. The Office for Equal Opportunity and Equity was established within the Provost's Office in 1999, under the direction of the vice provost for equal opportunity and equity (the successor to the associate provost for affirmative action). The Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Office oversaw all university activities related to compliance with federal and state laws prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race, gender, and disability.
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North Carolina State University. Office of Diversity and African American Affairs
Size: 12 linear feet (24 archival boxes); 0.014 Megabytes Collection ID: UA 005.014
This collection is comprised of correspondence, surveys, and reports related to discrimination and African American issues. It also includes information on the African American Cultural Center. This office of African American Affairs worked in cooperation with the Affirmative Action Office. In 1990 North Carolina State University ...
MoreThis collection is comprised of correspondence, surveys, and reports related to discrimination and African American issues. It also includes information on the African American Cultural Center. This office of African American Affairs worked in cooperation with the Affirmative Action Office. In 1990 North Carolina State University created a position of Coordinator of African American Affairs within the Office of the Provost. Dr. Augustus M. Witherspoon became the first to fill the position. Drs. William C. Grant, Rupert W. Nacoste, and Jose A. Picart have followed in his footsteps. By 2000 the position had become the Vice Provost for Diversity and African American Affairs.
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Digital content available
North Carolina State University. Office of Faculty Development
Size: 28.75 linear feet (19 cartons, 1 archival half box); 310 megabytes Collection ID: UA 005.063
The North Carolina State University, Office of the Provost, Office of Faculty Development Records contain materials on university teaching awards, including correspondence, applications, and lists of nominees. Materials range in date from 1989 - 2010. The Office of Faculty Development (OFD) was established as part of the Office of ...
MoreThe North Carolina State University, Office of the Provost, Office of Faculty Development Records contain materials on university teaching awards, including correspondence, applications, and lists of nominees. Materials range in date from 1989 - 2010. The Office of Faculty Development (OFD) was established as part of the Office of the Provost in August 2008. Its goal is to provide NC State faculty with access to a range of development opportunities provided by OFD and a number of other NC State offices and programs. It was formed by the Working Group on Faculty Development and assumes many of the roles of the Faculty Center of Teaching and Learning.
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Digital content available
North Carolina State University. Office of International Programs
Size: 3.2 linear feet (5 archival boxes, 1 half box, 1 flat folder) Collection ID: UA 005.017
Contained in this sub-group are copies of outgoing correspondence from J. Lawrence Apple, who successively wrote under the titles of administrative advisor, associate director of international agriculture, and finally director of international programs. There are also some more recent additions, not from Apple's files. In 1968 North ...
MoreContained in this sub-group are copies of outgoing correspondence from J. Lawrence Apple, who successively wrote under the titles of administrative advisor, associate director of international agriculture, and finally director of international programs. There are also some more recent additions, not from Apple's files. In 1968 North Carolina State University had a dean of international programs reporting to the chancellor. By 1982, an Office of International Programs reported to the provost. By 2002 the university had created the position of vice provost for international affairs.
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North Carolina State University. Office of the Vice Provost for Academic Affairs
Size: 10.5 linear feet (20 archival boxes, 2 archival half boxes) Collection ID: UA 005.005
This collection contains general records of the provost's office relating to UNC Program Review, graduate programs, and administration. There are several folders on the review of North Carolina State University's colleges and academic degree programs. Other materials concern faculty and course evaluations. As of 2019, many of the ...
MoreThis collection contains general records of the provost's office relating to UNC Program Review, graduate programs, and administration. There are several folders on the review of North Carolina State University's colleges and academic degree programs. Other materials concern faculty and course evaluations. As of 2019, many of the duies of this office are now performed by the Division of Academic and Student Affairs. Before this office was subsumed into the Division of Academic Affairs in 2011, the position was titled senior vice provost for academic affiars. It had been previously titled associate vice provost for academic affairs. During the 1970s and 1980s associate provosts assisted the provost in academic matters, although "academic affairs" was not a part of their titles.
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North Carolina State University. Office of the Provost
Size: 1 linear foot (2 archival boxes) Collection ID: UA 005.061
This collection contains correspondence, reports and other material about named professorships and teaching awards at North Carolina State University, 1959 - 1993. The practice of establishing various kinds of distinctive academic chairs or professorships to attract and encourage excellent faculty has been a part of North Carolina ...
MoreThis collection contains correspondence, reports and other material about named professorships and teaching awards at North Carolina State University, 1959 - 1993. The practice of establishing various kinds of distinctive academic chairs or professorships to attract and encourage excellent faculty has been a part of North Carolina State University since at least 1946. The University's oldest endowed professorship, the William Neal Reynolds Professorship in Agriculture, supports William Neal Reynolds Professors by providing salary supplements and discretionary operating support. NCSU has named professorships that are endowed at levels that provide, from their income, support for salary supplements and discretionary operating resources. Other professorships carrying distinctive titles may or may not be associated with continuing appropriations that provide salary and support. In mid-1986, with the advice of the Faculty Senate, the chancellor established the concept of "professors of distinction" as the broad descriptor of all kinds of distinctively-titled professorships, "including distinguished visiting scholars," and provided procedures for according such distinctions upon individuals. Those procedures provide that faculty committees, comprised in the majority by individuals holding such formal distinctions, be consulted in the process of searching for or naming particular individuals in such positions and that the final review and decision on such distinctions rested with the chancellor upon the advice of the provost, the vice chancellor for research, and the dean of the graduate school.
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North Carolina State University. Office of the Provost. University Program on Science and Society
Size: 2 linear feet (1 carton, 1 box) Collection ID: UA 005.052
Contained here are the files of the University Program on Science and Society. Included are brochures, budget records, correspondence, grant proposals, occasional papers, photographs, reports, questionnaires, speeches, and surveys. There are several folders on an Ethics and Decision-Making in the Textile Industry Study and a Science ...
MoreContained here are the files of the University Program on Science and Society. Included are brochures, budget records, correspondence, grant proposals, occasional papers, photographs, reports, questionnaires, speeches, and surveys. There are several folders on an Ethics and Decision-Making in the Textile Industry Study and a Science and Theology Study-Research Group. Files on the Experimental Study of Religion and Society also exist here, as well as on its funding from a Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation grant. In 1968 the University Program on Science and Society was established. It was a cooperative program among faculty and students whose purpose was to provide the colleges and universities with a means of focusing curricula and departmental resources upon major social problems related to the growth of science and technology. North Carolina State University (NCSU), University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Duke University, St. Augustine's College, and Shaw University participated in the program.
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Digital content available
North Carolina State University. Office of Extension, Engagement and Economic Development
Size: 4.25 linear feet (8 archival boxes, 1 half box, plus 17.2 GB of digital files,) Collection ID: UA 004.001
This collection contains reports, grant materials, white papers, award materials, and other records from the North Carolina State University Office of the Vice Chancellor for Extension, Engagement and Economic Development. The collection also contains meeting minutes, agendas, and memoranda from the Outreach and Extension Council. ...
MoreThis collection contains reports, grant materials, white papers, award materials, and other records from the North Carolina State University Office of the Vice Chancellor for Extension, Engagement and Economic Development. The collection also contains meeting minutes, agendas, and memoranda from the Outreach and Extension Council. The North Carolina State University Office of Extension, Engagement and Economic Development (EEED), previously known as the Office of Extension and Engagement, provides leadership and vision for University partnerships with external communities in the land-grant tradition. Separate from the Agricultural Extension Service (later the Cooperative Extension Services), a Division of Extension existed at North Carolina State College (later University) as far back as 1924.
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Digital content available
North Carolina State University. Office of Finance and Administration
Size: 157.5 linear feet (191 archival boxes, 19 cartons, 1 flat box, 1 oversize box, 1 oversize legal box, 13 oversize flat boxes, 2 tubes, 7 volumes, 6 flat folders) Collection ID: UA 003.001
The North Carolina State University, Office of the Vice Chancellor for Finance and Administration Records contain ledgers, invoices/invoice books, blueprints, statements of accounts, financial reports, capital improvement plans, correspondence, and information pertaining to budgets, donations, tuition, scholarships, enrollment and ...
MoreThe North Carolina State University, Office of the Vice Chancellor for Finance and Administration Records contain ledgers, invoices/invoice books, blueprints, statements of accounts, financial reports, capital improvement plans, correspondence, and information pertaining to budgets, donations, tuition, scholarships, enrollment and foundations.. Materials range in date from 1887 to 2013. The Office of the Vice Chancellor for Finance and Administration at North Carolina State University was formerly known as Bursar, Treasurer, Controller, and Business Manager. Records of the Office date back to 1887, when North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts (later North Carolina State University) was founded. The mission statement of the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Finance and Administration is “serving the NC State community through innovation and action in the development and management of the University’s physical, financial, and human resources.”As of 2011, the Office consists of the following units: Business Operations, Campus Enterprises, Centennial Campus Development, Environmental Health and Public Safety, Facilities Division, Finance and Resource Management, Human Resources, and the Treasurer's Office. These units report to the Vice Chancellor for Finance and Business, and they provide infrastructure services essential to supporting the students, faculty and staff of the university. In 2015, the name was changed from the Office of Finance and Business to the Office of Finance and Administration.
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Digital content available
North Carolina State University. Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research
Size: 41 linear feet (82 archival boxes) Collection ID: UA 011.001
The North Carolina State University, Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation Records contain correspondence, reports, and internal memoranda relating to research activities on campus. Faculty Research and Professional Development Grants and publications such as Results Magazine are also included. Materials range in ...
MoreThe North Carolina State University, Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation Records contain correspondence, reports, and internal memoranda relating to research activities on campus. Faculty Research and Professional Development Grants and publications such as Results Magazine are also included. Materials range in date from 1954 to 2018. The North Carolina State University, Office of Research and Innovation includes the Office of the Vice Chancellor, Research Development, Research Administration and Compliance, and Technology Commercialization and New Ventures. The unit's stated vision is to be instrumental in making an impact on society’s grand challenges through NC State’s emergence as a preeminent research university. The Office of Research and Innovation supports research, scholarship, and creative activities of the NC State community, facilitates a collaborative research and innovation environment, and translates results into social, economic, and technological development across North Carolina and around the world. The Office provides leadership for the research endeavors of the university and collaborates with industry partners. It also oversees the university's various centers and institutes. The Office of Research and Innovation was previously known as the Office of Research, Innovation and Economic Development. Prior to 2011, the Office of Research, Innovation and Economic Development was first called the Office of Research and Graduate Studies.
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Digital content available
North Carolina Sea Grant College Program
Size: 2.75 linear feet (1 carton, 2 boxes, 1 half box) Collection ID: UA 011.005
The records of the North Carolina Sea Grant College Program contain reports, newsletters, brochures, directories, proposals relating to coastal and water-related issues; includes the newsletters Blueprints, Conch Shell, Tidelines, Scotch Bonnet, Legal Tides, and Coastwatch. Materials range in date from 1973 to 2019. The North ...
MoreThe records of the North Carolina Sea Grant College Program contain reports, newsletters, brochures, directories, proposals relating to coastal and water-related issues; includes the newsletters Blueprints, Conch Shell, Tidelines, Scotch Bonnet, Legal Tides, and Coastwatch. Materials range in date from 1973 to 2019. The North Carolina Sea Grant began in 1970. Six years later, it became the nation's 12th Sea Grant College Program. Now the university-based program is part of a network of thirty Sea Grant programs that wrap the shores of the Atlantic, Pacific, Gulf of Mexico and Great Lakes. With its emphasis on solid, peer-reviewed scientific research coupled with outreach, Sea Grant has gained a reputation as a reliable source for valid solutions and timely information about our coast. Today, Sea Grant provides a holistic approach to a wide range of topics that have direct impacts not only along the North Carolina coast, but also across the state and the country.
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Digital content available
North Carolina State University. Office of Research and Innovation. Research Operations Council
Size: 1.5 linear feet (1 carton) Collection ID: UA 011.003
This collection contains mMinutes, reports, memoranda regarding research and its funding; arranged chronologically. The Research Operations Council convenes monthly and is chaired by the vice-chancellor for research, outreach, and extension. The overall purpose of the council is to improve the development, conduct, and administration of research programs at the University.
Digital content available
North Carolina State University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center
Size: 19.95 linear feet (33 archival boxes, 1 legal-sized archival box, 1 oversize flat box, 11 flat folders) Collection ID: UA 050.001
The University Archives Reference Collection, General Reference subgroup, contains brochures, clippings, correspondence and memoranda, news releases, programs, publications, reports, speeches, and related archival material concerning a variety of items relating to the University. This is an artificial collection and is maintained by ...
MoreThe University Archives Reference Collection, General Reference subgroup, contains brochures, clippings, correspondence and memoranda, news releases, programs, publications, reports, speeches, and related archival material concerning a variety of items relating to the University. This is an artificial collection and is maintained by Special Collections staff. North Carolina State University was established in 1887 as the North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts (A&M College). The College opened in 1889 with one building - the current Holladay Hall - six faculty, and courses in the agricultural and mechanical arts, adding a curriculum in applied science in 1893. By the turn of the century the College had grown to some half dozen buildings, about 300 students, and had begun to diversify its curricula. In 1917, the institution's name was changed to North Carolina State College of Agriculture and Engineering (State College). In 1931 the College greatly reworked its curricula as it underwent consolidation. Along with North Carolina College for Women and the University of North Carolina, it became a part of the Consolidated University of North Carolina,. North Carolina State is now one of the constituent institutions of the multi-campus University of North Carolina system, having received university status, and, after some controversy, assumed its current name in 1965. As of 2007, N.C. State had a student body of nearly 30,000, nearly two thousand faculty, and research and program expenditures of over $440 million.
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Size: 9 linear feet (6 cartons, 2 archival boxes) Collection ID: UA 002.005
The North Carolina State University University Policies and Procedures Records include official policies and procedures for North Carolina State University. Materials date from 1944 to 2007.
Fletcher, Oscar
Size: 7 linear feet (14 archival boxes) Collection ID: MC 00671
Oscar Fletcher, DVM, Ph.D., was dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine at NC State University from 1992 to 2004. From 2004 onwards, Fletcher served as a professor in the Department of Population Health and Pathobiology at NC State. Fletcher is a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Pathologists and a Founder Diplomate ...
MoreOscar Fletcher, DVM, Ph.D., was dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine at NC State University from 1992 to 2004. From 2004 onwards, Fletcher served as a professor in the Department of Population Health and Pathobiology at NC State. Fletcher is a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Pathologists and a Founder Diplomate of the American College of Poultry Veterinarians. The Oscar Fletcher Papers contain Fletcher's journals and notes,1992-2016, as well as his daytimers and calendars, 2000-2008, from the time period when he was on the faculty of NC State University and dean of its College of Veterinary Medicine. The Journals and Notes cover topics that include: scholarships, committee reports, budget reports, College of Veterinary Medicine statistics, student involvement, faculty and staff development, meetings with deans and faculty members, faculty retreat notes, operational plans, senior exit interviews, and student questionnaires.
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Digital content available
Size: 2.75 linear feet (3 archival boxes, 2 albums, 1 half box, 1 flat box) Collection ID: UA 023.002
The North Carolina State University Administration Photographs collection consists of black and white and color photographs and negatives covering the years 1889 to 2009. There are a limited number of slides, and papers with information relevant to the photographs are occasionally included.
Digital content available
North Carolina State University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center
Size: 12.5 linear feet (24 boxes, 1 halfbox, 1 flat folder); 1.8 megabytes Collection ID: UA 023.024
Black-and-white and color photographic prints, negatives, contact prints and sheets, printing plates, and reprographic copies of images picturing individuals and small groups of people who have contributed to the history of North Carolina State University. Pictures of administrators, faculty, staff, students, and notable visitors and ...
MoreBlack-and-white and color photographic prints, negatives, contact prints and sheets, printing plates, and reprographic copies of images picturing individuals and small groups of people who have contributed to the history of North Carolina State University. Pictures of administrators, faculty, staff, students, and notable visitors and alumni are included, as well as class pictures. Most of the materials were created to portray a specific individual or small group of people: many are posed and have subject identification on the reverse. The materials date from the 1890s to the late 20th century. North Carolina State University was established in 1887 as the North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts (A&M College). The College opened in 1889 with one building - the current Holladay Hall - six faculty, and courses in the agricultural and mechanical arts, adding a curriculum in applied science in 1893. By the turn of the century the College had grown to some half dozen buildings, about 300 students, and had begun to diversify its curricula. In 1917, the institution's name was changed to North Carolina State College of Agriculture and Engineering (State College). In 1931 the College greatly reworked its curricula as it underwent consolidation. Along with North Carolina College for Women and the University of North Carolina, it became a part of the Consolidated University of North Carolina,. North Carolina State is now one of the constituent institutions of the multi-campus University of North Carolina system, having received university status, and, after some controversy, assumed its current name in 1965. As of 2007, N.C. State had a student body of nearly 30,000, nearly two thousand faculty, and research and program expenditures of over $440 million.
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