Alumna a Master at Teaching Young Children
Mary J. White โ94, a master teacher at the College's N.E. Miles Early Childhood Development Center, is featured on the cover of Teaching Young Children, a national magazine for preschool educators.
Mary J. White โ94, a master teacher at the College's N.E. Miles Early Childhood Development Center, is featured on the cover of Teaching Young Children, a national magazine for preschool educators.
Assistant professor of English Gary Jackson was saying y'all long before he moved to Charleston from Topeka, Kan.
College of Charleston REACH graduate Sam Hazeltine was honored with a resolution from the South Carolina House of Representatives.
Graduating arts management major Stirling Rentz, the reigning Miss North Charleston 2015, will compete next month for the title of Miss South Carolina 2015.
The College of Charleston will celebrate the accomplishments of graduates from its Bachelor of Professional Studies Program on May 14, 2015.
College of Charleston education fellow Terry Peterson, a pioneer in arts in education and afterschool learning, will be recognized for lifetime achievement in the 2015 Elizabeth OโNeill Verner Governorโs Awards for the Arts on May 13, 2015.
For the past nine years, College alumna and former trustee Debra Gammons '87 has held a 5k race in Summerville, S.C., to honor the life of her mother and raise awareness about stroke prevention.
For many students at the College, intramural sports and sports clubs are a great way to make new friends. Just ask intramural basketball champions Mitchell Campbell, Tremayne Garvin, Patrick Young and Matt Suchecki.
Charlestonians Sarah Grimkรฉ (1792 โ 1873) and Angelina Grimkรฉ Weld (1805 โ 1879) were among the first American reformers to compare the condition of women to the plight of enslaved Africans and to call for an end to exploitation based on race and gender.
Senior anthropology major Ben Widder was participating in an archeological field school at Dixie Plantation when he discovered a parsonage key from the early 1700s.