Although its roots date back to 1945 when Ohio University established an academic center in Portsmouth, the university was conceived in 1985 when Vern Riffe, the speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives, introduced legislation to create Shawnee State University. The legislation passed both Ohio houses and was signed into law by Governor Richard Celeste in 1986.[4]
In 1990, the university awarded its first bachelor's degrees, having been authorized by the state Regents to establish baccalaureate programs two years earlier. The university established its first master's degree program in 2000 and its second master's program (the Master of Education) in 2010.[5] It now also offers a Master of Science in Mathematical Sciences and a Master of Occupational Therapy.[6]
In 2022, the university was involved in a court case and settled with a professor after he had previously been disciplined for refusing to use a transgender student's preferred pronouns and later sued the university in 2018 over First and Fourteenth Amendment violations.[7][8]
Campus
Shawnee State, located in downtown Portsmouth, has a 62-acre campus.[9] Its 28 buildings [10] include the Vern Riffe Center for the Arts, Clark Planetarium, Morris University Center, and James A. Rhodes Athletic Center.[11] The university's library[12] was named the Clark Memorial Library in 1997.[13]
Shawnee State University's Clyde W. Clark Planetarium opened in 1998. The Planetarium permanently displays the Hubble Space Telescope Viewspace system.[14]
Funding for the planetarium was provided by Clyde W. Clark, a university donor, for whom the planetarium and library are named.[13]
The university offers an Honors Program[18]
for exceptional students.[19]
The Clark Memorial Library of Shawnee State is a charter member of the OhioLINK library consortium,[20] giving faculty and students access to 46 million books and other items.[21]
Financial aid
Shawnee State marketing materials note that more than $25 million is awarded annually in financial aid; annual expenditures as of 2022 list approximately $11 million as federal direct loans which must be repaid by borrowers. Approximately $6.3 million in scholarships and fellowships were paid out over the same period. Other forms of financial aid offered by the institution include grants, other forms of repayable loans, and work-study programs.[22][23] In 2018, 94% of all SSU students received some form of financial aid.[24]
SSU offers summer study abroad programs in Greece, Great Britain, and Ireland, and other countries. Some of these programs are funded by the Jim and Betty Hodgden Travel Fund[29]
International students studying at Shawnee State represent 1% of the student population.[30]
The university offers an "English as a Second Language Program" on campus for International Students.[18]
Student life
Full-time-students are 90%, out-of-state students are 12%, female students are 54%, African American students are 5%, resident aliens are 1%, students living on campus are 26%, students in fraternities or sororities are 2%, and the average age for all students is 22 years.[18]
Two students serve on the Shawnee State University Board of Trustees, the university's highest governing body. The students serve two-year terms. They are appointed by the Governor's Office of Appointments in the state of Ohio.[31]
The university has on-campus housing[32] for 934 students.[33] All first-year students must live in university housing unless they are married, veterans, over age 23, or living with their parents.[34]
Clubs on campus include Art Club, Chemistry Club, Fantanime, Geology Club, History Club, International Game Developer's Association (IGDA), Political Science Club, Pre-Med Club, and Sexuality and Gender Acceptance (SAGA).[36] and an international group, the Other World Society.[37]
The Shawnee State athletic teams are called the Bears. The university is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), primarily competing in the River States Conference (MSC) since the 2023–2024 academic year.[38] The Bears previously competed in the Mid-South Conference (MSC) from 2010-11 to 2022-23;[39] the defunct American Mideast Conference (AMC) from 1991–92 to 2009–10; and as an NAIA Independent from 1986–87 (when the school began its athletics program and joined the NAIA) to 1990–91.
Shawnee State competes in the following intercollegiate varsity sports: Men's sports include baseball, basketball, bowling, cross country, golf, soccer, tennis, swimming, and track & field (indoor & outdoor); while women's sports include basketball, bowling, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, tennis, track & field (indoor & outdoor) and volleyball. Co-ed programs include e-sports and cheerleading.