State University of New York

State University of New York’s 64 geographically dispersed campuses bring educational opportunity to virtually all New Yorkers and constitute the nation’s largest comprehensive system of public higher education. Founded in 1948, with the consolidation of 29 state-operated but unaffiliated institutions, the state university has grown to a point where its impact is felt educationally, culturally, and economically the length and breadth of the state.

More than 467,000 students are pursuing traditional study in classrooms and laboratories or are working at home, at their own pace, through such innovative institutions as the SUNY Learning Network and Empire State College—for more than 25 years a leader in nontraditional education, distance learning, and assessment of prior learning. The state university’s students are predominantly New York State residents. They also come from every other state in the United States, from four U.S. territories or possessions, and from 160 foreign countries. The university passed a major milestone in the mid-1980s, when it graduated its one-millionth alumnus, and currently numbers almost three million graduates on its rolls.

The state university enrolls close to 40 percent of all New York State high school graduates, and its total enrollment is more than 467,000 (full-time and part-time). Because of its structure and comprehensive programs, the state university offers students a wide diversity of educational options: short-term vocational/technical courses, certificate programs, baccalaureate degrees, graduate degrees, and postdoctoral studies. The university offers access to almost every field of academic or professional study somewhere within the system—more than 7,000 programs of study overall.

As part of the university’s commitment to bring to the students of New York the very best and brightest scholars, scientists, artists, and professionals, the state university’s distinguished faculty is recruited from the finest graduate schools and universities throughout the United States and many countries around the world, and includes nationally and internationally recognized figures in all the major disciplines. Their efforts are regularly recognized in numerous prestigious awards and honors, including the Nobel Prize.

The state university’s research contributions are helping to solve some of today’s most urgent problems. At the same time, contracts and grants received by university faculty directly benefit the economic development of the regions in which they are located. State university researchers pioneered nuclear magnetic resonance imaging and the supermarket barcode scanner, introduced time-lapse photography of forestry subjects, isolated the bacteria that causes Lyme disease, and developed the first implantable heart pacemaker. Other university researchers continue important studies in such wide-ranging areas as breast cancer, immunology, marine biology, sickle cell anemia, and robotics, and make hundreds of other contributions, inventions, and innovations for the benefit of society.

The university’s program for the educationally and economically disadvantaged, consisting of Educational Opportunity Programs (EOP) and Educational Opportunity Centers (EOC), has become a model for delivering better learning opportunities to young people and adults traditionally bypassed by higher education.

The 30 locally sponsored two-year community colleges operating under the program of the state university offer local citizens programs that are directly and immediately job related as well as degree programs that serve as job-entry educational experience or a transfer opportunity to a baccalaureate degree at a senior campus.

In 1998, the governor and the legislature approved a multiyear, $2 billion capital construction program for the university. This investment in critical maintenance will protect the university’s infrastructure, valued at nearly $11 billion, and enable the university to keep pace with modern technology for the benefit of its students and faculty. As a public university, the State University of New York has a special responsibility to make its rich and varied resources accessible to all.

In 1995, the board of trustees developed the document Rethinking SUNY, in response to a call from the legislature for a “multiyear, comprehensive system wide plan to increase cost efficiency.” Underlying Rethinking SUNY is the theme of increasing efficiency by empowering campuses to manage directly more of their academic and financial affairs and by eliminating disincentives to the prudent use of campus and system resources.

In 2010, the university launched The Power of SUNY, a strategic plan that calls for the system’s campuses to lead New York’s economic revitalization through such innovations as increased entrepreneurial opportunities, an urban-rural teacher corps, more distance learning, and a health care report, SUNY Scale, that would document progress in combating obesity and chronic illnesses. The university’s economic development services programs provide research, training, and technical assistance to the state’s business and industrial community through Business and Industry Centers, the New York State Small Business Development Center, the Strategic Partnership for Industrial Resurgence, Rural Services Institutes, the Trade Adjustment Assistance Center, Technical Assistance Centers, Small Business Institutes, Centers for Advanced Technology, and international development.

State University of New York is governed by a board of trustees, appointed by the governor, that directly determines the policies to be followed by the 34 state-supported campuses. Community colleges have their own local boards of trustees whose relationship to the state university board is defined by law.

The university’s motto is “To Learn, to Search, to Serve.”

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Merryl H. Tisch, Chair
Cesar Perales, Vice Chair
Joseph Belluck
Courtney Eagles Burke
Eric Corngold
Marcos Crespo

Robert Duffy
James Haddon
Giovanni "Gio" Harvey, President, SUNY Student Assembly (SUNYSA)
Keith Landa, President, University Faculty Senate (UFS)
Eunice A. Lewin
Stanley S. Litow

Edward Spiro
Cary Staller
Camille Joseph Varlack
Christy Woods, President, Faculty Council of Community Colleges

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK ADMINISTRATION

John B. King, Jr.
Interim Chancellor of the University

Johanna Duncan-Poitier
Senior Vice Chancellor for Community Colleges and the Education Pipeline

Kapil Longani
Senior Vice Chancellor and General Counsel

Beth Berlin
Senior Vice Chancellor for Operations and Management and Chief Operating Officer

Valerie Dent
Associate Vice Chancellor and Chief Deputy for Student Success

Aaron Gladd
Strategy Officer and Senior Advisor for Operations and Management

F. Shadi Shahedipour-Sandvik
Senior Vice Chancellor for Research, Innovation, and Economic Development

Robert Megna
President of Rockefeller Institute of Government and Senior Advisor to the Chancellor

Nick Lyons
Senior Advisor

Travis Proulx
Vice Chancellor for Agency and Community Engagement

Cheryl Hamilton
Associate Vice Chancellor for Student Life, Opportunity Programs, and Student Advocate

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK COLLEGES AND CENTERS

University Centers
State University at Albany
State University at Binghamton
State University at Buffalo*
State University at Stony Brook*

Health Science Centers
Health Science Center at Brooklyn
Health Science Center at Syracuse

University Colleges
College at Brockport
College at Buffalo
College at Cortland
Empire State College
College at Fredonia
College at Geneseo
College at New Paltz
College at Old Westbury
College at Oneonta
College at Oswego
College at Plattsburgh
College at Potsdam
College at Purchase

Colleges of Technology
Alfred
Canton
Cobleskill
Delhi
Morrisville
SUNY Institute of Technology

Specialized Colleges
College of Environmental Science and Forestry
College of Optometry
College of Technology at Farmingdale
Institute of Technology at Utica/Rome**
Maritime College

Statutory Colleges***
College of Ceramics at Alfred University
College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University
College of Human Ecology at Cornell University
School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University
College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell University

Community Colleges
(Locally sponsored, two-year colleges under the program of State University of New York)
Adirondack Community College at Glens Falls
Broome Community College at Binghamton
Cayuga County Community College at Auburn
Clinton Community College at Plattsburgh
Columbia–Greene Community College at Hudson
Corning Community College at Corning
Dutchess Community College at Poughkeepsie
Erie Community College at Williamsville, Buffalo, and Orchard Park
Fashion Institute of Technology at New York City****
Finger Lakes Community College at Canandaigua
Fulton-Montgomery Community College at Johnstown
Genesee Community College at Batavia
Herkimer County Community College at Herkimer
Hudson Valley Community College at Troy
Jamestown Community College at Jamestown
Jefferson Community College at Watertown
Mohawk Valley Community College at Utica
Monroe Community College at Rochester
Nassau Community College at Garden City
Niagara County Community College at Sanborn
North Country Community College at Saranac Lake, Malone, and Ticonderoga
Onondaga Community College at Syracuse
Orange County Community College at Middletown
Rockland Community College at Suffern
Schenectady County Community College at Schenectady
Suffolk County Community College at Selden, Riverhead, and Brentwood
Sullivan County Community College at Loch Sheldrake
Tompkins Cortland Community College at Dryden
Ulster County Community College at Stone Ridge
Westchester Community College at Valhalla

*

The Health Sciences Centers at Buffalo and Stony Brook are operated under the administration of their respective University Centers.

**

This is an upper-division institution authorized to offer baccalaureate and master’s degree programs.

***

These operate as “contract colleges” on the campuses of independent universities.

****

While authorized to offer such baccalaureate and master’s degree programs as may be approved pursuant to the provisions of the Master Plan in addition to the associate degree, the Fashion Institute of Technology is financed and administered in the manner provided for community colleges.