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The College of Creative Studies is housed in its own single story building, number 494, located between campus dorms, a dining commons, and the University Center. The building was built during World War II and shares the title as the oldest building at UC Santa Barbara with the other buildings left from when the campus was a marine base.
The College of Letters and Science is the largest college at the University of California, Santa Barbara. The College, which offers 90 majors and 38 minors to over 20,000 undergraduates and 2,000 graduate students, has about 700 faculty members.
UC Santa Barbara has three colleges: the College of Letters & Science, the College of Engineering, and the College of Creative Studies. The College of Creative Studies offers students an alternative approach to education by supporting advanced, independent work in the arts, mathematics, and sciences.
Bruce Haynes Tiffney is an American paleobotanist, professor, and the former dean of the College of Creative Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. [2] [3] He graduated from Boston University with a degree in geology in 1971, and after earning his PhD at Harvard University in 1977, he became a professor of biology at Yale University, where he taught for nine years, and where ...
W. Patrick McCray, Professor of History, History of Science; David Rock, Professor Emeritus of History, Latin American history; Jeffrey Burton Russell, Professor Emeritus of History, Medieval European history; Paul Spickard, Professor of History, 20th-century US, world, and ethnic history; Jeffrey C. Stewart an American Professor of Black Studies
Name Degree(s) Prize year Prize field Reason (prize citation) Additional notability David Moats: B.A. 1969: 2001: Editorial Writing "For his even-handed and influential series of editorials commenting on the divisive issues arising from civil unions for same-sex couples."
Bren School of Environmental Science & Management; C. College of Creative Studies; University of California, Santa Barbara College of Engineering;
She served as the associate provost of College of Creative Studies from 1978 to 1981. [2] [6] [5] While in Santa Barbara, Sweeney gave a tour of the campus to the daughter of a family friend, future Nobel laureate Carol W. Greider, who was a high school student at the time. This led to Greider studying at the College of Creative Studies.