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University of the Virgin Islands (1962-- )

The University of the Virgin Islands  (UVI) is a public university located on the islands of St. Thomas and St. Croix, the United States Virgin Islands. It was established in 1962  In 1986 it officially became one of the 117 U.S. Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). It remains the only HCBU not on the mainland of the United States.

The University of the Virgin Islands was founded on March 16, 1962, as the College of the Virgin Islands.  Its founding legislation authorized the campus as a publicly funded, coeducational, liberal arts institution. According to that legislation, Act No. 862 of the Fourth Legislature of the U.S. Virgin Islands, the colleges prime objective was to provide for “...the stimulation and utilization of the intellectual resources of the people of the Virgin Islands and the development of a center of higher learning whereby and where from the benefits of culture and education may be extended throughout the Virgin Islands.” The institution changed its name in 1986 to the University of the Virgin Islands to reflect the growth and development of its academic programs.  

Today there are two are two campuses situated on the two major islands of St. Thomas and St. Croix.  The St. Thomas campus is three miles from Charlotte Amalie, the capital of the territory. About 94% of the campuss 2,392 students are from the Virgin Islands.  As a consequence, academic leaders have attempted to craft attractive programs that would diversify the student body.  They have worked to recruit students from the U.S. mainland and international students.  Students from across the United States for example, are allowed to participate in a semester or year-long exchange to UVI through the National Student Exchange with tuition paid by the students home campus.  UVI students are encouraged to enter exchanges with mainland campuses in all 50 states as well as Mexico, Puerto Rico, and Canada.

The university has five academic divisions: Business, Education, Humanities and Social Sciences, Nursing, and

The Green Book Pt I