Colorado Mountain College

Quick Facts

Location: Rockies
Setting: Small Town Setting
Type: Public
Size: Large (5,000 to 10,000 Undergrad)
CMC In The Community
Colorado Mountain College From Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

Colorado Mountain College (CMC)is a network of seven junior college campuses in western Colorado. Three of the campuses are residential campuses with student residence halls and cafeterias, and are located in Steamboat Springs, Leadville and Glenwood Springs. The residential campuses are essentially Colorado state junior colleges operated on a small college model, and are designed to send graduates on to successful enrollment and completion of 4-year degrees at the state's four-year institutions of higher learning. CMC also offers numerous courses transmitted across the district via live interactive video, allowing students at one location to hear and speak with their teachers at other college sites. CMC offers many of the same introductory courses in arts and sciences found at most four-year colleges, but it also has strong outdoor education and wilderness studies courses. Numerous professional certifications, and custom workforce training, are also offered.

Other heavily enrolled programs include ski business, which incorporates ski tuning, boot fitting, retail shop management, marketing; ski area operations, which offers hands-on courses in slope maintenance and grooming, and ski lift maintenance and operations; veterinary technology; and nursing. Courses in hotel and resort management are also offered, and graduates of these courses help to sustain the winter, and summer, tourism driven economies of Colorado.

The Roaring Fork (at Spring Valley), and Timberline (at Chaffee County) campuses offer programs for training police officers. These programs include legal instruction as well as courses in arrest techniques and gun combat. Courses are taught by local prosecutors and law enforcement officers. The college also offers criminal justice classes for other students as well.

Many Colorado Mountain College instructors are local professionals that teach at the college part time. They draw on their own professional experience as well as academic sources when teaching classes, giving Colorado Mountain College courses a "real world" emphasis. Some instructors are also students, as the college allows instructors to take a tuition free course for every course they teach (in addition to salary and benefits). Thus it is not uncommon to see someone teaching a class one day and taking one the next.

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Read the full entry on Wikipedia

Students & Campus Life
Full Time Students: 50%
Athletic Programs: Unavailable
> More Students & Campus Life
Expenses
Average Tuition: $ 7,110
Students Receiving Aid: 51%
> More Expenses & Financial Aid

Students

General
Full-Time vs. Part-Time
Part-Time 50%
Full-Time 50%
Race/Ethnicity
Caucasian 77%
Other 14%
Hispanic 8%
Asian 1%
African-American 0%
Geography
In State vs. Out-of-State
In-State 59%
Out-of-State 41%
Top States for Incoming Freshman
Colorado 59%
Pennsylvania 4%
New York 2%
Illinois 2%
Minnesota 2%
Percent of Students International: 0%
Tuition & Fees (undergraduate) In-District In-State Out-of-State
Published Tuition and Fees:
$ 1,470 $ 2,340 $ 7,110
Average Tuition for Full-Time Undergrads:
$ 1,290 $ 2,160 $ 6,930
Required Fees for Full-Time Undergrads:
$ 180 $ 180 $ 180
Financial Aid Avg. Amount Received % of Students Receiving Aid  
Federal Grants:
$ 1,450 45%  
State and Local Grants:
$ 911 16%  
Any Aid:
  51%  

Degree Programs at Colorado Mountain College

Associate's Level Majors

Certificate Programs at Colorado Mountain College

Career Education Majors

Videos

  • CMC In The Community