- Overview
- Quick Facts
- President's Letter
- What Makes Us Unique
- News & Events
- Environmental Commitment
- Facilities
Related Links
Quick Facts

General Information
College of the Atlantic is a small college deeply committed to interdisciplinary study and preparing students to make a difference in the world.
Founded — 1969, as an alternative to a traditional liberal arts college
Character — Private; close-knit educational community; coed; non-sectarian; liberal arts
Accreditation — Fully accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges
Academic Information
Degrees Offered — Bachelor of Arts, Master of Philosophy, both in Human Ecology
Academics — Unique interdisciplinary learning. No departments. All students design their own majors. Three main resource areas: Arts and Design, Environmental Sciences, and Human Studies.
Learning Approach — Small classes (average size is 12 students) emphasize engaged, interdisciplinary learning. Many classes are project-based, hands-on and are taught in a seminar format. 65% of our students study abroad as part of their academic program.
Academic Partnerships — Eco League, the University of Maine, Olin College of Engineering, SALT Institute for Documentary Studies and National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS)
Faculty
COA's faculty includes Fulbright Scholars, Peace Corps veterans, published authors, and active artists. 30% of the faculty are conversant in at least one language in addition to English.
Full-time Faculty — 29
Part-time Faculty — 15
Full-time Faculty with Ph.D. /Terminal Degrees — 86%
Facilities
Campus — 35 acres on the rocky coast of Mount Desert Island, Maine in the seaside town of Bar Harbor. Acadia National Park is minutes away.
Additional Facilities — Beech Hill Organic Farm and Forest (81 acres), Peggy Rockefeller Farms at College of the Atlantic (117 acres), Mount Desert Rock and Great Duck Island offshore research stations, George B. Dorr Museum of Natural History, Ethel H. Blum Gallery.
Thorndike Library's collection includes over 36,000 books, 475 periodical subscriptions and newspaper subscriptions, foreign language tapes and recorded music.
Rankings
Princeton Review — College of the Atlantic has appeared in the Princeton Review's "Best Colleges" volume for years, and has been called one of the best education values in the country. It is one of only six college on the Review's "Green Honor Roll" all three years of the compilation of this list.
U.S. News & World Reports: Top tier of colleges; #3 of U.S. private colleges for international students — currently 16% of the student body; #6 in nation for small classes, with 90% of classes having fewer than 20 students.
Sierra Magazine: In top 10 of its "Cool Schools" list of colleges that consider the environment in their institutional and academic efforts in each year it was polled.
National Survey of Student Engagement (a.k.a. NSSE): Surveying students on actual learning experiences at colleges. Consistently, COA stands among the top 10% of all colleges for our students' engagement with learning.
Student Body
Enrollment (FA10) — 353 undergraduate students; 6 graduate students
Student:Faculty Ratio — 11:1
Average Class Size — 12 students
Geographic Distribution — 38 states and 34 foreign countries
- Middle Atlantic: 18%
- New England: 35%
- Midwest: 12%
- South 10%
- West 8%
- Southwest 1%
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International 16%
Graduates — 55% of COA's graduates attend graduate school within five years of completing a COA degree. 20% of COA graduates become scientists, 12% go into social service of government work, 23% are involved in education, 17% pursue careers in art and design, and 13% go into business.
Fellowships and Prizes — COA students and alumni have received the following national awards: Watson Fellowship, Morris K. Udall Scholarship, Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship, Kathryn W. Davis Projects for Peace, George C. Marshall Fellowship, Gilman Fellowship, Jack Kent Cooke Graduate Fellowship, Environmental Protection Agency GRO Fellowship, and NASA Space Grant.
College Finances
For the year ending June 30, 2010
Operating Revenue — $15,187,000
Sources of Revenue — 60% student fees, 9% endowment, 31% other
Market Value of Endowment — $25,400,000
FY2009 form 990 (pdf - 1.6mb)
Admission and Financial Aid
For Fall 2011
Applications — 493
Admitted — 296
Deposited — 99
Average SAT (please note that COA does not require that students submit standardized test scores; only 49% of the class entering in Fall 2010 submitted SAT scores)
Verbal 668
Math 623
Writing 640
High School Rankings
Top 10% : 29%
Top 20% : 62%
Top 50% : 96%
Tuition, Fees, Room and Board (2011–2012) — $44,883
Percentage of Students Receiving Aid from the College — 84% (This means any student aid.)
Average Aid Award — $28,020 (or $31,981 for full-time undergraduates who were awarded aid)
Average Institutional Aid Award — (or $27,548 for full-time undergraduates who were awarded aid)
Sustainability
Taking a Stand — COA was the first college in the country to pledge to reduce to zero the amount of harmful greenhouse gases that emits.
Today it is working on
Examples of our other sustainable practices include:
Food — Fruits and Vegetables: College of the Atlantic's Beech Hill Farm provides organic greens as well as potatoes, carrots, onions and apples. Students can help raise the food they eat. Other food items come from Maine co-ops and other organic and local sources.
Meats: 90% free-range, locally raised whenever possible.
Coffee: organic and fair trade only.
Water: no bottled water on campus.
Office Supplies — Our environmentally and socially responsible purchasing policies include:
Paper: 100% chlorine and dioxin free with 60% post-consumer waste, for publications, photocopies and printing.
Printer Ink: Cartridge recycling on campus with training given to local schools to recycle as well.
Office Supplies: purchased through a source focused on recycling & offering products with environmental certifications.
Cleaning Chemicals — Using biodegradable materials for years; since 2004 using a 100% hydrogen peroxide cleaner.
Wood Procurement — Seeking products made from wood grown in sustainably-managed forests; no use of materials that off-gas chemicals or are cut from old-growth forests.
Energy — College of the Atlantic is now entirely powered by low-flow renewable hydropower. Whether through credits or actual purchases, COA has been powered by renewable electricity since 2004, when for three years it purchased Renewable Energy Certificates, also known as "green tags," from an existing out-of-state wind power source.