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Approximately 94% of iPoly graduates go on to pursue higher education; of them, more than 30% are the first in their families to do so. [11] Given the school's location, many graduates choose to attend Cal Poly Pomona. In the past, admittance to Cal Poly was guaranteed upon graduation, but that is no longer the case and iPoly students are ...
Old horse stables Cal Poly at Pomona stands on the former Arabian horse ranch of cereal magnate W.K. Kellogg.. Events leading to the foundation of present-day Cal Poly Pomona began with the ending of the Voorhis School for Boys near Walnut Creek [18] in San Dimas, California and its acquisition by the San Luis Obispo-based California Polytechnic School in 1938.
Cal Poly students working with NASA engineers. Engineering classes at the Kellogg Campus in Pomona, California of the California Polytechnic began in academic year 1957–58. [2] At the time, the Engineering Center (the current two-story portion of Building 9) had not been finalized and it took two more years, until 1959, to complete. [2]
In February, the university said 78,947 students applied for a spot this year — a 5.5% increase over 2023, when the university received 74,571 applications, and 12% above the 69,429 students who ...
It's no secret that the cost of college is rising, and the more competitive the school, the more it can charge. GOBankingRates looked at the cost to attend the top 50 colleges in the United States,...
In 1938, Charles and Jerry Voorhis donated a farm and school to the Cal Poly. In 1949, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation gifted an 812-acre horse ranch in Pomona, California. Originally a satellite campus for Cal Poly, the Pomona campus became an independent university, Cal Poly Pomona, in 1966.
The Collins College of Hospitality Management is a college part of the California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (Cal Poly Pomona). Founded in 1973, it was the first hospitality management studies program in California and its thousand students make it the largest such school in the state. [2]
Masago Armstrong, who served as the registrar of Pomona College for 30 years, left a $1-million gift toward a scholarship fund for the school after her death last year at age 102.