词条 | Summit Christian College |
释义 |
| name = Summit Christian College | image = | image_size = | image_alt = | caption = | latin_name = | other_name = | former_name = Platte Valley Bible College | motto = | motto_lang = | mottoeng = | established = {{start date|1951}} | closed = | type = Private Christian | parent = | affiliation = | religious_affiliation =Christian churches and churches of Christ | academic_affiliation = | endowment = | budget = | president = David K. Parrish | academic_staff = | administrative_staff = | students = 40-60 | undergrad = | postgrad = | doctoral = | other = | city = Gering | state = Nebraska | country = United States | coor = {{Coord|41|49|45|N|103|40|32|W|format=dms|display=title|name=Summit Christian College|type:edu_region:US-NE}} | campus = | free_label = | free = | colors = | athletics = | sports = | athletics_nickname = | mascot = | sporting_affiliations = | website = {{URL|www.summitcc.net}} | logo = | footnotes = }} Summit Christian College, based in Gering, Nebraska, United States, was established in 1951 in Scottsbluff, Nebraska as Platte Valley Bible College. It offers on-campus and distance education programs leading to one-year certificates and two- and four-year degrees in the areas of Bible and ministry, Christian education, missions, and management and ethics. The college is historically affiliated with non-denominational, Christian churches and churches of Christ of the Restoration Movement. {{Aligned table| cols =2 | class = wikitable | style = | colwidth = | leftright = | colstyle = | rowstyle = | row1header = Y | rowRclass = | rowRstyle = | President | Dates[1] | Ellis Baker | 1951-1957 | Ellwood Beeman | 1958-1970 | Frank Bush | October 1972-January 1979 | Gerald Parriott | July 1981-1985 | Lawrence D. Leathermon | November 1985-March 2001 | Gerald Parriott | July 2001-2003 | Jason Hanselman | May 2003-2008 | David Parrish | 2009- }} For many years, a program of medical missions was the college's major contribution to the efforts of Christian Church-related Bible colleges in the area of world evangelism. In recent years, the lack of demand for such programs, and the difficulties of providing them, have led to the discontinuance of the medical mission program at Summit. In 2005, Platte Valley Bible College changed its name to Summit Christian College. Total enrollment varies between about 40 and 60 students.[2] In 2008, Summit Christian College moved into a newly remodeled campus in the neighboring city of Gering. References1. ^Summit Christian College History 2. ^2005 Nebraska Higher Education Progress Report for the LR75 Legislative Evaluation Task Force {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110719182441/http://www.ccpe.state.ne.us/publicdoc/ccpe/reports/LR174/2005/ |date=2011-07-19 }} External links
7 : Universities and colleges in Nebraska|Universities and colleges affiliated with the Christian churches and churches of Christ|Unaccredited Christian universities and colleges in the United States|Bible colleges|Educational institutions established in 1951|Education in Scotts Bluff County, Nebraska|Buildings and structures in Scotts Bluff County, Nebraska |
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