General Information:
HistoryLouisiana State University in Shreveport originated with Act 41 of the 1964 Louisiana Legislature, which authorized the establishment of a two year commuter college in Shreveport. On February 6, 1965, the LSU Board of Supervisors formally established Louisiana State University in Shreveport as a division of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College System. The campus is a 200 acre tract located on Highway 1 in south Shreveport.
LSUS began its first session on September 21, 1967, offering basic freshman courses and extending the advantages of a great university system to the residents of northwest Louisiana. Sophomore courses were added in 1968.
Following approval by the Coordinating Council for Higher Education, Act 66 of the Louisiana Legislature authorized baccalaureate degree granting status. Subsequent approval by the LSU Board of Supervisors resulted in the decision to add junior level courses in 1973 and senior level courses in 1974. The first class was graduated in 1975. The University was first accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools in December 1975. Many baccalaureate degrees have since become available in the Colleges of Business Administration, Education and Human Development, Liberal Arts, and Sciences. The Master of Education degree program began in 1978, the Master of Business Administration degree program in 1979, the Specialist in School Psychology degree program in 1982, the Master of Arts in Liberal Arts degree program in 1983, the Master of Science in Systems Technology degree program in 1988, the Master of Science in Human Services Administration in 1999, the Master of Science in Counseling Psychology in 2001, and the Master of Health Administration in 2003. Continuing education programs are offered, as are seminars and workshops in specialized fields.
Mission
The mission of LSUS is to:
- Provide a stimulating and supportive learning environment in which students, faculty, and staff participate freely in the creation, acquisition, and dissemination of knowledge;
- Encourage an atmosphere of intellectual excitement;
- Foster the academic and personal growth of students;
- Produce graduates who possess the intellectual resources and professional and personal skills that will enable them to be effective and productive members of an ever-changing global community; and
- Enhance the cultural, technological, social, and economic development of the region through outstanding teaching, research, and public service.
Teaching
At all levels of instruction, LSUS maintains high academic standards and emphasizes personal interaction between students and qualified, experienced faculty. A comprehensive library, including the unique Noel collection, supports learning in three kinds of programs:
- Undergraduate programs provide a solid foundation in business, education, the liberal arts, and the sciences.
- Graduate programs address the community's need for technically skilled professionals and the individual's desire for advanced liberal education.
- Continuing education and public service programs allow life long learning and professional development for the region's diverse population.
Research
The University provides opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, as well as faculty, to conduct research that often helps the community while advancing knowledge in a particular field. The University will continue to enhance research opportunities by promoting cooperative ventures with other educational institutions in the region, especially the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center-Shreveport and the Biomedical Research Institute.
Public Service
In fulfilling its commitment to public service, the University helps the metropolitan area and surrounding communities by providing:
- Assistance to local businesses, governments, and schools in developing leadership and solving technical problems, assistance is available in four forms:
- consultation with individual faculty members
- mentorship programs, such as the one established between the Department of English and local high schools
- seminars and workshops, such as those offered by the Small Business Development Center, and other professional development programs
- collaboration with public schools such as the one established between LSUS and Midway Professional Development school (PDS).
- Expanded educational opportunities by means of cooperative degree programs with other colleges and universities
- Greater awareness of history and current issues by means of public forums, such as those offered by the American Studies Program
- Cultural and intellectual enrichment through several educational facilities serving the public and the university alike such as:
- Noel Memorial Library, whose Noel Collection promises to become a nationally prominent resource for scholars
- KDAQ, a public radio station, which has one of America's largest coverage areas
- Museum of Life Sciences, which encourages interest in environmental issues
- Red River Education and Research Park, which encourages a wide range of activities at the C. Bickham Dickson Park
- Pioneer Heritage Center, which focuses on the cultural history of the region
- Opportunities to satisfy vocational and ad-vocational needs in a broad spectrum of non credit courses, off campus as well as on campus, through the Division of Continuing Education and Public Service
The Office of Admissions and Records is an authorized Louisiana voter registration agency. Louisiana residents needing to register to vote or make changes to their voter registration including notification of change of address or name, may do so in the Registrar’s Office located on the first floor of the Administration Building.
Responsibility
As a senior university, LSUS recognizes its responsibility to meet the needs of students from diverse backgrounds in a changing metropolitan area. In carrying out this responsibility, the University ensures that each graduate:
- Explores a portion of human knowledge under the leadership of highly qualified and experienced faculty
- Learns to think creatively and critically to solve problems in human and scientific contexts
- Refines skills in oral and written communication to enhance professional growth and interpersonal relationships
- Examines contemporary issues of professional ethics in each program
- Conducts independent projects and communicates the results to others
- Uses current technology in pursuing knowledge and developing professional skills
- Demonstrates competence in a chosen field through examinations, applied research, field experience, and/or community service
Pursuing these goals, LSUS will continue to seek distinction as the key public comprehensive university in our region.
Mission: Student Affairs
The Student Affairs Division helps students establish personal autonomy, form satisfactory personal relationships, and set goals for their years at the University and after. The Division offers services to support students from the time they enter the University until the time they leave:
- counseling on admissions and processing of applications for admission and financial aid
- personal counseling
- social activities
- career counseling and placement assistance
- records maintenance and transcript service
The University periodically evaluates these services to make sure students and graduates are getting the help they need.
Mission: Business Affairs
The Business Affairs Division ensures that the University uses the financial and physical resources entrusted to it with effectiveness, efficiency, and complete accountability. The Division carries out its mission in two ways:
- by using sound fiscal management practices in conducting University business
- by maintaining a physical environment that is pleasing to the eye, safe for everyone, free of barriers, and conducive to learning
Thus, the Division plays an important role in supporting the academic mission of the University.
THE LSU SYSTEM
The Louisiana State University System is a multi-campus, multipurpose system of higher education, accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, encompassing all Louisiana, and exerting a major influence on the economic, social, and cultural life of its citizens.
Law and tradition have assigned the University System a three fold purpose: developing to the highest level the intellectual and professional capacities of its citizens through resident instruction; enriching instruction and establishing new frontiers of knowledge through research and scholarship; and providing all Louisianans with information useful in advancing the state's economy and culture through extension services.
The LSU System is composed of nine major administrative units, each head¬ed by a chancellor, located throughout the state. Four of these–LSU A&M, the University of New Orleans, LSU at Alexandria, and LSUS–provide undergraduate and graduate instruction. A two year campus is located in Eunice. The LSU Law Center, located on the LSU A&M campus, is a separate division of the LSU System. The LSU Agricultural Center, with headquarters on LSU A & M campus, administers a system of agricultural experiment stations and the Cooperative Extension Service throughout Louisiana. The two LSU Health Sciences Centers, in New Orleans and in Shreveport, train physicians and scientists in health care disciplines. The Pennington Biomedical Research Center promotes healthier lives through research and education in nutrition and preventive medicine.
PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM
Dr. William L. Jenkins is the principal executive officer of the System—housed on the LSU A&M campus—and is responsible for the execution of the administrative and educational policies of the Board of Supervisors.
LSUS FOUNDATION, INC.
The LSUS Foundation was established in 1983 as the University Associates. Its name was changed in 1990 to better identify the organization as the official foundation for the university. The Foundation is a nonprofit and tax-exempt organization, and all contributions are deductible to the full extent of the law.
The Foundation fosters private financial support for the university, manages investments and serves as trustee for funds and other assets contributed. Resources raised through the Foundation provide scholarships, support research and faculty development, and afford discretionary funds to fuel continued growth and success for LSUS. The Foundation is governed by a board of directors. Additional information about the Foundation may be obtained from the Office of University Development, located on the second floor of the Administration Building, (318) 797-5257.
LSUS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
The LSUS Alumni Association is a nonprofit organization which directs the activities among the university, its alumni and the community. It is supported by the LSUS Office of Alumni Services which maintains the alumni master file and coordinates the work of the Alumni Association Board of Directors.
The Alumni Association provides funds for scholarships, helps promote enrollment, supports the continuation and expansion of programs at LSUS, and encourages community involvement through financial contributions and cooperative events with community and civic organizations. Its activities and traditions help increase community awareness of the University’s programs, special events and specific needs in order to maintain and enhance its current reputation as Louisiana’s only public university in Shreveport and the Ark-La-Tex.
Additional information about Alumni Services may be obtained from the office of Alumni Services, located on the second floor of the Administration Building, (318) 797-5190.
THE LSUS CAMPUS
The campus, located at One University Place on 258 acres of land between East Kings Highway and Louisiana Highway 1, is being developed in accordance with a master plan. The Science Building, the Library and the Facility Services Complex were completed in 1967, followed by Bronson Hall in 1973, the University Center in 1979, the Business Administration Education Building in 1980, the Health and Physical Education Building in 1982, the Administration Building in 1986, and the University Court Apartments in 1993. Noel Memorial Library opened in 1994.
UNIVERSITY FACILITIES
Administration Building houses the administrative offices of the Chancellor, Business Affairs, Academic Affairs, Admissions and Records, University Computing Services, Student Affairs, Development and Financial Aid. It is a two story structure located on the southwest side of the campus.
William H. Bronson Hall is a four story building containing classrooms; faculty offices; administrative offices for the College of Liberal Arts, and various departments; seminar rooms; language laboratories and other special use rooms.
Business Administration Education Building houses classrooms for both the College of Business Administration and the College of Education and Human Development as well as faculty offices. This three story facility also houses a curriculum resource center, a faculty research reference area, and laboratories for the Departments of Accounting and Psychology, an Educational Technology laboratory, and university computer classes.
Health and Physical Education Building, housing the Department of Kinesiology and Health Science, is a two story facility that contains an indoor swimming pool; five handball/racquetball courts; basketball, tennis, volleyball, and badminton courts, an exercise science laboratory; a dance studio, a weight training room, one Wallyball court, mat room, Olympic Lifting Development Center; classrooms; computer lab, and faculty offices. This facility also houses the Athletic Department and the model (wireless) classroom.
Technology Center provides space for Continuing Education and Public Service, the Pioneer Heritage Center, Campus Bookstore, Department of Computer Science, the Office of Sponsored Research, and the Campus-Wide Computer Lab.
Facility Services Complex includes administrative offices that house facility maintenance and custodial functions, a workshop, maintenance yard and a central heating/cooling plant that serves all major campus buildings.
Public Radio Network Facilities include broadcast studios and administrative offices for the regional network: KDAQ, KLSA, KBSA, and KLDN.
Science Building, a three story facility, contains laboratories for chemistry, physics, and biological sciences; classrooms; and faculty and administrative offices for the College of Sciences. A 300 seat lecture auditorium is adjacent to this building. The Science Building received a complete renovation in 1998.
Shipping and Receiving houses campus mail and freight operations.
University Center houses dining facilities, a lounge, exhibit rooms, conference facilities, a large auditorium, student activity rooms, and student government offices
Other parts of the campus are described below as University Services.
Noel Memorial Library houses the university collection and the James Smith Noel Collection.
UNIVERSITY SERVICES
Intercollegiate Athletics
The Division of Business Affairs oversees Intercollegiate Athletics. The Office of Intercollegiate Athletics coordinates the LSUS varsity athletics programs. The LSUS Pilots and Lady Pilots compete in the Gulf Cost Athletic Conference, which is affiliated with the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA). The Pilots compete in baseball and basketball and the Lady Pilots compete in basketball and soccer. The Pilots baseball program, the University’s oldest sport, gained national recognition in the 2003 season when they made their first appearance in the NAIA World Series and finished in Third Place. The Pilots and Lady Pilots basketball programs experienced successful rebirths in the 2003-04 season, playing to packed houses at home. For more information: (318) 797-5194.
Noel Memorial Library
Noel Memorial Library is crucial to the intellectual and cultural growth of the university community. It collects materials adequate to support the University's curricula, organizes these materials, and makes them readily available. The Library currently has over 250,000 books and provides access to more than 17,000 journals. The reference section contains numerous books, indexes, and atlases, and provides electronic access to library catalogs and databases. The Library is also a select depository for United States Government Documents and receives selected Louisiana State documents. The Archives and Special Collections preserve, organize, and make available primary materials relating to or originating in northwest Louisiana. The 200,000-volume James Smith Noel Collection of rare books is on permanent loan to the University.
Librarians help individuals find information and offer classes on using specific reference materials. “Quick Guides” provide additional information on frequently used materials and services.
Museums and Galleries
The Museum of Life Sciences operates from a new, modern building located between the original library building and KDAQ. It houses more than 25,000 dried or liquid preserved scientific specimens: mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles, fish, insects and other arthropods, and plants. The museum also has the best assemblage in the world of plants from northwestern Louisiana.
Valuable donations include 7,000 topographic maps and important collections of animals from Africa, South America, Mexico, and India. The Museum documents the diversity of flora and fauna of northwestern Louisiana and makes its holdings available to students, faculty, and visiting scientists; to other museums on loan; and to other institutions through an exchange system. The museum promotes local research and disseminates knowledge through scholarly scientific journals and other publications. The Museum's own publication, The Bulletin of the Museum of Life Sciences, is distributed world wide to scientists and institutions. Informative programs and museum tours continue to increase in popularity and are the core of a vital public service for the Ark La Tex.
The Pioneer Heritage Center, founded in 1977 as a joint project of LSUS and the Junior League, is a history laboratory offering a glimpse of how people in northwest Louisiana lived during the pioneer years from the 1830's to the early 20th century.
Located on the northeast side of the campus, the Pioneer Heritage Center consists of the Caspiana House, a raised cottage built in 1856 on the Hutchinson's Caspiana Plantation 15 miles south of the campus; the 1850 Thrasher House, a log double pen “dog trot,” moved 35 miles from near Castor, Louisiana; a detached kitchen; a typical late 19th century board- and-batten shotgun house from the Webb Plantation; the 1903 doctor's office from the Caspiana Plantation; the Webb Commissary (circa 1900) from the Webb Plantation; a log single pen blacksmith shop (circa 1870) from the Jack W. Grigsby farm in DeSoto Parish, and in 2003 the Riverfront Mission of First Baptist Church was donated to LSUS . Both Caspiana House and Thrasher House are listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
Trained volunteers offer tours and lectures that use these structures and related artifacts to demonstrate the region's early folk architecture and social history. The authenticity of everything in the Center is ensured by many primary sources: original letters, diaries, ledgers, plantation records, successions, interviews, photographs, and other archival materials from the period. Public events and educational programs are scheduled throughout the year.
The University Center Art Gallery, governed by a committee composed of Student Activities Board members and Fine Arts faculty, introduces the student body and community to various styles of art. Besides annually exhibiting the works of students and faculty, the Gallery often displays works by artists from elsewhere in the region and from across the nation. Gallery hours are usually 8 A.M. to 4 P.M., Monday through Friday, but may vary with the University schedule.
On Campus Housing
University Court Apartments, located on the northwest side of the campus, are a complex of 15 two story buildings containing 140 apartments. The apartments can accommodate over 450 students in four bedroom, two bedroom, and efficiency units. The former features large living areas, private bedrooms, and full kitchens. Included in the complex are an outdoor pool, a Jacuzzi, sand volleyball and basketball courts, and a clubhouse. An eight foot fence surrounds the area and provides electronic access.
Public Radio
The University operates the Red River Radio Network, four radio stations affiliated with National Public Radio and Public Radio International and licensed to the LSU Board of Supervisors. KDAQ (89.9FM) originates from studios on campus and broadcasts to over 2,000,000 residents of the Ark La Tex. KLSA (90.7FM), which signed on in December of 1986, originates on the LSUS campus and serves more than 600,000 residents in the Central Louisiana Region. KBSA (90.9 FM) serves El Dorado, Arkansas. KLDN (88.9 FM) has offices in the Museum of East Texas in Lufkin, Texas, and serves Lufkin, Diboll, Nacogdoches, and Livingston, Texas. Broadcasting 24 hours a day, the stations provide listeners a broad selection of programs: news and information, humor, classical music, jazz, and blues. Underwriters, corporations, foundations, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and listeners support this cultural service of LSUS.
University Computing Services
Comprehensive computing services are provided for students, faculty, staff, and administrators. An IBM 2003 Model 126, located in the Administration Building, provides interactive processing from several campus locations for support of both academic and administrative activities.
Also available in laboratories and classrooms are microcomputers that provide access to the campus local area network and to the Internet. The most commonly used computer languages and statistical and utility packages are available for instruction, research, or production. Short courses and seminars keep the academic community informed of software and hardware developments.
University Police
The University employs a staff of full time commissioned police officers who maintain campus security around the clock. In or out of uniform, these officers possess all authority granted to peace officers under state laws. Each commissioned officer is post-certified from a Basic Law Enforcement Training Program. When they see or learn of crimes, officers ordinarily effect the arrest and work with local authorities as the case passes through the court system.
University Police also monitor parking areas and investigate traffic accidents. Questions concerning the operation and parking of vehicles should be directed to an officer upon receiving an LSUS parking decal. Detailed traffic regulations are printed in the Student Handbook and in brochures available at registration.
University Development
The Office of University Development coordinates all fundraising activities across the campus for both unrestricted and restricted contributions made directly to the University or through the LSUS Foundation. Unrestricted contributions to the LSUS Foundation provide discretionary funds for activities that cannot be paid for with state or tuition-generated monies. Donations may be also restricted in a variety of ways, including to specific academic colleges, athletics, programs, and endowments for chairs and professorships. Fundraising activities also include contributions for annual and endowed scholarships. The Office provides staff support for the LSUS Foundation (see page 6), and is located on the 2nd floor of the Administration Building. For more information: (318) 797-5257.
The Office oversees the Red River Radio Network and the following departments:
- The Office of Media and Public Relations organizes and directs a campus news bureau and interacts with editors of newspapers and magazines, with staff of radio and television stations, and with other individuals or groups in the dissemination of University-related news. The Office publishes and circulates LSUS News, the official University publication, maintains a Guide to Speakers and Experts on the LSUS Web site, produces the Chancellor’s Report and LSUS fact sheets, and maintains a campus wide calendar on the Web site. The Office also manages the University’s on-going image campaign, and provides consultation for other University publications. For more information: (318) 797-5108.
- The Office of Alumni Services directs the activities of the University’s alumni association, including membership, chapters, scholarship programs, the alumni annual fund, alumni news and special events. Students who have successfully completed at least 3 hours at LSUS are eligible for membership. The Office also maintains the alumni master database and supports the work of the Alumni Association’s Board of Directors. For more information: (318) 797-5190.
Final authority resides in the printed version of the catalog.
Send all questions to oaa@lsus.edu
Copyright © 2006. All Rights Reserved. LSUS is an equal opportunity educator and employer. The statements found on this page are for informational purposes only. While every effort is made to ensure that this information is up-to-date and accurate, for official information please consult a printed University publication.

