The university was founded in the late 1950s as Alaska Methodist University by Peter Gordon Gould, an Aleut from Unga, Alaska.[4] Gould became the first Alaska Native minister in the United Methodist Church later in life, and used his position to campaign for the development of a Methodist University in Alaska.[5]
Alaska Methodist University dedicated its campus on June 28, 1959.[6] In April 1958, Donald F. Ebright was elected as the university's first administrative president.[3] Frederick P. McGinnis was elected in 1960, and served as acting president to the first class of students to attend the university.[7] Approximately 900 acres of land destined to become the site of the APU Kellogg Campus was acquired in 1973 from the DeWolf-Kellogg Trust.[8]
Undergraduates can pursue liberal arts and sciences programs.[11] APU offers nine graduate programs, eight master's degrees and one doctoral degree.[11] There are also several graduate certificate options.[11] APU also offers a professional studies programs for non-traditional students.[12]
The Early Honors program functions as an alternative to the senior year in high school.[13]
Campus
The main campus includes academic facilities, residence halls, community gathering spaces, recreational facilities, and winter and summer recreational trails. The campus consists of eight major buildings, with five of them currently utilized directly by the university.[14] The three other buildings on the main campus are offices for the US Geological Survey's Alaska Volcano Observatory, Alaska Public Media, and the Alaska Spine Institute.[15][16] There are multiple housing accommodations on the main campus, divided by class year designations. All incoming freshman under 21 years of age are required to live on campus for their first two years.[17]
APU has an extension of its campus in Palmer, Alaska, known as the Kellogg Campus. It functions as a 700-acre working farm for students of the sustainability program, as well as an environmental learning center for home-schooled students.[19]
Student life
Athletics
Alaska Pacific University is known for its Nordic Ski Team.[20][21] The APU Nordic Ski Center (APUNSC) was established in 1999 as a regional Olympic training center for cross-country skiers.[22]
Alaska Methodist University's ski team sent four skiers to the 1972 Winter Olympics; AMU/APU has sent at minimum one skier to every winter Olympics after 1972, including Kikkan Randall who became a gold medalist in the cross-country skiing event at the 2018 Winter Olympics.[23][24]
Clubs and associations
Associated Students of Alaska Pacific University (ASAPU) is the elected body for student government. ASAPU members represent student interests and oversee student clubs and organizations. APU has an assortment of student clubs and organizations with which students can affiliate themselves.[25]
In the Residence Halls, the Resident Activity Programming Board hosts events for students who live on campus.[26]