Florida College System
The Florida College System, previously the Florida Community College System, is a system of 28 public community colleges and state colleges in the U.S. state of Florida. In 2020–2021, enrollment consisted of 640,183 students. In the 2015–16 academic year, the system had 70 campuses, had 46,329 employees, had 801,023 students, and awarded 115,908 degrees and certificates. Together with the State University System of Florida, which consists of Florida's twelve public universities, the two systems control all public higher education in the state of Florida.
While governed by local boards of trustees, the colleges are coordinated under the jurisdiction of Florida's State Board of Education. Administratively, the chancellor of the Florida College System is the chief executive officer of the system, reporting to the commissioner of Education who serves as the chief executive officer of Florida's public education system. In 2009, the Florida Legislature changed the name from the "Florida Community College System" to the "Florida College System," reflecting the fact that some of its member institutions now offer four-year bachelor's degrees. Hillsborough Community College was the last remaining member institution to use "community" in its official name before
rebranding, dropping "Community" from its name to become Hillsborough College on July 1, 2025.
Mission and offerings
Section 1004.65, Florida Statutes, establishes the primary mission and responsibility of Florida College System institutions as responding to community needs for post secondary academic education and career degree education. This mission and responsibility includes:A separate and secondary role for Florida College System institutions includes the offering of programs in:
In addition, s. 1007.33, F.S., requires that any Florida College System institution that offers one or more baccalaureate degree programs:
In 2023, the presidents of the system's member institutions issued a joint statement against Diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives and stated that they "will not fund or support any institutional practice, policy, or academic requirement that compels belief in critical race theory or related concepts such as intersectionality".