The
University of South Florida opened a satellite campus in
Lakeland – University of South Florida Lakeland – in 1988. The branch shared its grounds with the Lakeland campus of
Polk Community College (now Polk State College). By the 2000s it had grown to enroll around 4,000 students, and the local business owners secured state funding for a separate campus in 2008. The same year, USF's trustees renamed the campus University of South Florida Polytechnic, reflecting a new focus on
STEM education. A site near
Interstate 4 was chosen for the new campus. In 2009 Spanish architect
Santiago Calatrava was selected to design the campus' first building. Like the acquisition of the new campus, the proposed split was controversial in some quarters, as it came during a tight budget year and was unpopular with USF students and faculty. In response to Alexander's proposal, the
Florida Board of Governors approved a multi-year plan to allow Florida Polytechnic to gain independence gradually once it met certain criteria, including accreditation, the construction of residence halls, and the development of a
STEM curriculum. Displeased with the board's compromise, Alexander introduced a new budget for the state universities that included immediate independence from USF Polytechnic, effectively bypassing the Board of Governors. On April 20, 2012, Governor
Rick Scott signed into law Alexander's budget for the State University System, including the provision that created Florida Polytechnic University as an independent institution, and closed down USF Polytechnic. The law took effect on July 1, 2012. In a letter that accompanied the signed legislation (SB 1994) creating Florida Poly, Scott noted that Florida Poly, with its strong focus on STEM programs, will be a key component of the State University System of Florida meeting the goals outlined in its 2012-2015 Strategic Plan. The strategic plan requires the State University System to increase STEM degree production from 9,605 to 22,500 per year by 2025. Robert Gidel was elected chairman of the school's first 8-member board of trustees on August 1, 2012. The university submitted its initial application for regional accreditation in December 2014. In March 2016, the Florida Poly administration announced that the university would not meet its original accreditation deadline of December 31, 2016. A budget bill sent to the office of Gov. Rick Scott would extend the school's accreditation deadline until December 2017. The university finally received accreditation from the
Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges in June 2017. The university had its inaugural commencement ceremony on January 3, 2017. Fourteen students graduated with the Master of Science and four students were awarded the Bachelor of Science. The commencement speaker was JD Alexander, the former state senator known for his advocacy of a STEM university in Lakeland. The campus was thus named after him. On April 15, 2024, Devin Stephenson was selected by a committee to serve as Florida Poly's next president after inaugural university president Randy Avent announced his resignation from the position at the end of the tenth year of his tenure. ==Academics==