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University of Oklahoma

The University of Oklahoma (OU) is a public research university in Norman, Oklahoma. Founded in 1890, it had existed in Oklahoma Territory near Indian Territory for 17 years before the two Territories became the state of Oklahoma. In Fall 2022, the university had 29,705 students enrolled,[7] most at its main campus in Norman. Employing nearly 3,000 faculty members,[3] the school offers 152 baccalaureate programs, 160 master's programs, 75 doctorate programs, and 20 majors at the first professional level.[8]

University of Oklahoma
Former name
Norman Territorial University (1890-1907)
MottoLatin: Civi et Reipublicae
Motto in English
"For the benefit of the Citizen and the State"[1]
TypePublic research university
EstablishedDecember 19, 1890; 132 years ago (December 19, 1890)
AccreditationHLC
Academic affiliations
Endowment$2.7 billion (2021)[2]
PresidentJoseph Harroz Jr.
ProvostAndré-Denis G. Wright
Academic staff
2,937[3]
Students28,564 (Fall 2019)[4]
Undergraduates22,152 (Fall 2019)[4]
Postgraduates6,412 (Fall 2019)[4]
Location, ,
United States
CampusMidsize Suburb/College Town, 3,000 acres (12.1 km2)
NewspaperThe Oklahoma Daily
Other campuses
ColorsCrimson and cream[5]
   
NicknameSooners
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division I FBS:
MascotSooner Schooner
Websitewww.ou.edu

The university is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity".[9] According to the National Science Foundation, OU spent $283 million on research and development in 2018, ranking it 82nd in the nation.[10] Its Norman campus has two prominent museums, the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, specializing in French Impressionism and Native American artwork, and the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, specializing in the natural history of Oklahoma.

The university has won multiple national championships in multiple sports, including seven football national championships and two NCAA Division I baseball championships. The women's softball team has won the national championship six times: in 2000, 2013, and consecutively in 2016 and 2017 and in 2021 and 2022. The gymnastics teams have won a combined 11 national championships since 2002, with the men's team winning eight in the last 15 years, including three consecutive titles from 2015 to 2017.[11]

History

With the support of Governor George Washington Steele, on December 18, 1890, the Oklahoma Territorial legislature established three universities: the state university in Norman, the agricultural and mechanical college in Stillwater (later renamed Oklahoma State University) and a normal school in Edmond (later renamed University of Central Oklahoma).[12] Oklahoma's admission into the union in 1907 led to the renaming of the Norman Territorial University as the University of Oklahoma. Norman residents donated 407 acres (1.6 km2) of land for the university 0.5 miles (0.8 km) south of the Norman railroad depot. The university's first president ordered the planting of trees before the construction of the first campus building because he "could not visualize a treeless university seat."[13] Landscaping remains important to the university.[14]

The university's first president, David Ross Boyd, arrived in Norman in August 1892, and the first students enrolled that year. The university established a School of Pharmacy in 1893 because of the territory's high demand for pharmacists. Three years later, the university awarded its first degree to a pharmaceutical chemist.[15] The "Rock Building" in downtown Norman held the initial classes until the university's first building opened on September 6, 1893.[16]

 
Donald W. Reynolds Center for the Performing Arts, formerly Holmberg Hall, exemplifies the school's architectural style.

On January 6, 1903, the university's only building burned down and destroyed many records of the early university. Construction began immediately on a new building, as several other towns hoped to convince the university to move. President Boyd and the faculty were not dismayed by the loss. Mathematics professor Frederick Elder said, "What do you need to keep classes going? Two yards of blackboard and a box of chalk."[17] As a response to the fire, English professor Vernon Louis Parrington created a plan for the development of the campus. Although much of the plan was never implemented, Parrington's suggestion for the campus core formed the basis for the North Oval. The North and South Ovals are now distinctive features of the campus.

The campus has a distinctive architecture, with buildings designed in a unique "Cherokee Gothic" style. The style has many features of the Gothic era but has also mixed the designs of local Native American tribes from Oklahoma. This term was coined by the renowned American architect Frank Lloyd Wright when he visited the campus.[18] The university has built over a dozen buildings in the Cherokee Gothic style.

Presidents of the
University of Oklahoma

In 1907, Oklahoma entered statehood, fostering changes in the state's political atmosphere. Up until this point, Oklahoma's Republican tendencies changed with the election of Oklahoma's first governor, the Democratic Charles N. Haskell. Since the university's inception, religion had divided those on campus. Early in the university's existence, many professors were Presbyterian, as was Boyd. Under pressure, Boyd hired several Baptists and Southern Methodists.[19] The Presbyterians and Baptists coexisted but the Southern Methodists conflicted with the administration. Two notable Methodists, Rev. Nathaniel Lee Linebaugh and Professor Ernest Taylor Bynum, were critics of Boyd and activists in Haskell's election campaign. When Haskell took office, he fired many of the university's Republicans, including President Boyd.[20]

The campus expanded over the next several decades. By 1932, the university encompassed 167 acres (0.7 km2). Development of South Oval allowed for the southern expansion of the campus. The university built a new library on the oval's north end in 1936. By convincing the Oklahoma legislature to increase their original pledge of $200,000 for the library to $500,000, President Bizzell ensured an even greater collection of research materials for students and faculty.[16]

 
President Brooks' inauguration took place in front of Evans Hall in 1912.

Like many universities, OU had a drop in enrollment during World War II. Enrollment in 1945 dropped to 3,769, from its pre–World War II high of 6,935 in 1939.[21]

Many infrastructure changes have occurred at the university. The southern portion of south campus near Constitution Avenue, still known to long-time Norman residents as 'South Base', was originally built as an annex to Naval Air Station Norman. It contained mostly single-story frame buildings used for classrooms and military housing.[22] By the late 1980s, most were severely deteriorated and were demolished in the 1990s to make room for redevelopment. The Jimmie Austin University of Oklahoma Golf Course was built as a U.S. Navy recreational facility.[22]

During World War II, OU was one of 131 colleges and universities nationally that took part in the V-12 Navy College Training Program which offered students a path to a Navy commission.[23]

The north campus and airfield were built in the early 1940s as Naval Air Station Norman. The station served mainly an advanced flight training mission and could handle all but the largest bombers.[24] A large earthen mound east of Interstate 35 and north of Robinson Street, colloquially known as 'Mount Williams',[25] was a gunnery (the mound has been removed to make way for a commercial development).[26] In the post–World War II demobilization, the university received the installation. Naval aviator's wings displayed at the entrance to the terminal commemorates this airfield's Naval past.

After the World War, the university enjoyed rapid growth and a surge in enrollment. By 1965, enrollment had risen over 450% to 17,268, causing housing shortages.[21] In the mid-1960s, the administration constructed three new 12-story dormitories immediately south of the South Oval. In addition to these three towers, they built an apartment complex for married students, including men returning to college under the GI Bill.[27] These apartments are now Kraettli Apartments.

 
Bizzell Library sits at the heart of the university's Norman campus.

In 1943 George Lynn Cross took over as president of the university, two years after the U.S. entered World War II. He served until 1968, 25 years later, becoming the longest-serving president in the university's history. Five presidents served in the next 25 years. In 1994, the university hired a president who has stayed longer.

The Civil Rights Movement began a new era as the university began policies against racial discrimination and segregation after legal challenges and court cases outlawed discrimination. The Bizzell Memorial Library has been designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark in commemoration of the cases of G. W. McLaurin, a black man denied admission to graduate school in 1948. It was then state law that no school should serve both white and black students, but there were few or no separate graduate programs available for blacks. A court case effectively forced the Board of Regents to vote to admit McLaurin, but he was directed to study in a separated area within the law library and to be allowed to lunch only in a segregated area. The National Association for Advancement of Colored People brought the case to the U.S. Supreme court in McLaurin vs. Oklahoma State Board of Regents. In 1950, the court overturned the university's policy for segregation at the graduate school level. The case was an important precedent for the more famous and sweeping 1954 case of Brown v. Board of Education which disallowed "separate but equal" policy at all school levels.[28][29]

Since David Boren became president in 1994, the University of Oklahoma system has experienced tremendous growth, with an increase in new developments throughout including the purchase of 60 acres (0.2 km2) for OU-Tulsa, the new Gaylord Hall, Price Hall, the ExxonMobil Lawrence G. Rawl Engineering Practice Facility, Devon Energy Hall, the Wagner Student Academic Services Center, the Research and Medical Clinic, the expansions of the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art,[30] and the National Weather Center.[31]

In 2005, a bombing took place during a football match; student Joe Henrichs detonated a device which killed only himself. Police initially thought that this was an act of terrorism.[32]

In March 2015, the University of Oklahoma shut down the Oklahoma Kappa chapter of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity when a video surfaced that showed members singing a racist chant as they rode a bus. Sigma Alpha Epsilon shut down the chapter on March 8, 2015,[33] and University of Oklahoma president David Boren gave members two days to leave the fraternity house. He also expelled two students who he said "played a leadership role" in the incident, creating "a hostile learning environment for others".[34][35] The expulsion, allegedly without due process, earned the university a spot on the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education's 2016 "10 Worst Colleges for Free Speech".[36]

David Boren, a former U.S. senator and Governor of Oklahoma, served 24 years as the university's president from 1994 to 2018. James L. Gallogly succeeded Boren on July 1, 2018, only to retire ten months later on May 12, 2019.[37] OU College of Law Dean Joseph Harroz was appointed effective immediately May 16, 2019 to a 15-month term as interim president.[38] On May 9, 2020, Harroz was announced as the 15th president of the university by the Board of Regents.[39]

Campuses

 
Map of the Norman campuses excluding the north campus

Norman campus

As of fall 2009, the Norman campus had 18,667 undergraduate students and 6,367 postgraduate students.[40] Following the Sooners' 2000 football national-championship season[41] the university experienced an increase in college applicants and admissions. The falls of 1999 and 2000 both saw a 1.3% increase in the number of students over the respective previous years, while fall 2001 saw an increase of 4.8% over 2000.[42]

 
Price Hall, an addition to the Michael F. Price College of Business, finished construction in 2005.

The largest school, the College of Arts and Sciences, enrolls 35.2% of the OU-Norman students. The College of Arts & Sciences offers several programs, which include internships and most notably a joint archaeological program (with Saint Anselm College of Goffstown, New Hampshire) in Orvieto, Italy.[43] The next largest school, The Price College of Business enrolls 13%. Other large colleges on the Norman campus include the College of Engineering with 10.6% and the College of Education, Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication, and College of Liberal Studies, each with approximately 6% of the student body.[44]

Smaller schools include the Colleges of Architecture and Atmospheric and Geographic Sciences, Earth and Energy, the Weitzenhoffer Family College of Fine Arts, and the College of Law.

New students do not have to declare a major (a concentrated course of study) immediately and are not required to declare a major until their Junior year. If they are undecided in their major, they are considered a part of the University College, composing approximately 8% of the student body. Many Pre-Health majors choose this option until they are able to apply for the medical program of their choice.[44]

The Norman campus has three sections: north campus, main campus, and south campus. All three are connected by a bus service funded by student fees which allows students to park at Lloyd Noble Center and provides 5- to 10-minute service to the main and south campuses.[45] Other regular Norman bus routes provide service to north campus as well as the main campus. The main and south campus are contiguous while the north campus is about two miles north of the main campus.

The Norman campus is the focus of a number of ghost stories, some negative, some positive.[46][47]

Main campus

The main campus is bordered by Boyd Street on the north, Timberdell Road on the south, Chautauqua Avenue on the west, and Jenkins Avenue on the east.[48] The Norman campus is centered on two large "ovals." The Parrington Oval (or North Oval as it is commonly called) is anchored on the south by Evans Hall, the main administrative building. This building highlights the "Cherokee Gothic" style of architecture locally derived from the Collegiate Gothic style, the style that dominates and defines the older buildings on the OU campus. The North Oval is bordered on the east by the Oklahoma Memorial Union.

 
Memorial Stadium houses University of Oklahoma football games, as well as the campus bookstore.

On the east side of the northernmost part of campus sits Sarkeys Energy Center while to the west is the Fred Jones, Jr. School of Art and Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, home to the Weitzenhoffer Collection of Impressionist art[49] and the Catlett Music Center. Just south of Catlett is Goddard Health Center,[50] an on-campus clinic that provides medical care and counseling and testing services to students, faculty, staff, and their dependents. Goddard comprises the OU Health Services laboratory, Counseling Services, Health Promotion, and a pharmacy. The Van Vleet Oval (or South Oval) is anchored on the north by the Bizzell Memorial Library and flanked by academic buildings. When class is in session, the South Oval is often inundated with students going to and from class. Elm Avenue bounds the western edge of the academic portion of OU, with a few exceptions. Lying between Elm Avenue and Chautauqua Avenue are mostly fraternity and sorority houses.

 
Oklahoma Memorial Union

On the east side of the central part of campus lies Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium, just north of Lindsey Street on Jenkins Avenue. Immediately adjacent to the stadium is the Barry Switzer Center, a museum highlighting the historical success of Oklahoma athletics, as well as a comprehensive training facility for Oklahoma athletes. North of the stadium is the McCasland Field House, the former home of Oklahoma Basketball and the current home of Oklahoma's wrestling, volleyball and gymnastics programs. Across Jenkins Avenue are the athletic dorms and statues honoring Oklahoma's past five Heisman Trophy winners. Other statues on campus include several honoring the Native Americans who defined much of Oklahoma's history and a new memorial statue on the north side of Oklahoma Memorial Stadium honoring OU students, faculty, and staff that have died while serving in the armed forces.[51][52]

 
South Oval with Bizzell Library in the background

The portion of OU's main campus south of Lindsey Street includes three colleges, university housing, student activity and fitness facilities, and the Oklahoma Center for Continuing Education. The Joe C. and Carole Kerr McClendon Honors College is in David L. Boren Hall, which serves as an Academic Arts Community where residential rooms, faculty offices, classrooms, a computer center and library are all available in the same building.[53] Other residence halls include the twelve-story Adams, Couch and Walker Centers, as well as Cate Center, made up of three- and four-story buildings, which are transitioning to faculty offices.[54]

Adjacent to the residence facilities are the Sarkeys Fitness Center (formerly the Houston Huffman Fitness Center), Henderson-Tolson Cultural Center and the Jim Thorpe Multicultural Center. The Murray Case Sells Swim Complex is also nearby, providing indoor and outdoor swimming opportunities for the OU community. The Oklahoma Center for Continuing Education (OCCE) is one of eleven W. K. Kellogg Foundation-funded centers in the United States and Britain. It is home to OU Outreach, which consists of the College of Continuing Education and the College of Liberal Studies, and includes a conference center able to host events of up to 1500 participants.[55]

The Oklahoma administration prides itself on the aesthetic appeal of the campus.[13][56] All three campuses (Norman, Oklahoma City, and Tulsa) have beautifully landscaped gardens. Trees were planted on the OU campus before the first building was ever built.[13] There are also many statues and sculptures around campus, most of which portray the strong influence of the Native American culture.

There are also four buildings on the main campus that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. They are the Bizzell Library, the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house, Casa Blanca (the old Alpha Chi Omega sorority house), and Boyd House – the residence of the university president.[57]

 
Several campus buildings seen from Sarkeys Energy Center

In September 2008, it was announced that the University of Oklahoma's main campus will be entirely powered by wind by 2013.[58] According to OU president David Boren, "It is our patriotic duty as Americans to help our country achieve energy independence and to be sound stewards of the environment."[59] The school plans to purchase its energy from the OU Spirit Wind Farm, which is scheduled for construction near Woodward in late 2009. The new source of energy is projected to cost the university an additional $5 million per year.[60]

The Anne and Henry Zarrow School of Social Work was completed on the Norman campus in 2011 and houses facilities for the training of undergraduate and graduate social workers. The 12 million dollar building is named for the Zarrow family, a philanthropic couple from Tulsa, Oklahoma. The Zarrows donated $5 million as the keystone donors for the new building with the remaining funds coming from a bequest of Ruth I. Knee, a graduate of the program, and a portion of the states federal stimulus funds.

North campus

On the far north side of Norman is the OU Research Campus-North, which includes University of Oklahoma Max Westheimer Airport (ICAO: KOUN), the Radar Operations Center, the old National Severe Storms Laboratory facility, the OU OKDHS Training and Research Center, and Merrick Computer and Technology Center. Additional research facilities as part of OU's Gallogly College of Engineering also operate out of North campus including the Measurement and Automation Laboratory, Laboratory for Electrical Energy and Power Systems, and Laboratory for Smart Buildings.

OU's College of Aviation runs a programs in the education of future pilots, air traffic controllers and aviation industry professionals. The Aviation Accreditation Board has accredited the College of Aviation at North Base as one of only 29 accredited colleges in the world.[61]

South campus

 
The National Weather Center calls the university's south campus home.

South of student housing is Timberdell Road, the approximate southern boundary of the university. South of this road are University-owned apartments and athletic complexes. Also on the south side of Timberdell Road is the College of Law building which was expanded in 2002 by the addition of a larger law library and courtroom.[62] There are additional athletic complexes in this area, including L. Dale Mitchell Baseball Park, the OU Softball Field, and Lloyd Noble Center (the basketball arena).

OU owns the wooded area just south of Highway 9 between Chautauqua and Jenkins. This area is called Oliver's Woods. Ecology classes take field trips to Oliver's Woods frequently. They can use the area to study Ecological patterns including tree growth and pH in the ground. Visible patterns of plant dispersion can be studied in Oliver's Woods as well, including uniform, random, and clumped patterns. The area has a trail for people to follow and a creek running through the lower elevated area.

Research campus

While this area has traditionally lacked academic buildings, the pressure of expansion in the northern part of campus led recently to the construction of new academic buildings – such as the National Weather Center and Stephenson Research and Technology Center – on the south end of campus. This area, now termed The University of Oklahoma's Research Campus,[63] "brings academic, public and private sector organizations together in a mutually beneficial collaborative environment."[64]

In 2004, global weather information provider WeatherNews opened its U.S. Operations Center in One Partners Place, in the research campus one block from the new NWC building.[65] The southern boundary of the research campus is State Highway 9. OU's Advanced Radar Research Center is also on the Research campus in its new Radar Innovations Laboratory building.

As of 2013 the Life Sciences Research Center has opened, housing numerous chemical and biochemical research labs. Other buildings on the research campus include One Partners Place, Two Partners Place, Three Partners Place, Four Partners Place, and Five Partners Place. Housed within these buildings are the Center for Spatial Analysis and the Center for Applied Social Research among several others.

Health Sciences Center

The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center's main campus is at the Oklahoma Health Center in Oklahoma City, while a secondary Health Sciences campus is in Tulsa. About 3,500 students enroll in one of the seven colleges at the Health Center. The distribution of students in each of these colleges is more uniform than that of the main campus.

 
OUHSC at night

The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center (OUHSC), established in the early 20th century, is OU's presence in Oklahoma City. OUHSC is one of only four academic health centers in the nation with seven professional colleges.[66] The nineteen buildings that make up the OUHSC campus occupies a fifteen block area in Oklahoma City near the Oklahoma State Capitol. Surrounding these buildings are an additional twenty health-related buildings some of which are owned by the University of Oklahoma. With approximately 600 students and 600 residents and fellows training in specialties and subspecialties of medicine, the College of Medicine is the largest part of the Health Sciences Center. The major clinical facilities on campus are the OU Medical Center hospital complex, which and include The Children's Hospital, the OU Physicians clinics, and the Oklahoma City Veterans Administration Medical Center. The Oklahoma Health Center at large has large, university-operated biomedical research facilities joined on campus by a growing biomedical and pharmaceutical research corporations developed by the Presbyterian Health Foundation, dedicated to biotechnology, research, and new scientific ventures.

University of Oklahoma-Tulsa Schusterman Center

 
OU-Tulsa Seedsower at the corner of 41st and Yale in Tulsa

The University of Oklahoma-Tulsa Schusterman Center (OU-Tulsa) is home to all OU programs in Tulsa, OU Physicians-Tulsa, and the School of Community Medicine. OU-Tulsa offers six bachelor's degree completion programs; 14 master's degree programs; doctoral programs in medicine, physical therapy, education, early childhood education, engineering and nursing, as well as nine residency programs in medicine. Graduate certificate programs are also offered at OU-Tulsa.

More than 200 full-time faculty teach OU-Tulsa students and enrollment at OU-Tulsa exceeds 1,600 students. More than 1,000 employees work at the OU-Tulsa Schusterman Center and OU Physicians medical clinics throughout Tulsa. OU-Tulsa has service, education and research affiliations with more than 100 community agencies.

Norman-based programs

Programs offered at OU-Tulsa that are affiliated with departments on the Norman (main) campus of OU are referred to as Norman-based programs even when offered at OU-Tulsa. Norman-based programs on the Tulsa campus are primarily graduate level programs although an undergraduate degree completion program in Social Work is now being offered. Masters and doctoral level graduate programs as well as graduate certificate programs affiliated with a number of colleges on the Norman campus are offered on the Tulsa campus. The College of Arts and Sciences is the largest college on the Tulsa campus and includes programs in Human Relations, Library and Information Studies, Organizational Dynamics, Public Administration, and Social Work. Some graduate programs offered at OU-Tulsa are unique to the Tulsa campus such as Urban Design and Organizational Dynamics. Norman-based programs offered in Tulsa are predominately professional programs that include non-traditional scheduling formats such as evening and compressed format weekend courses to support the needs of working adults.

Health-science programs

Established in 1972 as a branch of the main Health Sciences Center campus in Oklahoma City, the OU School of Community Medicine, formerly the College of Medicine–Tulsa, has enabled the university to establish medical residencies and provide for expanded health care capabilities in the state. Between 1972 and 1999, OU's presence in Tulsa had grown but scattered. In 1999, a 60-acre (24 ha) site formerly owned by BP Amoco was sold to the university for $24 million (even though the property was appraised at $48 million). The site already featured a 370,000 square feet (34,370 m2) building with offices, labs, and classrooms.[67] The university purchased this property with the help of a $10 million gift from the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation. The existing building was renamed the Schusterman Center.[68] This historic, 60-acre property in the heart of Tulsa features original mid-century architecture surrounded by nearly 1,000 trees. New construction of the Schusterman Library and Schusterman Learning Center at OU-Tulsa has been designed in keeping with the original building style.

In 2003, Tulsa voters approved the Vision 2025 plan for capital improvements to the Tulsa metro area. Included in this plan was $30 million for a new Research and Medical Clinic near the existing Schusterman Center.[69] Construction on the new building, the OU Schusterman Clinic, was completed in June 2007.

OU-Tulsa is also home to the OU School of Community Medicine. Created with the support of a $50 million donation from the George Kaiser Family Foundation, the school's mission is to improve the health status of all Oklahomans, particularly the urban and rural underserved.

The OU School of Community Medicine faculty comprises around 200 physicians representing a wide field of specialties. These doctors also form the OU Physicians medical practice group, which provides care to patients at some 25 clinic sites in the Tulsa area. The faculty's time is split among teaching medical students, supervising medical residents and providing patient care.

OU in Arezzo

In 2012, The University of Oklahoma purchased a monastery in Arezzo, Italy.[70] In early 2016, renovations to the monastery neared completion and OU began the use of its newest permanent "campus" (denominated as a "Study Center") location outside of the state of Oklahoma. The university expects that one in five OU students who study abroad will go through the Arezzo campus.[citation needed] The Arezzo campus has been described by university president, David Boren, as a first step for students and their parents to become acquainted with the world and gain an educational experience in a foreign land. The campus is scheduled to be dedicated in the summer of 2016. Boren chose the smaller town of Arezzo in part because of the small size of the town relative to nearby Florence, which boasts programs from about 50 American universities. With such a large number of American college students in Florence, Boren was concerned that OU students would have socialized with other Americans rather than the local Italians.[70]

Other study centers

OU has study centers in Puebla, Mexico and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. A center is planned for İzmir, Turkey.

Academics

The University of Oklahoma is a large residential, research university.[9] The university consists of fifteen colleges, including 152 majors.[8] Native American studies includes language classes in Cherokee,[82] Choctaw, Mvskoke, and Kiowa[83] as part of the university's Native American language program; currently Creek, Choctaw, and Cherokee I, II, and III are offered in both fall and spring semesters.[83] The university has a high four-year full-time undergraduate enrollment including a high transfer-in population.[9] While the two main campuses are in Norman and Oklahoma City, affiliated programs in Tulsa expand access for students in eastern Oklahoma. Some of the programs in Tulsa include: architecture, arts and sciences, education, engineering, medicine, nursing, public health, allied health and liberal arts studies.[84]

 
Gaylord Hall, home of the Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication, finished construction in 2004.

In addition to 152 majors to choose from, the University of Oklahoma also has a nationally recognized Honors College featuring its own dedicated faculty, dormitories, and writing center.[85] Every student from any major can apply to the college; if accepted the student is eligible to take honors classes and graduate cum laude. In order to graduate with honors, the student must complete 18 credit hours of honors classes and submit an honors thesis. Transfer students are able to transfer up to nine credit hours of honor classes from a different university.[86]

Students come from all 50 U.S. states and over 100 countries. 32% of the 2006 freshmen were in the top 10% of their high school class.[87] Ethnic minority groups represent over 25% of newly enrolled undergraduates[88] and 27% of all students.[89] In addition, the university has an enrollment of over 700 National Merit Scholars, making it first per capita among public universities.[8]

In addition to being a member of the Southeastern Universities Research Association and Universities Research Association, undergraduate admission to the University of Oklahoma is categorized by the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education as "more selective". For the 2010–2011 school year, 9,996 applied and 8,498 were admitted (85%).[9] The university's freshman retention rate in 2009 was 82% and the six-year graduation rate was 62.0%.[90]

In May 2019, U.S. News & World Report said that the University of Oklahoma gave "inflated" data on its alumni giving rates for two decades and in response, would show the university as unranked in its 2019 edition of "Best Colleges" rankings.[91]

Museums and libraries

 
Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art on the University of Oklahoma campus has a different architectural style than the rest of the campus.

The university has two prominent museums, the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art and the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History.

  • The Museum of Art was founded in 1936 and originally headed by Oscar Jacobson, the director of the School of Art at the time. The museum opened with over 2,500 items on display and was originally on campus in Jacobson Hall. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jones of Oklahoma City donated money for a permanent building in 1971 and the building was named in honor of their son who died in a plane crash during his senior year at the University of Oklahoma.[92] Since then, the museum has acquired many renowned works of Native American art and, in 2000, received the Weitzenhoffer Collection of French Impressionism which includes works by Degas, Gauguin, Monet, Pissarro, Renoir, Toulouse-Lautrec, Van Gogh, and Vuillard. As of 2011 the museum has over 65,000 square feet (6,000 m2) filled with over 8,000 items from a wide array of time periods and movements.[92] In 2005, the museum expanded with the opening of the new Lester Wing designed by contemporary architect Hugh Newell Jacobsen. The architectural style of the new addition deviates from the Collegiate Gothic style of the university, but Jacobsen felt this was necessary given the contemporary works of art the wing would house.[93]
  • The Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, south of the main campus and directly southwest of the law building, specializes in the history of the people and animals that have inhabited Oklahoma over the last 300 million years. Since its founding in 1899, the museum has acquired over 5 million objects. In 2000, a new building was opened to house the ever-expanding museum. The new building offered nearly 200,000 square feet (18,600 m2) of space to display the many exhibits the museum has to offer.[94]
 
Great Reading Room inside Bizzell Memorial Library

The University of Oklahoma Library system has its headquarters in Bizzell Memorial Library. The largest research library in Oklahoma, it contains over 4.7 million volumes and is ranked[by whom?] 27th out of 113 research libraries in North America in volumes held.[95] It contains more than 1.6 million photographs, subscriptions to over 31,000 periodicals, over 1.5 million maps, government documents dating back to 1893, and over 50 incunabula.[95] It has five locations on campus. The primary library is Bizzell Memorial Library, in the middle of the main campus. Other notable campus libraries include the Architecture Library, the Fine Arts Library, and the Geology Library. The OU library system contains many unique collections such as the History of Science Collections (which houses over 94,000 volumes related to the history of science,[96] including hand-noted works by Galileo Galilei),[97] the Bizzell Bible Collection, and the Western History Collection.

The School of Library and Information Studies (SLIS), the only American Library Association-accredited program in Oklahoma,[98] offers a graduate degree (Master of Library and Information Studies) and an undergraduate degree (Bachelor of Arts in Information Studies). The impact of OU and SLIS on the history of libraries in Oklahoma is shown in the recent list of 100 Oklahoma Library Legends as produced by the Oklahoma Library Association.[99] Two current faculty, one faculty emeriti, and numerous others associated with either the OU libraries or SLIS account for nearly 10% of the list's members.

Residential life

 
The Walker, Couch, Adams, and DLB dorm buildings make up four of the school's residential halls.

Oklahoma requires, with few exceptions, that all freshmen live in one of the six residence halls.[100] Each residence hall has its own RSA (Resident Student Association) office, as well as its own computer lab and laundry facilities.

The most popular living option among freshmen is the Towers, three 12-story buildings on the south side of campus:

  • Adams Center is split into four smaller towers (Johnson, McCasland, Muldrow, and Tarman), all united by a common ground floor. It has amenities such as a 24-hour study room, free tutoring courtesy of the University College,[101] and Raising Cane's.
  • Couch Center is split into east and west wings. It features Couch Express, a quick-stop restaurant, and a lounge that has a 3D printing lab and separate study rooms.
  • Walker Center, also split into east and west wings, has a spacious kitchen on the first floor. It also houses a convenience store called Xcetera as well as Housing and Food services.

The Towers have suite-style rooms where two neighboring rooms share a bathroom. They are all around each other with the Couch Restaurants (often referred to by students as the Caf), completing the residence community. Couch Restaurants is an all-you-can-eat buffet composed of several different themed restaurants that serves a wide variety of food each day.

David L. Boren Hall is the fourth major residence hall on campus. Although it is commonly believed that this residence hall caters only to honors students, a large proportion of non-honors students live there.[102] It has community-style bathrooms that are regularly cleaned by staff and shared with approximately 10-16 people.

Headington Hall, completed in the Summer of 2013, is the fifth major residence hall on campus and is on the corner of Lindsey and Jenkins street. This facility is named after Tim Headington, OU graduate and former OU tennis player. The housing facility contains 400 students (49 percent student athletes and 51 percent students who do not participate in intercollegiate sports).[103]

The residential colleges, which are Dunham and Headington Colleges, are the sixth and newest major residence hall. having opened in Fall 2017. The majority of students who live in the residential colleges are upperclassmen, but some freshmen are allowed to live here if at least one of the roommates is in the Honors College.[104] Dunham and Headington are connected by a dining hall that is open to all students.

The university owns several apartment complexes around the campus. Some of these apartments were old and dilapidated, and the university has taken the strides to resolve this issue. Two brand new complexes owned by the university opened in recent years; OU Traditions Square East in 2005 and OU Traditions Square West in 2006.[105]

Due to a low cost of living in Oklahoma, many students find it financially viable to live off campus in either apartments or houses. In recent years, many new apartment or condominium complexes (not including the OU-owned properties) have been built[106] in addition to a booming housing market that is resulting in Norman spreading further east. Many students also commute from nearby Moore and Oklahoma City, both north of Norman.

Student organizations, activities, and media

Student body composition as of May 2, 2022
Race and ethnicity[107] Total
White 60% 60
 
Hispanic 11% 11
 
Other[a] 10% 10
 
Asian 7% 7
 
Black 5% 5
 
Native American 3% 3
 
Foreign national 3% 3
 
Economic diversity
Low-income[b] 24% 24
 
Affluent[c] 76% 76
 
 
The Pride of Oklahoma Marching Band performs during pre-game and halftimes at football games.

The Pride of Oklahoma, the university's marching band, celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2004 and consists of 311 student musicians and dancers from 19 states. Students wishing to enter the band go through a rigorous audition process. The band plays at every home football game. A smaller pep band, which usually consists of 100 members, travels to every away football game. The full band makes trips to the AT&T Red River Rivalry game against The University of Texas, Big 12 Championship Game, bowl games and other games of importance. Members of the band are also present for many student events. It was awarded the Sudler Trophy in 1987. In 2007, The Pride of Oklahoma marched in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, making it one of only a few bands to have ever marched in both the Tournament of Roses and Macy's Parades.[108]

 
The University of Oklahoma Army ROTC assembled in formation at its Fall 2007 Field Training Exercise

The local chapter of the Army ROTC provides officer training and education for nearly 100 OU students. Officially founded in 1919, it is one of the oldest such programs in the nation. OU Army ROTC cadets are active in numerous campus and state activities. They provide military color guards for Sooner football games and various on-campus ceremonies and events. After completing the Army ROTC program, OU students receive a commission in either the Regular Army, Army Reserve, or National Guard.

The campus student radio station, Studio U, broadcasts over the Internet. The campus TV station, OUTV, features student-produced programming five nights a week and is available on Public-access television cable TV (Cox Communications Ch. 124, ATT uVerse 99) also via Facebook and YouTube sites. OU Nightly, the live student newscast, airs weekdays at 7:00am, 12:00pm, 4:30pm live and 9:30pm. Sooner Sportspad, a live sports program, airs live Monday nights at 7:30 on Fox Sports SW and throughout the week as repeats on OUTV. Oklahoma's Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication programs Studio U and OUTV. Oklahoma's Department of Continuing Education operates KROU and KGOU, a public radio station broadcasting on 106.3 FM. KGOU is affiliated with NPR.

The campus newspaper, The Oklahoma Daily, is produced daily during the fall and spring semesters and weekly during the summer semester. The Oklahoma Daily's sister publication, Sooner yearbook, creates a 400-page coffee table book for current students and alumni. Sooner, ranked as one of the top two yearbooks nationwide, focuses on capturing the year with storytelling packages of text, photos and design.[109]

Athletics

Sports at Oklahoma
Men's Women's
  • Baseball
  • Basketball
  • Cross country
  • Football
  • Golf
  • Gymnastics
  • Tennis
  • Track & field
  • Wrestling
  • Basketball
  • Cross country
  • Golf
  • Gymnastics
  • Rowing
  • Soccer
  • Softball
  • Tennis
  • Track & field
  • Volleyball
 
Several main athletic facilities are grouped together at the Norman campus.

The school's sports teams are called the Sooners, a nickname given to early settlers during the land run who sneaked into the offered territory and staked claims illegally before they were officially allowed to. They participate in the NCAA's Division I-Bowl Subdivision and in the Big 12 Conference. The school sponsors nine sports for both men and women. The university has claimed 36 team national championships, which includes 7 football national championships (football championships are not awarded by the NCAA).[11] By far, OU's most famous and storied athletic program is the football program, which has produced seven Heisman Trophy winners: Billy Vessels in 1952, Steve Owens in 1969, Billy Sims in 1978, Jason White in 2003, Sam Bradford in 2008, Baker Mayfield in 2017, and Kyler Murray in 2018.[110] Many Pro Football Hall of Famers, including Lee Roy Selmon and Troy Aikman, also attended the University of Oklahoma. In 1988, OU became the first school to participate in both the football and basketball national championships in the same year, an achievement unequaled until the 2006 season, when Ohio State and the University of Florida were both in each, with Florida winning both games. Oklahoma also currently holds the record for the longest winning streak in NCAA Division I history when they won 47 consecutive games between 1953 and 1957.[111] In reference to the team's success and popularity as a symbol of state pride, George Lynn Cross, OU's president from 1943 to 1968, once told the Oklahoma State Senate, "I want a university the football team can be proud of."[112]

 
University of Oklahoma mascot

The wrestling program is the fourth most decorated in college wrestling, having won seven national championships.[Note 1] The men's gymnastics team has won twelve national championships, the most out of all sports at the University of Oklahoma.[Note 2] In addition, Oklahoma has produced five Nissen Emery Award winners, more than any other school and the only school with back-to-back honorees.[113] The women's gymnastics team was crowned co-national champions with the University of Florida in 2014 and won back-to-back national championships in 2016 and 2017.[114] The softball team has won six national championships, the first in 2000[115] another in 2013, back to back titles in 2016 and 2017, and back-to-back titles in 2021 and 2022. The baseball team won a national championship in 1951 and 1994.[116] On May 10, 2007, the university announced the addition of women's rowing to the intercollegiate athletics program.[117] A rowing facility will be built on the Oklahoma River near downtown Oklahoma City. This is the first sport added since women's soccer was added in 1996.[117]

The University of Oklahoma has had a long and bitter rivalry with the University of Texas known as the Red River Shootout, Red River Rivalry, or OU–Texas, with Texas having the better overall record at 59–43–5. This rivalry is often thought of as a contest of state pride along with school pride. OU also has a long-standing rivalry with Oklahoma State University. Known as the Bedlam Series, it encompasses all the athletic contests between the two universities with the winner receiving the Bedlam Bell. Another major historic rival is the University of Nebraska, which was part of the Big 8 Conference with Oklahoma and later joined with Oklahoma and other schools in the formation of the Big 12 Conference. The Sooners made football history December 6, 2008, when they scored sixty or more points in five consecutive games. This achievement occurred during their victory over the University of Missouri for the Big 12 Championship.

On June 30, 2021, the Oklahoma State Board of Regents unanimously accepted an invitation to join the Southeastern Conference (SEC) along with the University of Texas beginning on July 1, 2025.[118]

Notable people and alumni

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In 1936, 1951, 1952, 1957, 1960, 1963 and 1974.
  2. ^ In 1977, 1978, 1991, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018.

Notes

  1. ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans & those who prefer to not say.
  2. ^ The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students.
  3. ^ The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum.

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External links

Coordinates: 35°12′31″N 97°26′45″W / 35.20861°N 97.44583°W / 35.20861; -97.44583

university, oklahoma, public, research, university, norman, oklahoma, founded, 1890, existed, oklahoma, territory, near, indian, territory, years, before, territories, became, state, oklahoma, fall, 2022, university, students, enrolled, most, main, campus, nor. The University of Oklahoma OU is a public research university in Norman Oklahoma Founded in 1890 it had existed in Oklahoma Territory near Indian Territory for 17 years before the two Territories became the state of Oklahoma In Fall 2022 the university had 29 705 students enrolled 7 most at its main campus in Norman Employing nearly 3 000 faculty members 3 the school offers 152 baccalaureate programs 160 master s programs 75 doctorate programs and 20 majors at the first professional level 8 University of OklahomaFormer nameNorman Territorial University 1890 1907 MottoLatin Civi et ReipublicaeMotto in English For the benefit of the Citizen and the State 1 TypePublic research universityEstablishedDecember 19 1890 132 years ago December 19 1890 AccreditationHLCAcademic affiliationsURAORAUSpace grantEndowment 2 7 billion 2021 2 PresidentJoseph Harroz Jr ProvostAndre Denis G WrightAcademic staff2 937 3 Students28 564 Fall 2019 4 Undergraduates22 152 Fall 2019 4 Postgraduates6 412 Fall 2019 4 LocationNorman Oklahoma United StatesCampusMidsize Suburb College Town 3 000 acres 12 1 km2 NewspaperThe Oklahoma DailyOther campusesOklahoma CityTulsaColorsCrimson and cream 5 NicknameSoonersSporting affiliationsNCAA Division I FBS Big 12 through June 30 2025 SEC as of July 1 2025 6 MascotSooner SchoonerWebsitewww wbr ou wbr eduThe university is classified among R1 Doctoral Universities Very high research activity 9 According to the National Science Foundation OU spent 283 million on research and development in 2018 ranking it 82nd in the nation 10 Its Norman campus has two prominent museums the Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art specializing in French Impressionism and Native American artwork and the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History specializing in the natural history of Oklahoma The university has won multiple national championships in multiple sports including seven football national championships and two NCAA Division I baseball championships The women s softball team has won the national championship six times in 2000 2013 and consecutively in 2016 and 2017 and in 2021 and 2022 The gymnastics teams have won a combined 11 national championships since 2002 with the men s team winning eight in the last 15 years including three consecutive titles from 2015 to 2017 11 Contents 1 History 2 Campuses 2 1 Norman campus 2 1 1 Main campus 2 1 2 North campus 2 1 3 South campus 2 1 4 Research campus 2 2 Health Sciences Center 2 3 University of Oklahoma Tulsa Schusterman Center 2 3 1 Norman based programs 2 3 2 Health science programs 2 4 OU in Arezzo 2 5 Other study centers 3 Academics 4 Museums and libraries 5 Residential life 6 Student organizations activities and media 7 Athletics 8 Notable people and alumni 9 See also 10 Notes 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditWith the support of Governor George Washington Steele on December 18 1890 the Oklahoma Territorial legislature established three universities the state university in Norman the agricultural and mechanical college in Stillwater later renamed Oklahoma State University and a normal school in Edmond later renamed University of Central Oklahoma 12 Oklahoma s admission into the union in 1907 led to the renaming of the Norman Territorial University as the University of Oklahoma Norman residents donated 407 acres 1 6 km2 of land for the university 0 5 miles 0 8 km south of the Norman railroad depot The university s first president ordered the planting of trees before the construction of the first campus building because he could not visualize a treeless university seat 13 Landscaping remains important to the university 14 The university s first president David Ross Boyd arrived in Norman in August 1892 and the first students enrolled that year The university established a School of Pharmacy in 1893 because of the territory s high demand for pharmacists Three years later the university awarded its first degree to a pharmaceutical chemist 15 The Rock Building in downtown Norman held the initial classes until the university s first building opened on September 6 1893 16 Donald W Reynolds Center for the Performing Arts formerly Holmberg Hall exemplifies the school s architectural style On January 6 1903 the university s only building burned down and destroyed many records of the early university Construction began immediately on a new building as several other towns hoped to convince the university to move President Boyd and the faculty were not dismayed by the loss Mathematics professor Frederick Elder said What do you need to keep classes going Two yards of blackboard and a box of chalk 17 As a response to the fire English professor Vernon Louis Parrington created a plan for the development of the campus Although much of the plan was never implemented Parrington s suggestion for the campus core formed the basis for the North Oval The North and South Ovals are now distinctive features of the campus The campus has a distinctive architecture with buildings designed in a unique Cherokee Gothic style The style has many features of the Gothic era but has also mixed the designs of local Native American tribes from Oklahoma This term was coined by the renowned American architect Frank Lloyd Wright when he visited the campus 18 The university has built over a dozen buildings in the Cherokee Gothic style Presidents of theUniversity of OklahomaDavid Ross Boyd 1892 1908 A Grant Evans 1908 1912 Stratton D Brooks 1912 1923 James S Buchanan 1923 1925 William Bennett Bizzell 1925 1941 Joseph A Brandt 1941 1943 George Lynn Cross 1943 1968 John Herbert Hollomon 1968 1970 Paul F Sharp 1971 1977 William S Banowsky 1978 1984 Frank E Horton 1985 1988 Richard L Van Horn 1989 1994 David Boren 1994 2018 James L Gallogly 2018 May 12 2019 Joseph Harroz 2019 presentIn 1907 Oklahoma entered statehood fostering changes in the state s political atmosphere Up until this point Oklahoma s Republican tendencies changed with the election of Oklahoma s first governor the Democratic Charles N Haskell Since the university s inception religion had divided those on campus Early in the university s existence many professors were Presbyterian as was Boyd Under pressure Boyd hired several Baptists and Southern Methodists 19 The Presbyterians and Baptists coexisted but the Southern Methodists conflicted with the administration Two notable Methodists Rev Nathaniel Lee Linebaugh and Professor Ernest Taylor Bynum were critics of Boyd and activists in Haskell s election campaign When Haskell took office he fired many of the university s Republicans including President Boyd 20 The campus expanded over the next several decades By 1932 the university encompassed 167 acres 0 7 km2 Development of South Oval allowed for the southern expansion of the campus The university built a new library on the oval s north end in 1936 By convincing the Oklahoma legislature to increase their original pledge of 200 000 for the library to 500 000 President Bizzell ensured an even greater collection of research materials for students and faculty 16 President Brooks inauguration took place in front of Evans Hall in 1912 Like many universities OU had a drop in enrollment during World War II Enrollment in 1945 dropped to 3 769 from its pre World War II high of 6 935 in 1939 21 Many infrastructure changes have occurred at the university The southern portion of south campus near Constitution Avenue still known to long time Norman residents as South Base was originally built as an annex to Naval Air Station Norman It contained mostly single story frame buildings used for classrooms and military housing 22 By the late 1980s most were severely deteriorated and were demolished in the 1990s to make room for redevelopment The Jimmie Austin University of Oklahoma Golf Course was built as a U S Navy recreational facility 22 During World War II OU was one of 131 colleges and universities nationally that took part in the V 12 Navy College Training Program which offered students a path to a Navy commission 23 The north campus and airfield were built in the early 1940s as Naval Air Station Norman The station served mainly an advanced flight training mission and could handle all but the largest bombers 24 A large earthen mound east of Interstate 35 and north of Robinson Street colloquially known as Mount Williams 25 was a gunnery the mound has been removed to make way for a commercial development 26 In the post World War II demobilization the university received the installation Naval aviator s wings displayed at the entrance to the terminal commemorates this airfield s Naval past After the World War the university enjoyed rapid growth and a surge in enrollment By 1965 enrollment had risen over 450 to 17 268 causing housing shortages 21 In the mid 1960s the administration constructed three new 12 story dormitories immediately south of the South Oval In addition to these three towers they built an apartment complex for married students including men returning to college under the GI Bill 27 These apartments are now Kraettli Apartments Bizzell Library sits at the heart of the university s Norman campus In 1943 George Lynn Cross took over as president of the university two years after the U S entered World War II He served until 1968 25 years later becoming the longest serving president in the university s history Five presidents served in the next 25 years In 1994 the university hired a president who has stayed longer The Civil Rights Movement began a new era as the university began policies against racial discrimination and segregation after legal challenges and court cases outlawed discrimination The Bizzell Memorial Library has been designated a U S National Historic Landmark in commemoration of the cases of G W McLaurin a black man denied admission to graduate school in 1948 It was then state law that no school should serve both white and black students but there were few or no separate graduate programs available for blacks A court case effectively forced the Board of Regents to vote to admit McLaurin but he was directed to study in a separated area within the law library and to be allowed to lunch only in a segregated area The National Association for Advancement of Colored People brought the case to the U S Supreme court in McLaurin vs Oklahoma State Board of Regents In 1950 the court overturned the university s policy for segregation at the graduate school level The case was an important precedent for the more famous and sweeping 1954 case of Brown v Board of Education which disallowed separate but equal policy at all school levels 28 29 Since David Boren became president in 1994 the University of Oklahoma system has experienced tremendous growth with an increase in new developments throughout including the purchase of 60 acres 0 2 km2 for OU Tulsa the new Gaylord Hall Price Hall the ExxonMobil Lawrence G Rawl Engineering Practice Facility Devon Energy Hall the Wagner Student Academic Services Center the Research and Medical Clinic the expansions of the Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art 30 and the National Weather Center 31 In 2005 a bombing took place during a football match student Joe Henrichs detonated a device which killed only himself Police initially thought that this was an act of terrorism 32 In March 2015 the University of Oklahoma shut down the Oklahoma Kappa chapter of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity when a video surfaced that showed members singing a racist chant as they rode a bus Sigma Alpha Epsilon shut down the chapter on March 8 2015 33 and University of Oklahoma president David Boren gave members two days to leave the fraternity house He also expelled two students who he said played a leadership role in the incident creating a hostile learning environment for others 34 35 The expulsion allegedly without due process earned the university a spot on the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education s 2016 10 Worst Colleges for Free Speech 36 David Boren a former U S senator and Governor of Oklahoma served 24 years as the university s president from 1994 to 2018 James L Gallogly succeeded Boren on July 1 2018 only to retire ten months later on May 12 2019 37 OU College of Law Dean Joseph Harroz was appointed effective immediately May 16 2019 to a 15 month term as interim president 38 On May 9 2020 Harroz was announced as the 15th president of the university by the Board of Regents 39 Campuses Edit Map of the Norman campuses excluding the north campus Norman campus Edit As of fall 2009 the Norman campus had 18 667 undergraduate students and 6 367 postgraduate students 40 Following the Sooners 2000 football national championship season 41 the university experienced an increase in college applicants and admissions The falls of 1999 and 2000 both saw a 1 3 increase in the number of students over the respective previous years while fall 2001 saw an increase of 4 8 over 2000 42 Price Hall an addition to the Michael F Price College of Business finished construction in 2005 The largest school the College of Arts and Sciences enrolls 35 2 of the OU Norman students The College of Arts amp Sciences offers several programs which include internships and most notably a joint archaeological program with Saint Anselm College of Goffstown New Hampshire in Orvieto Italy 43 The next largest school The Price College of Business enrolls 13 Other large colleges on the Norman campus include the College of Engineering with 10 6 and the College of Education Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication and College of Liberal Studies each with approximately 6 of the student body 44 Smaller schools include the Colleges of Architecture and Atmospheric and Geographic Sciences Earth and Energy the Weitzenhoffer Family College of Fine Arts and the College of Law New students do not have to declare a major a concentrated course of study immediately and are not required to declare a major until their Junior year If they are undecided in their major they are considered a part of the University College composing approximately 8 of the student body Many Pre Health majors choose this option until they are able to apply for the medical program of their choice 44 The Norman campus has three sections north campus main campus and south campus All three are connected by a bus service funded by student fees which allows students to park at Lloyd Noble Center and provides 5 to 10 minute service to the main and south campuses 45 Other regular Norman bus routes provide service to north campus as well as the main campus The main and south campus are contiguous while the north campus is about two miles north of the main campus The Norman campus is the focus of a number of ghost stories some negative some positive 46 47 Main campus EditThe main campus is bordered by Boyd Street on the north Timberdell Road on the south Chautauqua Avenue on the west and Jenkins Avenue on the east 48 The Norman campus is centered on two large ovals The Parrington Oval or North Oval as it is commonly called is anchored on the south by Evans Hall the main administrative building This building highlights the Cherokee Gothic style of architecture locally derived from the Collegiate Gothic style the style that dominates and defines the older buildings on the OU campus The North Oval is bordered on the east by the Oklahoma Memorial Union Memorial Stadium houses University of Oklahoma football games as well as the campus bookstore On the east side of the northernmost part of campus sits Sarkeys Energy Center while to the west is the Fred Jones Jr School of Art and Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art home to the Weitzenhoffer Collection of Impressionist art 49 and the Catlett Music Center Just south of Catlett is Goddard Health Center 50 an on campus clinic that provides medical care and counseling and testing services to students faculty staff and their dependents Goddard comprises the OU Health Services laboratory Counseling Services Health Promotion and a pharmacy The Van Vleet Oval or South Oval is anchored on the north by the Bizzell Memorial Library and flanked by academic buildings When class is in session the South Oval is often inundated with students going to and from class Elm Avenue bounds the western edge of the academic portion of OU with a few exceptions Lying between Elm Avenue and Chautauqua Avenue are mostly fraternity and sorority houses Oklahoma Memorial Union On the east side of the central part of campus lies Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium just north of Lindsey Street on Jenkins Avenue Immediately adjacent to the stadium is the Barry Switzer Center a museum highlighting the historical success of Oklahoma athletics as well as a comprehensive training facility for Oklahoma athletes North of the stadium is the McCasland Field House the former home of Oklahoma Basketball and the current home of Oklahoma s wrestling volleyball and gymnastics programs Across Jenkins Avenue are the athletic dorms and statues honoring Oklahoma s past five Heisman Trophy winners Other statues on campus include several honoring the Native Americans who defined much of Oklahoma s history and a new memorial statue on the north side of Oklahoma Memorial Stadium honoring OU students faculty and staff that have died while serving in the armed forces 51 52 South Oval with Bizzell Library in the background The portion of OU s main campus south of Lindsey Street includes three colleges university housing student activity and fitness facilities and the Oklahoma Center for Continuing Education The Joe C and Carole Kerr McClendon Honors College is in David L Boren Hall which serves as an Academic Arts Community where residential rooms faculty offices classrooms a computer center and library are all available in the same building 53 Other residence halls include the twelve story Adams Couch and Walker Centers as well as Cate Center made up of three and four story buildings which are transitioning to faculty offices 54 Adjacent to the residence facilities are the Sarkeys Fitness Center formerly the Houston Huffman Fitness Center Henderson Tolson Cultural Center and the Jim Thorpe Multicultural Center The Murray Case Sells Swim Complex is also nearby providing indoor and outdoor swimming opportunities for the OU community The Oklahoma Center for Continuing Education OCCE is one of eleven W K Kellogg Foundation funded centers in the United States and Britain It is home to OU Outreach which consists of the College of Continuing Education and the College of Liberal Studies and includes a conference center able to host events of up to 1500 participants 55 The Oklahoma administration prides itself on the aesthetic appeal of the campus 13 56 All three campuses Norman Oklahoma City and Tulsa have beautifully landscaped gardens Trees were planted on the OU campus before the first building was ever built 13 There are also many statues and sculptures around campus most of which portray the strong influence of the Native American culture There are also four buildings on the main campus that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places They are the Bizzell Library the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house Casa Blanca the old Alpha Chi Omega sorority house and Boyd House the residence of the university president 57 Several campus buildings seen from Sarkeys Energy Center In September 2008 it was announced that the University of Oklahoma s main campus will be entirely powered by wind by 2013 58 According to OU president David Boren It is our patriotic duty as Americans to help our country achieve energy independence and to be sound stewards of the environment 59 The school plans to purchase its energy from the OU Spirit Wind Farm which is scheduled for construction near Woodward in late 2009 The new source of energy is projected to cost the university an additional 5 million per year 60 The Anne and Henry Zarrow School of Social Work was completed on the Norman campus in 2011 and houses facilities for the training of undergraduate and graduate social workers The 12 million dollar building is named for the Zarrow family a philanthropic couple from Tulsa Oklahoma The Zarrows donated 5 million as the keystone donors for the new building with the remaining funds coming from a bequest of Ruth I Knee a graduate of the program and a portion of the states federal stimulus funds North campus Edit On the far north side of Norman is the OU Research Campus North which includes University of Oklahoma Max Westheimer Airport ICAO KOUN the Radar Operations Center the old National Severe Storms Laboratory facility the OU OKDHS Training and Research Center and Merrick Computer and Technology Center Additional research facilities as part of OU s Gallogly College of Engineering also operate out of North campus including the Measurement and Automation Laboratory Laboratory for Electrical Energy and Power Systems and Laboratory for Smart Buildings OU s College of Aviation runs a programs in the education of future pilots air traffic controllers and aviation industry professionals The Aviation Accreditation Board has accredited the College of Aviation at North Base as one of only 29 accredited colleges in the world 61 South campus Edit The National Weather Center calls the university s south campus home South of student housing is Timberdell Road the approximate southern boundary of the university South of this road are University owned apartments and athletic complexes Also on the south side of Timberdell Road is the College of Law building which was expanded in 2002 by the addition of a larger law library and courtroom 62 There are additional athletic complexes in this area including L Dale Mitchell Baseball Park the OU Softball Field and Lloyd Noble Center the basketball arena OU owns the wooded area just south of Highway 9 between Chautauqua and Jenkins This area is called Oliver s Woods Ecology classes take field trips to Oliver s Woods frequently They can use the area to study Ecological patterns including tree growth and pH in the ground Visible patterns of plant dispersion can be studied in Oliver s Woods as well including uniform random and clumped patterns The area has a trail for people to follow and a creek running through the lower elevated area Research campus Edit While this area has traditionally lacked academic buildings the pressure of expansion in the northern part of campus led recently update to the construction of new academic buildings such as the National Weather Center and Stephenson Research and Technology Center on the south end of campus This area now termed The University of Oklahoma s Research Campus 63 brings academic public and private sector organizations together in a mutually beneficial collaborative environment 64 In 2004 global weather information provider WeatherNews opened its U S Operations Center in One Partners Place in the research campus one block from the new NWC building 65 The southern boundary of the research campus is State Highway 9 OU s Advanced Radar Research Center is also on the Research campus in its new Radar Innovations Laboratory building As of 2013 update the Life Sciences Research Center has opened housing numerous chemical and biochemical research labs Other buildings on the research campus include One Partners Place Two Partners Place Three Partners Place Four Partners Place and Five Partners Place Housed within these buildings are the Center for Spatial Analysis and the Center for Applied Social Research among several others Health Sciences Center Edit Main article University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center s main campus is at the Oklahoma Health Center in Oklahoma City while a secondary Health Sciences campus is in Tulsa About 3 500 students enroll in one of the seven colleges at the Health Center The distribution of students in each of these colleges is more uniform than that of the main campus OUHSC at night The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center OUHSC established in the early 20th century is OU s presence in Oklahoma City OUHSC is one of only four academic health centers in the nation with seven professional colleges 66 The nineteen buildings that make up the OUHSC campus occupies a fifteen block area in Oklahoma City near the Oklahoma State Capitol Surrounding these buildings are an additional twenty health related buildings some of which are owned by the University of Oklahoma With approximately 600 students and 600 residents and fellows training in specialties and subspecialties of medicine the College of Medicine is the largest part of the Health Sciences Center The major clinical facilities on campus are the OU Medical Center hospital complex which and include The Children s Hospital the OU Physicians clinics and the Oklahoma City Veterans Administration Medical Center The Oklahoma Health Center at large has large university operated biomedical research facilities joined on campus by a growing biomedical and pharmaceutical research corporations developed by the Presbyterian Health Foundation dedicated to biotechnology research and new scientific ventures University of Oklahoma Tulsa Schusterman Center Edit It has been suggested that this article should be split into a new article titled University of Oklahoma Tulsa Schusterman Center discuss March 2021 OU Tulsa Seedsower at the corner of 41st and Yale in Tulsa The University of Oklahoma Tulsa Schusterman Center OU Tulsa is home to all OU programs in Tulsa OU Physicians Tulsa and the School of Community Medicine OU Tulsa offers six bachelor s degree completion programs 14 master s degree programs doctoral programs in medicine physical therapy education early childhood education engineering and nursing as well as nine residency programs in medicine Graduate certificate programs are also offered at OU Tulsa More than 200 full time faculty teach OU Tulsa students and enrollment at OU Tulsa exceeds 1 600 students More than 1 000 employees work at the OU Tulsa Schusterman Center and OU Physicians medical clinics throughout Tulsa OU Tulsa has service education and research affiliations with more than 100 community agencies Norman based programs Edit Programs offered at OU Tulsa that are affiliated with departments on the Norman main campus of OU are referred to as Norman based programs even when offered at OU Tulsa Norman based programs on the Tulsa campus are primarily graduate level programs although an undergraduate degree completion program in Social Work is now being offered Masters and doctoral level graduate programs as well as graduate certificate programs affiliated with a number of colleges on the Norman campus are offered on the Tulsa campus The College of Arts and Sciences is the largest college on the Tulsa campus and includes programs in Human Relations Library and Information Studies Organizational Dynamics Public Administration and Social Work Some graduate programs offered at OU Tulsa are unique to the Tulsa campus such as Urban Design and Organizational Dynamics Norman based programs offered in Tulsa are predominately professional programs that include non traditional scheduling formats such as evening and compressed format weekend courses to support the needs of working adults Health science programs Edit Established in 1972 as a branch of the main Health Sciences Center campus in Oklahoma City the OU School of Community Medicine formerly the College of Medicine Tulsa has enabled the university to establish medical residencies and provide for expanded health care capabilities in the state Between 1972 and 1999 OU s presence in Tulsa had grown but scattered In 1999 a 60 acre 24 ha site formerly owned by BP Amoco was sold to the university for 24 million even though the property was appraised at 48 million The site already featured a 370 000 square feet 34 370 m2 building with offices labs and classrooms 67 The university purchased this property with the help of a 10 million gift from the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation The existing building was renamed the Schusterman Center 68 This historic 60 acre property in the heart of Tulsa features original mid century architecture surrounded by nearly 1 000 trees New construction of the Schusterman Library and Schusterman Learning Center at OU Tulsa has been designed in keeping with the original building style In 2003 Tulsa voters approved the Vision 2025 plan for capital improvements to the Tulsa metro area Included in this plan was 30 million for a new Research and Medical Clinic near the existing Schusterman Center 69 Construction on the new building the OU Schusterman Clinic was completed in June 2007 OU Tulsa is also home to the OU School of Community Medicine Created with the support of a 50 million donation from the George Kaiser Family Foundation the school s mission is to improve the health status of all Oklahomans particularly the urban and rural underserved The OU School of Community Medicine faculty comprises around 200 physicians representing a wide field of specialties These doctors also form the OU Physicians medical practice group which provides care to patients at some 25 clinic sites in the Tulsa area The faculty s time is split among teaching medical students supervising medical residents and providing patient care OU in Arezzo Edit In 2012 The University of Oklahoma purchased a monastery in Arezzo Italy 70 In early 2016 renovations to the monastery neared completion and OU began the use of its newest permanent campus denominated as a Study Center location outside of the state of Oklahoma The university expects that one in five OU students who study abroad will go through the Arezzo campus citation needed The Arezzo campus has been described by university president David Boren as a first step for students and their parents to become acquainted with the world and gain an educational experience in a foreign land The campus is scheduled to be dedicated in the summer of 2016 Boren chose the smaller town of Arezzo in part because of the small size of the town relative to nearby Florence which boasts programs from about 50 American universities With such a large number of American college students in Florence Boren was concerned that OU students would have socialized with other Americans rather than the local Italians 70 Other study centers Edit OU has study centers in Puebla Mexico and Rio de Janeiro Brazil A center is planned for Izmir Turkey Academics EditAcademic rankingsNationalARWU 71 115 133Forbes 72 125THE WSJ 73 244U S News amp World Report 74 127Washington Monthly 75 177GlobalARWU 76 501 600QS 77 701 750THE 78 501 600U S News amp World Report 79 425National Program Rankings 80 Program RankingBiological Sciences 112Business 85Chemistry 96Computer Science 111Earth Sciences 54Economics 90Education 79Engineering 114English 77Fine Arts 158Health Care Management 55History 63Law 76Library amp Information Studies 28Mathematics 74Medicine Primary Care 63Medicine Research 70Pharmacy 31Physician Assistant 46Physics 83Political Science 61Psychology 131Public Affairs 72Public Health 62Social Work 77Sociology 75Global Program Rankings 81 Program RankingEngineering 530Environment Ecology 187Geosciences 127Physics 290Plant and Animal Sciences 412Social Sciences amp Public Health 443Space Science 227The University of Oklahoma is a large residential research university 9 The university consists of fifteen colleges including 152 majors 8 Native American studies includes language classes in Cherokee 82 Choctaw Mvskoke and Kiowa 83 as part of the university s Native American language program currently Creek Choctaw and Cherokee I II and III are offered in both fall and spring semesters 83 The university has a high four year full time undergraduate enrollment including a high transfer in population 9 While the two main campuses are in Norman and Oklahoma City affiliated programs in Tulsa expand access for students in eastern Oklahoma Some of the programs in Tulsa include architecture arts and sciences education engineering medicine nursing public health allied health and liberal arts studies 84 Gaylord Hall home of the Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication finished construction in 2004 In addition to 152 majors to choose from the University of Oklahoma also has a nationally recognized Honors College featuring its own dedicated faculty dormitories and writing center 85 Every student from any major can apply to the college if accepted the student is eligible to take honors classes and graduate cum laude In order to graduate with honors the student must complete 18 credit hours of honors classes and submit an honors thesis Transfer students are able to transfer up to nine credit hours of honor classes from a different university 86 Students come from all 50 U S states and over 100 countries 32 of the 2006 freshmen were in the top 10 of their high school class 87 Ethnic minority groups represent over 25 of newly enrolled undergraduates 88 and 27 of all students 89 In addition the university has an enrollment of over 700 National Merit Scholars making it first per capita among public universities 8 In addition to being a member of the Southeastern Universities Research Association and Universities Research Association undergraduate admission to the University of Oklahoma is categorized by the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education as more selective For the 2010 2011 school year 9 996 applied and 8 498 were admitted 85 9 The university s freshman retention rate in 2009 was 82 and the six year graduation rate was 62 0 90 In May 2019 U S News amp World Report said that the University of Oklahoma gave inflated data on its alumni giving rates for two decades and in response would show the university as unranked in its 2019 edition of Best Colleges rankings 91 Museums and libraries Edit Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art on the University of Oklahoma campus has a different architectural style than the rest of the campus The university has two prominent museums the Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art and the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History The Museum of Art was founded in 1936 and originally headed by Oscar Jacobson the director of the School of Art at the time The museum opened with over 2 500 items on display and was originally on campus in Jacobson Hall Mr and Mrs Fred Jones of Oklahoma City donated money for a permanent building in 1971 and the building was named in honor of their son who died in a plane crash during his senior year at the University of Oklahoma 92 Since then the museum has acquired many renowned works of Native American art and in 2000 received the Weitzenhoffer Collection of French Impressionism which includes works by Degas Gauguin Monet Pissarro Renoir Toulouse Lautrec Van Gogh and Vuillard As of 2011 update the museum has over 65 000 square feet 6 000 m2 filled with over 8 000 items from a wide array of time periods and movements 92 In 2005 the museum expanded with the opening of the new Lester Wing designed by contemporary architect Hugh Newell Jacobsen The architectural style of the new addition deviates from the Collegiate Gothic style of the university but Jacobsen felt this was necessary given the contemporary works of art the wing would house 93 The Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History south of the main campus and directly southwest of the law building specializes in the history of the people and animals that have inhabited Oklahoma over the last 300 million years Since its founding in 1899 the museum has acquired over 5 million objects In 2000 a new building was opened to house the ever expanding museum The new building offered nearly 200 000 square feet 18 600 m2 of space to display the many exhibits the museum has to offer 94 Great Reading Room inside Bizzell Memorial Library The University of Oklahoma Library system has its headquarters in Bizzell Memorial Library The largest research library in Oklahoma it contains over 4 7 million volumes and is ranked by whom 27th out of 113 research libraries in North America in volumes held 95 It contains more than 1 6 million photographs subscriptions to over 31 000 periodicals over 1 5 million maps government documents dating back to 1893 and over 50 incunabula 95 It has five locations on campus The primary library is Bizzell Memorial Library in the middle of the main campus Other notable campus libraries include the Architecture Library the Fine Arts Library and the Geology Library The OU library system contains many unique collections such as the History of Science Collections which houses over 94 000 volumes related to the history of science 96 including hand noted works by Galileo Galilei 97 the Bizzell Bible Collection and the Western History Collection The School of Library and Information Studies SLIS the only American Library Association accredited program in Oklahoma 98 offers a graduate degree Master of Library and Information Studies and an undergraduate degree Bachelor of Arts in Information Studies The impact of OU and SLIS on the history of libraries in Oklahoma is shown in the recent list of 100 Oklahoma Library Legends as produced by the Oklahoma Library Association 99 Two current faculty one faculty emeriti and numerous others associated with either the OU libraries or SLIS account for nearly 10 of the list s members Residential life Edit The Walker Couch Adams and DLB dorm buildings make up four of the school s residential halls Oklahoma requires with few exceptions that all freshmen live in one of the six residence halls 100 Each residence hall has its own RSA Resident Student Association office as well as its own computer lab and laundry facilities The most popular living option among freshmen is the Towers three 12 story buildings on the south side of campus Adams Center is split into four smaller towers Johnson McCasland Muldrow and Tarman all united by a common ground floor It has amenities such as a 24 hour study room free tutoring courtesy of the University College 101 and Raising Cane s Couch Center is split into east and west wings It features Couch Express a quick stop restaurant and a lounge that has a 3D printing lab and separate study rooms Walker Center also split into east and west wings has a spacious kitchen on the first floor It also houses a convenience store called Xcetera as well as Housing and Food services The Towers have suite style rooms where two neighboring rooms share a bathroom They are all around each other with the Couch Restaurants often referred to by students as the Caf completing the residence community Couch Restaurants is an all you can eat buffet composed of several different themed restaurants that serves a wide variety of food each day David L Boren Hall is the fourth major residence hall on campus Although it is commonly believed that this residence hall caters only to honors students a large proportion of non honors students live there 102 It has community style bathrooms that are regularly cleaned by staff and shared with approximately 10 16 people Headington Hall completed in the Summer of 2013 is the fifth major residence hall on campus and is on the corner of Lindsey and Jenkins street This facility is named after Tim Headington OU graduate and former OU tennis player The housing facility contains 400 students 49 percent student athletes and 51 percent students who do not participate in intercollegiate sports 103 The residential colleges which are Dunham and Headington Colleges are the sixth and newest major residence hall having opened in Fall 2017 The majority of students who live in the residential colleges are upperclassmen but some freshmen are allowed to live here if at least one of the roommates is in the Honors College 104 Dunham and Headington are connected by a dining hall that is open to all students The university owns several apartment complexes around the campus Some of these apartments were old and dilapidated and the university has taken the strides to resolve this issue Two brand new complexes owned by the university opened in recent years OU Traditions Square East in 2005 and OU Traditions Square West in 2006 105 Due to a low cost of living in Oklahoma many students find it financially viable to live off campus in either apartments or houses In recent years many new apartment or condominium complexes not including the OU owned properties have been built 106 in addition to a booming housing market that is resulting in Norman spreading further east Many students also commute from nearby Moore and Oklahoma City both north of Norman Student organizations activities and media EditStudent body composition as of May 2 2022 Race and ethnicity 107 TotalWhite 60 60 Hispanic 11 11 Other a 10 10 Asian 7 7 Black 5 5 Native American 3 3 Foreign national 3 3 Economic diversityLow income b 24 24 Affluent c 76 76 The Pride of Oklahoma Marching Band performs during pre game and halftimes at football games The Pride of Oklahoma the university s marching band celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2004 and consists of 311 student musicians and dancers from 19 states Students wishing to enter the band go through a rigorous audition process The band plays at every home football game A smaller pep band which usually consists of 100 members travels to every away football game The full band makes trips to the AT amp T Red River Rivalry game against The University of Texas Big 12 Championship Game bowl games and other games of importance Members of the band are also present for many student events It was awarded the Sudler Trophy in 1987 In 2007 The Pride of Oklahoma marched in the Macy s Thanksgiving Day Parade making it one of only a few bands to have ever marched in both the Tournament of Roses and Macy s Parades 108 The University of Oklahoma Army ROTC assembled in formation at its Fall 2007 Field Training Exercise The local chapter of the Army ROTC provides officer training and education for nearly 100 OU students Officially founded in 1919 it is one of the oldest such programs in the nation OU Army ROTC cadets are active in numerous campus and state activities They provide military color guards for Sooner football games and various on campus ceremonies and events After completing the Army ROTC program OU students receive a commission in either the Regular Army Army Reserve or National Guard The campus student radio station Studio U broadcasts over the Internet The campus TV station OUTV features student produced programming five nights a week and is available on Public access television cable TV Cox Communications Ch 124 ATT uVerse 99 also via Facebook and YouTube sites OU Nightly the live student newscast airs weekdays at 7 00am 12 00pm 4 30pm live and 9 30pm Sooner Sportspad a live sports program airs live Monday nights at 7 30 on Fox Sports SW and throughout the week as repeats on OUTV Oklahoma s Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication programs Studio U and OUTV Oklahoma s Department of Continuing Education operates KROU and KGOU a public radio station broadcasting on 106 3 FM KGOU is affiliated with NPR The campus newspaper The Oklahoma Daily is produced daily during the fall and spring semesters and weekly during the summer semester The Oklahoma Daily s sister publication Sooner yearbook creates a 400 page coffee table book for current students and alumni Sooner ranked as one of the top two yearbooks nationwide focuses on capturing the year with storytelling packages of text photos and design 109 Athletics EditMain article Oklahoma Sooners Sports at OklahomaMen s Women sBaseball Basketball Cross country Football Golf Gymnastics Tennis Track amp field Wrestling Basketball Cross country Golf Gymnastics Rowing Soccer Softball Tennis Track amp field Volleyball Several main athletic facilities are grouped together at the Norman campus The school s sports teams are called the Sooners a nickname given to early settlers during the land run who sneaked into the offered territory and staked claims illegally before they were officially allowed to They participate in the NCAA s Division I Bowl Subdivision and in the Big 12 Conference The school sponsors nine sports for both men and women The university has claimed 36 team national championships which includes 7 football national championships football championships are not awarded by the NCAA 11 By far OU s most famous and storied athletic program is the football program which has produced seven Heisman Trophy winners Billy Vessels in 1952 Steve Owens in 1969 Billy Sims in 1978 Jason White in 2003 Sam Bradford in 2008 Baker Mayfield in 2017 and Kyler Murray in 2018 110 Many Pro Football Hall of Famers including Lee Roy Selmon and Troy Aikman also attended the University of Oklahoma In 1988 OU became the first school to participate in both the football and basketball national championships in the same year an achievement unequaled until the 2006 season when Ohio State and the University of Florida were both in each with Florida winning both games Oklahoma also currently holds the record for the longest winning streak in NCAA Division I history when they won 47 consecutive games between 1953 and 1957 111 In reference to the team s success and popularity as a symbol of state pride George Lynn Cross OU s president from 1943 to 1968 once told the Oklahoma State Senate I want a university the football team can be proud of 112 University of Oklahoma mascot The wrestling program is the fourth most decorated in college wrestling having won seven national championships Note 1 The men s gymnastics team has won twelve national championships the most out of all sports at the University of Oklahoma Note 2 In addition Oklahoma has produced five Nissen Emery Award winners more than any other school and the only school with back to back honorees 113 The women s gymnastics team was crowned co national champions with the University of Florida in 2014 and won back to back national championships in 2016 and 2017 114 The softball team has won six national championships the first in 2000 115 another in 2013 back to back titles in 2016 and 2017 and back to back titles in 2021 and 2022 The baseball team won a national championship in 1951 and 1994 116 On May 10 2007 the university announced the addition of women s rowing to the intercollegiate athletics program 117 A rowing facility will be built on the Oklahoma River near downtown Oklahoma City This is the first sport added since women s soccer was added in 1996 117 The University of Oklahoma has had a long and bitter rivalry with the University of Texas known as the Red River Shootout Red River Rivalry or OU Texas with Texas having the better overall record at 59 43 5 This rivalry is often thought of as a contest of state pride along with school pride OU also has a long standing rivalry with Oklahoma State University Known as the Bedlam Series it encompasses all the athletic contests between the two universities with the winner receiving the Bedlam Bell Another major historic rival is the University of Nebraska which was part of the Big 8 Conference with Oklahoma and later joined with Oklahoma and other schools in the formation of the Big 12 Conference The Sooners made football history December 6 2008 when they scored sixty or more points in five consecutive games This achievement occurred during their victory over the University of Missouri for the Big 12 Championship On June 30 2021 the Oklahoma State Board of Regents unanimously accepted an invitation to join the Southeastern Conference SEC along with the University of Texas beginning on July 1 2025 118 Notable people and alumni EditMain article List of University of Oklahoma people Carl Albert former U S speaker of the House of Representatives David Boren former Oklahoma governor and U S senator Tom Coburn physician and U S senator Fred Haise NASA Apollo 13 astronaut Ed Harris Golden Globe Award winning actor The Truman Show Peter MacDonald Navajo code talker 7th chairman of the Navajo Nation Susana Martinez governor of New MexicoSee also Edit2005 University of Oklahoma bombing Boomer Sooner Neustadt International Prize for Literature Red telephone box RUF NEKSNotes Edit In 1936 1951 1952 1957 1960 1963 and 1974 In 1977 1978 1991 2002 2003 2005 2006 2008 2015 2016 2017 and 2018 Notes Edit Other consists of Multiracial Americans amp those who prefer to not say The percentage of students who received an income based federal Pell grant intended for low income students The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum References Edit Civi et Reipublicae Archived from the original on November 3 2014 Retrieved December 13 2015 As of June 30 2021 University of Oklahoma Foundation Audit Report FY 2021 PDF Archived PDF from the original on December 13 2021 Retrieved December 13 2021 a b Employees by Campus Fall 2003 2007 2008 OU Factbook University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on November 9 2013 Retrieved February 8 2009 a b c College Navigator University of Oklahoma Norman Campus Archived from the original on February 24 2021 Retrieved August 2 2019 Brand Colors Print amp Web Archived from the original on November 24 2016 Retrieved November 19 2016 Cobb David Dodd Dennis July 30 2021 Texas Oklahoma join SEC Longhorns Sooners accept invitations as Big 12 powers begin new wave of realignment Archived July 30 2021 at the Wayback Machine CBS Sports University of Oklahoma Enrollment Summary Report Spring 2022 PDF February 7 2022 Archived PDF from the original on May 5 2022 Retrieved May 20 2022 a b c OU Facts University of Oklahoma Public Affairs Archived from the original on April 30 2006 Retrieved June 7 2006 a b c d Carnegie Classifications Institution Lookup carnegieclassifications iu edu Center for Postsecondary Education Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved July 26 2020 Table 20 Higher education R amp D expenditures ranked by FY 2018 R amp D expenditures FYs 2009 18 ncsesdata nsf gov National Science Foundation Archived from the original on June 11 2020 Retrieved July 26 2020 a b National Championships University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on October 8 2017 Retrieved October 7 2017 Levy David 2005 The University of Oklahoma A History Volume I 1890 1917 Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press p 14 ISBN 978 0 8061 3703 2 a b c Gumprecht Blake January 2007 The Campus as a Public Space in the American College Town Journal of Historical Geography 33 1 72 103 doi 10 1016 j jhg 2005 12 001 Archived from the original on August 22 2007 Retrieved May 16 2007 Gillham Omer Summer 1997 Did David Ross Boyd Plant that Tree PDF Sooner Magazine LCCN 46043016 Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved May 16 2007 Chronological History 1890 present 2006 OU Factbook University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on September 8 2006 Retrieved June 5 2006 a b Long Charles F September 1965 With Optimism For the Morrow A History of The University of Oklahoma PDF Sooner Magazine LCCN 46043016 Archived from the original on February 2 2015 Retrieved June 23 2006 Levy David 1975 The University of Oklahoma A History Volume I 1890 1917 Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1975 p 121 ISBN 978 0 8061 1241 1 Campus Evans Hall Archived from the original on May 28 2010 Retrieved August 17 2010 Levy David W Spring 1996 Combating the Image of Godlessness in 1909 PDF Sooner Magazine pp 28 30 Archived PDF from the original on July 25 2006 Retrieved July 3 2006 Levy David 1975 The University of Oklahoma A History Volume I 1890 1917 Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1975 pp 165 66 172 173 ISBN 978 0 8061 1241 1 a b Total Headcount Enrollment 1892 to Present 2006 OU Factbook University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on September 8 2006 Retrieved June 6 2006 a b A University Moves South PDF Sooner Magazine January 1961 LCCN 46043016 Archived PDF from the original on September 7 2006 Retrieved January 22 2007 U S Naval Administration in World War II HyperWar Foundation 2011 Archived from the original on January 12 2012 Retrieved September 29 2011 Floren Sigfrid December 1941 O U s Quarter Million Airport Sooner Magazine LCCN 46043016 Beloved lump Mount Williams will be coming down soon Norman Transcript August 2003 Retrieved August 1 2008 permanent dead link Scheffer David J March 1998 The clear and present danger of war crimes Speech Norman Oklahoma Archived from the original on October 13 2007 Retrieved January 15 2007 Burr Carol J October 1963 Always Room for One More Sooner Magazine Cianci Salvatore Susan September 1 2001 National Historic Landmark Nomination Bizzell Library University of Oklahoma PDF National Park Service 4 photos exterior and interior undated PDF Under Construction Archived from the original on October 30 2005 Retrieved June 2 2006 About OKFIRST University of Oklahoma Board of Regents Archived from the original on March 20 2007 Retrieved January 8 2007 Explosion Kills One at Oklahoma Campus The New York Times October 2 2005 Wagner Meg University of Oklahoma president evicts Sigma Alpha Epsilon brothers from campus frat house after racist video nydailynews com Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved July 26 2020 Julia Glum March 10 2015 University Of Oklahoma Racist Fraternity Video 2 SAE Students Expelled For Leadership Role International Business Times Archived from the original on June 30 2015 Retrieved August 3 2015 Parker Rice identified as student expelled from OU after racist chant OU Daily March 10 2015 Archived from the original on March 1 2016 Retrieved March 10 2015 Lukianoff Greg February 17 2016 The 10 Worst Colleges for Free Speech 2016 The Huffington Post Archived from the original on May 6 2016 Retrieved April 18 2016 OU President Jim Gallogly Announces Plans to Retire University of Oklahoma May 12 2019 Archived from the original on May 13 2019 Retrieved May 13 2019 OU names Joseph Harroz Jr interim president he will hold position at least 15 months Tulsa World Archived from the original on May 17 2019 Retrieved May 19 2019 Hoover John E Oklahoma Board of Regents name Joe Harroz OU s 15th president Sports Illustrated Oklahoma Sooners News Analysis and More Archived from the original on May 14 2021 Retrieved May 14 2021 Institutional Research amp Reporting Archived from the original on February 24 2010 Retrieved April 20 2011 SoonerSports Oklahoma Athletics The University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on February 2 2013 Retrieved March 11 2013 Enrollment by Gender 1973 74 to 2003 04 2004 OU Factbook University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved May 16 2007 OU St Anselm Joint Archaeological Dig in Italy Topic of Presentation on Thursday University of Oklahoma March 11 2008 Archived from the original on July 2 2010 Retrieved February 5 2016 a b Norman Campus Enrollment Summary By Major Fall 2005 University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on September 7 2006 Retrieved June 1 2006 Norman CART METRO Transit CART Cleveland Area Rapid Transit Archived from the original on November 23 2005 Retrieved May 18 2007 Provine Jeff 2013 Campus Ghosts of Norman Oklahoma History Press Brestovansky Mike OU ghosts Friends or foes OU Daily Oct 3 2014 The University of Oklahoma Visitor Center University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on September 11 2007 Retrieved May 7 2007 Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art Collections Weitzenhoffer Collection University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on April 16 2007 Retrieved May 7 2007 Goddard Health Services Retrieved December 13 2017 permanent dead link Williams Victoria September 20 2004 Speakers Dedicate Memorial to Fallen Sooner Veterans OU Daily Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved January 25 2007 Peterson Althea September 16 2004 Monument To Be Dedicated to OU s Fallen Veterans OU Daily Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved January 25 2007 Academic Arts Community University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on November 10 2010 Retrieved October 22 2010 Groover Sara Academic offices to move to Cate Oklahoma Daily Archived from the original on October 5 2011 Retrieved April 19 2011 Oklahoma Center for Continuing Education University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on November 12 2010 Retrieved October 22 2010 Swan Stacy September 25 2003 Campus in Bloom OU Daily Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved January 25 2007 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 100 Wind Power Coming to University of Oklahoma Sooner Rather Than Later TreeHugger Archived from the original on September 26 2008 Retrieved September 23 2008 Energy Management University of Oklahoma June 24 2022 Archived from the original on July 10 2022 Retrieved June 18 2022 Boren ushers in OG amp E wind energy agreement Archived from the original on February 5 2011 Retrieved March 22 2009 AABI Accredited Institutions aabi aero Archived from the original on March 28 2013 Retrieved March 11 2013 Marx Michael January 24 2002 Supreme Court Justice O Connor to come to OU OU Daily Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved May 30 2006 University Research Campus The University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on February 2 2009 Retrieved February 8 2009 URC Web Page University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on April 28 2009 Retrieved February 7 2009 Weathernews Opens State of Art Operations Center on The University of Oklahoma s South Research Campus Press release Weathernews Inc October 21 2004 Archived from the original on March 14 2006 Retrieved May 30 2006 University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center General Information University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on February 8 2007 Retrieved January 30 2007 Burr Carol 2003 A Foundation for the Future Sooner Magazine Archived from the original on February 12 2006 Retrieved May 30 2006 Krehbiel Randy Fall 2002 Tulsa Time PDF Sooner Magazine pp 4 11 LCCN 46043016 Archived PDF from the original on June 20 2007 Retrieved January 30 2007 OU Tulsa Project Updates Vision2025 City of Tulsa Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved July 18 2006 a b Allen Silas April 22 2012 University of Oklahoma renovates Tuscan monastery for use as overseas campus News OK Archived from the original on February 23 2016 Retrieved February 14 2016 ShanghaiRanking s Academic Ranking of World Universities Shanghai Ranking Consultancy Retrieved September 13 2022 Forbes America s Top Colleges List 2022 Forbes Retrieved September 13 2022 Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education College Rankings 2022 The Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education Retrieved July 26 2022 2022 2023 Best National Universities U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 13 2022 2022 National University Rankings Washington Monthly Retrieved September 13 2022 ShanghaiRanking s Academic Ranking of World Universities Shanghai Ranking Consultancy Retrieved September 13 2022 QS World University Rankings 2023 Quacquarelli Symonds Retrieved July 26 2022 World University Rankings 2022 Times Higher Education Retrieved July 26 2022 2022 Best Global Universities Rankings U S News amp World Report Retrieved July 26 2022 University of Oklahoma U S News Best Grad School Rankings U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on March 6 2022 Retrieved March 7 2022 University of Oklahoma U S News Best Global University Rankings U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on March 7 2022 Retrieved October 3 2020 Cherokee Ethnologue Archived from the original on July 30 2015 Retrieved August 3 2015 a b Native American Language Program College of Arts and Sciences The University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on November 23 2011 Retrieved August 3 2015 University of 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false data to U S News college rankings for 20 years CNN Archived from the original on May 23 2019 Retrieved May 24 2019 a b Museum History Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art Archived from the original on September 7 2006 Retrieved June 2 2006 Rickard Jennifer December 9 2004 New Home For Art To Open OU Daily Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved January 22 2007 Our History Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History Archived from the original on May 24 2005 Retrieved June 2 2006 a b Library Facts University of Oklahoma Libraries Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved June 2 2006 Department of the History of Science Department of the History of Science University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on May 21 2019 Retrieved May 17 2007 Rader Jesse April 1952 DeGolyer and the History of Science PDF Sooner Magazine LCCN 46043016 Archived PDF from the original on June 20 2007 Retrieved May 17 2007 Alphabetical List of Institutions with ALA Accredited 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apartments means more perks for tenants OU Daily Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved January 25 2007 College Scorecard University of Oklahoma United States Department of Education Archived from the original on February 20 2021 Retrieved May 8 2022 Waters Michael Summer 2004 100 Years of the Pride of Oklahoma Sooner Magazine LCCN 46043016 Archived from the original PDF on July 18 2007 Retrieved January 25 2007 OU Student Media studentmedia ou edu Archived from the original on February 5 2007 Retrieved January 25 2007 Heisman Winners Heisman com Archived from the original on October 21 2015 Retrieved October 18 2015 Richard M Campbell Gary K Johnson Sean W Straziscar J D Hamilton Jim Wright August 2006 Official 2006 NCAA Divisions I A and I AA Football Records Book PDF NCAA p 29 ISBN 978 1 57243 908 5 ISSN 0735 5475 Archived from the original PDF on December 22 2006 Retrieved May 9 2007 The Creation of Quality Time Time Magazine June 2 1967 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved January 8 2007 Five Nissen Award Winners The University of Oklahoma Department of Intercollegiate Athletics Archived from the original on August 12 2007 Retrieved August 21 2007 Sooners Celebrate 2017 at Championship Banquet soonersports com Archived from the original on February 19 2018 Retrieved March 16 2018 2007 Softball Media Guide The University of Oklahoma Department of Intercollegiate Athletics p 108 Archived from the original on July 18 2007 Retrieved August 21 2007 1994 Baseball National Championship The University of Oklahoma Department of Intercollegiate Athletics Archived from the original on July 18 2007 Retrieved August 21 2007 a b OU Athletics Adds Women s Rowing The University of Oklahoma Department of Intercollegiate Athletics May 10 2007 Archived from the original on August 9 2007 Retrieved August 21 2007 Texas Oklahoma regents accept SEC invitation ESPN com July 30 2021 Archived from the original on October 9 2021 Retrieved October 15 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of Oklahoma Official website University of Oklahoma Athletics website Historic American Landscapes Survey HALS No OK 39 University of Oklahoma Bounded by Boyd Street on the North Timberdell Road on the South Chautauqua Avenue on the West and Jenkins Avenue Norman Cleveland OK Oklahoma University of Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 Oklahoma University of New International Encyclopedia 1905 Coordinates 35 12 31 N 97 26 45 W 35 20861 N 97 44583 W 35 20861 97 44583 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title University of Oklahoma amp oldid 1134058190, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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