History of University Outreach
The University of Oklahoma
Outreach College of Continuing Education
and College
of Liberal Studies began in 1913
as the Extension
Division of OU, becoming
the Continuing Education and Public Service
Division in 1962. In 1992, the division
became the College
of Continuing Education.
In 2001, University
Outreach was chosen as a branding tool to
provide a way to speak to the diversity
of the college in a more inclusive manner.
Since its inception, the college has grown
to include for-credit programs and degree
programs, grant and contract-sponsored
programs and a wealth of noncredit programs.
Dr. Thurman
J. White, a pioneering contributor
to the theoretical base of adult education,
conceived and played an active role in
the design and development of the Oklahoma
Center for Continuing Education (OCCE),
now called University
Outreach. The center’s
design turned theory into practice (that
architectural design can significantly
influence communication and learning).
University Outreach is one
of eleven W. K. Kellogg Foundation-funded,
university-based residential conference
centers in the world.
Annually, Outreach offers more than 2,000
courses and activities in more than 30
different program formats to more than
200,000 nontraditional learners throughout
the world. More than 500 staffers are employed
by Outreach
around the world.
For every $1 of state funds invested,
Outreach generates more than $35 of new
revenues and services, impacting the economy
statewide and earns 48
percent of all grant and contract awards
received by the OU Norman campus, the largest
of all colleges, at $55 million.
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