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The medical school building now houses the University of Arkansas at Little Rock's William H. Bowen School of Law; the hospital building was torn down and became the law school's parking lot. In 1950, a 26-acre (110,000 m 2 ) tract of land on West Markham Street was formally deeded to the university by the Arkansas State Hospital, a state-owned ...
This is a list of colleges and universities in Arkansas. This list also includes other educational institutions providing higher education , meaning tertiary , quaternary , and, in some cases, post-secondary education .
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (2 C, 4 P) Pages in category "Medical schools in Arkansas" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.
The University of Arkansas College of Medicine was founded in October, 1879 by eight Arkansas physicians, led by Dr. P. O. Hooper of Little Rock. The physicians pooled $5,000 to acquire the former Sperindo Restaurant and Hotel in downtown Little Rock, the first location of the medical school at that time known as the Medical Department of ...
The school opened in 1975 as Ozarka Vocational-Technical School and was renamed to Ozarka Technical College by the Arkansas legislature in 1991. In 1999, it dropped the word Technical from its name to emphasize its wider range of programs. Currently the college enrolls approximately 1,500 students per semester. [1]
The campus of ARCOM is located on 542 acres in Fort Smith, Arkansas. [1] Construction on the main building began in March 2015. [2] The building is a three-story 102,000 ft.² facility, with construction costs estimated at $32.4 million. [2]
Arkansas State University Three Rivers (ASU Three Rivers) is a public, two year college in Malvern, Arkansas. In 2020, it joined the ASU System and changed to its current name. ASU Three Rivers has approximately 3,500 students annually through its degree programs, technical courses, and community educational offerings.
Southeast Arkansas College was originally named Arkansas Vocational-Technical School. It began offering postsecondary vocational-technical programs on September 21, 1959. Act 328 of 1957 set the stage for it to become the first vocational-technical school in Arkansas to meet the needs of industry and to provide jobs, and raise the standard of ...