Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
There are 226 colleges and universities in the State of Texas that are listed under the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education.These institutions include thirty-four research universities, twenty-nine master's universities, ninety-two undergraduate schools, and seventy-one special-focus institutions.
List of Public Universities in Texas by Fall Enrollment University 2023 2022 2021 [1] 2020 [1] ... This page was last edited on 12 November 2024, at 00:40 (UTC).
This article is a partial list of business schools in Texas. Business schools are listed in alphabetical order by name. Schools named after people are alphabetized by last name. The AACSB International―The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business is the oldest, largest, and most respected of the accreditation boards for business ...
Stephen F. Austin's addition to the UT System was approved by the Texas Legislature during the 2023 session. The identically worded House and Senate bills that would formally add SFA to the UT System specified that SFA would retain its name, but with the phrase "a member of The University of Texas System" appended to the legal school name.
St. Mary's University School of Law: St. Mary's University: San Antonio: 1927 148-194 [Note 2] University of Texas School of Law: University of Texas at Austin: Austin: 1883 16 Texas A&M University School of Law: Texas A&M University: Fort Worth: 1989 60 [Note 3] [Note 4] [Note 5] Texas Tech University School of Law: Texas Tech University ...
Our Lady of the Lake University was the first San Antonio institution of higher education to receive regional accreditation. It has been accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools since 1923. In 1927, it became the third Texas school to be approved by the American Association of Universities.
The Cambridge School of Dallas in Dallas, Texas (5–12); Cassata Catholic High School in Fort Worth, Texas (9–12); Cathedral High School in El Paso, Texas (9–12); Cathedral School of St. Mary in Austin, Texas (K-8)
All of the system's components had their names changed from state colleges to state universities in 1969 [8] [19] while East Texas (Texas A&M-Commerce) [20] and West Texas (West Texas A&M) [21] left the system entirely in 1969 to become independent before settling on their present affiliations with the Texas A&M University System.