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A crowning achievement of the district was the opening, during the 1970–1971 school year, of two new high schools: Westland High School and Grove City High School. These two buildings, planned to house two thousand students, were built in 1970-1971 at the amazing low cost of $18.98 per square foot, or a perpupil cost of $1,700.
Tulsa is home to a variety of colleges and universities, including: National American University- Tulsa campus [1] New York University - Tulsa Global Site [2] Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences - (Tulsa) Langston University - Tulsa campus; Oklahoma State University Institute of Technology (OSUIT Okmulgee)
It serves approximately 23,000 students per year in classes. [3] TCC consists of four main campuses, two community campuses, and a conference center situated throughout the Tulsa metropolitan area with an annual budget of approximately $112 million. The college employs about 2,270 people, including 280 full-time faculty and 536 adjunct faculty.
Tulsa Public Schools is an independent school district serving the Tulsa, Oklahoma area in Northeastern Oklahoma. As of 2022, it is the largest school district in Oklahoma, surpassing Oklahoma City Public Schools for the first time since 2013. [3] As of 2022 the district serves approximately 33,211 students. [3] It is governed by an elected ...
Tulsa: Public Research University (included with main campus) 1999 Oklahoma State University - Center for Health Sciences: Tulsa: Public Research University 1,459 1972 Rogers State University: Claremore: Public Baccalaureate / Associates Colleges 3,155 1909 Southwestern Oklahoma State University: Weatherford: Public Masters University: 4,777 1909
Nex, 16, got into a fight with other students at the Owasso High School West Campus, northeast of Tulsa, on Feb. 7. The student's mother took him to the hospital following the fight and called ...
Bishop Kelley High School is an American Lasallian Catholic high school with 905 students, grades 9 to 12, located at 41st and Hudson Avenue, in the center of the Tulsa metropolitan area (in the Midtown area), on a campus spanning just over 47 acres (150,000 m 2). [1]
The Tulsa School Board established a system of desegregation busing. As part of this policy, Booker T. Washington became a magnet school; it no longer had a home neighborhood from which students were accepted. Students instead had to apply for admission and were drawn from across the district. A racial quota system was established and, until ...