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Establishing MU High School in 1999 as an accredited diploma-granting high school enabled CDIS to provide students in Missouri and elsewhere with a complete program, as well as to fulfill the university's land-grant mission in new ways. [5] The MU High School recently merged with Mizzou K-12 Online in order to offer more courses to online students.
A Second Home: Missouri's Early Schools (U of Missouri Press, 2006) online; a scholarly history; Troen, Selwyn K. "Popular education in nineteenth century St. Louis." History of Education Quarterly 13.1 (1973): 23-40. Troen, Selwyn K. The Public and the Schools: Shaping the St. Louis System, 1838–1920 (1975), a major scholarly study online
In 2006, the name was changed to the University of Central Missouri. There are 150 majors and minors, 32 professional accreditations and 45 graduate programs. UCM has a high-tech, STEM-focused facility called the Missouri Innovation Campus in Lee's Summit, Missouri [5] and provides numerous online courses and programs. [6]
The Missouri Digital Heritage Initiative is a collaborative effort that expands the amount of information available online about Missouri's past. In 2007, Secretary of State Robin Carnahan proposed this landmark initiative to further Missourians’ access to information about the history of Missouri and local communities.
The next year, it began offering general education courses located in the North Town Mall. September 1990 the schools founding president was chosen to be Dr. Norman K. Meyers. [3] In 1994, the schools name was shortened to Ozarks Technical Community College. [4] [5] In 2003, it became one of the first smoke-free campuses in the country. [6]
Administration of primary and secondary public schools in the state is conducted by the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. [2] Education is compulsory from ages seven to seventeen in Missouri, commonly but not exclusively divided into three tiers: elementary school, middle school or junior high school, and high school.
Enjoy a classic game of Hearts and watch out for the Queen of Spades!
Missouri Historical Review 79 (April 1985): 357–372. online; Eisenman, Harry J. "Origins of engineering education in Missouri", Missouri Historical Review (1969) 63#4 pp 451–460. online; Huber, Patrick, and Foster, Stephen "Making Boys into Miners: The Freshman Fight and Hazing at the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy, 1903–1945."