About University of Oregon Online
The University of Oregon Online offers a variety of Distance Education courses designed to allow admitted and non-admitted students the flexibility of completing coursework outside the traditional classroom. Distance Education classes can be taken from virtually anywhere that has Internet access.
Take a Course
Taking a UO credit course without formal admission.
Even if you are not a currently admitted UO student, it is still possible to take courses at the UO. Through the Community Education Program, students can take almost any course offered by the UO, including Distance Education courses.
Online distance education courses for enrolled UO students.
Take a course that fits your lifestyle. Online courses can help resolve schedule conflicts you may have with other courses, employment, athletics, family responsibilities, or your ability to take a course on campus. The University offers online courses from twelve programs on the main campus.
About the UO
The University of Oregon is a world-class teaching and research university located in the beautiful Willamette Valley of Oregon. The UO offers a broad spectrum of opportunities for learning in the liberal arts and professional programs in architecture, arts, business, education, journalism, law, and music and dance. In the classrooms and laboratories, students are inspired by a faculty of prominent scholars and work side by side with eminent researchers involved in breakthrough discoveries. At the UO, both students and faculty members reach out to make connections that serve communities from small local groups to large international organizations.
Location and Size
Located in Eugene, Oregon, two hours from Portland and one hour each from the Pacific Coast and the Cascade Mountains.
Sixty major buildings on 295 acres.
Academic Offerings
The University of Oregon is a public research university and a member of the Association of American Universities, one of only two such universities in the greater Northwest.
Schools, Colleges, and Professional Schools:
Architecture and Allied Arts
Arts and Sciences
Lundquist College of Business
Education
Journalism and Communication
Law
Music and Dance
Clark Honors College
UO Libraries
2.6 million volumes and 18,000 periodicals—second largest in the Northwest.
A Brief History
1876: University of Oregon opens, with first students registering October 16.
1877: First building, later named Deady Hall, completed.
1878: First class, with five members, graduates.
1879: UO Alumni Association formed.
1884: School of Law established in Portland.
1886: Villard Hall completed. Music department added that would become School of Music in 1902.
1893: First dormitory, Friendly Hall, opens.
1894: First football game held.
1895: First track team organized. First summer session held, near Seaside.
1900: Graduate School organized. First fraternity, Sigma Nu, established. Associated Students of the University of Oregon (ASUO) organized.
1904: First Rhodes scholar, Harvey Densmore, named. First sorority (later Kappa Alpha Theta) organized.
1907: First library building, Fenton Hall, opens.
1910: Education school established. Oregana chosen as name for yearbook.
1913: Plan to consolidate University of Oregon and Oregon Agricultural College in Corvallis defeated.
1914: Schools of commerce, architecture established.
1915: Law school moves to Eugene from Portland. Johnson Hall constructed.
1916: Journalism school created from department established in 1912.
1920: Gerlinger Hall completed. Hayward Field opens. Oregon Daily Emerald replaces Oregon Emerald.
1926: First Ph.D. granted. McArthur Court finished.
1931: Museum of Art completed.
1932: Zorn-Macpherson bill to combine University of Oregon and Oregon State College at Corvallis defeated. Upper-division science courses moved to Corvallis.
1934: William Parry Murphy '14 awarded Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for his research on pernicious anemia.
1937: Library completed. Law school moves into Fenton Hall.
1939: The University of Oregon Ducks, known as the Tall Firs, win first NCAA national basketball championship. Chapman Hall opens.
1947: Athletic Director Leo Harris forms an agreement with Walt Disney to allow Oregon to use Donald Duck as school's mascot.
1949: Erb Memorial Union constructed.
1956: Oregon's Jim Bailey runs first sub-four-minute mile on U.S. soil at the Coliseum Relays in Los Angeles. Walter Brattain, M.A. '26, wins Nobel Prize in physics for his research on semiconductors.
1959: Institute of Molecular Biology created as one of the first U.S. institutes to encourage interdisciplinary research. Honors College established.
1962: Oregon wins first of five NCAA men's track championships. Virgil Boekelheide, professor of chemistry, is first UO faculty member elected to National Academy of Sciences.
1967: Autzen Stadium completed.
1969: University of Oregon elected to elite Association of American Universities.
1970: Men's track and field coach Bill Bowerman and former Ducks track star Phil Knight '59 develop the first Nike running shoe. Oregon wins its first NCAA men's cross-country
championship. School of Music's Oregon Bach Festival and Chamber Music Series founded.
1972: Steve Prefontaine runs at the UO, solidifies Eugene's status as Track Town USA.
1977: Deady and Villard halls designated National Historic Landmarks. Animal House filmed on campus.
1989: New four-building, $45.6 million science complex opens.
1992: Riverfront Research Park dedicates first building.
1994: Dave Frohnmayer named fifteenth UO president. Renovated Knight Library rededicated. University launches the Oregon Campaign, state's largest fundraising drive. The James H. Warsaw Sports Marketing Center founded.
1995: Ducks represent Pac-10 in Rose Bowl for first time in thirty-seven years.
1999: William W. Knight Law Center opens. First phase of Student Recreation Center completed.
2001: The University of Oregon celebrates 125th anniversary with publication of widely acclaimed, international award-winning Atlas of Oregon second edition.
2003: Faculty members secure a record $90.2 million in research funding. Autzen Stadium renovated and expanded. Lillis Business Complex—most environmentally friendly business school facility in country—opens.
2005: UO launches Campaign Oregon: Transforming Lives, most ambitious fundraising effort in state history. Renovated and expanded art museum reopens as Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art. Museum of Natural and Cultural History reopens with new interactive exhibits in entirely redesigned and reconstructed gallery spaces. Many Nations Longhouse opens. Ground broken for $27 million Living Learning Center, first new residence hall on campus since 1960s.
Showing posts with label Architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Architecture. Show all posts
Friday, August 14, 2009
Saturday, August 8, 2009
Norwich University
About Norwich University
At Norwich University, you'll develop traits common among leaders in every profession—discipline, integrity, confidence, critical thinking, adaptability, loyalty, and honor—through a wide range of opportunities that will empower you in lasting ways you never imagined. At the core is a rigorous academic environment emphasizing interactive classes, mentoring relationships with faculty, and extensive hands-on learning. Whether you join the Corps of Cadets or pursue a traditional collegiate experience, expect the greatest challenge of your life.
Norwich Firsts
History of Norwich University
Few American institutions of higher learning as old as Norwich University still closely adhere to the educational principles of its founders. Norwich is one of the exceptions and in a very substantial sense the institution today is the lengthened shadow of its founder, Captain Alden Partridge. The educational philosophy of Alden Partridge continues to guide Norwich University on its 175th anniversary and serves as a touchstone by which the university can be measured and appraised.
Norwich University Chronology
1819
Founded by Alden Partridge at Norwich, Vermont as "The American Literary, Scientific, and Military Academy."
1820
Band organized, oldest collegiate band in the nation. First instruction in Civil Engineering offered in the United States.
1825
Academy moves to Middletown, Connecticut.
1829
Academy moved back to Norwich, Vermont following Connecticut’s refusal to grant a charter.
1831
Construction started on the North Barracks
1834
Academy received a charter from the State of Vermont recognizing the institution as Norwich University.
1856
The Alpha Chapter of Theta Chi Fraternity founded.
1860
General Alumni Association formed and chartered.
1866
South Barracks at Norwich, Vt. burned. Norwich University moved to Northfield, Vt.
1868
First Barracks built in Northfield, Vt. Named Jackman Hall in 1907.
1880
University name is changed to Lewis College by Vermont Legislative Act. Restored to Norwich University in 1884.
1887
First Commandant and Professor of Military Science and Tactics assigned to Norwich by the United States government.
1898
Norwich designated, "The Military College of the State of Vermont" by the Vermont Legislature.
1907
Electrical Engineering Department established.
1910
First Cavalry horses arrive on campus.
1916
Norwich made a Senior Division, Cavalry Unit, of the Reserve Officer Training Corps. Harold "Doc" Martin entered the University, the first African-American cadet.
1919
Centennial Celebration, stairs and gate posts erected.
1923
The class ring tradition started.
1933
Epsilon Tau Sigma founded as an academic honor society.
1943
Special Commencement in March due to World War II.
1943–1946
University facilities devoted to Army Air Corps Air Crew Training Program; Army Specialized Training Program, and Army Specialized Training Reserve Program.
1945
First veterans return to finish their degrees.
1947
Mountain Cold Weather ROTC program inaugurated. Cavalry unit terminated.
1949
Business Administration major instituted.
1951
Honor System adopted.
1954
South Gateway constructed. Lybrand Ski Area purchased.
1955
Alden Partridge Statue unveiled.
1960
Fraternities abolished. Class clubs instituted.
1972
Merger with Vermont College.
1974
First women enter the Corps of Cadets.
1981
Acquisition of Alternative Education Programs from Goddard College.
1987
Peace Corps Preparatory Program started as national model.
1990
Five-year baccalaureate degree program in Architecture started.
1993
Opening of Kreitzberg Library.
1994
Civilian and Corps campuses merged on Northfield Campus.
1995
Cadet Tracey L. Jones, Class of ’96, is the first Norwich student to be selected as a Rhodes Scholar.
1997
Opening of the Engineering, Math, and Science Complex.
1998
Completion of the Kreitzberg Arena.
2001
Sale of Vermont College to The Union Institute and University.
2007
Completion of Wise Campus Center.
Captain Alden Partridge (1785–1854) probably did more than any other individual to promote military education in civilian institutions in the United States prior to the Civil War. Partridge originated a novel system of education which combined civilian and military studies in order to produce enlightened and useful citizen-soldiers. Like John Milton, Alden Partridge saw the ideal education as a liberal one which prepares youth for the responsibilities of peace and war. The fundamental promise of Partridge’s thinking was that education must prepare youth "to discharge, in the best possible manner, the duties they owe to themselves, to their fellow-men, and to their country."
For more than four decades the remarkably energetic Partridge labored relentlessly to promote what he called the "American System of Education." He first attempted to introduce his ideas at the United States Military Academy, but the frustration he met with them prompted him to establish the American Literary, Scientific and Military Academy at Norwich, Vermont, in 1819. The Vermont institution served as a model for several private military academies and colleges founded by Partridge, or his students, at locations throughout the United States prior to Partrdge’s death in 1854.
In organizing his plan of education, Partridge was guided in part by the U.S. Constitution. The defense of the nation is vested in the great mass of citizens who form "an impregnable bunker around the Constitution and liberties of the country." The militia had to be trained in at least the elements of military science and tactics. "Hence arises the necessity—of an extended system of military education and of a general diffusion of military knowledge." Partridge was emphatic in pointing out that he was not recommending a system of education for youth that was "purely military." The military was to be only an "appendage" to civil education.
Among the deficiencies Partridge saw in traditional "liberal education" was that it was too restrictive and not liberal enough. The standard curriculum was not sufficiently practical and was not designed to prepare youth for the duties of an American citizen. The existing system of education was deficient because it did not give adequate attention to such matters as the operations of government or to the important sources of national wealth—"agriculture, commerce, and manufacturers."
Alden Partridge’s American System of Education linked military science and training with a "civil" curriculum so broad and innovative that it won national attention at the time it was implemented. It was a bold and radical response to the educational requirements of a democratic republic. Partridge sought to transform the traditional curriculum by making it more practical, scientific, and truly liberal. He expanded the classical curriculum to include modern languages and history, as well as political economy and engineering. Indeed, Partridge’s institution was the first in the United States to offer instruction in civil engineering. Partridge also played a pioneering role in physical education and was one of the first educators to offer instruction in agriculture. He was also in the vanguard of academicians who adopted field training as a regular and important extension of theory learned in the classroom. The guiding philosophy behind Partridge’s curricular innovation contributed heavily to the concepts advanced in the College Land Grant Act of 1862, submitted to congress by Vermont Senator Justin Morrill, as well as to the legislation that created the Reserve Officers Training Corps in 1916.
Alden Partridge can be credited as one of the first Americans to use outdoor experience as an integral part of the process of education, thus anticipating the later acceptance of field trips and "outward bound" programs as legitimate educational activities. Field excursions provided excellent opportunities to combine exercise, recreation, and improvement. Arduous hikes, according to Partridge’s design for education, were physically challenging and promoted self-reliance. Students involved in excursions became accustomed to "fatigue and privation." Furthermore, they learned "to take care of themselves," a process Partridge considered essential to the proper development and education of youth.
Excursions also supplemented classroom instruction with "practical and everyday knowledge of the world, which can never be derived from books." Trips into the field provided valuable educational experiences in such areas as botany, mineralogy, surveying, engineering, military science, and history. Students visited and examined factories, navy yards, arsenals, railroads, bridges, canals, and historic sites. Alden Partridge became convinced from considerable experience, "as well as from the nature of the case," that his students derived "more real advantage" and improvement from excursions than from any other activities.
Events in the recent history of Norwich University illustrate how the growth and evolution of the institution have remained consistent with the educational principles of Alden Partridge. The merger with Vermont College in 1972 enabled Norwich to expand its academic base, extend its offering to women, and add a non-military lifestyle. Vermont College was founded in 1834 as Newbury Seminary and is notable as one of the first American institutions to offer higher education to women. Indeed, Alden Partridge was a strong advocate of female education and attempted at about the same time to establish a female division for his school at Norwich, Vermont. For more than a century after the two schools relocated to central Vermont, Norwich University and Vermont College were neighbors. Merger of the two institutions was discussed for several decades before it came about, in part because of a shared mission of leadership and service. In 1974, two years after the merger with Vermont College, women were first admitted into the Norwich University Corps of Cadets.
Also consonant with Alden Partridge’s thinking was the acquisition of four adult-centered programs from Goddard College in 1981. Alden Partridge recognized the need for a curricular flexibility that would provide students with elective opportunities and allow them to pursue an educational program at their own pace, a pedagogical attitude that explains why students ranging from adolescents to veterans of the War of 1812 could be found at his institution in the 1820’s. The programs acquired from Goddard College broadened the curriculum and enriched the educational environment by enabling Norwich to open its offering to nontraditional learners, introduce new residency patterns, diversify culturally and geographically, and significantly increase the enrollment of minority students. These programs share the University’s focus on experiential education.
Partridge’s philosophy continues to give direction to the Norwich curriculum with its special emphasis on preparing students to become useful and active citizens. In many academic programs, experiential learning is given a prominent role in order to encourage students to make connections between classroom theory and the surrounding world. The creation, in 1987, of the nation’s first Peace Corps Preparatory Program, the expansion of internship programs, and the encouragement of volunteer community service all represent an extension of those aspects of the University mission that relate to experiential learning and social service.
Today, Norwich University still closely adheres to the purposes and precepts laid out by its founder Alden Partridge in 1819. The system of education articulated by Partridge was so broad, sensible, flexible, and visionary that it continues to have extraordinary currency.
At Norwich University, you'll develop traits common among leaders in every profession—discipline, integrity, confidence, critical thinking, adaptability, loyalty, and honor—through a wide range of opportunities that will empower you in lasting ways you never imagined. At the core is a rigorous academic environment emphasizing interactive classes, mentoring relationships with faculty, and extensive hands-on learning. Whether you join the Corps of Cadets or pursue a traditional collegiate experience, expect the greatest challenge of your life.
Norwich Firsts
Norwich was the first private institution in the country to teach engineering.- Norwich was the first of all private military colleges in the nation.
- Norwich was the birthplace of ROTC.
- Norwich was one of the first military colleges to accept women.
- Norwich’s founder, Capt. Alden Partridge, brought experiential learning to U.S. education.
- Norwich University was the first to incorporate physical education into the curriculum.
- Norwich University was one of the first military colleges to successfully introduce civilian students onto its campus.
- Norwich University was one of the first institutions in the country to accept international students.
- Norwich had the first collegiate band.
- Norwich was one of the first American universities to teach agriculture.
History of Norwich University
Few American institutions of higher learning as old as Norwich University still closely adhere to the educational principles of its founders. Norwich is one of the exceptions and in a very substantial sense the institution today is the lengthened shadow of its founder, Captain Alden Partridge. The educational philosophy of Alden Partridge continues to guide Norwich University on its 175th anniversary and serves as a touchstone by which the university can be measured and appraised.
Norwich University Chronology
1819
Founded by Alden Partridge at Norwich, Vermont as "The American Literary, Scientific, and Military Academy."
1820
Band organized, oldest collegiate band in the nation. First instruction in Civil Engineering offered in the United States.
1825
Academy moves to Middletown, Connecticut.
1829
Academy moved back to Norwich, Vermont following Connecticut’s refusal to grant a charter.
1831
Construction started on the North Barracks
1834
Academy received a charter from the State of Vermont recognizing the institution as Norwich University.
1856
The Alpha Chapter of Theta Chi Fraternity founded.
1860
General Alumni Association formed and chartered.
1866
South Barracks at Norwich, Vt. burned. Norwich University moved to Northfield, Vt.
1868
First Barracks built in Northfield, Vt. Named Jackman Hall in 1907.
1880
University name is changed to Lewis College by Vermont Legislative Act. Restored to Norwich University in 1884.
1887
First Commandant and Professor of Military Science and Tactics assigned to Norwich by the United States government.
1898
Norwich designated, "The Military College of the State of Vermont" by the Vermont Legislature.
1907
Electrical Engineering Department established.
1910
First Cavalry horses arrive on campus.
1916
Norwich made a Senior Division, Cavalry Unit, of the Reserve Officer Training Corps. Harold "Doc" Martin entered the University, the first African-American cadet.
1919
Centennial Celebration, stairs and gate posts erected.
1923
The class ring tradition started.
1933
Epsilon Tau Sigma founded as an academic honor society.
1943
Special Commencement in March due to World War II.
1943–1946
University facilities devoted to Army Air Corps Air Crew Training Program; Army Specialized Training Program, and Army Specialized Training Reserve Program.
1945
First veterans return to finish their degrees.
1947
Mountain Cold Weather ROTC program inaugurated. Cavalry unit terminated.
1949
Business Administration major instituted.
1951
Honor System adopted.
1954
South Gateway constructed. Lybrand Ski Area purchased.
1955
Alden Partridge Statue unveiled.
1960
Fraternities abolished. Class clubs instituted.
1972
Merger with Vermont College.
1974
First women enter the Corps of Cadets.
1981
Acquisition of Alternative Education Programs from Goddard College.
1987
Peace Corps Preparatory Program started as national model.
1990
Five-year baccalaureate degree program in Architecture started.
1993
Opening of Kreitzberg Library.
1994
Civilian and Corps campuses merged on Northfield Campus.
1995
Cadet Tracey L. Jones, Class of ’96, is the first Norwich student to be selected as a Rhodes Scholar.
1997
Opening of the Engineering, Math, and Science Complex.
1998
Completion of the Kreitzberg Arena.
2001
Sale of Vermont College to The Union Institute and University.
2007
Completion of Wise Campus Center.
Captain Alden Partridge (1785–1854) probably did more than any other individual to promote military education in civilian institutions in the United States prior to the Civil War. Partridge originated a novel system of education which combined civilian and military studies in order to produce enlightened and useful citizen-soldiers. Like John Milton, Alden Partridge saw the ideal education as a liberal one which prepares youth for the responsibilities of peace and war. The fundamental promise of Partridge’s thinking was that education must prepare youth "to discharge, in the best possible manner, the duties they owe to themselves, to their fellow-men, and to their country."
For more than four decades the remarkably energetic Partridge labored relentlessly to promote what he called the "American System of Education." He first attempted to introduce his ideas at the United States Military Academy, but the frustration he met with them prompted him to establish the American Literary, Scientific and Military Academy at Norwich, Vermont, in 1819. The Vermont institution served as a model for several private military academies and colleges founded by Partridge, or his students, at locations throughout the United States prior to Partrdge’s death in 1854.
In organizing his plan of education, Partridge was guided in part by the U.S. Constitution. The defense of the nation is vested in the great mass of citizens who form "an impregnable bunker around the Constitution and liberties of the country." The militia had to be trained in at least the elements of military science and tactics. "Hence arises the necessity—of an extended system of military education and of a general diffusion of military knowledge." Partridge was emphatic in pointing out that he was not recommending a system of education for youth that was "purely military." The military was to be only an "appendage" to civil education.
Among the deficiencies Partridge saw in traditional "liberal education" was that it was too restrictive and not liberal enough. The standard curriculum was not sufficiently practical and was not designed to prepare youth for the duties of an American citizen. The existing system of education was deficient because it did not give adequate attention to such matters as the operations of government or to the important sources of national wealth—"agriculture, commerce, and manufacturers."
Alden Partridge’s American System of Education linked military science and training with a "civil" curriculum so broad and innovative that it won national attention at the time it was implemented. It was a bold and radical response to the educational requirements of a democratic republic. Partridge sought to transform the traditional curriculum by making it more practical, scientific, and truly liberal. He expanded the classical curriculum to include modern languages and history, as well as political economy and engineering. Indeed, Partridge’s institution was the first in the United States to offer instruction in civil engineering. Partridge also played a pioneering role in physical education and was one of the first educators to offer instruction in agriculture. He was also in the vanguard of academicians who adopted field training as a regular and important extension of theory learned in the classroom. The guiding philosophy behind Partridge’s curricular innovation contributed heavily to the concepts advanced in the College Land Grant Act of 1862, submitted to congress by Vermont Senator Justin Morrill, as well as to the legislation that created the Reserve Officers Training Corps in 1916.
Alden Partridge can be credited as one of the first Americans to use outdoor experience as an integral part of the process of education, thus anticipating the later acceptance of field trips and "outward bound" programs as legitimate educational activities. Field excursions provided excellent opportunities to combine exercise, recreation, and improvement. Arduous hikes, according to Partridge’s design for education, were physically challenging and promoted self-reliance. Students involved in excursions became accustomed to "fatigue and privation." Furthermore, they learned "to take care of themselves," a process Partridge considered essential to the proper development and education of youth.
Excursions also supplemented classroom instruction with "practical and everyday knowledge of the world, which can never be derived from books." Trips into the field provided valuable educational experiences in such areas as botany, mineralogy, surveying, engineering, military science, and history. Students visited and examined factories, navy yards, arsenals, railroads, bridges, canals, and historic sites. Alden Partridge became convinced from considerable experience, "as well as from the nature of the case," that his students derived "more real advantage" and improvement from excursions than from any other activities.
Events in the recent history of Norwich University illustrate how the growth and evolution of the institution have remained consistent with the educational principles of Alden Partridge. The merger with Vermont College in 1972 enabled Norwich to expand its academic base, extend its offering to women, and add a non-military lifestyle. Vermont College was founded in 1834 as Newbury Seminary and is notable as one of the first American institutions to offer higher education to women. Indeed, Alden Partridge was a strong advocate of female education and attempted at about the same time to establish a female division for his school at Norwich, Vermont. For more than a century after the two schools relocated to central Vermont, Norwich University and Vermont College were neighbors. Merger of the two institutions was discussed for several decades before it came about, in part because of a shared mission of leadership and service. In 1974, two years after the merger with Vermont College, women were first admitted into the Norwich University Corps of Cadets.
Also consonant with Alden Partridge’s thinking was the acquisition of four adult-centered programs from Goddard College in 1981. Alden Partridge recognized the need for a curricular flexibility that would provide students with elective opportunities and allow them to pursue an educational program at their own pace, a pedagogical attitude that explains why students ranging from adolescents to veterans of the War of 1812 could be found at his institution in the 1820’s. The programs acquired from Goddard College broadened the curriculum and enriched the educational environment by enabling Norwich to open its offering to nontraditional learners, introduce new residency patterns, diversify culturally and geographically, and significantly increase the enrollment of minority students. These programs share the University’s focus on experiential education.
Partridge’s philosophy continues to give direction to the Norwich curriculum with its special emphasis on preparing students to become useful and active citizens. In many academic programs, experiential learning is given a prominent role in order to encourage students to make connections between classroom theory and the surrounding world. The creation, in 1987, of the nation’s first Peace Corps Preparatory Program, the expansion of internship programs, and the encouragement of volunteer community service all represent an extension of those aspects of the University mission that relate to experiential learning and social service.
Today, Norwich University still closely adheres to the purposes and precepts laid out by its founder Alden Partridge in 1819. The system of education articulated by Partridge was so broad, sensible, flexible, and visionary that it continues to have extraordinary currency.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)