Interim President: Susan Bynum, J.D.
OU-Tulsa’s Website: https://www.ou.edu/tulsa
OU-Tulsa is a nationally-recognized center for higher education, offering a wide range of 30+ undergraduate, master’s, and doctorate level degrees, as well as graduate certificates. Programs include architecture, engineering, education, nursing, public health, occupational and physical therapy, library and information studies, organizational dynamics, public administration, social work, human relations, clinical mental health counseling, as well as medicine and physician assistant through the OU-TU School of Community Medicine. Since 1957, OU-Tulsa has provided higher education to northeast Oklahoma and moved to the 60-acre Schusterman Campus in 1999.
A university for the community:
In addition to the university’s excellence in research and instruction, programming at OU-Tulsa is thoroughly embedded in the community. Faculty members have collaborated with local industries, governments, community agencies, health care-providers and many other community partners.
Tackling Tulsa’s problems:
The University of Oklahoma has been involved in the Tulsa community since the School of Library and Information Studies began offering classes in Tulsa in 1957. The OU College of Medicine – Tulsa, now known as the OU-TU School of Community Medicine, had its beginning in 1972 when the Oklahoma legislature approved the opening of a clinical branch of the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine.
Neither the university nor the community could have imagined then how greatly that presence would expand, nor how in a little more than 30 years OU-Tulsa would be nationally recognized as a leading example of a new kind of community-based graduate institution.
Many of OU-Tulsa degree programs place heavy emphasis on community engagement. In fact, some of them were created with community needs in mind. Every year, students in the Organizational Dynamics program invite business leaders to serve as jury members for class case presentations. Students in the Social Work program have a long-standing relationship with the community of Turley, and they work with community leaders and residents to improve services and accessibility for the community. OU-Tulsa nursing students receive experience working with a variety of community agencies.
Another way in which OU-Tulsa works to address community needs is through the Bedlam Alliance for Community Health, which offers two free health clinics for the uninsured. The clinics provide much-needed health services to hundreds of patients and also provide medical students direct experience in community medicine and understanding the challenges the uninsured face in accessing health care. Students from pharmacy, nursing and social work are also part of the healthcare teams at Bedlam Clinics. Other departments are similarly involved in projects and research with community groups and agencies as OU-Tulsa students involve themselves in real-world, professional experiences.
Growth for the future:
Enrollment has grown 57 percent since the fall of 2000, with more than 1,600 students enrolled at OU-Tulsa. In the years ahead, OU-Tulsa is committed to continuing to provide a university experience unlike any other.
Content Source: https://www.ou.edu/tulsa/about
Recent News:
- School of Social Work Hosts Poverty Simulation
- Trauma Informed Nutrition Training to Best Serve Families
- OU Names New Vice President for Marketing and Communications
- Community Engagement Graduate Certificate Available to All Campuses Enrolling for Second Cohort
- OU-Tulsa Celebrates Class of 2023 Convocation
- Childhood Well-being Accepting New Cohort
- OU President Joseph Harroz Jr. shares OU’s future in Tulsa
- Staff Awards Honor the Best of the Best
- School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at OU-Tulsa celebrates 20 Years
- OU-Tulsa Diversi-Tea Provides Fun and Learning
- OU-Tulsa Student Affairs Receives Collaboration Award
- Education Professor Honored by American Educational Research Association
- OU Polytechnic Institute Director shares direction for the future
- OU-Tulsa hosts leaders in technology panel on cybersecurity
- OU-Tulsa study leads to important findings on children and racism
University of Oklahoma – Tulsa
Vice President Bynum