Western Oregon University
Western Oregon University (WOU) is a public university in Monmouth, Oregon. It was originally established in 1856 by Disciples of Christ[5][6][7] pioneers as Monmouth University. Subsequent names included Oregon State Normal School, Oregon College of Education, and Western Oregon State College. Western Oregon University incorporates both the College of Education and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Enrollment is approximately 3,750 students.
"WOU" redirects here. For other uses, see WOU (disambiguation).
Former names
Monmouth University (1856–1865)
Christian College (1865–1882)
Oregon State Normal School (1882–1910)
Oregon Normal School (1910–1939)
Oregon College of Education (1939–1981)
Western Oregon State College (1981–1997)
January 18, 1856[1]
$16 million (2021)[2]
Jesse Peters
Jose E. Coll
452
427
3,746[3]
3,317
429
Fringe town[4], 157 acres (0.64 km2)
The Western Howl
Red
Wolfie
History[edit]
Establishment[edit]
Western Oregon University was founded in 1856 as Monmouth University.[8] In 1865, it merged with another private institution, Bethel College, in Bethel and became Christian College. In 1882, the Oregon State Legislature approved the college's bid to become a state-supported teacher training (or "normal") school, Oregon State Normal School.[9]
In November 1910, an initiative petition (Measure 10) to establish a normal school at Monmouth, passed by 55.6%. The name was changed, for the fourth time, to Oregon Normal School. On the same ballot were two other measures to additionally establish normal schools in Ashland and Weston: both failed.[10]
Growth[edit]
A period of growth was experienced in the 1920s during which the school's enrollment more than tripled from 316 in 1920 to peak at the 990 mark in 1927.[11] With the coming of the Great Depression attendance tailed off slightly, with an average attendance in 1930 of 705 students,[12] hitting a nadir in the 1933–34 academic year.[13] Attendance rebounded later in the decade, topping the 1,000 mark for the first time during the 1938–39 academic year, with a total enrollment including summer session of 1,017.[13]
In 1939, the Oregon Legislature changed the name for the fifth time, to Oregon College of Education. The school entered an extended period of growth, except for a period during World War II when college enrollments dropped nationwide. New programs were added in the areas of liberal arts and sciences.[8]
Academics[edit]
Western Oregon University offers bachelor's degrees (BA, BS, BM, BFA), and AB through its two colleges: the College of Education and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Master's degrees are available in Education (MAT and MSEd), Rehabilitation Counseling (MS), Criminal Justice (MA), Music (MM), and Management and Information Systems (MS).[14][15] In 2015, U.S. News & World Report ranked Western as the 77th best amongst the regional universities in the west.[16]
In January 2024, the university announced it would eliminate its D- and F grades and instead replace these with a grade of "no credit". This was done in attempt to improve retention and graduation rates and focus on student learning outcomes.[17]
Organization[edit]
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences[edit]
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers 30 bachelor's degrees in seven academic divisions: Behavioral Science, Business and Economics, Computer Science, Creative Arts, Humanities, Natural Sciences and Mathematics, and Social Science.
Greek life[edit]
On May 18, 2012, the school was introduced to its first traditional Greek life with the organization and initiation of the Kappa Sigma fraternity, Sigma Tau chapter . The schools Greek system now consists of one traditional fraternity, one traditional sorority, one non-traditional fraternity and one non-traditional sorority. The school welcomed Alpha Chi Omega, its first traditional sorority in the fall of 2015 with the organization founding its chapter in 2016.[22] On November 29, 2012, The Beta Kappa chapter of Omega Delta Phi fraternity was founded. Kappa Delta Chi is the other non-traditional sorority on campus.