Type Private Undergraduate tuition and fees 23,180 USD (2015) Acceptance rate 62.7% (2014) | Total enrollment 1,147 (2010) | |
Motto A university where Jesus is Lord Endowment $5,461,866 (as of 2014) Location Bartlesville, Oklahoma, U.S. Colors University Navy and Red Address 2201 Silver Lake Rd, Bartlesville, OK 74006, USA Similar Tabor College, Bacone College, Mid‑America Christian University, Central Christian College o, Southwestern Christian University Profiles |
Oklahoma wesleyan university obamacare mandate challenge
Oklahoma Wesleyan University (OKWU) is an evangelical Christian university of the Wesleyan Church located in Bartlesville, in the U.S. state of Oklahoma.
Contents
- Oklahoma wesleyan university obamacare mandate challenge
- President of of oklahoma wesleyan university says school is not day care
- School overview
- History
- Antecedent schools
- Timeline
- Council for Christian Colleges and Universities
- DOE Title IX lawsuit
- Athletics
- Notable alumni
- References
President of of oklahoma wesleyan university says school is not day care
School overview
The President of Oklahoma Wesleyan University (OKWU) is Dr. Everett Piper (Ph.D, Michigan State University), who came to OKWU from Spring Arbor University in 2002.
OKWU offers over 50 majors through its traditional campus program. It has 1205 undergraduate students, with approximately 600 on the main campus in Bartlesville.
In 2016, it was ranked #12 among Regional Colleges in the western region, according to U.S. News and World Report.
History
Oklahoma Wesleyan University was founded by the Wesleyan Church to provide higher education within a Christian environment for Wesleyan youth. Central Pilgrim College its predecessor, was founded on the campus in Bartlesville, Oklahoma from a series of mergers of several schools: the Colorado Bible College (Colorado Springs, Colorado), the Pilgrim Bible College (Pasadena, California), and the Holiness Evangelistic Institute (El Monte, California). Central Pilgrim College was renamed Bartlesville Wesleyan College in 1968, following a merger of the Pilgrim Holiness Church and the Wesleyan Methodist Church to become the Weslayan Church. In August 2001, Bartlesville Wesleyan College became Oklahoma Wesleyan University.
In 1972, OKWU merged with a Kansas school, Miltonvale Wesleyan College. OKWU then became a four-year college having about 1300 students.
Antecedent schools
The following is a list of antecedent schools:
Timeline
Council for Christian Colleges and Universities
On August 31, 2015 Oklahoma Wesleyan announced the withdrawal of its membership from the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities (CCCU), citing the CCCU's "reluctance to make a swift decision" as an unwillingness to defend the biblical definition of marriage, in response to the decisions of two member schools (Goshen College and Eastern Mennonite University) which changed their hiring policies to include same-sex couples. “In doing so CCCU has not adequately represented Oklahoma Wesleyan and our legal interests,” President Everett Piper said. Calling the decision to withdraw a difficult one, Piper nonetheless said the decision had the support of the school’s faculty, staff, and trustees.
DOE Title IX lawsuit
On August 15, 2016 OKWU joined a court challenge to a 2011 mandate from the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) requiring colleges and universities adjudicate what they called "a unconstitutional process and standard." President Piper stated, in part, that they "refuse to accept any government intrusion that would require OKWU to teach the antithesis of our Christian beliefs concerning sexual behavior" and that OKWU's students "should have the legal right to avail themselves of local law enforcement without their petition being compromised by the intrusion of an OCR-mandated committee of amateurs that contravenes the due process and confidentiality of the legal process.” The suit is sponsored by the civil liberties organization, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE).
Athletics
Oklahoma Wesleyan teams, nicknamed athletically as the Eagles, are part of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), primarily competing in the Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference, and previously the Midlands Collegiate Athletic Conference (MCAC) until 2015.
Men's sports include baseball, basketball, golf, soccer, cross country, and track & field. Women's sports include basketball, soccer, softball, track & field, golf, cross country, and volleyball.