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Oregon University System

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TheOregon University System(OUS) was administered by theOregon State Board of Higher Education(the "Board") and the Chancellor of the OUS, who was appointed by the Board.[1]It was disbanded in June 2015.[2]

OUS was responsible for governing the state's seven public universities. Legislation passed in 2013 allowed Oregon public universities the option to set up their own institutional governing boards and the state's three largest universities (Oregon State University,University of Oregon,Portland State University) opted for institutional boards that became effective July 1, 2014.[3]The four remaining regional universities in the OUS system (Eastern Oregon University,Oregon Institute of Technology,Southern Oregon University,Western Oregon University) later opted for institutional boards, effective July 1, 2015.[4]

Administrative work that was conducted by OUS has been managed since June 2015 by academic and financial units of theOregon Office of University Coordinationand theOregon Higher Education Coordinating Commission.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Melody Rose, Chancellor, OUS".Oregon University System. 2014. Archived fromthe originalon September 24, 2014. RetrievedSeptember 24,2014.
  2. ^Paulson, Dash (July 9, 2015)."The End Of The Oregon University System".Eugene Weekly. RetrievedMarch 6,2023.
  3. ^"About OUS".Oregon University System. Archived fromthe originalon 25 June 2014. Retrieved17 June2014.
  4. ^"Independence Growing At Oregon's Small Universities".Oregon Public Broadcasting. June 6, 2014. Archived fromthe originalon August 1, 2014. RetrievedMarch 6,2023.
  5. ^"State of Oregon: Higher Education Coordinating Commission - University Coordination".Oregon.gov. Archived fromthe originalon August 7, 2016. RetrievedMarch 6,2023.
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