| Odessa College | |
|---|---|
| Established | August 29, 1946[1] |
| Type | Junior college |
| President | Dr. Gregory D. Williams[2] |
| Students | 5,803[3] |
| Location | Odessa, Texas, U.S. |
| Campus | 80 acres (0.32 km2)[1] |
| Colors | Blue and White[4] |
| Nickname | Wranglers[4] |
| Mascot | "Willie" the Wrangler[4] |
| Affiliations | Western Junior College Athletic Conference[4] |
| Website | odessa.edu |
Odessa College, informally referred to as OC, is a public two-year junior college based in Odessa, Texas, United States serving the people of Ector County and the Permian Basin. It was established in 1946 and currently enrolls about 5,000 annually in its university-parallel and occupational/technical courses, and 11,000 students annually in its Basic Education, Continuing Education, and Community Recreation courses.
Odessa College is home to KXWT, a National Public Radio member station.
As defined by the Texas Legislature, the official service area of Odessa College is the following:[5]
In 1999, an Odessa doctor and his wife donated a 27,000-square-foot (2,500 m2) building in Pecos to house the new Pecos Technical Training Center of Odessa College. After renovations to the building made possible by an $860,000 Economic Development Administration grant, the center now houses administrative and faculty offices, technical and vocational learning labs and a student lounge. The new center enables OC to improve and expand its long-established extension education program in Pecos.
|
Contents
|
Odessa College participates in the WJCAC Conference of the NJCAA in multiple sports. To date, the OC sports programs have won 46 national NJCAA titles, making them the most winning program in the NJCAA. [6] 11 sports are currently active: Men's and Women's Basketball, Baseball, Softball, Golf, Rodeo, Men's and Women's Cross Country, Dance, Cheerleaders, and Trainers. In 1970 the women's tennis team won the third national collegiate championship of the United States Lawn Tennis Association. During the basketball season, OC broadcasts the men's and women's WJCAC road games and the home games with Midland College on the radio.
| This article on a southern United States institution of higher education is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)