William E. Henry Administration Building, Bowie State University, Bowie, Maryland, September 2017. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
Martin Luther King, Jr., Communications Arts Center, Bowie State University, Bowie, Maryland, February 2003. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
In 1867, the Baltimore Association for the Moral and Educational Improvement of Colored People, aided by the Freedmen's Bureau, English Quakers and others, purchased and renovated for the use of the school, the old Friends Meetinghouse at Saratoga and Courtland Streets in Baltimore.
The school reorganized in 1893 as the Baltimore Normal School for the Education of Colored Teachers. "Normal" came from the French ecole normale, and the Prussian normal schools, that influenced American educators to establish norms or standards for the training of teachers. While it sought to prepare students to become elementary school teachers, originally the School first served as a middle and high school.
In 1908, the General Assembly designated the Baltimore Normal School as Normal School no. 3, a State institution, and placed it under the State Board of Education (Chapter 599, Acts of 1908). It then was located at the northwest corner of Saratoga Street and St. Paul Street in Baltimore. By October 1910, the school temporarily was held at 608 North Eutaw Street, Baltimore. In 1910, the State Board of Education purchased for the School some 187 acres of land at Jericho Park, one mile north of Bowie in Prince George's County.
After relocation to Prince George's County, the first building at Bowie opened on September 25, 1911. By its opening, the School was known as the Maryland Normal and Industrial School at Bowie. Students and staff constructed its first buildings. The school focused on three areas of instruction: normal (teaching), industrial, and agricultural, including maintenance of a school farm that produced the School's food supply. In 1925, when the School began to offer college-level instruction, its high school curriculum began to be phased out. In 1928, the whole curriculum focused on college courses for the training of teachers, with a two-year professional course for elementary school teachers. It was renamed the Maryland Teachers College at Bowie in 1935. By 1935, a three-year program for teaching training was instituted, and by 1938, a four-year program.
Following the establishment of a liberal arts program, the school reorganized in 1963 as Bowie State College, a four-year liberal arts college, and began offering graduate courses in 1969 (Chapter 41, Acts of 1963). Formerly overseen by the State Department of Education, Bowie, at that time, was among the five State colleges placed under the Board of Trustees of State Colleges. On July 1, 1988, the College became Bowie State University (Chapter 293, Acts of 1988). In 1988, the University also joined the University of Maryland System, now the University System of Maryland (Chapter 246, Acts of 1988).
Within the University are the Graduate School and four colleges: the College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Business, the College of Education, and the College of Professional Studies.
GRADUATE SCHOOL
In the evenings and on weekends, the Graduate School offers courses. These include 19 master degree programs and 14 specialty certificate programs, as well as doctoral programs in computer science, and educational leadership.
Classes are held at the University and at off-campus sites, such as Joint Base Andrews (Camp Springs); Fort George G. Meade Center (Odenton); Southern Maryland Higher Education Center (California); University System of Maryland Shady Grove Center (Rockville); Garrett Community College (McHenry); and Montgomery College (Rockville).
Within the College are three departments: Accounting, Finance, and Economics; Management, Marketing, and Public Administration; and Management Information Systems, as well as the Bowie Business Innovation Center, and the Entrepreneurship Academy.
Presently, the College has three departments: Counseling; Educational Leadership; and Teaching, Learning, and Professional Development.
James E. Proctor, Jr., Building, Bowie State University, Bowie, Maryland, September 2017. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
The Graduate School began as the School of Continuing Education and Extended Studies. In July 2000, it reformed as the School of Graduate Studies and Continuing Education. In 2005, the School reorganized as the Office of Graduate Studies, Research, and Continuing Education, and received its present name in January 2009.
COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
The College of Arts and Sciences formed in 1995 as the School of Arts and Sciences. It reorganized as the College of Arts and Sciences in November 2008.
Center for Natural Sciences, Mathematics, & Nursing, Bowie State University, Bowie, Maryland, September 2017. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
The College includes eight departments: Communications; Computer Science; English and Modern Languages; Fine and Performing Arts; History and Government; Mathematics; Military Science (ROTC); and Natural Sciences.
Computer Science Building, Bowie State University, Bowie, Maryland, February 2003. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
In July 2004, the College of Business originated as the School of Business. It reformed under its present name in November 2008.
COLLEGE OF EDUCATION
Origins of the College of Education parallel the origins of Bowie State University when by 1893 it had organized as the Baltimore Normal School for the training of teachers. In 1908, the General Assembly designated it as Normal School no. 3, a State institution (Chapter 599, Acts of 1908). After relocation to Prince George's County, the School by 1914 was known as the Maryland Normal and Industrial School at Bowie. It was renamed the Maryland Teachers College at Bowie in 1935 and Bowie State College in 1963 (Chapter 41, Acts of 1963).
Under Bowie State College, the training of teachers was consolidated under the Education Department, which later became the School of Education and Professional Studies. In July 2001, it reformed into two schools: the School of Education, and the School of Professional Studies. In November 2008, these schools merged to form the College of Education.
COLLEGE OF PROFESSIONAL STUDIES
In July 2001, the College of Professional Studies was created as the School of Professional Studies from the merger of a division of the School of Education with the School of Professional Studies. The School reformed as the College of Professional Studies in November 2008.
The College oversees four departments: Behavioral Sciences and Human Services, Nursing, Psychology, and Social Work.
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