List of colleges and universities in Colorado
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(Redirected from Colleges of Colorado)
This is a list of colleges and universities in the U.S. State of Colorado which range in age and focus of programs.[1] This list also includes other educational institutions providing higher education, meaning tertiary, quaternary, and, in some cases, post-secondary education. State commission data is also provided.
Colorado Commission on Higher Education
[edit]This table includes locations, governance, institution focus(es), the enrollment head count (the sum of undergraduate and graduate students), the number of full-time equivalent students, and the percentage of these students who qualify as residents of the state.
Institution | Location | Institution focus(es) | Fall 2020 enrollment head count[2] | 2008 full-time equivalent students | Full-time residency percentage[2] | Part-time residency percentage[2] | Public/private | 2-year/4-year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adams State University | Alamosa | A general baccalaureate institution with moderately selective admission standards | 3352 | 1919 | 57 | 43 | Public | 4-year |
Aims Community College | Greeley, Loveland, Fort Lupton, Windsor | A two-year college with open admission standards | 5981 | 1009 | 98 | 2 | Public | 2-year |
Colorado Mesa University | Grand Junction | A comprehensive graduate university with moderately selective admission standards | 9110 | 5058 | 86 | 14 | Public | 4-year |
Colorado Mountain College | Glenwood Springs | A two‐year local district college with open admission standards | 5315 | 2766[1] | 94 | 6 | Public | 2-year |
Colorado School of Mines | Golden | A specialized baccalaureate and graduate research institution with high admission standards; first public institution of higher education to open doors in Colorado (in 1874)[1] | 6744 | 4325[1] | 58 | 42 | Public | 4-year |
Colorado State University | Fort Collins | A comprehensive graduate research university with selective admission standards; one of 68 land‐grant institutions founded by the Morrill Act of 1862[1] | 27838 | 22312[1] | 69 | 31 | Public | 4-year |
Colorado State University Pueblo | Pueblo | A regional, comprehensive institution with moderately selective admission standards | 3460 | 3806[1] | 86 | 14 | Public | 4-year |
Fort Lewis College | Durango | A public liberal arts institution with selective admission standards | 3469 | 3530[1] | 45 | 55 | Public | 4-year |
Metropolitan State University of Denver | Denver | A comprehensive baccalaureate institution with modified open admission standards | 18074 | 16165[1] | 96 | 4 | Public | 4-year |
University of Colorado Boulder | Boulder | A comprehensive graduate research university with selective admission standards | 35433 | 26815[1] | 60 | 40 | Public | 4-year |
University of Colorado Colorado Springs | Colorado Springs | A comprehensive university with selective admission standards | 11723 | 6606[1] | 87 | 13 | Public | 4-year |
University of Colorado Denver | Denver and Aurora | An urban comprehensive undergraduate and graduate research university with selective admission standards | 19885 | 13217[1] | 84 | 16 | Public | 4-year |
University of Northern Colorado | Greeley | A comprehensive baccalaureate and specialized graduate research university with selective admission standards | 8387 | 9691[1] | 86 | 14 | Public | 4-year |
Western Colorado University | Gunnison | A general baccalaureate institution with moderately selective admission standards | 2766 | 1875[1] | 79 | 21 | Public | 4-year |
Colorado Community College System | A state system of 13 community and technical colleges with open admission standards[1] | 71825[1] | 48004[1] | 33[1] | 67[1] | Public | 2-year |
Four-year institutions
[edit]Defunct private colleges and universities
[edit]School | Location | Control | Carnegie Classification | Founded[4] | Defunct |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Colorado Heights University | Denver | Private (not for profit) | Baccalaureate / Associates Colleges | 1989 | 2016 |
Johnson & Wales University | Denver | Private (not for profit) | Masters University | 2000 | 2021 |
Jones International University | Centennial | Private (for profit) | Masters University | 1993 | 2015 |
National American University | Centennial, Colorado Springs, Denver | Private (for profit) | Masters University | 1941 | 2018 |
CollegeAmerica | Fort Collins, Denver, Colorado Springs | Private (not for profit) | Baccalaureate / Associates Colleges | 1964 | 2021 |
State institutions
[edit]Two-year institutions
[edit]- Aims Community College
- Fort Lupton Campus
- Loveland Campus
- Windsor Campus
- Arapahoe Community College
- Castle Rock Campus
- Parker Campus
- Colorado Mountain College
- Residential campuses
- Leadville Residential Campus, Leadville
- Roaring Fork Residential Campus in Spring Valley, Glenwood Springs
- Steamboat Residential Campus, Steamboat Springs
- Community campuses
- Aspen Campus, Aspen
- Rifle Campus, Rifle
- Roaring Fork Campus, Carbondale and Glenwood Springs
- Summit Campus, Breckenridge and Dillon
- Timberline Campus, Buena Vista and Salida
- Vail-Eagle Valley Campus, Edwards and Eagle
- Residential campuses
- Colorado Northwestern Community College
- Community College of Aurora
- Community College of Denver
- Front Range Community College
- Boulder County Campus, Longmont, Colorado
- Brighton Center, Brighton, Colorado
- Larimer Campus, Ft. Collins, Colorado
- Westminster Campus, Westminster, Colorado
- Lamar Community College
- Morgan Community College
- Northeastern Junior College
- Otero College[5]
- Pikes Peak State College
- Pueblo Community College
- Fremont Campus, Cañon City
- Southwest Campus, Mancos
- Red Rocks Community College
- Trinidad State College[5]
- Western Colorado Community College
- Bishop Campus, Grand Junction
Two-year, for-profit institutions
[edit]See also
[edit]- List of colleges and universities
- List of colleges and universities by country
- Bibliography of Colorado
- Geography of Colorado
- History of Colorado
- Index of Colorado-related articles
- List of Colorado-related lists
- Outline of Colorado
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Colorado Higher Education Overview (Report). CCHE Annual Retreat: Colorado Department of Higher Education. August 6–7, 2009. pp. 1–18.
- ^ a b c "Search Data". Colorado Department of Higher Education. Retrieved 13 April 2022.
- ^ Enrollment is the total enrollment as reported by IPEDS for fall 2016.
- ^ a b U.S. News & World Report. "America's Best Colleges 2008". Retrieved 2007-09-29.
- ^ a b An act concerning removing the word "junior" from the name of certain colleges (PDF) (Act). Colorado General Assembly. May 18, 2021.
- ^ "LincolnEdu".