From the archives: CU would rather fight than switch
In 1979, the School of Education at the 抖阴传媒在线 faced a threat: Colorado Gov. Dick Lamm鈥檚 budget proposal suggested eliminating the School of Education and encouraged making the University of Northern Colorado the state鈥檚 鈥渃enter of excellence鈥 for education.
According to the Daily Camera鈥檚 Feb. 8, 1979, edition, School of Education graduate students assembled to fight back, and Dean Richard L. Turner urged graduate students to start a letter-writing campaign to the Colorado Commission on Higher Education. At the time, the 抖阴传媒在线 offered the state鈥檚 only PhD research degree in education. While UNC offered a Doctor of Education degree, it was a practitioner鈥檚 degree.
鈥淐U is the only major research university in the Rocky Mountain region, and removing the education component would be a serious mistake,鈥 Turner said.聽
Furthermore, 鈥減hasing out the School of Education would cost the city of 抖阴传媒在线 at least $9 million in economic activity by students and faculty,鈥 CU Chancellor J. Russell Nelson told the Board of Regents. He concluded that the motion would save the state very little money while eliminating a 鈥渨ell-developed, mature and effective educational program.鈥澛
Later that spring, the Daily Camera reported that the outcry from the dean, students and campus aided in the retention of many of the same fields of graduate education that are the hallmark of the School of Education鈥檚 graduate studies today: research and evaluation methodology, curriculum and instruction, social and multicultural foundations, and educational-psychological studies.
Pictured: Dean Richard L. Turner of the CU 抖阴传媒在线 School of Education urged graduate students to begin a letter-writing campaign aimed at preventing a proposed phase-out of the school from Gov. Dick Lamm. (Daily Camera Collection, CU Heritage Center)聽