BOWIE STATE UNIVERSITY
ORIGIN & FUNCTIONS
Bowie State University evolved from the first school opened in Baltimore by the Baltimore Association for the Moral and Educational Improvement of Colored People in 1865. The school was reorganized in 1893 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. On July 1, 1988, the College became Bowie State University (Chapter 293, Acts of 1988). In 1988, the University also became part of the University of Maryland System, now the University System of Maryland (Chapter 246, Acts of 1988).
Bowie State University today is the regional comprehensive university serving central Maryland. The University offers masters' degrees in eleven concentrations, from organizational communications and human resource development to computer science and management information systems. It also offers an honors program, Army ROTC, and athletics, fielding teams in eight intercollegiate sports in the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association and the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The University's interdisciplinary College of Excellence strengthens the freshman and sophomore experience, preparing students for later graduate and professional study. Bowie State University also is the nation's first historically African-American institution to offer graduate programs in Europe.
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