Emily Griffith Opportunity School
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Emily Griffith Opportunity School | |
For All Who Wish To Learn / Denver's most Unique Technical College.
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Address | |
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1250 Welton Street Denver, Colorado, Denver County, 80204 USA |
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Coordinates | Coordinates: [1] |
Information | |
Executive Director | Les Lindauer [2] |
CEEB Code | 060405 |
School type | Public technical college |
Education System | Colorado Community College System |
School fees | $10 one-time student fee |
Tuition | $47 per credit hour (as of 2005-2006)[3] |
Accreditation(s) | North Central Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Accreditation and School Improvement,State Board for Community College and Occupational Education, & Colorado Commission on Higher Education |
School Colour(s) | Purple and Green |
Opened | 1916 |
Homepage | http://www.egos-school.com/ |
Emily Griffith Opportunity School is a public technical college in downtown Denver, Colorado. Founded by Emily Griffith in 1916 as Opportunity School, it was renamed in her honor in 1933.[4] The school is affiliated with Denver Public Schools, offering an alternative high school program, and is part of the Colorado Community College System.
Contents |
[edit] History
Denver educator Emily Griffith (1868-1947) shared her dream of opening a school to serve people of all ages and interests with a Denver Post features writer in 1915. Following its publication, she persuaded the Post and local trolley cars to promote the idea. In May 1916, Griffith received the condemned Longfellow School at 13th and Welton Streets from the Denver Board of Education. The Opportunity School opened on September 9, 1916.[5]
By 1954, the school served 10,000 students annually and had over 400,000 alumni.[6] Public television in Denver signed on January 30, 1956 from a studio in an auto body shop at the school.[7] Funding from Denver Public Schools gradually declined over the years, leading the school to begin charging Denver residents tuition in 1991.[8]
Courses also changed with the needs of the community, adding more English as a Second Language and health care courses and closing programs in shoe repair, audio/visual electronics, watch-and-clock repair and precision machining in the mid 1990s.[9] Over 30 years after being based at Stapleton International Airport, the airport's closing sent the school's aircraft mechanics program seeking a new location for five years before moving to Front Range Airport in 2003.[10]
[edit] Campus
There Campus is an urban campus it is across the street from the Colorado convention center. The auto shops,custodian training class rooms & tutoring labs are located behind the main building, in what is known as the Glenarm Building.
[edit] Organization
[edit] Academics
Emily Griffith Opportunity School is organized into nine college areas of study: the Apprenticeships Training Division, the College of Business and Technology, the Corporate Training Division, the College of Health Sciences, the College of Trades and Industry, the College of Design Industries, the Extended Learning Division, the Language Learning Center, and Emily Griffith High School. The Language Learning Center is the largest English as a Second Language program in Denver and serves 3,000 students a year.[11]
[edit] Research and endowment
The Emily Griffith Foundation, a 501(c)3 non-profit corporation, provides financial support to the school including endowment.
[edit] Student life
[edit] Noted people & Alumni
[edit] Notes/References
- ^ Feature Detail Report - Emily Griffith Opportunity School. Geographic Names Information System. U.S. Geological Survey (1992-08-31). Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
- ^ Harsanyi, David. "Degree-less bakers make good dough", Denver Post, 2007-08-08. Retrieved on 2007-11-08. "Les Lindauer, executive director of the Emily Griffith Opportunity School in Denver, is the ideal person to advocate for the vocational schools. He signed up as an ironworker apprentice in 1971 rather than going to college because he felt "no real direction." By 1974 he had become a skilled craftsman."
- ^ Emily Griffith Opportunity School 2007-2008 Course Catalog. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
- ^ Noel, Tom. "Griffith's life, not death, endures", Rocky Mountain News, 2006-02-25. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
- ^ "You Can Do It", TIME, 1946-07-08. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
- ^ "Giant Classroom", TIME, 1954-11-15. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
- ^ Saunders, Dusty. "'Frantic, fascinating, crowded' start for public TV in Denver", Rocky Mountain News, 2006-02-25. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
- ^ "Founder saw special school needed for adult education", Denver Post, 1997-07-20. Retrieved on 2007-11-08. "...in 1991, Emily Griffith Opportunity school, now open to non-Denver residents, ceased being free, but tuition has been kept low...."
- ^ Chotzinoff, Robin. "Tool and Die", Westword, 1995-06-07. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
- ^ Bryer, Amy. "Front Range Airport finds room for student mechanics", The Denver Business Journal, 2003-09-19. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
- ^ Aguilera, Elizabeth. "English classes overflow", Denver Post, 2007-04-01. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
- Brink, Carolyn. Class Acts: Stories from the Emily Griffith Opportunity School ISBN 0865410798
- Faulkner, Debra. Touching Tomorrow: The Emily Griffith Story ISBN 9780865410787
[edit] External links
- Emily Griffith Opportunity School official website
- Denver Public Schools History: Emily Griffith Opportunity School
- Emily Griffith Opportunity School 2005-2006 School Accountability Report (applies to the high school program)