Oklahoma Graduate Schools

A Graduate School is an education institution that offers graduate degrees, including Master and Doctorate degrees. This page lists all accredited graduate schools in the state of Oklahoma that provide full-time or part-time graduate education leading to a postgraduate degree. Note: according to AbbreviationFinder, OK is the two-letter abbreviation of Oklahoma.

East Central University
Ada, OK 74820-6899
(580) 332-8000
http://student.ecok.edu/

Northeastern State University
Tahlequah, OK 74464
(918) 456-5511 ext.3690
http://www.nsuok.edu

Oklahoma City University
2501 North Blackwelder
Oklahoma City, OK 73106
(405) 521-5000
http://frodo.okcu.edu/

Oklahoma State University
Stillwater, OK 74078
(405) 744-6368
http://www.okstate.edu

Oral Roberts University
7777 South Lewis Avenue
Tulsa, OK 74171
(918) 495-6518
http://www.oru.edu

Phillips University
100 South University Avenue
Enid, OK 73701-6439
(580) 548-2316
http:///www.philips.edu

Southwestern OKlahoma State
University
100 Campus Drive
Weatherford, OK 73096-3098
(580) 774-3769
http://www.swosu.edu

University of Central Oklahoma
100 North University
Edmond, OK 73034
(405) 341-2980 ext.3341
http://www.ucok.edu/

University of Oklahoma
Norman, OK 73019
(405) 325-3811
http://www.uoknor.edu

University of Tulsa
600 South College Avenue
Tulsa, OK 74104
(918) 631-2336

The University of Tulsa

Oklahoma State Overview

The words okla and humma from the “Choktaw” language mean red people . The state of Oklahoma is also often referred to by its nickname The Sooner State . The term Sooners was used for the settlers who came to the “Unassigned Lands” of present-day Oklahoma before President Grover officially declared Cleveland as a settlement area.

Indigenous people lived in this area long before the Spaniard Francisco Vásquez de Coronado traveled through the country in 1541. French explorers claimed the terrain in the 1700s and it remained under French control until 1803, when the United States bought large areas west of the Mississippi River from the French in the “Louisiana Purchase.”

Thousands of Native Americans were brought to Oklahoma in the 1830s from their lands in Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee. By 1890, over 30 Native American tribes had been resettled there by the US federal government.

At the beginning of the 20th century there were efforts to establish an Indian state that should be called Oklahoma, but failed. In another attempt, a pure Indian state called Sequoyah should be founded. The 1905 Sequoyah Statehood Convention eventually laid the groundwork for the Oklahoma Statehood Convention, held two years later. Finally, on November 16, 1907, Oklahoma became the 46th state to join the Union.

The new state came under the spotlight of the oil industry as large oil fields were discovered there. Rapidly growing population figures and increasing prosperity were the result. Tulsa became known as the “Oil Capital of the World”. Businessman Cyrus Avery , who made a name for himself as the “Father of Route 66”, campaigned in 1927 and established US Route 66 . The stretch from Amarillo, Texas to Tulsa, Oklahoma was the first leg of this legendary route.

Major industries in Oklahoma today include aviation, energy, transportation, electronics, telecommunications, and the food industry. Oklahoma ranks second in the United States in natural gas production.

  • Countryaah.com: Provides list of counties in Oklahoma in alphabetical order. Also covers top 10 counties by area and population.

Geographical location

Oklahoma lies partly in the “Great Plains” and is bounded by the states of Arkansas and Missouri to the east, Kansas to the north, Colorado to the northwest and New Mexico to the west. Texas is to the south and southwest.

Capital city: Oklahoma City
Largest metropolis: Oklahoma City
Nickname: Sooner State
Motto: Labor omnia vincit
(lat.) Work overcomes everything

Oklahoma