Ball State University Teachers College

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TypeAcademic College
Established1918
Parent institution
Ball State University
DeanAnand Marri
Teachers College
TypeAcademic College
Established1918
Parent institution
Ball State University
DeanAnand Marri
Location
McKinley Avenue and West Riverside Avenue (Scramble Light)

40°12′03″N 85°24′31″W / 40.200822°N 85.408530°W / 40.200822; -85.408530
ArchitectWalter Scholer & Associates
Websitewww.bsu.edu/teachers

Teachers College is an academic college of Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana. Teachers College is housed in a 10-story, 138 feet (42 m) building which is the second tallest in Delaware County.[1] It is home to six academic departments: Early Childhood, Youth, and Family Studies, Educational Leadership, Educational Psychology, Educational Studies, Elementary Education, and Special Education. It also houses the Office of the Dean and the Office of Teacher Education Services and Clinical Practice.

Teachers College Building, as seen from the Scramble Light in 2008.

Ball State University began in 1899 as a private teachers college, the Eastern Indiana Normal School. At this early age all classrooms, residence halls, offices, and dining facilities were located in Ball State University's Administration Building. In 1917 the college, Indiana State Normal School (Eastern Division), was purchased by the Ball Brothers, local industrialists and entrepreneurs. It then was donated to the state of Indiana in 1918, making the teachers college a public institution. In 1922 the campus had expanded to several buildings, and the name was changed to Ball Teachers College and later Ball State Teachers College (1929) to honor the Ball Brothers' dedication to the institution. The Indiana State Teachers College Board governed the school until 1961; a board of trustees was established in 1961 to govern the newly created Ball State College. The college rapidly expanded its curricula and was renamed Ball State University in 1965 in recognition of its growth and in anticipation of its future impact on education in the state of Indiana.[2]

Teachers College remains one of the largest of seven academic colleges at the university and offers a wide selection of academic programs. Its educator programs are accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education, and the college is home to several nationally recognized and distinguished faculty members.[3]

Academic departments

Awards

References

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