by Dana EchoHawk ; contributors, Christine Bradley, James E. Fell, Jr., Thomas J. Noel, Duane A. Smith, Eric Twitty., Figures -- Introduction -- Colorado mining history timeline -- Colorado regions map -- General -- Northwest -- Southwest -- Front range -- South central -- Southeast -- Labor / unions -- Ethnic miners / women -- Ghost towns -- Technology -- Videos -- Fiction -- Other resources., "February 20, 2013.", Includes bibliographical references and glossary., Print version record.
"608."--Cover., Facsimile of 1984 edition : Colorado Historical Society. Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation., "This is a facsimile edition of the original 1984 publication. Text and graphics are those of the original edition."--P. [2]., Includes bibliographical references., Mode of access: World Wide Web.
"609."-Cover., Facsimile of 1984 edition : Colorado Historical Society. Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation., "This is a facsimile edition of the original 1984 publication. Text and graphics are those of the original edition."--P. [2]., Includes bibliographical references., Mode of access: World Wide Web.
"606."--Cover., "This is a facsimile edition of the original 1984 publication. Text and graphics are those of the original edition.", Includes bibliographical references., Mode of access: World Wide Web.
The Colorado Commission on Higher Education presents its master plan as an urgent call to action. If the state of Colorado is to prepare its students for changing workforce demands and maintain its high quality of life and vibrant economy, it must invest more in the educational attainment of all its citizens. Today Colorado faces a critical decision: Invest in expanded access in order to mitigate affordability and equity gap challenges or bear the weight and financial burden of an undereducated citizenry. In this plan, the CCHE reaffirms a statewide credential attainment goal of 66 percent by 2025 for our adult population. Our economy demands it., "Published August 2017.", Bibliogrpahy: unnumbered page 25., Online resource; title from PDF cover (viewed September 2017)
Containing costs for students in higher education is paramount to the Colorado Department of Higher Education (CDHE) and the State of Colorado. Although data suggest that earning a postsecondary credential improves individual earning potential and offers robust return on investment, the cost of college or technical school remains a barrier for many Coloradans. To this end, CDHE is building capacity for wide-scale implementation of open educational resources (OER), free or very low-cost teaching and learning materials that live in the open domain., prepared and submitted by the OER Council with the Department of Higher Education ... pursuant to the statutory authority of H.B. 18-1331., "The Colorado Department of Higher Education Report to the Colorado Commission on Higher Education, Joint Budget Committee and Education Committee of the General Assembly of Colorado.", "Statute: CRS 23-1-135.", "October 2019.", Includes bibliographical references., Online resource; title from PDF cover (viewed November 2019)
"This is a facsimile edition of the original 1984 publication. Text and graphics are those of the original edition."--First unnumbered page., Includes bibliographical references., Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Title from cover., "611.", Title page for "Colorado engineering context" incorrectly inserted in the electronic file., Includes bibliographical references., Mode of access: World Wide Web.