Bellevue Colleges

Choose from the many fine Bellevue Colleges.



If you are the type of student who prefers to be physically present for instruction, there are many on-campus schools available in your region. Here you will find some of the education possibilities in the Bellevue metro area. Look to find your ideal choice amongst the listed Bellevue Colleges. Just click on the buttons to have more information from the schools of your choice sent directly to you.

List of Bellevue Colleges

Online Programs = Online Program    Campus Programs = Campus Program
DeVry University - Multiple Locations Campus Programs
Get on the fast track to success. DeVry University provides you with the skills you need to succeed. Choose from one of DeVry’s many campuses to earn an associate or a bachelor's degree in a variety of fields, including Business Management, Technical Management, Computer Information Systems, Telecommunications Management, Electronics Engineering Technology and so much more. Flexible scheduling and extensive job placement assistance make DeVry University the perfect choice to advance your career.
DeVry University's Keller Graduate School of Management - Multiple Locations Campus Programs
A graduate degree really can make a difference, especially when it’s from DeVry University’s Keller Graduate School of Management. The majority of our students balance work, family and school. That’s why we offer online, evening and weekend classes in all of our master’s degree programs, which include Business Administration, Human Resource Management, Information Systems, Project Management, Public Administration and Telecom Management.

Some Information and Fun Facts about Bellevue, Washington (Seattle, WA)

Courtesy of Bellevue Convention and Visitors Bureau (http://www.ci.bellevue.wa.us)


Bellevue is located three miles east of Seattle, between Lake Washington and Lake Sammamish, and about ten miles west of the foothills of the Cascade Mountains.

The city’s has a daily workforce of about 121,000. Bellevue is a prosperous, increasingly diverse city that has evolved from a “bedroom community” into the economic and cultural hub of the Seattle-area’s Eastside. The city has developed its downtown core into a major business and retail center while maintaining the safe, comfortable family neighborhoods for which it has long been popular.

Bellevue's estimated population in 2002 is 117,000 - Washington’s fifth-largest city. As the population has grown over the years, so has the median age and the diversity in Bellevue’s ethnic makeup.

Mild winters and cool summers characterize Bellevue. High temperatures in July average about 75° F (24° C) while low temperatures in winter drop below freezing an average of only 15 days per year. Average rainfall in the region is about 38 inches per year compared to 19.5 inches in San Francisco, 34.5 inches in Chicago, and 40.3 inches in Washington, D.C.