Women's college

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Scripps College, a women's college in Claremont, California, United States

Women's colleges in

graduate schools
or in smaller numbers to undergraduate programs, but all serve a primarily female student body.

Distinction from finishing school

A women's college offers an academic curriculum exclusively or primarily, while a girls' or women's finishing school (sometimes called a charm school) focuses on social graces such as deportment, etiquette, and entertaining; academics if offered are secondary.

The term finishing school has sometimes been used or misused to describe certain women's colleges. Some of these colleges may have started as finishing schools but transformed themselves into rigorous liberal arts academic institutions, as for instance the now defunct Finch College.[1] Likewise the secondary school Miss Porter's School was founded as Miss Porter's Finishing School for Young Ladies in 1843; now it emphasizes an academic curriculum.[2]

A women's college that had never described itself as a finishing school can acquire the misnomer. Throughout the 114-year history of the women's college Sweet Briar, students and alumnae have objected to calling it a finishing school.[3] Nonetheless the finishing school characterization persisted, and may have contributed to declining enrollment, financial straits, and the school's near closure in 2015.[4]

Declining number

The continuing relevance of women's colleges has been questioned.[5] While fifty years ago[when?] there were 240 women's colleges in the U.S., only about 40 now remain.[6] In the words of a teacher at Radcliffe (a women's college that merged with Harvard): "[i]f women’s colleges become unnecessary, if women’s colleges become irrelevant, then that’s a sign of our [women's] success."[7]

Around the world

Africa

Somaliland
Sudan

Asia

Philippines

South Korea

Canada

Brescia University College is Canada's only extant university-level women's educational institution. Brescia is affiliated with and located on the campus of the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario.[8]

Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax, Nova Scotia was originally founded as a women's college in 1875, but became co-educational in 1967.

Middle East

Kingdom of Bahrain
United Arab Emirates
  • Dubai Women's College
Kuwait
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

Most major universities in Kingdom of Saudi Arabia are composed of two branches: a women-only branch and a similar male-only branch. This includes the following universities:

The following are female-only institutions:

Iran
  • Alzahra University
    , Tehran

United Kingdom

Lady Margaret Hall
in Oxford opened in 1879.

Existing women's colleges:

Former women's colleges:

United States

Early history

Women's colleges in the

coeducational colleges (such as Oberlin College founded in 1833, Lawrence University in 1847, Antioch College in 1853, and Bates College
in 1855), most colleges and universities of high standing at that time were exclusively for men.

Critics of the girls’ seminaries were roughly divided into two groups. The reform group, including Emma Willard, felt seminaries required reform through “strengthening teaching of the core academic subjects.” Others felt seminaries were insufficient, suggesting “a more durable institution--a women’s college--be founded, among them, Catharine E. Beecher. In her True Remedy for the Wrongs of Women (1851),[14] Beecher points out how “seminaries could not offer sufficient, permanent endowments, buildings, and libraries; a corporation whose duty it is to perpetuate the institution on a given plan.”[13][15]

Another notable figure was

Wheaton College, Massachusetts) in 1834.[16]

Women's College Coalition

The

Women's Rights Movement", and Title IX, as well as demographic and technological changes in the 1960s brought about rapid and complex social and economic change in the United States. These societal changes put increasing pressure of perceived "unpopularity" and "old fashioned" perceptions and opinions placing the concept of "single-sex education
" for both women and men on the most drastic downward spiral in its history. Additionally, the landscape of education dramatically changed as many previously all-male high schools (both private/independent and public) along with the colleges, many of which were either forced by official actions or declining attendance figures to become coeducational, thereby offering women many more educational options. At the same time with the similar changes forced on women's institutions, both private and public secondary schools along with the colleges/universities, forced a number of the larger number of girls schools to also coeducate. By the late 1970s, women's enrollment in college exceeded the men's and, today, women make up the majority of undergraduates (57% nationally) on college/university campuses. Women earn better college grades than men do, and are more likely than men to complete college.

During the past several years, the Women's College Coalition engaged in research about the benefits of a women's high school and/or college education in the 21st Century. Drawing upon the findings of research conducted by the

Association of American Colleges and Universities
, NAICU and others, the Coalition makes the case for women's education and women's high schools and colleges to prospective students, families, policy and opinion makers, the media, employers and the general public.

Women's colleges and universities in North America

See also

References

  1. ^ Arenson, Karen W. (January 26, 1997). "Rodney O. Felder Dies at 69; Finch College's Last President". New York Times. Retrieved March 1, 2014. Finch was founded in 1900 as a two-year finishing school for women. Dr. Felder and others at the school maintained, however, that it had become as academically demanding as Barnard, Bryn Mawr and other colleges.
  2. ^ "Flashback Photo: Miss Porter's School Finishes Socialites, Scholars and a First Lady - New England Historical Society". New England Historical Society. February 15, 2015. Retrieved March 31, 2015.
  3. ^ Resentment of term finishing school
    • "Editorial". Forgotten Books. The Sweet Briar Magazine. 1915. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved March 15, 2015. Do we not rather resent it when we hear the college where we have all worked just as hard as possible called 'only a finishing school ?' Of course, finishing schools are all right in themselves, but are we not something more ?
    • Susan Svrluga (March 6, 2015). "Alumna: Sweet Briar College is no finishing school. It must not close". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
  4. ^ Characterization of Sweet Briar as finishing school
  5. ^ Question of continuing relevance of women’s colleges
  6. ^ parlous condition, declining numbers
  7. ^ Darlene Superville (June 1, 2001). "US Women's Colleges Hit Hard". Bangor Daily News. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
  8. ^ About Brescia University College
  9. ^ Astell, Mary (1697). "Serious Proposal to the Ladies for the Advancement of their True and Greatest Interest: in two parts (1697)". London: Printed for Richard Wilkin. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
  10. OCLC 54305884
    . Retrieved 12 September 2013.
  11. .
  12. ^ "Girton Past". Girton College. Retrieved 24 April 2019.
  13. ^
    ISBN 9780788143243. Retrieved 12 September 2013 – via Google Books
    .
  14. ^ Beecher, Catharine E (1851). True Remedy for the Wrongs of Women; with a history of an enterprise having that for its objective. Boston: Phillips, Samson & Co.
  15. ^ Smith, Wolf and Morrison. Paths to Success: Factors Related to the Impact of Women's Colleges. p. 263.
  16. OCLC 43475535. Retrieved 2013-09-12 – via Google Books
    .

Further reading

  • Horowitz, Helen Lefkowitz (1993) [1984]. Alma Mater: Design and Experience in the Women's Colleges from Their Nineteenth-Century Beginnings to the 1930s (. Alfred A. Knopf, NY (1984); University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 0585083665.
  • MacDonald, Sara Z. University Women - A History of Women and Higher Education in Canada (McGill-Queen's University Press. 2021)
  • Rowold, Katharina. The Educated Woman: Minds, Bodies, and Women's Higher Education in Britain, Germany, and Spain, 1865-1914 (Routledge, 2009).
  • World Bank Task Force on Higher Education and Society. Higher Education in Developing Countries: Peril and Promise (World Bank. 2000)

External links