List of coordinate colleges explained

Prior to, and for some time after the Revolutionary War, America's colleges and universities catered almost exclusively to males, following the British and European model. These colleges and universities only gradually opened to co-ed participation at a time when, generally, women seeking to extend their educations would either attend finishing schools, equating to the final years of high school, or a type of women's vocational school: teachers, nursing or (women's) business schools that were designed for female students and task-oriented in outcome. For these, typically, curricula would be designed as two-year courses, providing teachers, nurses, typists, and secretaries for an expanding country where, still, occupational sex roles were culturally enforced, if not as a matter of legislation.

The rise of 4-year women's schools

Countering this and to meet growing demand, several academically vigorous women's colleges in the United States were established. While a few were fully independent, more commonly these were set up as "coordinate colleges", enjoying various levels of support or integration with established and nearby men's colleges in the years leading up to World War II. "Coordination" here refers to an array of linkages, including direct administrative connections and even a parent/subordinate school relationship, cross-registration, the award of diplomas from the parent school, and at the student level, desirable social connections. After World War II, the establishment of new coordinated colleges appears to have been curtailed, as these gave way to widespread mergers with men's colleges or the move to make most pre-war single-sex institutions coeducational. Out of this turbulent period some of the coordinated colleges emerged as independent women's or co-educational colleges, while others merged with their male counterparts, or closed.[1]

Coordinate colleges versus other types

As a class, coordinate colleges were funded and structured quite differently from the finishing schools and business schools for women that had formed in the decades before WWII. Many of the latter were privately owned, for-profit institutions; today, most of these have vanished with only a few, perhaps one or two in each state, evolving into junior colleges themselves or merging into state college systems. Conversely, coordinate colleges can point to an affluent founder (or their partnering male-only school) as their initial and primary supporters; these were structured at the start with the expectation of continuation as long-term foundation- or endowment-supported entities, though none could anticipate the rush to merge or become co-educational in the post-war period. None of the coordinate colleges were investor-owned.[2]

Some, but not all, of the Seven Sisters can be classified as coordinate colleges with a specific originally male-only partner school. However, as a group, they have maintained an equivalent association with the Ivy League schools, conference-to-conference.[3]

Where coordination continues it is most apparent in consortium school relationships (Ivy league and others) to provide cross-registration and mutually accepted financial aid applications.

Coordinate colleges

These colleges include:

School nameAssociated institutionEstablished and rangeCityStateCo-ed statusStatusNotes
Bard CollegeColumbia UniversityAnnandale-on-HudsonNew YorkCo-edIndependent, merged, then independent again
Barnard CollegeColumbia University[4] ManhattanNew YorkWomen'sAffiliated
Bethlehem Female SeminaryMoravian UniversityGermantown, then BethlehemPhiladelphiaNAMerged
Evelyn College for WomenPrinceton University1887–1897PrincetonNAClosed
H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial CollegeTulane University1886New OrleansLouisianaNAMerged
Jackson College for WomenTufts University[5] Middlesex CountyMassachusettsNAMerged
Mills CollegeNortheastern UniversityOaklandCaliforniaNAMerged
Mount Holyoke CollegeAndover Theological SeminarySouth HadleyWomen'sIndependent
Ohio Wesleyan Female CollegeOhio Wesleyan University-1877DelawareNAMerged
Pembroke CollegeBrown University1891ProvidenceRhode IslandNAMerged
Radcliffe CollegeHarvard University[6] CambridgeMassachusettsNAMerged
Scripps CollegeClaremont CollegesClaremontCaliforniaWomen'sConsortium member
Spelman CollegeMorehouse College (Atlanta University Center)1881AtlantaGeorgiaWomen'sConsortium member
Tift CollegeMercer University-1986Forsyth, now MaconGeorgiaNAMerged
Vassar CollegeYale University[7] PoughkeepsieNew YorkCo-edFormerly affiliated
Wellesley CollegeMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyWellesleyMassachusettsWomen'sSeparate
Westhampton CollegeRichmond College (University of Richmond)1914[8] RichmondVirginiaCo-edAcademic merger in 1990
William Smith CollegeHobart College1908GenevaNew YorkWomen's/NASemi-merged

See also

Notes and References

  1. Malkiel . Nancy Weiss . “Keep the Damned Women Out”: The Struggle for Coeducation in the Ivy League, the Seven Sisters, Oxford, and Cambridge . Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society . March 2017 . 160 . 1 . 31-37 . 1 September 2023.
  2. Web site: What are the Ivy League equivalents to the Seven Sister schools? . Fluther.com . 1 September 2023.
  3. Web site: The Founding of The Seven Sisters . Vassar Encyclopedia . Vassar College . 1 September 2023.
  4. Web site: Short History of Barnard-Columbia Relations | Barnard 125. Columbia University.
  5. Web site: TEI | Light on the hill: A history of Tufts College, 1852-1952 | ID: 9c67wz173 | Tufts Digital Library. dl.tufts.edu.
  6. Sociology in the women’s annex: Inequality and integration at Harvard and Radcliffe, 1879–1947. Lawrence T.. Nichols. September 1, 1997. The American Sociologist. 28. 3. 5–28. Springer Link. 10.1007/s12108-997-1011-6.
  7. Web site: The Dangerous Experiment. August 9, 2018. National Women's History Museum.
  8. Web site: Westhampton College - University of Richmond . 2023-11-22 . wc . en.