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Coeducation

Coeducation is the American English term for integrated education of men and women. Before coeducation became predominant, most important institutions of higher education restricted their enrollment to men. Women were educated in all-female schools, if at all.

Coeducation in the United States

The first coeducational institution of higher education in the United States was Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio. The agitation for coeducation by feminists grew through the American Civil War era, and by 1872 there were 97 American universities admitting women. Some institutions refused to integrate fully, but were willing to educate women in closely associated schools--a variation on the later "separate but equal" standard of racially segregated schools followed in some parts of the US. Examples of this parallelism include Radcliffe College at Harvard University in Massachusetts and Barnard College at Columbia University in New York. A variety of gender-segrated women's institutions were founded, notably the Seven Sisters of New England. Some of these "girls schools" are now coeducational (e.g. Vassar), others are not (e.g. Wellesley).

It should be noted that many or most "common schools"--the neighborhood, village and county schools that educated most Americans through the end of the 19th century--were coeducational from the beginning, in part because small school districts could not fund separate educational facilities for girls and boys.

Remarkably, after a little more than than a century in the mainstream higher education system of the United States, American women now earn the majority of bachelor's degrees and account for 60% of the enrolled undergraduate population.

U.S. Institutions of higher education coeducational from establishment

Years Canadian educational institutions became coeducational

1884McGill University

Years U.S. educational institutions became coeducational

1860University of Wisconsin
1865Cornell University
1867DePauw University
1868University of Iowa Law School
1870University of Michigan
1872Cornell University
1882Florida State University
1883Bucknell University
1885University of Mississippi
1888George Washington University, Tulane University Pharamaceutical School
1892Auburn University
1893Macalester College, University of Connecticut
1894Boalt Hall
1897University of Buffalo Law School, University of North Carolina (graduate students)
1902Miami University
1909Tulane University School of Dentistry
1914University of Pennsylvania Medical School, Tulane University Medical School
1918College of William and Mary
1922Northeastern University School of Law
1931Seattle University
1942Wake Forest University
1952Lincoln University
1953Georgia Tech
1953Harvard Law School
1968Princeton University, Virginia Tech
1969Yale University, Georgetown University, Kenyon College
1970University of Virginia, Johns Hopkins University
1972University of Notre Dame, Washington and Lee University Law School, Davidson College
1976United States Military Academy, United States Naval Academy, United States Air Force Academy, United States Coast Guard Academy, Claremont McKenna College
1983Columbia College
1985Washington and Lee University
1993The Citadel

External links

See also: List of women's colleges in the United States

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Coeducation".

 

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