Barnard College

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Barnard College
Barnard Seal.gif
Established 1889
President {{{President}}}
Dean President Deborah Spar
Degrees BA
Enrollment 2,389 students
Website www.barnard.columbia.edu

Barnard College is the women's division of Columbia University in the City of New York. It is part of the prestigious Seven Sisters Colleges (the other members being Bryn Mawr, Mount Holyoke, Radcliffe, Smith, Vassar, and Wellesley). It was founded in 1889 for female undergraduate students at Columbia University at a time when Columbia College accepted only men (it would become co-ed in 1983).

Barnard is affiliated with the University via an intercorporate agreement negotiated between the two institutions. Barnard students can take most classes at the University (most notably, they may not take Columbia College Core Curriculum classes). Barnard College degrees are conferred at University commencement, along with the three other undergraduate schools -- Columbia College, the School of General Studies, the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences -- along with all of the graduate divisions. Barnard degrees are awarded by Columbia Univeristy[1].

Barnard College maintains its own alumnae organization separate from the Columbia University Alumni Association[2]. Barnard College operates its own undergraduate campus, located west of Broadway between West 116th and 120th streets, which is part of Columbia University's Morningside Heights campus complex.

Barnard has a complicated relationship with Columbia.

For many years Barnard College was headed by a Dean, but at around the time Columbia College decided to admit women, Barnard decided to elevate the status of its highest ranking administrator to President.

History

On October 23, 1890, the Spec welcomed Barnard with this editorial:

"With this issue Barnard College makes her bow--we beg the young ladies' pardon, her courtesy [curtsy]--to our readers. It is, for the present at least, our intention to make the news of our sister school a regular--and of course a pretty--department of our paper.

In if the course of time, however, we find that our sister students, prepossessing and spirituelle though they be, are not interesting and alert, we shall indeed feel obliged to sacrifice their publicity to more pressing news!

We shall, therefore, anxiously await from our correspondent the account of something 'real naughty and shocking' to keep alive interest. We should not like to suggest a love affair with a tutor; but if such an event came to pass spontaneously in the course of time, nothing could be further from our profession of impartiality than to restrain the news of it."

Dining locations

Housing

Map

<googlemap lat="40.809717" lon="-73.963373" type="map" zoom="16" width="500" height="300" controls="small">

  1. 758bc5

40.808442, -73.964767 40.808149, -73.964038 40.810545, -73.962289 40.810862, -73.963019 40.808442, -73.964767 </googlemap>


External links

References


Columbia University Schools
Architecture, Planning and PreservationArtsArts and Sciences (Graduate School)BusinessColumbia CollegeDentistryContinuing EducationEngineeringGeneral StudiesInternational and Public AffairsJournalismLawMedicineNursingPublic HealthSocial Work
Affiliated Institutions
BarnardJewish Theological SeminaryTeachers CollegeUnion Theological Seminary
Defunct Schools
PharmacyLibrary Service