All-Women Colleges

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Women's colleges were founded in the nineteenth-century when efforts were made to expand educational opportunities for
Newnham College, Cambridge. One of the 3 remaining all-women colleges.
women. Universities were not open to women, thus creating a glass ceiling for young women who wanted to pursue higher studies. Many women's colleges in the nineteenth-century were private foundations or established through religious institutions (notably the Catholic Church in the United States).

By the end of the nineteenth century, established universities in the United States began to establish 'coordinate' colleges,  a type of 'sister' system. Notable nineteenth century coordinate colleges included Barnard (with Columbia University), Pembroke (with Brown University), and Radcliffe College (with Harvard University).

In the United Kingdom, women's colleges appeared in the nineteenth-century to cater for women who attended lectures (but who were not allowed to take a degree). Newnham College began in a house for five students in 1871, one year after Lectures for Ladies started in Cambridge. Henry Sidgwick, one of the organisers of the lectures, rented a house in which young women attending the lectures could reside. With in creasing demand, funds were raised to build Newnham Hall. Newnham students followed a curriculum tailored for them, in constrast to Girton College which encouraged its students to study the same curriculum as men in order to achieve gender equality.

Increasingly, women's colleges in the United Kingdom and the United States have become co-educational due to financial pressures. This has sparked debates on the benefits of female-only education and the role of single sex institutions for gender equality and educational attainment. There remains male-only colleges in the United States; but none in the United Kingdom.

Contents

Women's Colleges in the United Kingdom

There are currently only three remaining women's colleges in the United Kingdom - all of them at the University of Cambridge:

Women's colleges which have become co-educational are:

Women's Colleges in Asia

Women's Colleges in the Middle East

Women's Colleges in the United States of America

References


See Also

Gender Education and Advocacy

Girls' Education



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