Difference between revisions of "Barnard College"

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'''Barnard College''' is a single-sex, all-women educational institution in New York City. It was founded in 1889 and is affiliated with Columbia University. Barnard students can take classes with Columbia students and officially their degrees are granted by the trustees of Columbia University. Barnard's other major affiliation is as a member of the [[Seven Sisters]].
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{{wp-also}}
Its campus is located between West 116th to 120th street.
 
  
==Controversies==
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{{Infobox school
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|Name=Barnard College
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|Image=Barnard_Seal.gif
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|Established=[[1889]]
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|President=Laura Rosenbury
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|Dean=Leslie Grinage
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|Degrees=[[Bachelor of Arts]]
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|Enrollment= 2,682 students (2019)
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|Website=[http://www.barnard.edu/ www.barnard.edu]
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}}
  
Barnard has been the subject of several controversies, these are more or less all related to Barnard's standing with respect to the Columbia University undergraduate schools, and include:
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'''Barnard College''' is a liberal arts college for women located at 117th Street and [[Broadway (avenue)|Broadway]] next to Columbia's [[Morningside Heights campus]].  It is part of the prestigious [[Seven Sisters]] Colleges (the other members being Radcliffe, Smith, Wellesley, Bryn Mawr, Vassar, and Mount Holyoke). It was founded in [[1889]] for female undergraduate students at a time when [[Columbia College]] was an all-male college. 
  
===Barnard as a single-sex college===
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Barnard is an independent institution affiliated with the University via an [[Columbia-Barnard Intercorporate Agreement|intercorporate agreement]] negotiated between the two institutions. Barnard has an intricate, historical, often complex, and sometimes confusing [[Columbia-Barnard Relationship|relationship]] with Columbia.
Barnard has been accused of being outmoded and even sexist in its attitude towards admissions, it has responded to these allegations by suggesting that a single-sex educational environment is necessary to foster educational equality for women. Barnard is unique amongst its Ivy-coupled peers in terms of its relationship to its parent Ivy. Institutes like Radcliffe college, which once occupied a similar position with respect to Harvard as Barnard does to Columbia today, was formally integrated into Harvard proper. Barnard has traditionally resisted such pressures to do the same since the 1960's. It has been argued that as the Columbia undergraduate division had an all-male admissions policy up until 1980, Barnard served a vital role in granting women access to a Columbia quality education. However since Columbia became co-ed in 1980, it has been subject to repeated accusations of being obsolete.
 
  
===Seperate but equal?===
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The current President is Laura Rosenbury.
As was mentioned in the previous section, Barnard has fiercely defended its individuality in the face of attempts by Columbia to integrate it, however this has lead to tensions between their respective undergraduate student bodies. Barnard college degrees are officially granted by the trustees of Columbia university, despite its status as an affiliate rather than as a fully integrated undergraduate division. It has been suggested that this gives Barnard students the opportunity to claim that they attended Columbia proper and in doing so create unfair competition in the job markets. It has also been suggested that this is unfair given the average disparity between the entry qualifications (SAT I, II, ACT, AP etc) for undergraduates at the respective institutions. Another dimension of this controversy involved giving Barnard students the choice between @barnard.edu and @columbia.edu cubmail addresses, which in light of certain perceived privileges that could be derived from the use of an @columbia.edu e-mail address, still remains the subject of furious debate on both campuses.
 
  
===Residence hall swipe access===
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==History==
Another issue that has sparked controversy is the issue of dormitory access via swipe card. Barnard students, who traditionally have been unable to gain access to Columbia University dormitories through card-swipe have been vocal in demanding this particular right. Columbia has a policy of not giving swipe access to its dormitories to students who are not housed through the lottery system, students in Barnard housing and in University apartment housing (which includes General Studies and graduate students) fall outside of this system, so are not typically granted swipe-access. The issue is complicated even more by the fact that some dormitories have a mixed student body, so this means that certain Barnard students get swipe-access and others don't. The need for a resolution to this problem that is satisfactory to all parties involved is an oft campaigned upon issue for student government, but the reality seems to be that a compromise is a long way off, as the university is resolute with regards to its swipe-access policy.
 
  
== Map ==
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[[File:Barnard ivy day.jpg|thumb|Barnard Class of [[1913]] students celebrate [[Ivy Day]] outside [[Brooks Hall]]]]
<googlemap lat="40.809717" lon="-73.963373" type="map" zoom="16" width="500" height="300" controls="small">
 
#758bc5
 
40.808442, -73.964767
 
40.808149, -73.964038
 
40.810545, -73.962289
 
40.810862, -73.963019
 
40.808442, -73.964767
 
</googlemap>
 
  
[[Category: Schools]]
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Barnard's pre-history dates back to [[1876]], the first time the Trustees of Columbia were petitioned to admit women. In [[1879]], Columbia president [[Frederick A. P. Barnard]] included in his [[Annual Reports of the President to the Trustees|Annual Report to the Trustees]] an argument in favor of admitting women, suggesting that if [[Columbia College]] were going to be of any use in his vision for a University, then they could at least admit women. He continued to include his arguments in his annual reports, and in [[1882]] printed his greatest hits from the previous three years in a volume titled "The Higher Education of Women." In [[1883]] the [[University Trustees|trustees]] finally responded in part by establishing the [[Plan for the Education of Women in Connection to Columbia College]], which allowed any woman over the age of 17 who passed an entrance exam to sit for all of the exams Columbia College students took, and on successful passage and payment of $5, granted her a certificate bearing their seal. Beginning in [[1886]], the trustees would begin offering an actual Columbia [[BA]] [[degree]] to course completers.
 +
 
 +
In the spring of [[1889]], responding to a request by [[Annie Nathan Meyer]] and others to establish a formal annex for women's education at Columbia, the Trustees agreed to provide a space and Columbia faculty members to teach women.<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=UGlMAAAAYAAJ&vq=barnard&pg=RA1-PA50#v=snippet&q=barnard&f=false Barnard College], Columbia Spectator, 25 April 1889.</ref> And thus, on October 7, 1889, Barnard College was born.
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 +
On October 23, [[1890]], the ''[[Spec]]'' announced its intention to cover affairs at Barnard College with this wonderfully condescending (and sexist!) editorial:
 +
 
 +
{{quotation
 +
|1=''"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."''
 +
''
 +
|2=The Columbia Spectator.
 +
}}
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 +
Beginning in [[1891]], Barnard began operating as an affiliate of Columbia, with further refinement of the arrangement in [[1893]]. The arrangement was finally formalized in [[1900]] with the first [[Columbia-Barnard Intercorporate Agreement]]. As part of the agreement, the President of Columbia University also served as President of Barnard College, while Barnard's chief officer held the title of "Dean." In [[1952]], Dean [[Millicent McIntosh]] chose to adopt the title of "President" as part of Barnard's growing assertion of its independent status.
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Barnard spent a great deal of the [[1970s]] and early [[1980s]] in negotiations with Columbia over a potential merger and undergraduate co-education. Ultimately, Barnard chose to remain independent, and in [[1982]], Columbia College went co-ed on its own.
 +
 
 +
Barnard has managed to survive, and thrive, thank you very much, while co-existing with the co-ed college across the street ever since.
 +
 
 +
== Relationship with Columbia ==
 +
 
 +
:''Main article: [[Columbia-Barnard Relationship]]''
 +
 
 +
Barnard is institutionally and financially independent, while academically and socially linked to Columbia. Institutionally, Barnard has its own board of trustees which oversees the college's operation, its own endowment, its own faculty, its own campus (Columbia does not share ownership of any of Barnard's campus buildings), and its own administration. Barnard pays Columbia for access to utilities, the University's libraries, and other facilities such as [[Lerner Hall]]. Columbia University plays no role in admitting Barnard students. Academically, the two schools offer near-complete course cross-registrations to students of the other institution, and Barnard graduates receive their [[degrees]] from the Trustees of Columbia University, a tradition dating back to the Collegiate Course for Women, before Barnard's foundation. With some exceptions, students at both institutions participate in an integrated social scene, including access to the same extra-curricular activities.
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 +
==Campus==
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:''Main article: [[Barnard campus]]''
 +
 
 +
Barnard's four acre campus lies across Broadway from Columbia's main [[Morningside Heights campus]], spread on the half-block between Broadway, [[Claremont Avenue]], [[116th Street]] and [[120th Street]].
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 +
The heart of Barnard's campus is [[Barnard Hall]], aligned with the Barnard gates and the main east-west axis of the Columbia campus. It was built in the style of Columbia's academic buildings across the street and houses the college's athletic facilities, including [[LeFrak Gymnasium]] and the Barnard pool, as well as classrooms and lecture halls. [[Milbank Hall]] is the oldest building on campus; it was the original building when Barnard moved to Morningside Heights with Columbia in 1897. In between are a number of academic buildings, including [[Altschul Hall]], [[Lehman Hall]] (home of the [[Barnard Library]]), and the new [[Diana]] student center, completed in February 2010.
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Over 1000 Barnard students live in the [[The Quad]] dorms immediately south of Barnard Hall. The rest live in Barnard dorms within the Morningside Heights neighborhood (though some, like [[Cathedral Gardens]], are very far-flung). [[Hewitt Dining Hall|Hewitt]], the main dining facility for Barnard students, is located mostly below street level underneath these dorms.
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 +
The Barnard campus is connected by open-access tunnels, which make traversing campus easy in inclement weather, which is more than can be said for Columbia's [[tunnels]], which require virtual spelunking skills to access in some cases.
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 +
==Academics==
 +
 
 +
Barnard students, unlike their Columbia College counterparts, do not have a Core Curriculum, but rather engage in an elaborate distribution requirement known as the [[Nine Ways of Knowing]], which includes a tailor-made First Year Seminar and a number of electives within a given number of categories.
 +
 
 +
==Notable Alumnae==
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 +
There are many notable [[Barnard alumnae]] including Anna Quindlen, '74, Martha Stewart, '62, and Jhumpa Lahiri, '89.
 +
 
 +
==Trivia==
 +
 
 +
Recent Commencement speakers have included President Barack Obama, CC '83, in 2012, Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Facebook, in 2011, Meryl Streep in 2010, and Hillary Clinton in 2009.
 +
 
 +
When it was announced in March 2012 that President Obama would be speaking at the 2012 Barnard Commencement, the Internet (i.e. BWOG and Spec comment sections) had a hissy fit, inciting what is now popularly known as "[[Obamanard]]," with students from both sides of the street engaging in intense and anonymous conversation online.
 +
 
 +
== Dining locations ==
 +
* [[Hewitt Dining Hall]]
 +
* [[The Diana Center]]
 +
 
 +
== Housing ==
 +
 
 +
===The Quad===
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* [[Sulzberger Tower]]
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* [[Reid]]
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* [[Brooks]]
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* [[Hewitt Hall]]
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* [[Sulzberger]]
 +
 
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===116th St.===
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* [[600 W 116th]]
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* [[616 W 116th]]
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* [[620 W 116th]]
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===Other===
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* [[601 W 110th]]
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* [[Elliott]]
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* [[Plimpton]]
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* [[Cathedral Gardens]]
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 +
 
 +
== External links ==
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* [http://www.barnard.edu/ Barnard College website]
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 +
== References ==
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<references />
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 +
{{Schools}}
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 +
[[Category:Barnard College]]
 +
[[Category:Affiliates]]

Latest revision as of 22:31, 3 July 2023

See also Wikipedia's article about "Barnard College".
Barnard College
Barnard Seal.gif
Established 1889
President Laura Rosenbury
Dean Leslie Grinage
Degrees Bachelor of Arts
Enrollment 2,682 students (2019)
Website www.barnard.edu

Barnard College is a liberal arts college for women located at 117th Street and Broadway next to Columbia's Morningside Heights campus. It is part of the prestigious Seven Sisters Colleges (the other members being Radcliffe, Smith, Wellesley, Bryn Mawr, Vassar, and Mount Holyoke). It was founded in 1889 for female undergraduate students at a time when Columbia College was an all-male college.

Barnard is an independent institution affiliated with the University via an intercorporate agreement negotiated between the two institutions. Barnard has an intricate, historical, often complex, and sometimes confusing relationship with Columbia.

The current President is Laura Rosenbury.

History

Barnard Class of 1913 students celebrate Ivy Day outside Brooks Hall

Barnard's pre-history dates back to 1876, the first time the Trustees of Columbia were petitioned to admit women. In 1879, Columbia president Frederick A. P. Barnard included in his Annual Report to the Trustees an argument in favor of admitting women, suggesting that if Columbia College were going to be of any use in his vision for a University, then they could at least admit women. He continued to include his arguments in his annual reports, and in 1882 printed his greatest hits from the previous three years in a volume titled "The Higher Education of Women." In 1883 the trustees finally responded in part by establishing the Plan for the Education of Women in Connection to Columbia College, which allowed any woman over the age of 17 who passed an entrance exam to sit for all of the exams Columbia College students took, and on successful passage and payment of $5, granted her a certificate bearing their seal. Beginning in 1886, the trustees would begin offering an actual Columbia BA degree to course completers.

In the spring of 1889, responding to a request by Annie Nathan Meyer and others to establish a formal annex for women's education at Columbia, the Trustees agreed to provide a space and Columbia faculty members to teach women.[1] And thus, on October 7, 1889, Barnard College was born.

On October 23, 1890, the Spec announced its intention to cover affairs at Barnard College with this wonderfully condescending (and sexist!) 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."

The Columbia Spectator.

Beginning in 1891, Barnard began operating as an affiliate of Columbia, with further refinement of the arrangement in 1893. The arrangement was finally formalized in 1900 with the first Columbia-Barnard Intercorporate Agreement. As part of the agreement, the President of Columbia University also served as President of Barnard College, while Barnard's chief officer held the title of "Dean." In 1952, Dean Millicent McIntosh chose to adopt the title of "President" as part of Barnard's growing assertion of its independent status.

Barnard spent a great deal of the 1970s and early 1980s in negotiations with Columbia over a potential merger and undergraduate co-education. Ultimately, Barnard chose to remain independent, and in 1982, Columbia College went co-ed on its own.

Barnard has managed to survive, and thrive, thank you very much, while co-existing with the co-ed college across the street ever since.

Relationship with Columbia

Main article: Columbia-Barnard Relationship

Barnard is institutionally and financially independent, while academically and socially linked to Columbia. Institutionally, Barnard has its own board of trustees which oversees the college's operation, its own endowment, its own faculty, its own campus (Columbia does not share ownership of any of Barnard's campus buildings), and its own administration. Barnard pays Columbia for access to utilities, the University's libraries, and other facilities such as Lerner Hall. Columbia University plays no role in admitting Barnard students. Academically, the two schools offer near-complete course cross-registrations to students of the other institution, and Barnard graduates receive their degrees from the Trustees of Columbia University, a tradition dating back to the Collegiate Course for Women, before Barnard's foundation. With some exceptions, students at both institutions participate in an integrated social scene, including access to the same extra-curricular activities.

Campus

Main article: Barnard campus

Barnard's four acre campus lies across Broadway from Columbia's main Morningside Heights campus, spread on the half-block between Broadway, Claremont Avenue, 116th Street and 120th Street.

The heart of Barnard's campus is Barnard Hall, aligned with the Barnard gates and the main east-west axis of the Columbia campus. It was built in the style of Columbia's academic buildings across the street and houses the college's athletic facilities, including LeFrak Gymnasium and the Barnard pool, as well as classrooms and lecture halls. Milbank Hall is the oldest building on campus; it was the original building when Barnard moved to Morningside Heights with Columbia in 1897. In between are a number of academic buildings, including Altschul Hall, Lehman Hall (home of the Barnard Library), and the new Diana student center, completed in February 2010.

Over 1000 Barnard students live in the The Quad dorms immediately south of Barnard Hall. The rest live in Barnard dorms within the Morningside Heights neighborhood (though some, like Cathedral Gardens, are very far-flung). Hewitt, the main dining facility for Barnard students, is located mostly below street level underneath these dorms.

The Barnard campus is connected by open-access tunnels, which make traversing campus easy in inclement weather, which is more than can be said for Columbia's tunnels, which require virtual spelunking skills to access in some cases.

Academics

Barnard students, unlike their Columbia College counterparts, do not have a Core Curriculum, but rather engage in an elaborate distribution requirement known as the Nine Ways of Knowing, which includes a tailor-made First Year Seminar and a number of electives within a given number of categories.

Notable Alumnae

There are many notable Barnard alumnae including Anna Quindlen, '74, Martha Stewart, '62, and Jhumpa Lahiri, '89.

Trivia

Recent Commencement speakers have included President Barack Obama, CC '83, in 2012, Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Facebook, in 2011, Meryl Streep in 2010, and Hillary Clinton in 2009.

When it was announced in March 2012 that President Obama would be speaking at the 2012 Barnard Commencement, the Internet (i.e. BWOG and Spec comment sections) had a hissy fit, inciting what is now popularly known as "Obamanard," with students from both sides of the street engaging in intense and anonymous conversation online.

Dining locations

Housing

The Quad

116th St.

Other


External links

References

  1. Barnard College, Columbia Spectator, 25 April 1889.
Columbia University Schools
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Affiliated Institutions
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Defunct Schools
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