Harvard Division of Continuing Education

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Harvard Division of Continuing Education
Harvard Division of Continuing Education

The Division of Continuing Education and University Extension School is a part of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) at Harvard University responsible for various undergraduate, graduate, and non-degree programs that enroll approximately 20,000 students each year. In contrast to the other degree granting schools within FAS, such as Harvard College and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS), the division has open enrollment (the degree programs require a formal admissions process), and tuition on a per course basis. This enables part-time undergraduate and graduate students, undergraduates at other colleges and universities, and adults in the Boston area access to Harvard's faculty, laboratories, library system, and facilities.

[edit] Programs

Currently, the Division of Continuing Education comprises five major programs:

  1. The Harvard Summer School
  2. The Harvard Extension School
  3. The Harvard Institute for English Language Programs, and
  4. The Harvard Institute for Learning in Retirement
  5. The Harvard Summer Secondary School Program


The Harvard Summer School, founded in 1871, is the oldest academic summer session in the United States. Each summer more than 5,000 students of all ages come to Harvard from across the U.S. and nearly 80 foreign countries to study for eight weeks with faculty from Harvard and other major American and foreign universities. The Summer School offers approximately 200 daytime and evening classes in over forty disciplines in the liberal arts, sciences, and engineering.

The Harvard Extension School, founded by Harvard University President A. Lawrence Lowell in 1909, is an academic program designed to serve the educational interests and needs of the greater Boston community. The Extension School features open enrollment (the degree programs require a formal admissions process),part-time evening classes, coeducation, instructors drawn mainly from Harvard, and an opportunity for personal enrichment, career advancement, or study leading to a degree or certificate. The school currently awards the degrees of Associate in Art (AA), Bachelor of Liberal Arts (ALB), Master of Liberal Arts (ALM), Master of Liberal Arts in mathematics for teaching, master of liberal arts in biotechnology, master of liberal arts in environmental management, master of liberal arts in museum studies, and master of liberal arts in information technology. There are certificate programs in administration and management, applied sciences, environmental management, publishing and communications, and technologies of education.

The Harvard Institute for English Language Programs was founded in 1950 to meet the language needs of post-World War II immigrants to the United States. During the academic year, the Institute offers part-time day and evening programs to non-native English speakers in the greater Boston area. During the summer, it offers day and nighttime intensive English language instruction, as well as a business program.

The Harvard Institute for Learning in Retirement, created in 1977, offers retires and other older adults an opportunity to pursue intellectual interests and explore new areas of knowledge in peer-taught study groups. Each year, approximately 500 people, ranging in age from their fifties to their nineties, participate in the institute's programs.

The Harvard Summer Secondary School Program offers high school seniors, juniors, and sophomores an extraordinary chance to sample college. Students take college classes taught by fine instructors, meet students from around the world, and take part in social, recreational, and college preparatory activities: a college fair, trips to other colleges, intramural athletics, dances, a trivia bowl, music groups, and a talent show. Special features include the Math Program, the Writing Program, Summer Seminars, and College Prep activities and workshops.

[edit] Organization and faculty

The Division of Continuing Education and University Extension is led by a dean, who is appointed by and reports to the dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. The dean of the Harvard Summer School reports to the dean of Continuing Education. The Summer School and the Extension School draw their instructors from among the tenured and ladder-rank faculty in the various Arts and Sciences departments, certain academic administrators, and various part-time lecturers and practitioners.


[edit] External links

Schools of Harvard University
Faculty of Arts and Sciences: CollegeGraduate School of Arts and SciencesDivision of Engineering and Applied SciencesContinuing Education
Faculty of Medicine: Medical SchoolSchool of Dental Medicine
Divinity SchoolLaw SchoolBusiness SchoolGraduate School of Design
Graduate School of EducationSchool of Public HealthKennedy School of Government
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study (successor to Radcliffe College)