Text Only
Search

'America's Oldest University': Why Penn Can Make Claim

13 June 2007
MP3 - Download Audio audio clip
Listen to MP3 audio clip
Listen in RealAudio audio clip

This is the VOA Special English Education Report.

We continue our Foreign Student Series this week with questions from three listeners.

Thu Ya Naing from Burma wants to know how many colleges and universities are in the United States. Alexander Romashchenko in Russia wonders which university in the United States is the oldest. And Mohamad Firouzi in Iran would like to know more about Harvard University.

The National Center for Education Statistics says more than four thousand two hundred colleges and universities award degrees. These include two-year schools as well as four-year schools.

Harvard Hall
Harvard Hall

The oldest institution of higher learning in the country is Harvard in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was established in sixteen thirty-six as Harvard College. Massachusetts was an English colony at the time.

The school was named for a Puritan religious leader. John Harvard gave the college all his books and half his property when he died.

At first, Harvard had one teacher and nine students. Today it has almost twenty thousand students. Nearly four thousand of them this past year were from outside the United States.

There are fourteen schools at Harvard. They include Harvard College and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Harvard College is the undergraduate division of the university and Radcliffe is a former college for women.

So Harvard came first. Later, in seventeen eighty, the Massachusetts Constitution went into effect and officially recognized Harvard as a university. Some Harvard materials call it America's oldest university.

College Hall at the University of Pennsylvania
College Hall at the University of Pennsylvania
But the University of Pennsylvania calls itself America's oldest university. Penn officials note that the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania recognized their school as a university in seventeen seventy-nine. That was one year before Harvard.

Yet the history gets a little complex. Penn considers its anniversary date to be seventeen forty. That was when the Charity School of Philadelphia was established, though it never opened. Benjamin Franklin later presented his ideas for a learning institution that included the Charity School. It opened in seventeen fifty-one and became the university.

Today, more than twenty-three thousand students attend the University of Pennsylvania. Four thousand of them come from other countries.

And that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach. Our series about studying in the United States is online at voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Steve Ember.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Foreign Student Series
 
  Featured Story
US Presidential Campaign Moves to Full Speed for Final Eight Weeks  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Serious Songs Give Bite to Death Cab for Cutie's Sixth Album  Audio Clip Available
U.S. Health Spending: Looking for a Cure  Audio Clip Available
School, and Family, Budgets Under Pressure  Audio Clip Available
American History Series: War of 1812 Ends With Treaty of Ghent  Audio Clip Available
Understanding Down Syndrome  Audio Clip Available
Jimmy Doolittle Is Best Remembered for Leading a Raid on Japan in 1942  Audio Clip Available
Scientists Find an Explanation for the Northern Lights  Audio Clip Available
Seeking a New Future for 'Lost' Fruits of Africa  Audio Clip Available
Schools Feel Effects of Weak Economy, High Fuel Prices as Classes Begin  Audio Clip Available
Saving Reindeer -- and a Community -- in Mongolia  Audio Clip Available
Five Labor Leaders Who Improved Conditions for American Workers  Audio Clip Available