Although its origins date to 1826, the University in its present form is the result of the 1967 federation of Case Institute of Technology and Western Reserve University. The two institutions had shared adjacent campuses since the late nineteenth century, and were involved in cooperative efforts for many years. Today, Case Western Reserve's enrollment and resources, distributed among undergraduate, graduate, and professional programs that encompass the arts and sciences, dental medicine, engineering, law, management, medicine, nursing, and social work, achieve a balance that is distinctive among American universities.
Programs
Accounting, Aerospace, Aerospace Engineering, American Studies, Anthropology, Applied Mathematics, Art, Art Education, Art History, Asian Studies, Astronomy, Banking, Biochemistry, Biology, Biomedical Engineering, Chemical, Chemistry, Child Studies, Chinese, Civil Engineering, Classics, Computer Engineering, Dance, Economics, Education, Electrical, Electrical Engineering, Electronics, Engineering, Engineering Physics, English, Entrepreneurship, Environmental Studies, Ethnic Studies, Finance, French, Gerontology, History, Information Systems, International Studies, Italian, Japanese, Judaic Studies, Management, Management Information Systems, Marketing, Math, Mathematics, Mechanical, Mechanical Engineering, Music, Music Education, Natural Sciences, Nutrition, Philosophy, Photography, Physics, Political Science, Psychology, Public Policy, Religious Studies, Russian, Science, Sciences, Sociology, Spanish, Statistics, Teacher Education, Theatre
Campus type
Normal
Carnegie
Doctoral/Research Universities-Extensive
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