In the United Kingdom,
Oxford University's
Department for Continuing Education was founded in 1878, and the
Institute of Continuing Education of
Cambridge University dates back to 1873. In the United States, the
Chautauqua Institution, originally the Chautauqua Lake Sunday School Assembly, was founded in 1874 "as an educational experiment in out-of-school, vacation learning. It was successful and broadened almost immediately beyond courses for Sunday school teachers to include academic subjects, music, art and physical education."
Harvard University traces its origins in continuing education to 1835 when
John Lowell Jr. established the
Lowell Institute with a mission to provide free public lectures in Boston. In 1909, then-Harvard President
A. Lawrence Lowell, who was also a trustee of the Lowell Institute, expanded plans to offer Lowell Institute public courses directly with Harvard. In 1910, Lowell formally established the
Havard Extension School, then referred to as the Commission on Extension Courses. The
Harvard Extension School now operates under the
Faculty of Arts and Sciences and is one of the 13 degree-granting schools that makes up
Harvard University. The School has remained in continuous operation since 1910.
Cornell University was among higher education institutions that began offering university-based continuing education, primarily to teachers, through extension courses in the 1870s. As noted in the
Cornell Era of February 16, 1877, the university offered a "Tour of the Great Lakes" program for "teachers and others" under the direction of Professor
Theodore B. Comstock, head of Cornell's department of geology. The
University of Wisconsin–Madison began its continuing education program in 1907.
The New School for Social Research, founded in 1919, was initially devoted to adult education. In 1969,
Empire State College, a unit of the
State University of New York, was the first institution in the US to exclusively focus on providing
higher education to adult learners. In 1976 the
University of Florida created its own
Division of Continuing Education and most courses were offered on evenings or weekends to accommodate the schedules of working students. The method of delivery of continuing education can include traditional types of classroom lectures and laboratories. However, many continuing education programs make heavy use of
distance education, which not only includes independent study, but can also include
videotaped material,
broadcast programming or
online education which has more recently dominated the distance learning community. ==For professionals==