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NAWE/NAWDAC

 Sub-Series
Identifier: M086.06.01

Abstract

This sub-series contains materials related to the National Association of Women in Education (NAWE), which was previously the National Association of Women Deans, Administrators, and Counselors (NAWDAC). NAWDAC was founded by Kathryn Sisson Phillips in 1916, in reaction to the large increases in the number of women in higher education in the late nineteenth century, which led to an increase in the number of deans of women, establishing it as a professional occupation. While operating as the National Association of Deans of Women, the group carried out research, ran scholarships, and produced pamphlets regarding female students and deans of women. A group for African American students, called the Association of Deans of Women and Advisers to Girls in Negro Colleges and Schools, was formed by 1935. After World War II the association advocated and lobbied organisations and higher learning institutions to retain and hire women in policy-making positions.[2] By the 1950s the organisation ran an annual meeting, a journal, and had over 1500 members.[3] In 1951 the association's members voted to retain their autonomy and focus on women and in 1953 worked with the American Council on Education to establish a Commission on the Education of Women, which was later disbanded in 1962.[2]

In 1956 then president Eunice Hilton announced that the organisation was being renamed to the National Association of Women Deans and Counselors. The 1960s saw the association's highest level of membership, with the organisation continuing to push for women's rights and equality. In 1971 the members again voted on the topic of merging with other education associations, with the result of remaining single-gender. By 1973, however, the organisation had decided to broaden its scope to other educational professions following the enactment of Title IX, renaming to the National Association of Women Deans, Administrators, and Counselors and began allowing men to join. In 1975 the association became the first organization in the United States to pass a resolution which refused to hold its conferences in states which hadn't ratified the equal rights amendment. By 1989 the association had taken on sole responsibility for the National Conference for College Women Student Leaders, which provided support, networking, and awards for collegiate women, and continued to publish its journal Initiatives as well as running conferences. In September 1990 the association voted to change their name to the National Association for Women in Education, an alteration which was implemented at the association's 75th anniversary conference in 1991. Marriot Management Services gave the association $125,000 in April 1996 to assist "the development and implementation of innovative leadership training programs for women within [education]" which led to the creation of the Institute for Emerging Women Leaders in Higher Education. In 1999 the association ran their first International Conference on Women in Higher Education, having taken it over from the University of Texas at El Paso. Increased competition from other associations, a lack of funding, and a decrease in single-sex organisations contributed to the association deciding to cease operating in 2000. It left behind considerable funding to continue to support the National Conference for College Women Student Leaders.--Wikipedia

When NAWE dissolved, they transferred the majority of NAWE assets and intellectual property over to HERS. A contingency fund was also set up to handle any outstanding NAWE obligations, and HERS was granted authority over the fund. Also transferred to HERS were several plaques, publications, and records.

Dates

  • 1969-2014

Conditions Governing Use

Copyright not evaluated: The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. See: https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/?language=en

Extent

1 Linear Feet (1 record box)

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

The Higher Education Resource Services (HERS) records reflect the development of a successful women's organization. The collection contains papers generated by the HERS office from the three last decades of the twentieth century, including correspondence, memorandums, notes, reports, meeting minutes, financial statements, directories, resumes, newsletters, curriculum notebooks, conference announcements, conference evaluations, grant applications, journal articles, newspaper clippings, course catalogs, position announcements, mailing list cards, journals, published materials, ephemera and research materials. The materials date from the late 1960s to the mid-1990s.

Creator

Repository Details

Part of the Special Collections and Archives Repository

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