Drexel University
Drexel University is a private research university located in Philadelphia's University City neighborhood. Founded in 1891 by financier Anthony J. Drexel, it started with a specific mission: practical education that prepared students for careers in industry and business. The university's cooperative education program, established in 1919 as one of the nation's first, remains central to everything Drexel does, weaving classroom learning together with professional work experience. Today it serves approximately 24,000 students spread across fifteen colleges and schools, blending its technical education roots with comprehensive university offerings in medicine, law, arts, and sciences.[1]
History
Anthony J. Drexel was a partner of J.P. Morgan and one of the nineteenth century's most successful financiers. In 1891, he founded the Drexel Institute of Art, Science and Industry to provide practical education for working-class Philadelphians. The institution opened in the Main Building, whose Victorian Gothic architecture still anchors campus today, and offered programs in commerce, engineering, library science, and domestic arts.
Drexel's vision wasn't just about technical training. He wanted something bigger: technical training combined with broader education that'd prepare graduates for productive careers while developing them as full human beings and citizens.[2]
The twentieth century brought steady evolution. In 1970 the institute gained university status, and then it expanded into fields way beyond its technical origins. Two major mergers changed things: MCP Hahnemann University joined in 2002, adding medical education. The Academy of Natural Sciences came aboard in 2011, bringing natural history collections. From regional technical institute to comprehensive research university. Yet it never lost those cooperative education traditions that still set it apart today.[1]
Cooperative Education
Here's what makes Drexel tick. Most undergraduates must complete multiple six-month work experiences integrated straight into their academic programs. They alternate: classroom study, then professional employment, then back again. Typically students finish three co-op cycles over five years, which means they graduate with substantial real-world experience already on their résumés. That matters in job markets. That builds professional networks you can't get any other way.[1]
The program connects students with an enormous range of employers. Fortune 500 companies. Startups. Government agencies. Nonprofits. Over 1,700 employers across 38 countries participate, providing paid professional experiences that let students actually explore career paths while building their qualifications. Many students get job offers directly from co-op employers, proving that experiential education can drive career transitions in ways classroom learning simply cannot.[1]
Academic Programs
Across its fifteen colleges and schools, Drexel offers over 200 degree programs. Traditional strengths in engineering, business, and information science continue to be strong, but the university's added newer programs in medicine, law, and arts. The College of Engineering came first and keeps its solid reputation in areas from biomedical engineering to computer science. LeBow College of Business stays true to Drexel's overall philosophy by emphasizing experiential learning. Westphal College of Media Arts and Design prepares students for creative work in media, entertainment, and design.[1]
Then there's the College of Medicine, brought in through that 2002 merger. Drexel University College of Medicine operates with clinical affiliations throughout the Philadelphia region. The Kline School of Law teaches legal education while emphasizing practical skills alongside traditional doctrinal instruction. The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University combines a natural history museum with academic programs in biodiversity, environmental science, and museum studies, creating something you won't find elsewhere: real educational opportunities where research, collections, and public engagement actually intersect.[1]
Campus
Drexel's 96-acre University City campus sits adjacent to the University of Pennsylvania and near 30th Street Station, which is Philadelphia's major rail hub. The campus mixes historic structures from the institute's early years with contemporary buildings that support modern research and teaching. The Main Building from 1891 anchors everything. From there the campus expanded eastward toward the Schuylkill River and northward into what used to be industrial areas, now transformed into academic and residential facilities.[2]
Major facilities include the Daskalakis Athletic Center, URBN Center (a renovated industrial building housing arts and design programs), and Gerri C. LeBow Hall for the business school. The university's invested heavily in campus development over recent years, adding residence halls, academic buildings, and student amenities that've transformed it from commuter institution to residential university. Schuylkill Yards development promises continued transformation in areas right next to campus.[1]
Research
The research enterprise here generates over $130 million annually. Work spans engineering and medicine to arts and humanities. Materials science, biomedical engineering, infectious disease, information science: these are areas where Drexel shows real strength. That applied orientation shapes research that tackles practical problems while advancing fundamental knowledge. It's consistent with the founding principles that emphasized useful education.[1]
Research centers and institutes focus on everything from cybersecurity to autism treatment to advanced materials. Industry partnerships support both research and co-op opportunities for students. Being in an urban location helps tremendously: the university partners with companies, hospitals, and organizations throughout Philadelphia. The city itself becomes a laboratory for applied research that addresses real-world challenges.[1]
See Also
- University City
- Anthony J. Drexel
- Academy of Natural Sciences
- Drexel University College of Medicine
- 30th Street Station