2025-2026 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
    Jul 02, 2025  
2025-2026 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

The College



History of the College

Founded in 1880 by Charles Wesley Emerson, noted preacher, orator, and teacher, Emerson College has grown into a comprehensive college enrolling over 4,000 undergraduate and graduate students from 50 states and several dozen countries. The original concentration on oratory has evolved into specialization in the fields of communication studies; marketing communication; communication sciences and disorders; journalism; performing arts; visual and media arts; and writing, literature and publishing.

Since Emerson’s founding, the elements of human communication-the spoken word, the written word, the gesture-have changed in both form and substance, and the media through which they flow have evolved and multiplied. Radio, motion pictures, television, and the sciences of speech pathology and audiology have all developed during the past century.

Throughout its history, Emerson College has shown the capacity to respond to and meet the needs of education in communication and the arts. Emerson was the first college in New England to establish an educational FM radio station (WERS in 1949), one of the first colleges in the nation to establish a program in children’s theater (1919), and one of the first colleges in the nation to offer undergraduate programs in broadcasting (1937). Among its other pioneering achievements, Emerson offered professional-level training in speech pathology and audiology (1935); established a closed-circuit television broadcast facility, WERS-TV (1954); and created a Bachelor of Fine Arts in film (1972).

Today, Emerson continues this tradition of innovation in communication and the arts. For example, since 2016, the College has offered a Bachelor of Fine Arts in the Comedic Arts-the first such program in the nation specifically designed to integrate comedic writing, performance, literature, media, and production across all comedic formats. The College is organized into two schools and an institute: a School of the Arts, a School of Communication, and the Marlboro Institute for Liberal Arts and Interdisciplinary Studies.

Concurrent with programmatic evolutions and academic reorganizations, Emerson has continued to upgrade the technology and the facilities necessary to support the curriculum. Emerson’s radio and television stations both offer webcasts in addition to traditional broadcasts, and the state-of-the-art Tufte Performance and Production Center opened in Fall 2003. In Spring 2010, the College opened the multi-use Paramount Center, which includes a 596-seat live performance theater, performance development facilities, the Bright Family Screening Room, and a residence hall.

In March 2014, Emerson College Los Angeles celebrated the opening of its new facility in Hollywood. Designed by award-winning architect Thom Mayne, the sustainable 10-story structure can house approximately 200 students and includes wired classrooms, an open-air screening and live-performance space, a Dolby Surround 7.1 audio post-production suite, a 4K screening room, computer labs, and mixing suites.

In Summer 2017, the College opened a new Dining Center and a new residence hall at Boylston Place. At more than 18,000 square feet, the multipurpose Dining Center has seating for 530 and provides much needed social spaces for the urban campus, including a performance stage area and a meeting space for faculty and staff. In 2019, the College opened the renovated Little Building residence hall that now houses 1,035 students and provides them with 16 lounges and 6 kitchenettes.

Emerson’s expansion into Boston’s cultural district has brought it within a few city blocks of the site where the College was first located in 1880. This return to the College’s roots has been accompanied by a renewal of its commitment to foster innovation and excellence in communication and the arts.

In 2020, Emerson and Marlboro College completed their planned alliance, through which Marlboro moved its academic programs to Emerson. Emerson welcomed a number of Marlboro undergraduates to matriculate and a number of Marlboro tenured, tenure-track, and emeritae faculty to teach starting in the Fall 2020 semester.

Emerson College is fully accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education and is a member of the Council of Graduate Schools.

Honorary Degrees and Awards

Emerson College awards the following honorary degrees: Doctor of Laws, Doctor of Humane Letters, Doctor of Literature, and Master of Arts. In addition to honorary degrees awarded through the College, the Musical Theatre Society confers the annual Leonidas A. Nickole Award of Distinction to an individual or individuals who have distinguished themselves as a role model in the field of American musical theater.

Phi Alpha Tau, the oldest communication arts honorary fraternity in the country, presents the Joseph E. Connor Award to any individual or individuals who have distinguished themselves in the field of communication.

The following is a partial list of recent recipients of honorary degrees and awards through the College.

Honorary Degree Recipients

Alan Alda

Debbie Allen

Edmund N. Ansin

Randy Barbato

Joseph R. Biden

Cheri Blauwet

Ian Bowles

Kevin Bright

Tom Brokaw

Carol Burnett

Michael E. Capuano

Christopher B. Cerf

Clifford Christians

Janet Langhart Cohen

Billy Collins

Jennifer Coolidge

Bernard Cornwell

Ted Cutler

Elspeth Cypher

Rita Dove

Jean Picker Firstenberg

Miloš Forman

Tom Freston

Fred Friendly

Danielle Legros Georges

David Gergen

Rebecca Newberger Goldstein

Juan Gonzalez

David Gregory

Henry Hampton

Anne Hawley

Doug A. Herzog

Anita Hill

Leo J. Hindery Jr.

Doug Holloway

Gwen Ifill

Shoo Iwasaki

Albert M. Jaffe 

Gish Jen

James Earl Jones

Deeyah Khan

John Kerry

Stanley Kunitz

Tony Kushner

Richard LaGravenese

Eugene M. Lang

Sherry Lansing

Norman Lear

Denis Leary

Dennis Lehane

John Lewis

Jacqueline Liebergott

Thomas Lux

David McCullough

Peter G. Meade

Mayor Thomas Menino

Melvin B. Miller

Sue Miller

Patricia Edenfield Mitchell

Walter Mosley

Max Mutchnick

Soledad O’Brien

Eduardo J. Padron

Nell Irvin Painter

Rod Parker

Thomas Payzant

Tom Perrotta

Dith Prahn

Hal Prince

Claudia Rankine

Fernando M. Reimers

Robin Roberts

Walter V. Robinson

Mark Samels

Isabel Sanford

Andrew Sarris

Gerald Schoenfeld

Alice Sebold

Terry S. Semel

Rod Serling

Robert F.X. Sillerman

Robert A. Silverman

Lesley Stahl

Robert Steele

Evan Thomas

Donald Thurston

Natasha Trethewey

Kathleen Turner

Liv Ullmann

Blair Underwood

John Updike

Jose Antonio Vargas

Charles V. Willie

Henry Winkler

Janet Yuen-Mei Wu

Marillyn Zacharis

Leonidas A. Nickole Award of Distinction (Presented by the Musical Theatre Society)

Beatrice Arthur

Christine Baranski

Ann Baxter

Michael Bennett

Jerry Bock

Ray Bolger

Carol Channing

Martin Charnin

Victoria Clark

Betty Comden

Barbara Cook

Ken Davenport

Fred Ebb

Scott Ellis

William Finn

Peter Gennaro

Jack Gilford

Adolph Green

Adam Guettel

Sheldon Harnick

Shirley Jones

John Kander

Michael John LaChiusa

James Lapine

Carol Lawrence

Lotte Lenya

Norn Lewis

Patti LuPone

Joe Masteroff

Donna McKechnie

David Merrick

Brian Stokes Mitchell

Jerry Mitchell

Robert Morse

Donna Murphy

Leonidas A. Nickole

Janis Paige

Bernadette Peters

Harold Prince

Ann Reinking

Stephen Schwartz

Sherri Rene Scott

Stephen Sondheim

Susan Stroman

Charles Strouse

Julie Taymor

Ben Vereen

Phi Alpha Tau Joseph E. Connor Award

Yul Brynner

Walter Cronkite

Hugh Downs

Arthur Fiedler

Robert Frost

David Hartman

Elia Kazan

Thomas Leahy

Dennis Lehane

Keith Lockhart

Jack Lemmon

Chris B. Montan

Edward R. Murrow

Carl Reiner

Robert Sarnoff

John Williams

Undergraduate Programs