Undergraduate Day College
Assumption was founded in the year 1904 by the
Augustinians of the
Assumption 
, a Catholic order dedicated
service through teaching and the dogma of the Assumption of
Mary. The original campus was located in the Greendale section of Worcester, on a tract of hillside land. In these early
years, enrollment was exclusively male, primarily of French-Canadien heritage. Most courses were taught in French, though a very
few were taught in English.In June of 1953, a tornado cut a path of
destruction through several Western and Central Massachusetts
communities, including the city of Worcester. Several campus buildings were destroyed or severely damaged by this tornado.
Although the Assumption Preparatory School stayed on the rebuilt campus until circa 1970,
the College relocated to a new campus off Salisbury St, in the West side of the city, officially opening in 1956.In 1969, Assumption became a coeducational institution, allowing both laymen and -women
into the faculty and female students into its programs of study.Centennial festivities began early in January 2004, celebrating the College's 100th year.
Continuing education
Assumption's first effort at continuing education began in 1954 with the founding of the
Evening College, later known as the St. Augustine Institute. Non-credit courses were offered two years later with the founding of
The Adult Education Center. Both facilities were coeducational and open to the public. Assumption phased out both facilities in
the late 1960s.In 1979, Assumption launched a second effort at continuing adult education with the
Center for Continuing and Professional Education. This new facility combines the credited courses of the old Evening College and
the non-credit work of the Adult Education Center into one office. The Center is celebrating its 25th anniversary in the same
year as the undergraduate College's Centennial.
The French Insitute, founded in 1979, serves as a specialized research center for students studying French history, culture,
and language.The Aaron T. Beck Institute for Cognitive Studies, a 1996 addition to the College, serves as the research center for students in the BA and Master's
counseling psychology programs.In 1993, Assumption began sponsoring a specialized continuing education program, called
the Worcester Institute for Senior Education (W.I.S.E.). This program offers non-credit courses in most major academic
disciplines to older learners in the community. Currently W.I.S.E. enrolls 450 elder students in 35 courses each semester.