Yeshiva University
500 West 185th Street
New York, New York 10033
Yeshiva University, established in 1886, is a private Jewish university in the urban setting of New York City. Yeshiva is comprised of two campuses. The Beren Campus in midtown Manhattan houses the Stern
college for Women and the women's division of Sy Syms School of
business. The Wilf Campus, home to Yeshiva College and the men's division of Sy Syms School of
business, is in Washington Heights.
There are about 3,000 undergraduate and more than 3,400 graduate students enrolled at Yeshiva University. More than 4,700 faculty members are employed. Yeshiva undergraduate courses include English, physics, real estate and Jewish
education. Graduate schools include the
school of medicine, School of Psychology, School of Social Work, and School of Law.
Yeshiva University's S. Daniel Abraham Israel Program enables more than 650 students per year to study at more than 45 yeshivot and other educational institutions in Israel, including Bar Ilan University. The program is supervised by the S. Daniel Abraham Program staff at the Yeshiva University campus in Jerusalem.
Quick Facts
About 90 percent of Yeshiva students live in college-owned housing.
The Israel Program aims to increase fluency in oral and written Hebrew and enable students to learn firsthand about Israel's land, people, history, and culture.
This school profile has been compiled and updated by The CollegeBound Network. The school is not affiliated with The CollegeBound Network and shall not be considered a sponsor of this program.