Cambridge College grants Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Arts degrees in human services, psychology, management studies and multidisciplinary studies. All bachelor's degree programs are designed for adult learners, ideally those with some work experience. As of 2016, the undergraduate degrees in general business administration and management were the most popular majors at the college. The School of Education offers graduate teacher and educational administrator preparation and licensure programs leading to Master of Education and Doctor of Education degrees, or to the Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study. The National Institute for Teaching Excellence in Cambridge combines a five-week summer program for adult students with an on-line or local-campus component and leads to a graduate degree in education. The School of Management grants Master of Management and the Master of Management in Health Care degrees. Students enrolling in the health care managerial competencies degree program must have 3–5 years of experience. The School of Counseling and Psychology offers several different Master of Education in Counseling Psychology degrees. Several of these degrees fulfill requirements for the educational portion of the licensure process in the states of Massachusetts and Connecticut. A Certificate of Advanced Graduate Studies is also available in Counseling and Psychology. The college is one of 1,900 "military-friendly" institutions belonging to the Servicemembers Opportunity Colleges consortium.
History
Founding
Cambridge College had its beginnings as an innovative graduate program created by Eileen Moran Brown and Joan Goldsmith in the newly created Institute of Open Education in 1971 formed by John Bremer at Newton College of the Sacred Heart. Students in education programs were given individual attention: for example, through critiques of videotaped student performance on the job. Within two years, Brown and Goldsmith were directing the IOE, and later affiliated the IOE with Antioch College, where Brown was named Dean. In 1979, Brown began the 18-month process of elevating the graduate program to an independent, fully accredited institution that was named Cambridge College.
1990s
A 2003 Wall Street Journal article reported that in 1996, the New England Association of Schools and Colleges had cited "quality control of academic achievement" as an "issue of overriding concern which is central to the academic credibility of the college" with reference to the graduate program in education. The article discussed the lack of rigorous entrance requirements and grade inflation in the program as areas of concern.
2000s
John Bremer was invited to Cambridge College where he was appointed to the Elizabeth J. McCormack Chair in the Humanities. In 2017, Cambridge College consolidated its four locations in Cambridge into a single campus in the HoodOffice Park in Charlestown, a neighborhood of Boston.