University of Dayton, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Dayton, Ohio, U.S. The university is affiliated with the Marianist order (Society of Mary) of the Roman Catholic church. It is composed of the College of Arts and Sciences and schools of business administration, education and allied professions, engineering, and law. The university offers a range of undergraduate and graduate degree programs. Business majors may spend a year studying at the University of Augsburg in Germany, and students from throughout the university may study in Asia, Latin America, western Europe, or Australia. Important campus facilities include Anderson Information Sciences Center and the University of Dayton Research Institute (for materials and aerospace engineering). The university has student-run television and radio stations with full production facilities.
The university began as St. Mary’s School for Boys in 1850 and became a college in 1882. In 1920 the name was changed to the University of Dayton. A college for women opened in 1935 but closed in 1937 when women were admitted to the larger university. The School of Law was reestablished in 1974, having earlier operated from 1922 to 1935. Nobel Prize-winning chemist Charles Pedersen was a Dayton graduate.