The Women's Normal School later became Stern Women's College.
Yeshiva College, founded in 1928, offers advanced Talmud studies and secular university courses, and awards bachelor's degrees. Around this time, the Jewish university began to develop its philosophy of combining religious and secular knowledge. After receiving rabbinical education in Isaac Elchanan Rabbi Theological Seminary, students can continue to study in the college and obtain rabbinical certificates, and then a few students can continue their studies. At this time, the school was collectively called Yeshiva College and Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary.
Yeshiva University left the Lower East Side in the late 1960s and moved to Washington Heights in Upper Manhattan, where it is today. Today, it is still the main campus of Yeshiva University, including central management office, main library, men's undergraduate school, men's college, rabbi college and other departments. The Great Depression, which began in this period, caused the seminary to fall into many economic difficulties. In particular, the construction cost of the new site it moved to is higher (the campus of Yeshiva University was not expanded until the1960s). 1936 Jewish university established the first master's school of Jewish studies. At the same time, the school established many new departments, including Jewish department and secular department, through immigrants from Europe to avoid the Holocaust.