| Formation | 1995 |
|---|---|
| Legal status | Association of American-based colleges |
Region served | Ohio,United States |
| Membership | Denison University Kenyon College Oberlin College Ohio Wesleyan University The College of Wooster |
Chair | Matthew vandenBerg[1] |
| Website | ohio5.org |
TheFive Colleges of Ohio, Inc. is an American academic and administrative consortium of five privateliberal arts colleges in the state ofOhio. It is a nonprofit educational consortium established in 1995 to promote the broad educational and cultural objectives of its member institutions.
The members of The Five Colleges of Ohio consortium are:
The designationOhio Five first appeared in Ohio newspapers in the early twentieth century. The grouping, predating any formal agreement, was immediately adopted by the press as a foreshadowing of an Ohio league of schools with similar academic and athletic reputations, which at the time was a common perception.
Following informal discussions among the five colleges in the early 1990s, the consortium was formalized by the incorporation of the organization on June 30, 1995. A grant from theAndrew W. Mellon Foundation, awarded in June 1995, provided for the development of a joint library system, establishment of an administrative structure, and investigation of the benefits and methods for sharing digital images and multimedia resources, establishing The Five Colleges of Ohio, Inc. as a legal entity.
Collaboration among the five colleges occurs in several areas:
The colleges have worked together on grants and long-term projects to support curricular development, faculty collaborations, and opportunities for students. These projects have included:
In language teaching:
In curricular development:
In student opportunities:
In faculty collaborations:
Ohio Five Dance Workshops[dead link] support an annual showcase of faculty and student dance performances at member colleges.
In 2012, the Ohio Five resolved to identify and implement ajoint e-procurement solution to automate purchasing and contract administration across the colleges and realize related savings through joint purchasing plans and contracts. A $100,000 grant from the Mellon Foundation in 2014 supported system installation and a full-time staff member was hired to supervise the program. Denison University, Kenyon College, Oberlin College and Ohio Wesleyan University moved forward together to develop the program, which realized an estimated $500,000 in contract savings in its first fully implemented year in 2015-16. In 2017-18, more than 4,300 suppliers were active in the e-procurement system representing an annual spend of $4.483 million.
Since 2014, the Five Colleges have also collaborated on a shared online work order system enabling the colleges to optimize workflow in facilities management and maintenance and track expenditures.
Risk management, disaster planning, Title IX training and investigative services and information technologies represent additional areas in which the college work together to support training and cost savings. The Ohio Five also maintains ajob site for employment opportunities in faculty, staff, and administration at the Five Colleges

The libraries ofDenison University,Kenyon College,Ohio Wesleyan University, andThe College of Wooster share anintegrated library system calledCONSORT. This multi-college system maximizes the colleges' abilities to share collection resources and collaborate on collection-related databases and publications.Oberlin College maintains its ownintegrated library system calledOBIS.
Since the founding of the Five Colleges, its libraries have worked together to support the development of the CONSORT system and promote institutional priorities in digital literacy and digital scholarship. Joint library projects have included:
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation provided significant support for three projects focusing on digital scholarship:
The Five Colleges of Ohio is governed by its five presidents who form the organization's board of trustees.Standing committeesArchived November 26, 2020, at theWayback Machine led by cabinet officers of each college supervise finance and business operations (chief financial and business officers), academic affairs (provosts and deans), library programs (library directors) and information technology (chief financial officers). The Five Colleges of Ohio is managed by afull-time staff of five who supervise the organization's activities from offices located throughout the consortium, with a central office at Oberlin College.