Difference between revisions of "Graduate School of Arts and Sciences"

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The '''Graduate School of Arts and Sciences''' (GSAS) is Columbia's graduate school. There were originally three graduate faculties that would eventually be combined to form Arts and Science- Political Science (1880), Philosophy (1890), and Pure Science (1892). Columbia conferred its first PhD in 1882 for his study "Geology of Water Supplies and Water Analysis." The graduate program was open to women far before any other division of the school. In 1886 Winifred H. Edgerton earned a PhD for her dissertatio "Multiple Integers." George Edmund Haynes was the first African-American to receive a Columbia PhD. His disseratation was titled "The Negro at Work in New York City".  
 
The '''Graduate School of Arts and Sciences''' (GSAS) is Columbia's graduate school. There were originally three graduate faculties that would eventually be combined to form Arts and Science- Political Science (1880), Philosophy (1890), and Pure Science (1892). Columbia conferred its first PhD in 1882 for his study "Geology of Water Supplies and Water Analysis." The graduate program was open to women far before any other division of the school. In 1886 Winifred H. Edgerton earned a PhD for her dissertatio "Multiple Integers." George Edmund Haynes was the first African-American to receive a Columbia PhD. His disseratation was titled "The Negro at Work in New York City".  
  
Since it's creation and until the 1990's, the graduate school stood in stark contrast to the [[Columbia College]] in it's standing with the University. While the grad school was called "the Jewel in Columbia's Crown," successive University presidents considered the undergraduate a waste of resources that could instead be lavished on what was for the first half of the 20th century one of the indisputably best graduate schools in the country, if not the world. It's no coincidence that Columbia attracted world famous researchers- who weren't required by the school to teach undergraduates.
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Since its creation and until the 1990's, the graduate school stood in stark contrast to the [[Columbia College]] in it's standing with the University. While the grad school was called "the Jewel in Columbia's Crown," successive University presidents considered the undergraduate a waste of resources that could instead be lavished on what was for the first half of the 20th century one of the indisputably best graduate schools in the country, if not the world. It's no coincidence that Columbia attracted world famous researchers- who weren't required by the school to teach undergraduates.
  
 
The school, and faculties only stumbled as a result of the financial crunch imposed by the depression, and then the calamitous financial free fall of the 60's and 70's.
 
The school, and faculties only stumbled as a result of the financial crunch imposed by the depression, and then the calamitous financial free fall of the 60's and 70's.

Revision as of 16:38, 30 March 2007

Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
GSASsymbol.jpg
Established 1880
President {{{President}}}
Dean Henry Pinkham
Degrees MA, PhD
Enrollment 4,157 students (2005)
Website www.columbia.edu/gsas/

The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS) is Columbia's graduate school. There were originally three graduate faculties that would eventually be combined to form Arts and Science- Political Science (1880), Philosophy (1890), and Pure Science (1892). Columbia conferred its first PhD in 1882 for his study "Geology of Water Supplies and Water Analysis." The graduate program was open to women far before any other division of the school. In 1886 Winifred H. Edgerton earned a PhD for her dissertatio "Multiple Integers." George Edmund Haynes was the first African-American to receive a Columbia PhD. His disseratation was titled "The Negro at Work in New York City".

Since its creation and until the 1990's, the graduate school stood in stark contrast to the Columbia College in it's standing with the University. While the grad school was called "the Jewel in Columbia's Crown," successive University presidents considered the undergraduate a waste of resources that could instead be lavished on what was for the first half of the 20th century one of the indisputably best graduate schools in the country, if not the world. It's no coincidence that Columbia attracted world famous researchers- who weren't required by the school to teach undergraduates.

The school, and faculties only stumbled as a result of the financial crunch imposed by the depression, and then the calamitous financial free fall of the 60's and 70's.

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