Steinhardt School of Education

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NYU Steinhardt School of Education
New York University

Established 1890
Type Private
Undergraduates 2200
Postgraduates 3700
Location New York City, New York, USA
Dean Mary Brabeck
Website www.steinhardt.nyu.edu

The Steinhardt School of Education is one of 14 divisions within New York University and is the oldest professional School of Education in the United States.

Contents

[edit] History

Founded in 1890 as the School of Pedagogy, New York University's School of Education was the first professional school devoted to teacher education established at an American university. In 1910, the school established the first university chair in experimental education in the United States. From 1920 to 1930 the school saw an expansion in enrolment from 993 to over 9500 students. In 1930, the education building on Washington Square was opened and still serves as home to the school until present date. The school was renamed Steinhardt School of Education in 2001, honoring a $ 10 million donation - the largest the school had ever received.

[edit] Academics

The School enrolls roughly 7000 students each year -- 2400 undergraduates and 4300 full- and part-time masters, certificate, and doctoral students. Several hundred international students pursue graduate degrees at Steinhardt each year. The School employs more than 250 full-time faculty in 11 separate academic departments:

  • Department of Administration Leadership and Technology
  • Department of Applied Psychology
  • Department of Art and Art Professions
  • Department of Culture and Communication
  • Department of Humanities and Social Sciences
  • Department of Music and Performing Arts Professions
  • Department of Nutrition, Food Studies and Public Health
  • Department of Occupational Therapy
  • Department of Physical Therapy
  • Department of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology
  • Department of Teaching and Learning

The Steinhardt School was home to the Division of Nursing until the fall of 2005, when the division became the College of Nursing within the College of Dentistry.

The Steinhardt School receives research funding exceeding $30 million annually. In the 2006 U.S. News Graduate School survey, the Steinhardt School of Education is ranked # 11 among U.S. graduate schools for education, its programs in nursing, occupational therapy and music are frequently ranked among the top ten programs in the U.S.

[edit] Department of Music and Performing Arts Professions

The Department of Music and Performing Arts Professions serves as the music conservatory for New York University. Almost all degree programs in music performance at NYU schools are located in the Department of Music. It employs more than 300 faculty and admits over 1,400 students from baccalaureate through doctoral. Founded in 1925, the department was one of the first in the United States to award a doctorate in Music Education. Ph.D. student Wilfred Bain was later called the Dean of Deans in United States schools serving as Dean of Indiana University School of Music. In 1968, the Steinhardt Music Department merged with New York College of Music, the oldest conservatory of music in New York City. In the 1970s, the school's name was changed to School of Education, Health, Nursing and Arts Professions.

[edit] Facilities

The School's research centers include the Institute for Education and Social Policy, the Nordoff-Robbins Center for Music Therapy, the Child and Family Policy Center, and the Metropolitan Center for Urban Education.

Rehearsal and performance facilities of the Steinhardt School of Education on campus include the Frederick Loewe Theatre (300 seats), the Provincetown Playhouse (134 seats), the Eisner-Lubin Auditorium (540 seats) and the Skirball Theatre (862 seats) at the NYU Kimmel Center as well as many smaller practice and rehearsal sites at the school.

[edit] Deans of Steinhardt

  • Jerome Allen (1890 - 1894)
  • Edward R. Shaw (1890 - 1901)
  • Thomas M. Balliet (1904 - 1921)
  • John W. Withers (1921 - 1939)
  • Enoch George Payne (1939]] - 1945)
  • Ernest O. Melby (1945 - 1956)
  • George D. Stoddard (1956 - 1960)
  • Walter A. Anderson (1960 - 1964)
  • Daniel E. Griffiths (1965 - 1983)
  • Robert A. Burnham (1983 - 1989)
  • Ann Marcus (1989 - 2003)
  • Mary Brabeck (2003 -

[edit] Alumni

Famous alumni of the music department include: composer Cy Coleman, lyricist Betty Comden. Film composer and Oscar winner Elmer Bernstein as well as Oscar winning film writer, playwright and director John Patrick Shanley, jazz legend Wayne Shorter, conductor and composer Tania Leon, music technologist and composer Enoch Light, and New York College of Music President and music educator Jerrold Ross are alumni the department. Notable faculty include the late Neil Postman. See also List of New York University People

[edit] External links

New York University v  d  e 

Academics

Erich Maria Remarque InstituteFurman Center for Real Estate and Urban PolicyGNATMount Sinai School of MedicineNew York Institute for the Humanities

Athletics

Chelsea PiersColes Sports and Recreation CenterDeans' CupEast River ParkEastern Intercollegiate Volleyball AssociationFencingRiverbank State ParkUniversity Athletics AssociationVan Cortlandt ParkViolet D. Bobcat

Campus

Bobst LibraryLa Maison FrançaiseResidence HallsPuck BuildingRusk Institute of Rehabilitation MedicineSilver CenterTamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner ArchivesTorch ClubUnion SquareVilla LaPietraWashington Square Park

People

President John SextonAlbert Gallatin

Schools

Undergraduate Colleges and Schools
College of Arts and ScienceCollege of DentistryCourant InstituteEhrenkranz School of Social WorkGallatin School of Individualized StudySteinhardt School of EducationStern School of BusinessTisch School of the Arts

Graduate/Professional Colleges and Schools
College of Arts and ScienceContinuing and Professional StudiesInstitute of Fine ArtsSchool of LawSchool of MedicineWagner Graduate School of Public Service

Student Life

Eucleian SocietyPhilomathean SocietyWashington Square NewsWNYU