A Widening Sphere : Evolving Cultures at MIT

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Tác giả: Philip N Alexander

Ngôn ngữ: eng

ISBN-13: 978-0262015639

ISBN-13: 978-0262295406

ISBN: mitpress/8361.001.0001

Ký hiệu phân loại: 378.7444 Higher education

Thông tin xuất bản: Cambridge : The MIT Press, 2011

Mô tả vật lý: 1 electronic resource (520 p.)

Bộ sưu tập: Tài liệu truy cập mở

ID: 229251

 How MIT's first nine presidents helped transform the Institute from a small technical school into a major research university. MIT was founded in 1861 as a polytechnic institute in Boston's Back Bay, overshadowed by its neighbor across the Charles River, Harvard University. Harvard offered a classical education to young men of America's ruling class
  the early MIT trained men (and a few women) from all parts of society as engineers for the nation's burgeoning industries. Over the years, MIT expanded its mission and ventured into other fields-pure science, social science, the humanities-and established itself in Cambridge as Harvard's enduring rival. InA Widening Sphere, Philip Alexander traces MIT's evolution from polytechnic to major research institution through the lives of its first nine presidents, exploring how the ideas, outlook, approach, and personality of each shaped the school's intellectual and social cultures. Alexander describes, among otherthings, the political skill and entrepreneurial spirit of founder and first president, William Rogers
  institutional growing pains under John Runkle
  Francis Walker's campaign to broaden the curriculum, especially in the social sciences, and to recruit first-rate faculty
  James Crafts, whose heart lay in research, not administration
  Henry Pritchett's thwarted effort to merge with Harvard (after which he decamped to the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching)
  Richard Maclaurin's successful strategy to move the institute to Cambridge, after considering other sites (including a golfclub in Brighton)
  the brilliant, progressive Ernest Nichols, who succumbed to chronic illness and barely held office
  Samuel Stratton's push towards a global perspective
  and Karl Compton's vision for a new kind of Institute-a university polarized around science and technology. Through these interlocking yet independent portraits, Alexander reveals the inner workings of a complex and dynamic community of innovators.
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