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The New York University Graduate School of Arts and Science (GSAS) is a school within New York University (NYU) founded in 1886 by Henry Mitchell MacCracken, establishing NYU as the second academic institution in the United States to grant Ph.D. degrees on academic performance and examination.
The Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service is the public policy school of New York University in New York City, New York. The school is named after New York City former mayor Robert F. Wagner Jr. in 1989. [1]
New York School of Interior Design; New York University, West Village, Manhattan. College of Arts & Science; Graduate School of Arts and Science; Liberal Studies; College of Dentistry; Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences; Gallatin School of Individualized Study; Grossman School of Medicine; New York University Grossman Long Island School ...
New York University Silver School of Social Work: STEINHARDT: Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development: STERN: Stern School of Business: TSOA: Tisch School of the Arts: ARTS: University College of Arts and Sciences (discontinued/merged; now CAS) WAG: Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service: SHA: New York ...
The Stern School was founded by Charles Waldo Haskins (an alumnus of New York University Tandon School of Engineering) in 1900 as the Undergraduate School of Commerce, Accounts and Finance on the university's Washington Square campus. In 1913, Jeanette Hamill, J.D., M.A., joined the school's Economics department, becoming its first female ...
The Gallatin building is situated within the campus of New York University just east of Washington Square Park, at 1 Washington Place in Manhattan, New York City. The Gallatin School's facilities on the corner of Washington Place and Broadway underwent a redesign in 2007–2008. It was the first renovation project at New York University to ...
New York University faced financial hardships leading it to sell its University Heights campus that housed its engineering school to City University of New York, which in turn renamed the campus Bronx Community College. Also during that period from 1969 to 1975, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn was forced to rely on subsidies provided by New ...
The New York University Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development (commonly referred to as NYU Steinhardt) is the education school of New York University. The school was founded as the School of Pedagogy in 1890. Prior to 2001, it was known as the NYU School of Education.