U-M’s Rackham celebrates its 100th with events all year

January 16, 2012
Contact:

ANN ARBOR—As the Rackham Graduate School enters its centennial, it not only will look back at a century of service but will offer an assortment of activities that showcase the many facets of modern graduate education.

Events planned throughout the year include an evening with Jorge Cham, the creator of PHDComics.com; a centennial symposium; and roundtable discussions on U-M alumni making a difference.

In 1912, a separate school of graduate studies was established at U-M to be responsible for assuring consistent standards of quality across all graduate programs.

“The University of Michigan is known worldwide for its transformative graduate education programs,” President Mary Sue Coleman said. “In creating new knowledge and preparing future leaders since 1912, Rackham Graduate School stands on a firm foundation for its next 100 years of developing scholars, scientists and professionals.”

Today, U-M not only is one of the largest producers of doctoral degrees in the nation, but also is among America’s top-ranked universities in the number of doctoral degrees granted to members of underrepresented groups. Michigan offers 108 doctoral, 83 master’s and 33 certificate programs ranging from the arts and humanities to the biomedical sciences, engineering, the social sciences, and the physical sciences.

“This year we are celebrating the 100th anniversary of the founding of the graduate school in 1912, although the University of Michigan began awarding graduate degrees in the 1840s,” Rackham Graduate School Dean Janet Weiss said. “During that long history, and especially since a university-wide graduate school was created, Michigan has been a national leader in innovation in graduate education.

“The university offers remarkable breadth, flexibility (including allowing students to design their own doctoral degrees), and interdisciplinarity (a host of interdepartmental degrees and graduate certificates) in graduate education across all of the schools and colleges.”

During the past century, the graduate school has continued to provide new ways of adding value to graduate education at U-M—by making innovative, well thought out interventions guided by faculty; nurturing interdisciplinary and international programs; and supporting the intellectual entrepreneurism of graduate students from every discipline. The Rackham Graduate School provides a rich set of financial and professional supports for students in master’s and doctoral programs to promote high quality scholarship during graduate school, and to prepare students for careers after graduate school, Weiss says.

Each year, the graduate school collaborates with faculty and senior administrators across campus to foster new programs and fund new initiatives such as the Global Engagement of Doctoral Education, an effort to prepare Ph.D. students for the international dimensions of a research career, and the Bridge Master’s Program, an effort to recruit to the sciences exceptional students who might not otherwise consider graduate school.

“The graduate school welcomes talent from across society. Federal data show that the University of Michigan is among the top 10 producers of minority Ph.D. recipients for all racial minority groups,” Weiss said. “Diversity, innovation and academic excellence are all hallmarks of graduate education at Michigan today, as they have been for the last 100 years and more. Our anniversary will celebrate these accomplishments and point us toward sharing these values with future generations of Michigan graduate students.”

 

Related Links: