Mission Statement
Tulane's purpose is to create, communicate, and
conserve knowledge in order to enrich the capacity of individuals,
organizations and communities to think, to learn, and to act and lead with
integrity and wisdom.
Tulane pursues this mission by cultivating an environment that focuses on
learning and the generation of new knowledge; by expecting and rewarding
teaching and research of extraordinarily high quality and impact; and by
fostering community-building initiatives as well as scientific, cultural
and social understanding that integrate with and strengthen learning and
research. This mission is pursued in the context of the unique qualities
of our location in New Orleans and our continual aspiration to be a truly
distinctive international university.
History
Tulane University, one of the foremost independent
national universities in the South, is ranked among the top quartile of
the nation's most highly selective universities. With ten schools and
colleges that range from the liberal arts and sciences through a full
spectrum of professional schools, Tulane gives its students a breadth of
choice equaled by few other independent universities in the country.
Tulane University's ten academic divisions enroll approximately 8,000
undergraduates and about 5,000 graduate and professional students. The
schools of Architecture, Business, Liberal Arts, Public Health and
Tropical Medicine, and Science and Engineering offer both undergraduate
and graduate programs. Other divisions include the Schools of Law,
Medicine, Social Work, and Continuing Studies. All divisions except the
medical complex, which includes a teaching hospital and clinic, are
located on Tulane's 110-acre campus in uptown New Orleans.
The University's origins trace back to the founding of
the Medical College of Louisiana, the Deep South's first medical school,
in 1834. Classes started the next year when 11 students and seven faculty
members met in a rented hall; students paid for instruction by the
lecture. Born of the desperate need for competent medical care in this
region and of the founders' dedication to study and treat "the peculiar
diseases which prevail in this part of the Union," the college quickly
earned recognition. Soon the medical college merged with the public
University of Louisiana in New Orleans, adding a law department and a
"collegiate" department that became Tulane College. The university
continued building a national reputation. J. L. Riddell, professor of
chemistry, built the first successful binocular microscope in 1852. The
medical department faculty fought for improved public health and
sanitation; and, in 1857, Christian Roselius, an early graduate of the
collegiate and law departments, was appointed Chief Justice of the
Louisiana Supreme Court.
The Civil War forced the University to close. After
the war, the University reopened in financial trouble. Total assets,
excluding buildings, totaled $4,570.39 in 1866. In the early l880s, Paul
Tulane provided a permanent solution by donating more than $1 million "for
the promotion and encouragement of intellectual, moral, and industrial
education" Tulane had made his fortune in New Orleans before returning to
his native Princeton, New Jersey; his gift expressed his appreciation to
the city. The 17-member board authorized to administer the Tulane
Educational Fund decided to revitalize the struggling University of
Louisiana instead of founding a new institution. Paul Tulane concurred,
and in 1884, the Louisiana legislature gave the University of Louisiana to
the administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund. Tulane University of
Louisiana, a private, non-sectarian institution, was born. As a result of
its new strength, the University was able to create the Department of
Philosophy and Science, which later became the Graduate School, and
initiate courses in architecture and engineering. In 1886, Josephine
Louise Newcomb founded Newcomb College as a memorial to her daughter,
Harriott Sophie. Newcomb was the first degree-granting women's college in
the nation to be established as a coordinate division of a men's
university. It became the model for other coordinate women's colleges,
including Barnard and Radcliffe Newcomb's founding is linked with the
World's Industrial and Cotton Exposition which opened in Audubon Park in
1884. Several artisans who came to the New Orleans Exposition to exhibit
their own work and see the works of others stayed to establish the arts
program, which was at the heart of Newcomb's early curriculum. By the
early 1900s, Newcomb pottery had won a bronze medal at the Paris
Exposition, its fame had spread across the nation, and young women were
engaged in the unusual task of earning an independent living.
In 1894, Tulane moved to its present campus on St.
Charles Avenue, five miles by streetcar from its former site in downtown
New Orleans. At about the same time, the Richardson Memorial Building was
built on Canal Street to house the medical school. Some medical classes
were moved to the uptown campus, but clinical teaching remained downtown.
The medical school was split between campuses until a major reorganization
in the 1960s. For a quarter of a century, Newcomb College had been on
Washington Avenue in the Garden District. In 1918 it, too, moved uptown to
join other divisions of the university. Around the turn of the century,
Tulane's curriculum grew as several new professional schools were
established, including the Deep South's first schools of architecture,
business, and social work. City officials frequently consulted the College
of Technology, which became the School of Engineering, on construction
techniques and soil conditions. Engineering alumnus A. Baldwin Wood
designed the famous Wood screw pump that helps drain New Orleans in times
of torrential rains and flooding. The first student yearbook, Jambalaya,
and the first Tulanian, the alumni magazine, were published. The Alumni
Association was founded with 800 members, and significant contributions to
the University financed new buildings, library holdings, and research
facilities. The Middle American Research Institute, founded in 1924,
became a pioneer in Central American archaeology and anthropology,
excavating and restoring the Mayan village of Dzibilchaltun in the
Yucatan.
Since then, research in many disciplines has flowered
through the establishment of research centers, including: the Murphy
Institute of Political Economy, the Newcomb College Center for Research on
Women, the Roger Thayer Stone Center for Latin American Studies, the
Center for Bioenvironmental Research, the Tulane Museum of Natural
History, and the Amistad Research Center, curator of one of the largest
collections in the world of primary source material on American ethnic
groups, especially African-Americans.
As early as the 1890s, Tulane offered free lectures
and classes to the New Orleans community. This commitment to community
service was reaffirmed in 1942 with the founding of University College,
now the School of Continuing Studies, which offers adult education and
sponsors the annual Summer School.
After World War II, Tulane's Graduate School and the
professional programs continued to grow. The university was elected to the
Association of American Universities, a select group of over 60
universities with "pre-eminent programs of graduate and professional
education and scholarly research" The Tulane Medical Center, now the
Health Sciences Center, was established in 1969 to include the School of
Medicine, the School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, and the
Tulane University Medical Center Hospital and Clinic. The Health Sciences
Center also administers the Tulane National Primate Research Center in
Covington, Louisiana; the F. Edward Hebert Riverside Research Center in
Belle Chase, Louisiana; and the International Collaboration in Infectious
Diseases Research (ICIDR) Program in Cali, Colombia.
By their very nature, universities are organic,
constantly changing in reaction to their people, their immediate
environment, and the educational climate in general. Most change occurs
slowly, over time; unless, of course, something happens - a hurricane, for
example - to speed the process.
In the fall of 2005, following the nation's worst
national disaster - Hurricane Katrina and the subsequent flooding - Tulane
University was confronted with unprecedented challenges and, if those
challenges could be mastered, tremendous opportunities. The administration
and the Board of Tulane University were faced redefining and renewing the
university for the future. University President Scott Cowen called the
resulting plan "the most significant reinvention of a university in the
United States in over a century"
The plan outlined four characteristics that define
Tulane University
- by its unique relationship to the culturally rich and diverse city of
New Orleans, characterized by its great waterways.
- by its financial strength and viability.
With these four characteristics in mind, an intensive
examination of the university's organizational structure was undertaken
and ways of maximizing organizational efficiency were identified. The
resulting renewal plan has at its center:
- a focus on an exceptional undergraduate program that is campus- and
student-centric and a dedication to the holistic development of students
- a core that is surrounded and strengthened by superb graduate,
professional and research programs that build on the university's
historical strengths and distinctive characteristics.
Tulane's programs were shaped by the university's
direct experience with the unprecedented natural disaster of Hurricane
Katrina, and the experience provided faculty, staff and students with
equally unprecedented research, learning and community service
opportunities that have had a lasting and profound impact on them, the
city of New Orleans, the Gulf Coast region, and other world communities.
Accreditation
Tulane University is accredited by the Commission on
Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to award
associate, baccalaureate, masters, doctorate, and professional degrees.
Contact the Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, Georgia
30033-4097 or call 404-679-4500 for questions about the accreditation of
Tulane University.
University Administration
Michael A. Fitts
JD., Yale University
President of the University
Michael Bernstein
Ph.D., Yale University
Sr. Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost
Ana M. López
Ph.D., University of Iowa
Associate Provost
Michael Cunningham
Ph.D., Emory University
Associate Provost
Newcomb-Tulane College
James M. MacLaren
Ph.D., Imperial College, University of London
Dean
Amjad Ayoubi
Ph.D., Oklahoma State University
Associate Dean and Director of Career Services and Academic Advising
F. Thomas Luongo
Ph.D., University of Notre Dame
Associate Dean and Executive Director of the Honors Program
Andrew Martinez
Ph.D., Princeton University
Associate Dean
Molly Travis
Ph.D., The Ohio State University
Associate Dean
Scott Pentzer
Ph.D., Tulane University
Associate Dean and Executive Director of the Center for Global Education
School of Architecture
Kenneth Schwartz
M.Arch., Cornell University
Dean
Wendy Redfield
M.Arch., University of Virginia
Associate Dean
A.B. Freeman School of Business
Ira Solomon
Ph.D., University of Texas
Dean
Paul A Spindt
Ph.D., University of California
Senior Associate Dean
School of Continuing Studies
Richard A. Marksbury
Ph.D., Tulane University
Dean
Terrence W. Fitzmorris
Ph.D., Louisiana State University
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs
John Olson
M.S., University of South Alabama
Assistant Dean
School of Law
David Meyer
J.D., University of Michigan
Dean
Stephen Griffin
J.D., University of Kansas
Vice Dean
School of Liberal Arts
Carole Haber
Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania
Dean
Kevin Gotham
Ph.D., University of Kansas
Associate Dean
Jeremy Jernegan
MFA, San Jose State University
Associate Dean
School of Science and Engineering
Nicholas J. Altiero
Ph.D., University of Michigan
Dean
Gary L. McPherson
Ph.D., University of Illinois
Senior Associate Dean
Janet Ruscher
Ph.D., University of Massachusetts
Associate Dean for Graduate Programs
Beth Wee
Ph.D., Michigan State University
Associate Dean for Undergraduate Programs
School of Social Work
Ronald Marks
Ph.D., M.P.H., M.S.W., University of Pittsburgh
Dean
Jane Parker
M.S.W., University of Southern Mississippi
Associate Dean
School of Medicine
Lee Hamm
M.D., University of Alabama at Birmingham
Senior Vice President for Health Sciences
School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine
Pierre Buekens
M.D., Ph.D., Free University of Brussels
Dean
Libraries and Academic Information Resources
Lance Query
Ph.D., Indiana University
Dean
Student Affairs
J. Davidson Porter
Ph.D., University of Maryland
Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students
Carolyn Barber-Pierre
M.A., Bowling Green State University
Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs and Director of Student
Programs
W. Ross Bryan
Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs for Housing/Residence Life
Enrollment Management
Earl Retif
J.D., Loyola University of New Orleans
Vice President for Enrollment Management and Dean of Admission and
Registrar
David Seaver
M.Ed., Harvard University
Assistant Vice President for Enrollment Management Recruitment and
Assessment
Laurie Lagonegro
M.B.A., Tulane University
Assistant Vice President for Enrollment Management Student Information
Systems
Technology Services
Charles McMahan
Vice President for Information Technology and Chief Information Officer
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