Graduate
College
James R. Bloedel, Dean
George A. Jackson, Assistant Dean
Donna S. Kienzler, Assistant Dean
John E. Mayfield, Associate Dean
The Graduate College and graduate faculty at Iowa
State University are responsible for the quality of graduate education,
for administering students’ graduate programs, and for promoting
research support from various governmental, industrial, and private
agencies.
The graduate faculty in various programs handle admission
and classification of graduate students, establish requirements
for advanced degrees, and have charge of instruction and research
at the graduate level. Graduate faculty members also teach graduate
courses, serve on program of study (POS) committees, and direct
work of master’s and doctoral students. All graduate courses
offered for major or nonmajor credit are taught by graduate faculty
members or graduate lecturers.
Graduate study was offered soon after the university
was founded, and the first graduate degree was conferred in 1877.
Experimentation and research also started early, first in agriculture
and shortly thereafter in home economics, engineering, science,
and veterinary medicine. In 1913, the graduate faculty was organized
formally and an executive graduate committee was appointed. In 1915,
the graduate faculty held its first meeting, and in 1916, it granted
the first doctor of philosophy degree.
Graduate education is vital to the quality of university
teaching. The creative efforts of graduate faculty members and graduate
students result in knowledge necessary to help society solve problems
in educational, scientific, technological, and socio-economic areas.
The Graduate College encourages educational exchange and contact
with undergraduate areas of the university to promote improved teaching
on both the undergraduate and graduate levels. A part of this exchange
is accomplished by the publication of books and technical articles
which are made possible by graduate research.
The degrees master of arts, master of science, and
doctor of philosophy are research oriented. In many fields master’s
degrees are also awarded without a thesis, but a written report
of independent study, called a creative component, is generally
required. For those individuals interested in advanced study directed
toward meeting vocational or professional objectives, the following
degrees are offered: master of accounting, master of agriculture,
master of architecture, master of business administration, master
of community and regional planning, master of education, master
of engineering, master of family and consumer sciences, master of
fine arts, master of landscape architecture, master of public administration,
and the master of school mathematics.
The Graduate College Handbook lists policies and procedures
of the Graduate College. It is available at the Graduate College’s
Web site: www.grad-college.iastate.edu/.
3/19/03
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