|
Directors
of the office
| Name |
Dates |
Title |
James
Libby Tyron
|
1920-1926
|
Assistant
to the Registrar |
| 1929-1930 |
Admissions
Officer |
| 1930-1936 |
Director |
| Brainerd
Alden Thresher |
1936-1961 |
Director |
| Roland
B. Greeley |
1962-1972 |
Director |
| Peter
H. Richardson |
1972-1984 |
Director |
| Michael
C. Behnke |
1985-1997 |
Director |
| Marilee
Jones |
1
May-31 Dec. 1997
|
Interim
Director |
| 1998-26 Apr. 2007 |
Dean
of Admissions |
| Stuart Schmill |
26 Apr. 2007- 2008;
2008-
|
Interim Director;
Dean of Admissions |
The
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Admissions Office is responsible
for recruiting undergraduate students, reviewing applications for
admission, making offers of acceptance to students, and processing
applications for entrance to the Institute. The office assists with
admissions applications from graduate students for MIT departments,
which act on graduate applications.
The
Admissions Office was formally created in 1929 with the appointment
of an admissions officer, James Libby Tryon. Tryon was a special
lecturer on international law in the Division of General Studies.
He concurrently held the position of assistant registrar from 1920
to 1926 and performed all of the duties of an admissions officer.
The
objective of the admissions officer was to increase the pool of
qualified applicants to the Institute. President Samuel Stratton
established the Faculty Publicity Committee in 1925. Representatives
were sent to various New England and surrounding high schools to
lecture and answer questions about MIT, technical education, and
the profession of engineering. In 1929 the newly appointed admissions
officer and members of the faculty continued to visit secondary
and preparatory schools, as well as colleges and universities, to
recruit students and to make contacts with counselors and administrators.
In 1930 Tryon was promoted to director of admissions and the Institute
president attributed a subsequent boost in enrollment applications
to these visits by Tryon and other faculty. In that same year, President
Compton appointed a number of graduates as Honorary Secretaries
of MIT to assist in recruitment. Dr. Tryon became responsible for
the long-distance tours of colleges and universities, Technology
Clubs, and preparatory and high schools, as well as the eventual
editor of the bulletins describing the visits. He also held the
posts of vice chairman and secretary of the Faculty Publicity Committee
(later named the Secondary School Publicity Committee).
In
1935 the Committee on Admissions made entrance requirements more
flexible, in keeping with the requirements of other technical schools.
In May 1936 the faculty voted to set the size of the entering class
at 575 to 600 students, in accordance with the recommendation of
an ad hoc Committee on Stabilization of Enrollment. The Committee
on Admissions was authorized to select the best-qualified applicants
up to that number.
Tryon
retired in 1936 and was succeeded by Professor Brainerd Alden Thresher
of the Department of Economics and Social Science. By 1939 first
year applications had reached the unprecedented number of 1,621,
which permitted the admissions office to fully utilize the selective
plan and markedly improve the all-around quality of the student
body.
In
1951 the Honorary Secretaries were reorganized as the Educational
Council, which continues to operate today (2000) as part of the
Admissions Office. Thresher retired in 1961.
The
Admissions Office reports to the Office of the Dean for Undergraduate
Education (as of 2000).
Prepared
by the Institute Archives, MIT Libraries
July 2000; updated 2008
|