 |
Head
of the Department of
Business and Engineering Administration |
| Erwin
Schell |
1930-1951 |
Deans
of the Sloan School of Management |
| Edward
Pennell Brooks |
1951-1959 |
| Howard
W. Johnson |
1959-1966 |
| William
F. Pounds |
1966-1980 |
| Abraham
J. Siegel |
1980-1987 |
| Lester
Thurow |
1987-1993 |
| Glen
L. Urban |
1993-1998 |
| Richard
L. Schmalensee |
1998-2007 |
| David C. Schmittlein |
Oct. 15, 2007- |
The
Alfred P. Sloan School of Management began in 1914 as Course XV,
Engineering Administration, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
within the Department of Economics and Statistics. The concept of
providing business training in the academic environment was gaining
popularity in the early 1910s and the idea of an engineering administration
or a business engineering program at MIT was promoted by several
faculty members including Professor Harold Pender of the Department
of Electrical Engineering. Pender envisioned that the course would
be taught in conjunction with engineering courses. In 1913 an ad
hoc committee of the Alumni Council studied the matter and issued
a report in favor of a program "specially designed to train men
to be competent managers of businesses that have much to do with
engineering problems."
As
head of the Department of Engineering and Statistics, economist
Davis R. Dewey was in charge of Course XV from its inception. Dewey
taught the course with one assistant, initially, but demand for
business courses was increasing and by 1916 three new faculty members,
also economists, were hired. Erwin Haskell Schell, who was the first
Business Management faculty member hired, is widely acknowledged
as the first head of Course XV. Schell was hired in 1917 and taught
and directed Course XV until his retirement in 1951.
In
1925 a program leading to a master's degree in management was established.
In 1926 the undergraduate courses included marketing, finance, accounting,
and the study of economic trends. That same year Schell introduced
a new subject that focused on the organization and operation of
a small business. In keeping with the MIT methodology of closely
relating subjects to practical industrial problems, Schell encouraged
successful businessmen to present lectures to the classes and arrange
for students to consult with business executives to examine their
administrative methods.
In
1930 Course XV became an independent department and was named the
Department of Business and Engineering Administration. In 1931 an
innovative program for executive development was initiated with
the backing of several industrialists. It was a joint project of
the Department of Business and Engineering Administration and the
Department of Economics and Social Science. It offered one year
of graduate study in the fundamentals of management and decision
making. The program was aimed at young managers who were nominated
by their employers, and was highly competitive. In 1938 the program
received full funding by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and was
formally named the Sloan Fellowship Program for Executive Development
at MIT. The program was suspended during World War II and reopened
in 1949.
In
1950 the Sloan Foundation made a gift of over five million dollars
to establish a School of Industrial Management (SIM), including
a newly refurbished building. The concept of the school was the
idea of Alfred P. Sloan, Jr. (class of 1895), who was interested
in further developing the close association between science and
industry. Sloan sought to correlate the complex problems of management
in modern technical industry with science, engineering, and research.
The school has traditionally been able to capitalize on this unique
approach to attract both students and industry to its wide array
of programs.
Edward
Pennell Brooks (class of 1917) replaced Schell as head of Course
XV in 1951. He became the first dean of the new SIM, he recruited
staff and developed the program. The Sloan School opened its new
building, E52, in May 1952. A grant from the Sloan Foundation in
1952 provided funds exclusively for research and exploration in
the field of Industrial Management. For the first few years the
school focused on developing its mission and attracting faculty
members. The demand for short, ad hoc courses for upper level managers
remained consistently high following World War II and the School
continued to broaden its curriculum for management training. In
June of 1953 a second one- year program for executive development
was initiated. Also in 1953 the faculty and administration began
to experiment with shorter executive training courses and offered
an intensive three-week course titled Control Problems for the Executive.
In March of 1956 Dean Brooks felt the school had sufficient staff
and quarters (MIT's newly acquired Endicott House was to be used
as housing) to offer a ten-week pilot course. The course was a success
and became the Program for Senior Executives. Two years later, the
Greater Boston Executive Program was initiated.
In
1959 Howard Johnson became dean of the school. The following year
the school initiated its doctoral program in industrial management.
Studies in the program were divided into two broad categories. The
first included the disciplines of economics, psychology, applied
mathematics, and statistical analysis. The second category included
applied management subjects such as production, marketing, finance,
and organization. In 1963 a grant from the Sloan Foundation permitted
the school to offer doctoral fellowships to attract outstanding
young managers to careers in business and research and thereby create
a pool of educators both for future management professionals and
for serious research in the field. Candidates were required to hold
a master's degree and have several years of significant and successful
experience in business, industry, or government.
In
1964 the school was renamed the Alfred P. Sloan School of Management,
after its benefactor. Throughout the 1960s short executive development
programs, aimed specifically at the transfer of modern techniques
in areas of specialized concern, grew in popularity. Under deans
Johnson and William Pounds (1966- 1980) the Sloan School met the
demand by offering a wide variety of executive programs. In addition
to the more traditional two-year master's program, during which
most students took a summer position, in 1972 the school offered
an Accelerated Master's Program - an intensive, one-year program
for students with several years of work experience. In the mid-1960s
the school began to address important management problems in the
fields of health, education, and urban and public affairs through
its programs and research, and it pioneered the combining of concern
for private and public management problems in its curriculum. In
1975 the school offered the Health Management Development Program.
Under
Pounds, the school continued to develop its focus on research and
the education of management professionals, educators, and researchers.
In the late 1970s the school decided to enlarge its physical facilities
in order to accommodate the expansion of its programs, particularly
the burgeoning two-year master's program. During this period the
school also found that some of its programs had lost their unique
niche among business schools and sought to renew their uniqueness
by increasing student involvement in research and professional experience
through strengthening student writing and speaking abilities, and
through increased exposure to practicing managers. To accomplish
this, the school sought to increase research relative to teaching
for faculty members, improve teaching facilities, increase support
staff for specific projects, and increase the school's visibility.
This was done by hiring more faculty, enlarging master's and senior
executive programs, and by strengthening the support organization
for all activities of the school. Concurrently, the school sought
to increase the relative numbers of female and minority students.
In
1980 Abraham J. Siegel became dean and the process of revamping
MIT Sloan's programs continued. In 1981 the Joint Master's Program in
the Management of Technology was established and remained the only
program of its kind for several years. The curriculum for this twelve-month,
full-time master's program was developed by a joint faculty committee
from the Sloan School and the School of Engineering. The program
was designed for engineers and scientists with five to ten years'
work experience. The objective was to prepare candidates for more
senior roles in industry and government, where they would generate
and manage technology-based endeavors. In 1984 a program in management
science was introduced at the undergraduate level, which greatly
increased overall enrollment and attracted increasing numbers of
students from other schools at the Institute. Also in 1984, the
school adopted a revised core curriculum for the master's students
which enlarged the number of disciplines and applications in the
core, and changed the teaching format to a half semester. By the
mid-1980s investment banks became the primary employers of the school's
graduate students and the scope of graduate electives was refined
to reflect the demand.
Under
Dean Lester Thurow (1987-1993), MIT Sloan developed a new strategic
vision to reflect the increasingly global nature of the economy.
This vision encompassed three central elements: the need for managers
to stay on top of technology in order to remain competitive; the
increasingly international aspect of all management, given the nature
of the economy; and the need for organizations to change in order
to cope with environmental changes such as demographics, as well
as the need to research how such change should be implemented.
In
1993 Glen L. Urban became dean and initiated a five-year plan with
six specific initiatives that built upon MIT Sloan's existing international
focus and inherent strengths, particularly through its relationship
to the industrial, scientific, and technological expertise of the
Institute as a whole. Urban's six initiatives were: establish a
joint engineering/management degree in large-scale system design;
use new technology for teaching; expand international partnerships;
align and grow executive programs; enhance and expand the master's
program; and build on the school's strength in research and application
of that research through its research centers.
In
1995 the school offered ten academic programs including the Undergraduate
Program in Management Science, the master's program, the Ph.D. program,
the Custom or Short Courses Program, the International Initiatives
Program, the Leaders for Manufacturing Program, the MIT Management
of Technology Program, the Alfred P. Sloan Fellows Program, the
MIT Program for Senior Executives, and the Visiting Fellows Program.
The Program for Senior Executives was suspended in May 1995 pending
a review of MIT Sloan offerings for senior executives. The dean projected
that future offerings would likely be in the form of shorter, more
focused programs tailored to the specific needs of corporations,
and the university-corporate partnerships which provide one- or
two-week courses on specific subjects to the employees of one corporation.
Academic
centers associated with the school include the Center for Computational
Research in Economics and Management Science; the Center for Coordination
Science; the Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research;
the Center for Information Systems Research; the Industrial Relations
Section; the International Center for Research on the Management
of Technology; the International Financial Services Research Center;
Inventing the Organization of the 21st Century; the Leaders for
Manufacturing Program; the Organizational Learning Center; the Program
on the Pharmaceutical Industry; the System Dynamics Group; and the
Context Interchange Project.
Prepared
by the Institute Archives, MIT Libraries
|  |