Showing posts with label planning schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label planning schools. Show all posts

Monday, December 16, 2013

Top Urban Planning Graduate Programs

In this recent post we talked about continuing education, but what about starting your education? Where did you go to school? 



The rest of the list:

2. Cornell University
3. Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
4. University of California, Berkeley
5. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
6. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
7. University of Southern California
8. Georgia Institute of Technology
9. University of California, Los Angeles 
10. University of Pennsylvania

I wonder if this has changed at all for 2013-2014 school year. I also wonder where University of Illinois at Chicago falls as that is the school that most of the local Chicago planners went to! It would be beneficial to see school ranking by specialization within the department itself.

How did you feel about your urban planning program?



Monday, October 14, 2013

Harvard Department of City and Regional Planning Program Denies Admission to a Woman


In 1961 Phyllis Richman applied to the Harvard Department of City and Regional Planning. 

The department responded "...our experience, even with brilliant students, has been that married women find it difficult to carry out careers in planning, and hence tend to have some feeling of waste about the time and effort spent in professonal education. (This is, of course, true of almost all graduate professional studies.)" The full letter from Harvard in 1961.



























Richman never finished her application to Harvard and pursued a career in writing. She found the old letter going through her attic recently and thought that it was time to finally respond, "The problem, I suspect, was the narrowness of your time frame. Google tells me that your wife earned two master’s degrees and a doctorate, and built an impressive resume in research, conference planning and social action. Do you still think of her graduate studies as a waste of time?" Her full response.

I can't decide if reading the APA's Salary Survey Summary is hopeful or still a little frustrating?

The gender gap in earnings still exists, though it has changed slightly for the better in the last four years. For example, in 2008, females earned 85 cents on the dollar, whereas earnings in 2012 are up to 88 cents on the dollar. The gender gap grows with increasing experience.
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