- Heinz School
Mission To advance the broad public interest through focused research and outstanding graduate education. Established 1968 byRichard King Mellon Official name H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy And Management University Carnegie Mellon University School type Private Public Policy School Dean Ramayya Krishnan (Acting)Location Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Enrollment 200 graduate Web site [http://www.heinz.cmu.edu Heinz School] The H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management (The Heinz School) at
Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh,Pennsylvania ,United States is one of the nation's top-ranked public policy schools. It is named after PennsylvaniaU.S. Senator H. John Heinz III (1938 -1991 ).The Heinz School educational process integrates policy, management, and information technology course work. Coursework emphasizes the applied disciplines of empirical methods and
statistics ,economics ,information systems andtechnology ,operations research , andorganizational behavior .In addition to full-time, on campus programs inPittsburgh andAdelaide , Australia, the Heinz School offers graduate-level programs to non-traditional students through part-time on-campus and distance programs, customized programs, andexecutive education programs for senior managers.History
Richard King Mellon and his wife Constance had long been interested in urban and social issues. In1965 , they sponsored a conference on urban problems, in which they began discussions with theUniversity of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Tech (as Carnegie Mellon University was then known) to create a school focused on public affairs. In1967 , Carnegie Mellon PresidentH. Guyford Stever , Richard M. Cyert, Dean of the then Graduate School of Industrial Administration, andProfessor sWilliam Cooper andOtto Davis met and formed a university-wide committee to discuss creating a school that would train leaders to address complex problems in American urban communities. Davis was asked to draft a proposal to create such a school.In
1968 , William Cooper and Otto Davis presented the final proposal for the School of Urban and Public Affairs (SUPA) to theRichard King Mellon Foundation . The proposal found favor with R. K. Mellon and he became strongly committed to creating such a school. The R. K. Mellon Foundation sent a proposal to President Stever to finance it with an initial grant of $10 million, and on1 November 1968 , President Stever created the School of Urban and Public Affairs with William Cooper as the first Dean. Subsequent Deans include Otto Davis, Brian Berry,Alfred Blumstein , current Carnegie Mellon ProvostMark Kamlet ,Linda Babcock ,Jeffrey Hunker ,Mark Wessel , and current Acting DeanRamayya Krishnan .In
1992 ,Teresa Heinz (later Teresa Heinz Kerry) donated a large sum of money to the school, which was then renamed in honor of Mrs. Heinz's late husband, Senator H. John Heinz III. Senator Heinz, heir to theH. J. Heinz Company fortune, had been killed when his small private plane crashed a few years before.The Heinz School is headquartered in
Hamburg Hall and has a branch campus inAdelaide ,Australia that offers masters degrees in Public Policy and Management and Information Technology, aNorth Hollywood Center inLos Angeles, CA as part of the masters degree program in Entertainment Industry Management, and opened a center inWashington, DC onCapitol Hill for students in the Public Policy and Management masters program.The Heinz School focuses on the application of
quantitative analysis ,statistics ,economics ,operations research ,decision science , andinformation technology to tackle public sector problems in a practical manner. The faculty of the Heinz School is often considered the best in the country in such application.In 2007 the Heinz School received a grant from the
Heinz Foundations that will integrate a new School of Information Systems and transform the Heinz School into a college. The college will be called the H. John Heinz III College and will comprise two schools: the School of Public Policy and Management and the School of Information Systems and Management with the college's faculty serving both schools. The official launch of the Heinz College will be on October 24th, 2008 during Carnegie Mellon'sHomecoming weekend.Rankings
In the most recent
US News and World Report Graduate School rankings, the Heinz School was ranked 10th overall among schools of public affairs. Of the 253 schools of public affairs across the nation that were surveyed, the Heinz School ranked:*1st in Information and Technology Management;
*4th in Public Policy Analysis;
*10th in Environmental Policy and Management;
*10th in Health Policy and Management.The Heinz School also ranked 2nd in the
Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index listing for the top performing programs in public administration and 9th in the listing for the top performing programs in public policy.The Medical Management program was ranked 4th by Modern Healthcare Magazine in the 2006 rankings of the top business graduate schools for physician executives.
Education
Presently, the Heinz School has an international reputation for excellence in its educational programs:
PhD programs:*
Public Policy andManagement
*Economics andPublic Policy (jointly withTepper School of Business )
*Statistics andPublic Policy (jointly with Department of Statistics)
*Computational Analysis of Social and Organizational Systems (jointly with Center for Computational Analysis of Social and Organizational Systems)
*Strategy ,Entrepreneurship , and Technological Change (jointly with Department of Social and Decision Sciences)
*Technological Change andEntrepreneurship (Carnegie Mellon Portugal program)
*Machine Learning andPublic Policy (jointly withMachine Learning Department )The Heinz school offers accelerated masters program for qualified Carnegie Mellon undergraduates, several joint master degrees with the
Tepper School of Business , theUniversity of Pittsburgh , and thePittsburgh Theological Seminary as well asexecutive education programs.The hallmarks of every Heinz School education is the quantitative and skills-based curriculum, the integration of technology, and the required capstone final project: "the system synthesis." This final project is done instead of a traditional thesis and allows the students to apply their problem solving skills to a real-world client's problem. Graduates of the Heinz School are successful in the
public sector ,private sector , andnonprofit sector .Research
The Heinz School maintains an international reputation of excellence in the fields of
criminal justice policy and management,health policy analysis ,information systems andtechnology ,management science ,policy analysis , andsocial welfare policy. The Heinz School is also affiliated with several research centers:Finally, the Heinz School carries on the university tradition of interdisciplinary collaboration by working with departments throughoutCarnegie Mellon University .Notable faculty
*
Ashish Arora , economist and expert in technology, innovation, development, and public policy
*Linda C. Babcock , author, economist, and expert in negotiation and gender
*Alfred Blumstein , criminologist and operations researcher
*Kathleen Carley , computational sociologist and expert indynamic network analysis
*Jonathan P. Caulkins , operations researcher, expert in drug and crime policy, and founder ofRAND Pittsburgh
*William W. Cooper , founding Dean of the Heinz School and pioneer inmanagement science andaccounting
*Otto Davis , co-founder of the Heinz School, economist, and public-choice theorist
*David Farber , co-creator ofARPANET and former Chief Technologist for theFCC
*Richard Florida , social economist and urban scientist
*Martin Gaynor , health economist
*Jeffrey Hunker , expert in information security policy
*Ramayya Krishnan , expert in information technology, strategy, and policy
*Mark Kamlet , economist and Provost of Carnegie Mellon
*David M. Krackhardt , expert inorganizational behavior andsocial network analysis
*M. Granger Morgan , expert in environment policy analysis and engineering and public policy
*Daniel Nagin , criminologist
*Michael D. Smith, economist in information technology and pioneer inThe Long Tail phenomenon
*Robert P. Strauss , economist and expert in public finance and tax policyee also
*
Heinz School Australia , The Heinz School's branch campus inAdelaide, Australia
* , The Heinz School's academic journal on law, policy, and information systems jointly administered with theMoritz College of Law atThe Ohio State University References
*cite book | author=Fenton, Edwin | title=Carnegie Mellon 1900-2000: A Centennial History | location=Pittsburgh | publisher=Carnegie Mellon University Press | year=2000 | id=ISBN 0-88748-323-2
External links
* [http://www.heinz.cmu.edu/ Heinz School official web site]
* [http://ism.cmu.edu/index.asp Heinz School IS programs web site]
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