Lawrence Technological University (LTU), frequently referred to as Lawrence Tech, is a private university located in Southfield, Michigan, United States. Lawrence Tech was founded in 1932 in Highland Park, Michigan, as the Lawrence Institute of Technology (LIT) by Russell E. Lawrence. The university moved to Southfield in 1955 and has since expanded to 107 acres (0.43 km2). The campus also includes the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Affleck House in Bloomfield Hills and the Detroit Center for Design + Technology in Midtown Detroit.
The school offers undergraduate, masters, and doctoral programs in STEAM fields (science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics). The university's four colleges are Architecture and Design, Arts and Sciences, Engineering, and Management. LTU's athletic teams are known as the Blue Devils. They compete in Division II of the NAIA and joined the Wolverine Hoosier Athletic Conference in 2012.
Video Lawrence Technological University
History
Russell Lawrence founded the college of engineering in the midst of the Great Depression and with only a few hundred students and a handful of faculty. Classes were originally held in a building leased from Henry Ford adjacent to a huge manufacturing facility on Woodward Avenue. Ford built the Model T and perfected the moving assembly line in this location. "Theory and Practice" were ingrained side-by-side and helped prepare students for leadership in a new technical era.
From the beginning, there were no restrictions on entering students relating to race, color, creed, or national or ethnic origin--only the requirement that students qualify for admission and have the desire to succeed. Lawrence Tech provided the opportunity for working students to earn a baccalaureate degree by attending evening programs, day programs, or a combination of the two--a unique feature in 1932.
E. George Lawrence, Russell Lawrence's brother, became President in 1934, after Russell Lawrence's death, and helped usher growth of programs, including the move to a new location in Southfield. In 1935, the four-quarter academic calendar was developed. As enrollment grew, the University acquired acreage at the John C. Lodge Freeway and 10 Mile Road on what had been a General Mills research farm. In 1950, associate programs were added to Lawrence Tech's baccalaureate offerings. In 1952 the College of Management was created, having its origins in an earlier industrial engineering curriculum. In 1955, Lawrence Tech opened its first building on the Southfield Campus to house all of these programs. The College of Architecture and Design evolved in 1962 from the former architectural engineering department.
Wayne H. Buell, who served as president from 1964 to 1977 and as chair of the board and chief executive officer until 1981, worked to build a firm foundation for the University's early emergence as a technological leader. He first advanced the notion that Lawrence Tech was a private college serving a public purpose. The College of Arts and Sciences was established under his watch in 1967.
Richard E. Marburger, served as president from 1977 to 1993 and as chair of the board of trustees and chief executive officer. His presidency was marked by the addition of graduate degrees and the massive growth of computer facilities. In 1977, Lawrence Tech shed its "commuter" classification by opening the nine-story University Housing-South residence hall. The Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Affleck House in Bloomfield Hills was donated to the University in 1978. The Wayne H. Buell Management Building and the Don Ridler Field House were completed during his presidency. Numerous improvements to existing buildings, and a substantial increase in state-of-the-art laboratory and computer equipment were highlights of these years. Master's degree programs in management were launched in 1989, and in engineering in 1990. Simultaneously, LIT's change to its present name, Lawrence Technological University, was approved on January 1, 1989, by the State of Michigan, and more clearly described Lawrence Tech's undergraduate and graduate mission.
Charles M. Chambers became president in 1993 and served as chancellor in 2006. During his presidency, he oversaw significant enhancement of the University's international reputation as a distinguished center of technological education and research. A Strategic Plan and Campus Master Plan were adopted to guide the University. Other achievements included construction of the University Technology and Learning Center, University Housing-North; the A. Alfred Taubman Student Services Center; a redeveloped campus quadrangle; the Center for Innovative Materials Research; establishment of a Faculty Senate; conversion of the computer system to a client server model with full Internet2 connectivity and online library access; creation of Michigan's first completely wireless laptop campus; and expanded bookstore, dining, and student activity facilities. Master of Architecture program was added in 1993, and graduate degree in Arts and Sciences in 1997. Doctoral programs were launched in 2002. The University Technology and Learning Center opened in 2001, University Housing-North in 2002, and the A. Alfred Taubman Student Services Center and the Center for Innovative Materials Research in 2006.
Lewis N. Walker was named interim president in February 2006, became president on July 1, and was inaugurated on November 2, 2006. He had previously served as provost, the University's chief academic officer, and executive vice president. Walker was committed to developing the leadership skills of Lawrence Tech's students and worked with faculty to add a leadership component to the curricula of all undergraduate programs. In addition, he engaged in partnerships with universities worldwide that brought international students to campus and provided further opportunities for Lawrence Tech students to study abroad. Most importantly, Lewis Walker was a valued tenured faculty member in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Varsity athletics returned under his watch in 2011.
Virinder K. Moudgil was named president in July 2012, and was inaugurated in September. He had previously served as Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost, Interim Provost, and Provost at Oakland University. In the fall of 2015, Lawrence Tech opened its third on-campus housing unit, Lloyd E. Reuss Residence Hall. Concurrently, there has been an enormous expansion and improvement of facilities, including the building of the A. Alfred Taubman Complex, a 36,600-square-foot, $16.9 million building housing new laboratories and collaboration spaces for biomedical engineering, robotics, life sciences research, and the university's SAE motorsports teams. The Taubman Complex is also the home of the new Marburger STEM Center. Established by a $20 million gift from former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, who took mathematics courses at Lawrence Tech while a high school student, the Marburger STEM Center will consolidate, organize and expand the university's efforts to promote STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) education and career preparation at all levels, from preschool through postgraduate. .
Maps Lawrence Technological University
Present Day
Today, Lawrence Tech offers over 100 programs in four colleges, with a total enrollment of nearly 4,500 students, and employs over 400 full- and part-time faculty. In terms of enrollment, Lawrence Tech is among Michigan's largest independent colleges.
The A. Alfred Taubman Complex, dedicated in September 2016, was a result of the University's 10-year capital campaign, "Proud Heritage, Bold Future." Established with an initial fundraising goal of $75 million, the campaign closed June 30, 2016, having raised more than $125 million. The university has named Sibrina Nichelle Collins, former director of education at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African-American History in Detroit, as the first director of LTU's Marburger STEM Center, an umbrella organization founded to direct the university's many K-12 outreach programs in the STEM/STEAM (science, technology, engineering, architecture/design, and mathematics) disciplines.
Lawrence Tech has consistently been among the Top Tier for "Universities-Master's (Midwest)" by U.S. News & World Report. Lawrence Technological University's ranking in the 2018 edition of Best Colleges is 38th in the category "Midwest Regional Universities," out of 165 institutions listed. It is also on U.S. News' list of "A+ Schools for B Students," which the magazine defined as schools where students who might not have been "superstars" in high school stand a chance of being admitted, and where they can grow and thrive. Other distinctions include: Princeton Review "Top 50 Schools for Game Design" in 2016, 2017, and 2018; Princeton Review "Best in the Midwest," 2017 and 2018; fourth in Michigan for the average salary of graduates 10 years after graduation, The Wall Street Journal/Times High Education, 2016; Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching recognition, 2009; G. I. Jobs "Military Friendly School", 2010 through 2017; State of Michigan Center of Excellence for Sustainable Infrastructure and Structural Testing; an Intel "Top 50 Unwired Campus"; a Michigan Green Leader; Architectural Record among "America's Best Architectural Schools" in construction methods and materials; and Michigan's Going Green Award." Bloomberg-Businessweek also reported that the earning power of a Lawrence Tech bachelor's degree ranks in the highest 30 percent of all U.S. universities. And the website PayScale.com rated Lawrence Tech 56th in the nation in return on investment in college tuition, out of 1,343 institutions reviewed nationwide,
In November 2016, LTU and St. John Providence Hospitals announced they had received state approval to establish a nursing education program. The program, which opened in August 2017, has classroom instruction at LTU's Southfield campus, with clinical and laboratory instruction at six St. John Providence hospital locations around metro Detroit. The new program will fall under Lawrence Tech's College of Arts and Sciences as a major in the LTU Department of Natural Sciences, granting a Bachelor of Science in Nursing. LTU will admit up to 32 students a year in the program. Lawrence Tech has hired Therese Jamison, DNP, ACNP-BC, as professor of nursing and director of the program. Jamison earned her Doctorate of Nursing Practice from Vanderbilt University. Earlier, she earned a Bachelor of Science in Nursing and a Master's Degree in Nursing from Wayne State University, as well as a post-master's certificate as an acute care nurse practitioner from the University of Michigan. A veteran nursing specialist, Jamison continues to work one day a week as a nurse practitioner in cardiovascular services at St. John Macomb-Oakland Hospital, Warren Campus.
In January 2017, Lawrence Tech announced that it would resume intercollegiate football competition, after a hiatus of more than 70 years dating back to World War II. The university has admitted two recruiting classes of about 90 student-athletes for a team that will compete as an independent squad in the fall of 2018, and which will begin playing a full varsity schedule in the Mid-States Football Association of the NAIA in the fall of 2019. LTU hired Jeff Duvendeck, former head coach at Culver-Stockton (Mo.) College and a former assistant at Michigan State University, Northern Michigan University, Michigan Technological University, Grand Valley State University, and Tiffin (Ohio) University, as its head coach.
In February 2017, the LTU Board of Trustees approved the construction of a fourth residence hall on campus. The new building will house more than 300 students and residence hall staff, and will open in August 2018. Groundbreaking for the new residence hall was held May 11, 2017.
Academics
College of Architecture and Design
The college offers numerous undergraduate and graduate opportunities as outlined below.
College of Engineering
The college offers numerous undergraduate and graduate opportunities as outlined below.
College of Arts and Sciences
The college offers numerous undergraduate and graduate opportunities as outlined below.
College of Management
The college offers numerous undergraduate and graduate opportunities as outlined below.
Athletics
Lawrence Tech teams are known as the Blue Devils. The university is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), primarily competing in the Wolverine-Hoosier Athletic Conference (WHAC) while the university's second men's ice hockey team is a member of the American Collegiate Hockey Association (ACHA) at the Division III level as a member of the Michigan Collegiate Hockey Conference (MCHC). Men's sports include basketball, bowling, cross country, ice hockey, lacrosse and soccer; while women's sports include basketball, bowling, cross country, lacrosse, soccer and volleyball. Football, which was dropped after World War II, will be reinstated after a 70 year hiatus starting in 2018.
Lawrence Tech fielded athletic teams throughout its history from 1930 to 1962. The 1950-51 men's basketball team played the 1951 National Invitation Tournament, held at Madison Square Garden in New York. Lawrence Tech was defeated by Dayton, 71-77 in the opening round of the tournament. Blaine Denning, an alumnus from the 1951 team, went on to play professional basketball with the Baltimore Bullets of the NBA.
Lawrence Tech re-instated athletic programs in 2011 and joined the NAIA. Men's soccer and bowling, along with women's volleyball, joined the already established men's ice hockey team for the university's athletic offerings during the 2011-12 academic year. During its fifth season in the NAIA, the university fielded teams in men's baseball, basketball, bowling, cross country, golf, hockey, volleyball, lacrosse, soccer and tennis, and women's basketball, bowling, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, tennis and volleyball.
Thanks to a $1 million gift from an anonymous donor, during the summer of 2016 Lawrence Tech constructed an AstroTurf surface athletic field at the Point, the part of campus at the intersection of Northwestern Highway and 10 Mile Road. LTU's men's and women's soccer and lacrosse teams began playing on this field in August 2016. The project also includes a 40-car parking lot. Future plans for the site include lights for nighttime games, permanent stands with pressbox, a team building with locker rooms and offices for trainers and coaches, and a concession and restroom building.
Student life
Student Organizations
On campus extracurricular activities include leadership opportunities and more than 40 clubs. Student Government represents all organizations on campus.
Fraternities and Sororities
The University is also home to chapters of fraternities, including Alpha Sigma Phi, Theta Tau, Sigma Pi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi Kappa Upsilon, and Phi Beta Sigma. The sororities represented on campus include Chi Omega Rho, Delta Tau Sigma, Delta Phi Epsilon, and Kappa Beta Gamma.
Notable alumni
The following is a list the presents other notable alumni.
- Steven A. Ballmer, while still simultaneously enrolled in high school, participated in Lawrence Tech's Summer Science Institute, then spent a year at the University, excelling in six of Lawrence Tech's top mathematics classes. Ballmer is the former CEO of Microsoft and current owner of the NBA's Los Angeles Clippers.
- Bennie L. Benjamin, B.S. Civil Engineering 1955 - retired director of the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department, which serves nearly half of Michigan's citizens and is one of the nation's largest water and waste treatment organizations
- John Buffone, B.S. Architecture 1974, B. Architecture 1975 - Little Caesars Vice President of Architecture, oversaw design of Comerica Park. He managed a team of hundreds of architects, artists, and designers to develop the ballpark, which features a carousel, Ferris wheel, and 150-foot (46 m) wide fountain.
- Donald W. Date, B.S. Architectural Engineering 1949 - The late chief architect for the United States' Panama Canal Co. His Canal improvements and modernizations significantly increased efficiency and tonnage transported through the Canal.
- John DeLorean, B.S. Industrial engineering 1948 - Former GM executive who created the first muscle car and an American businessman who founded the De Lorean Motor Company based in Northern Ireland.
- Ed Donley, B.S. Mechanical Engineering 1943 - Former president of Air Products & Chemicals and Lawrence Tech's largest benefactor, and former Chairman of the United States Chamber of Commerce in the 1980s.
- Alan Haase, B.S. Electrical Engineering 1982 - President of AGC Aerospace & Defense Composites Group, accomplished turnaround expert in leading underperforming companies to produce profitable, sustainable growth.
- Elizabeth Howell, B.S. Electrical Engineering 1992 - Vice President of Operations at ITC Holdings Corp., the nation's largest independent electricity transmission company. Miss Howell is a NERC certified system operator and is a board member of the Midwest Reliability Organization.
- Ronald Knockeart, B.S. Electrical Engineering 1963 - inventor of the laser bar code scanner and pioneered keyless entry door locks on cars.
- John W. Laister, B.S. Aeronautical Engineering 1938 - During World War II, developed the revolutionary high wing/rear door cargo plane design still used in cargo aircraft worldwide.
- Thomas S. Moore, B.S.EE 1986- general manager of Daimler-Chrysler's advanced vehicle research and development program, called Liberty and Technical Affairs. He oversees development of all future Chrysler products, working with a five to 10 year lead time.
- James P. Ryan, B.S. Architectural Engineering 1966 - former owner and one time principal of one of the nation's leading architectural firms that specializes in commercial and shopping center development. Highly acclaimed designs include the Somerset Collection and Great Lakes Crossing malls.
- George W. Sierant, ME 1947 - engineered the first viable rear-facing child safety seat in 1966. The six-way seat adjuster was another of many driver comfort and safety innovations Sierant developed during his 34 years with General Motors.
- Alfred Taubman, former Lawrence Tech architecture student - one of the nation's leading real estate developers, innovators, and owners of shopping malls throughout the U.S. He also owns Sotheby's auctioneers and until recently owned the A&W restaurant chain.
- Lewis Veraldi, B.S. Mechanical Engineering 1968 - late father of the original Ford Taurus and Sable. As Ford Motor Company vice president in charge of car development, Veraldi pioneered cross-disciplinary personnel teams that led to the launch of these cars. The "team" development process he innovated has become the industry standard.
- Vincent G. Dow, B.S. Electrical Engineering 1979 - Vice President and Chief Engineer of Electric Distribution Operations at DTE Energy. Oversees DTE's electrical system, including new customer connections, engineering, power plant electrical equipment, and all distribution system construction. Also oversees Ass Optimization, distribution contract management, performance management, the Smart Grid efforts and NERC standards and compliance for DTE.
- Hassane El-Khoury, B.S. Electrical Engineering 1997 - CEO and President of Cypress Semiconductor. Founded in 1982, Cypress is the leader in advanced embedded system solutions for the world's most innovative automotive, industrial, home automation and appliances, consumer electronics and medical products.
Notable faculty and staff
- Wayne Buell, B.S. Chemical Engineering 1936 - Lawrence Tech's president in 1964 Was a member of the first class to attend Lawrence Tech for four years from 1932-1936. The Buell Management building was named in his honor.
- Don Ridler - Before coming to Lawrence Tech in 1932 to build an athletic program, he coached Michigan's first professional football franchise. The Ridler Field House was named in his honor.
Photo gallery
See also
- Association of Independent Technological Universities
References
Source of article : Wikipedia