University of Wisconsin School of Human Ecology

The School of Human Ecology is a school at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, Wisconsin. The school has both graduate and undergraduate programs. The school has departments in Consumer Science, Interdisciplinary Studies, Design Studies, and Human Development & Family Studies. The school has approximately 900 undergraduates working towards majors, and 100 graduate students.

Undergraduate program

The school offers undergraduate majors in Consumer Science; Family, Consumer and Community Education; Human Development and Family Studies; Interior Design; Retailing; Textile and Apparel Design.

Each major is based on a background of course work in the arts and humanities, the social sciences, and the biological, physical, and natural sciences. The focus of undergraduate professional programs may be in scientific, aesthetic, and/or business areas.[1]

Graduate Degrees

The School awards M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Human Ecology, with three options in Consumer Behavior and Family Economics, Design Studies, and Human Development and Family Studies. It also awards an M.F.A. in Design Studies.

History

The University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Human Ecology dates to the spring of 1903. With support from women's organizations around the state, the University Board of Regents, and Belle Case La Follette (the governor's wife), the state legislature funded the establishment of the Department of Home Economics. On June 16, 1903, Caroline Hunt became its first professor. Over time, the department expanded to serve the needs of the University and surrounding community. One outreach effort was the creation of the Dorothy Roberts Nursery School in response to a request from area mothers in 1926. The department also added and developed new and more focused majors such as foods and nutrition, textiles, applied bacteriology, related art, and home economics journalism. All of this occurred under the direction of Abby Marlett. After taking over from Abby Marlett in 1939, Frances Zuill worked to further develop the department, so that it became the School of Home Economics within the College of Agriculture. The school continued to grow and became a separate unit, autonomous from the College of Agriculture in 1973. The original Department of Home Economics underwent several name changes over the years, most recently changing from the School of Family Resources and Consumer Economics to its current name, the School of Human Ecology, in 1996.


Statistics

Major State Initiatives

The $1.8-million Southern Wisconsin Child Welfare Training Project provides training to all the social workers in child protective services in the 21 southern tier counties of the state. The Badger Care project, a collaborative to implement the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) for Wisconsin, develops and evaluates more effective means to enroll children from families of modest means in this essential health insurance program.


Internal Links

References

  1. Kenneth Casper, Undergraduate Majors, accessed March 2, 2009
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