List of Teachers College, Columbia University alumni
Appearance
Following is a list of notable alumni of Teachers College, Columbia University.
Art and architecture
[edit]- Charles Alston (M.F.A. 1931), artist
- Aaron Douglas (M.A. 1944), painter, illustrator, and major figure in the Harlem Renaissance
- Maude Kerns (M.A. 1906), pioneering abstract artist and teacher[1]
- Audrea Kreye (M.A.), metalsmith and jewelry designer
- Ryah Ludins (B.S. 1921; artist and art teacher
- Agnes Martin (B.A. 1942), artist
- Georgia O'Keeffe (1914), artist
- Raphael Montañez Ortiz (Ed.D. 1982), artist and founder of El Museo del Barrio
- Frank Shifreen (2001), artist; curator; teacher
- Elaine Sturtevant (M.A.), artist
- Marius Sznajderman, painter, printmaker, and scenic designer
- Hilda Taba (PhD 1932), architect; curriculum theorist; curriculum reformer and teacher educator
- Alma Thomas (M.A. 1934), expressionist painter and art educator
- Lynd Ward (1926), illustrator and artist known for his series of wordless novels using wood engraving
Academia
[edit]President
[edit]- Michael Apple (Ed.D. 1970), professor of educational policy studies
- Louis T. Benezet (PhD 1942), former president of Claremont Graduate University
- Zhang Boling (1917), founder and president of National Nankai University
- Paul G. Bulger (Ed.D. 1951), president of Buffalo State College
- Betty Castor (1963), President of the University of South Florida, member of the Florida Senate, and Florida Education Commissioner
- Margaret Mordecai Jones Cruikshank (1911), president of St. Mary's Junior College
- Bidhu Bhusan Das (M.A. 1947), university president/Vice Chancellor and ranking government official from India
- Marjorie Housepian Dobkin (M.A.), Barnard College professor and dean
- Edward C. Elliott (M.A.), educational researcher and president of Purdue University
- Claire Fagin (M.A.), the first woman to serve as president of an Ivy League university
- Abraham S. Fischler (Ed.D. 1959), academic; second president of Nova Southeastern University
- Edward Fitzpatrick (B.S. 1906; M.A. 1907; PhD 1911), president of Mount Mary College
- William Trufant Foster (PhD 1911), economist; first president of Reed College
- Susan Fuhrman (Ph.D. 1977), first female president of TC; former UPenn dean
- Mildred García (Ed.D. 1987), president of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU)
- Gordon Gee (Ed.D. 1972), president of Ohio State University
- Andy Holt (PhD 1937), president of University of Tennessee
- George Ivany (M.A. 1962), president of the University of Saskatchewan
- Dock J. Jordan (A.B., 1925; M.A. 1928), president of Edward Waters University and Kittrell College
- J. Paul Leonard (1901–1995), university president, educator[2]
- Morris Meister (PhD 1921), first president of Bronx Community College and first principal of Bronx High School of Science
- Jiang Menglin (PhD), president of Peking University; minister of education for the Republic of China
- Mary Eileen O'Brien (M.A. 1983), president of Dominican University New York[3]
- Regina Peruggi (Ed.D. 1984), President of Kingsborough Community College
- Thomas Granville Pullen Jr. (Ed.M.; Ed.D. 1926), president University of Baltimore; Maryland State Superintendent of Education
- William Schuman (B.S. 1935; M.A. 1937), former president of the Juilliard School of Music and the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
- Floyd Wilcox (M.A. 1920), third president of Shimer College
- John Davis Williams (Ed.D. 1940), chancellor of the University of Mississippi
Faculty
[edit]- Randy E. Bennett (M.A. 1977; Ed.M., 1978; Ed.D. 1979), educational researcher
- Josephine Thorndike Berry (B.S. 1904, A.M. 1910), college professor and home economist
- John Seiler Brubacher (M.A.; PhD), educational philosopher; professor at Yale
- Edith Buchanan (Ed.D. 1953), nursing educator, professor, and principal of the College of Nursing, (now Rajkumari Amrit Kaur College of Nursing) New Delhi, India
- Arthur W. Chickering (PhD 1958), educational researcher in student development theory
- Satis N. Coleman (Ph.D. 1931), music educator and professor at Teachers College, Columbia University
- Erick Gordon (Ed.M. 1992), founding director of the Student Press Initiative at Teachers College, Columbia University
- Joan Dye Gussow (Ed.D. 1975), professor emerita and former chair of the Nutrition Education Program at Teachers College, Columbia University
- Margaret H'Doubler (1916), dance instructor who created the first dance major at the University of Wisconsin
- Martin Haberman (Ed.D. 1962), dean and distinguished professor at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
- Martha Hill (B.S. 1929), first director of dance at the Juilliard School
- Percy Hughes (M.A.; Ph.D.), leading fia gure in the Philosophy, Education, and Psychology Department at Lehigh University
- Seymour Itzkoff (Ph.D. 1965), professor emeritus of education and child study at Smith College
- Yoshi Kasuya (M.A. 1930, Ph.D. 1933), educator at Tsuda College in Kodaira, Tokyo
- William Heard Kilpatrick (PhD 1912), philosopher of education; professor of Teachers College, Columbia University
- Herbert Kliebard (Ed.D. 1963), historian of education and professor at the University of Wisconsin–Madison
- Julius B. Maller (PhD 1929), professor and research sociologist
- John C. McAdams (M.A.), associate professor of political science at Marquette University
- Jane Ellen McAllister (PhD 1929), college professor and first African American woman to earn a PhD in education in the United States
- Lin Mosei (PhD 1929), Dean of Arts at the National Taiwan University and the first Taiwanese to receive a PhD degree
- Jerome T. Murphy (M.A.), dean emeritus at the Harvard Graduate School of Education
- Kuo Ping-Wen (M.A. 1912; Ph.D. 1914), chancellor of the Shanghai College of Commerce
- Thomas S. Popkewitz (M.A. 1964), professor of curriculum theory at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
- Louise M. Powell (B.S. 1922), nurse and educator who led the University of Minnesota School of Nursing during its formative years.
- Robert Bruce Raup (PhD 1926), philosophy of education professor emeritus and critic of the American education system
- Betty Reardon (Ed.D. 1985), founder and director of the Peace Education Center at Teachers College, Columbia University
- Agnes L. Rogers (PhD 1917), educational psychologist; professor of education
- Juanita Jane Saddler (M.A. 1935), dean of women at Fisk University
- Irma Salas Silva (Ph.D. 1930), head of the Department of Education of the University of Chile's Faculty of Philosophy and Education
- Rawley Silver (Ed.D. 1936), art therapist
- Lucy Diggs Slowe (M.A. 1915), first Blacthe k woman to serve as Dean of Women at an American University; one of the founders and first president of Alpha Kappa Alpha
- Samuel Totten (Ed.D. 1985), genocide scholar and professor at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
- William E. Warner (Ph.D. 1928), industrial arts professor at Ohio State University and founder of Epsilon Pi Tau honor society
- Joel Westheimer, professor of citizenship education at the University of Ottawa
- Marion Thompson Wright (Ph.D. 1940), professor at Howard University and first African-American woman in the United States to earn Ph.D. in Ha istory[4]
Activism
[edit]- Thelma C. Davidson Adair (M.A. 1945; Ed.D. 1959), advocate for human rights; peace; and justice
- Mary Antin (1902), immigration rights activist; author of The Promised Land
- Belle Moskowitz (attended in 1894), social activist
- Esther Peterson (M.A. 1930), consumer rights activist; 1981 Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient
- Anita Pollitzer (1913), suffragette and national chairman of the NWP
- Henrietta Rodman (1904), teacher; feminist activist
- Jill Sheffield (M.A. 1963), women's reproductive rights advocate
- Leon Sullivan (M.A. 1947), civil rights leader and social activist; 1991 Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient
- Ruth C. Sullivan (M.A. 1953), autism activist
Business
[edit]- William Vincent Campbell Jr. (Ed.M. 1974), board director for Apple Inc.; CEO for Claris; Intuit Inc. and GO Corporation
- Richard Robinson (attended, 1963), former CEO of Scholastic Corporation
- Carmen Rita Wong (M.A. 2000), personal finance expert
Education
[edit]- Millie Almy (M.A. 1945, Ph.D. 1948), psychologist and "Grandame of early childhood education"
- Florence E. Bamberger (PhD 1922), pedagogue; school supervisor; progressive education advocate
- Sarah Bavly (M.S. 1929; PhD 1947), Dutch-Israeli nutrition education pioneer in Israel
- Frank W. Cyr (PhD 1930), educator and author known for his contribution to school busing
- Sarah Louise Delany (B.A. 1920; Ed.M. 1925), the first African-American permitted to teach high school science in New York
- Florence Dunlop (Ph.D. 1935), a pioneer in education for special needs children
- Blanche General Ely (M.A. 1923), principal and founder of multiple schools in Broward County, Florida
- John D. Kendall (M.A.), promulgated the Suzuki Method in the United States
- Deborah Kenny (PhD 1994), CEO of Harlem Village Academies
- H. S. S. Lawrence (M.A.; Ed.D. 1950), Indian educationist
- Caroline Pratt (B.A. 1894), progressive educator; founder of City and Country School in the Greenwich Village
- Tao Xingzhi (1917), Chinese educator and author of children's literature
Entertainment
[edit]- Sara Benincasa (M.A.), comedian and author
- Donald Byrd (Ph.D. 1982), jazz and fusion trumpet player; music educator
- Ennis Cosby (Ed.M. 1995), murder victim and son of comedian Bill Cosby
- Arthur Cunningham (M.A. 1957), composer
- Patricia DiMango (M.A.), judge; star of CBS' Hot Bench
- William Patrick Foster (Ed.D. 1955), bandmaster, composer, and author
- Agnes Moore Fryberger, educational director of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra and of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra
- Art Garfunkel (M.A. 1967), singer (Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame inductee); poet; and actor
- Samuel E. Goldfarb, composer
- Ellie Krieger (M.S. 1994), nutritionist; host of Healthy Appetite with Ellie Krieger and Ellie's Real Good Food
- Eda LeShan (B.S. 1944), writer; television host; counselor; educator; playwright
- Mort Lindsey (M.A. 1948; Ed.D. 1974), orchestrator; composer; pianist; conductor; musical director
- Margaret McFarland (PhD 1938), child psychologist, chief consultant to Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
- Annie-B Parson (M.A. 1983), dancer, choreographer, founder of Big Dance Theater
- Soon-Yi Previn (Ed.M.), wife of filmmaker Woody Allen
- David Randolph (M.A. 1942), conductor; music educator; radio host
- Helen Reichert (M.A. 1931), talk show personality; professor
- Marvin Rosen (Ed.M.; Ed.D.), pianist; educator; musicologist; Classical Discoveries radio host
- Angela Santomero (M.A.), television executive producer and creator
- Morton Schindel (M.A. 1947), educator and film producer
- Robert Sherman (M.A. 1953), radio broadcaster; author; educator
- Karl Struss (B.A. 1912), photographer and cinematographer; pioneer in 3D films
- Bobby Susser (M.A. 1987), children's songwriter; record producer; performer
- Ellen R. Thompson (M.A.) composer and music educator
- Marion Verhaalen, (Ed.D., 1971) composer and musicologist
- Ruth Westheimer (Ed.D. 1970), sex therapist known as "Dr. Ruth", talk show host, author, professor
Literature and journalism
[edit]- Pam Allyn (M.A. 1988), literacy expert
- Carolyn Sherwin Bailey (1896), author of Miss Hickory winner of the 1947 Newbery Medal
- Norman Cousins (B.A.), editor; peace activist
- Ella Cara Deloria (B.S. 1915), novelist and Yankton Sioux ethnologist
- Rudolf Flesch (PhD 1955), author who inspired Dr. Seuss to write The Cat in the Hat
- Neil Postman (M.A. 1955; Ed.D. 1958), author and cultural critic
- Miriam Roth (Ed.M.), Israeli writer and scholar of children's books; educator
- Grace Steele Woodward, writer and historian
- Tao Xingzhi (1917), Chinese educator and author of children's literature
- Anzia Yezierska (1905), novelist
Medicine and psychology
[edit]- Louie Croft Boyd (1909), nurse and hospital superintendent of nurses
- Augusta Fox Bronner (B.S. 1906; M.A. 1909; Ph.D. 1914), psychologist and co-director of the first child guidance clinic
- May Edward Chinn (B.S. 1921), the first black woman to graduate from Bellevue Hospital Medical College
- Peter T. Coleman (PhD), psychologist; executive director of the Morton Deutsch ICCCR and the AC4
- Diane DiResta (M.S. 1977), media trainer; speech coach; certified speech pathologist
- Patricia Lynne Duffy (M.A. 1981), synesthesia expert
- Albert Ellis (M.A. 1943; PhD 1947), cognitive behavioral therapist
- Haim Ginott, child psychologist and psychotherapist, and parent educator
- Edmund W. Gordon (Ed.D.), psychologist
- Tsuruko Haraguchi (PhD 1912), psychologist
- Virginia Henderson (B.S. 1932; M.A. 1934), nurse; researcher; theorist; the "first lady of nursing"
- Lois Holzman (Ph.D. 1977), psychologist, director, and co-founder of the East Side Institute
- David W. Johnson (Ed.D. 1966), social psychologist
- Imogene King (Ed.D.), pioneer of nursing theory development
- Eleanor C. Lambertsen (B.S. 1949; M.A. 1950; Ed.D. 1957), revolutionized nursing and health care organization and delivery
- Harriet Lerner (M.A.), clinical psychologist
- Ruth Lubic (B.S. 1959; M.A. 1961; Ed.D. 1979), leader of the nurse-midwifery movement in the US
- Rollo May (PhD 1949), existential psychologist
- Margaret McFarland (PhD 1938), child psychologist, chief consultant to Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
- Hildegard Peplau (M.A.; Ph.D.), nurse and nurse theorist who led the way toward the humane treatment of patients with behavior and personality disorders
- June Reinisch (M.A. 1970; PhD 1976), psychologist and director of the Kinsey Institute
- Carl Rogers (M.A. 1928; PhD 1931), psychologist
- Martha E. Rogers (M.A. 1945), nursing theorist; creator of the Science of Unitary Human Beings
- Celestine Smith (Ed.D. 1952), the first Black woman to become certified as a Jungian psychoanalyst, in 1964
- Ian K. Smith (M.A. 1993), physician and author
- Edward Thorndike (PhD 1898), psychologist
- Robert L. Thorndike (M.A. 1932; PhD 1935), psychologist
- Darlene Yee-Melichar (M.S. 1984; Ed.D. 1985), gerontologist
- Shirley Zussman (1937), sex therapist
Military
[edit]- Anna Mae Hays (B.S. 1958), the first woman in the U.S. Armed Forces to be promoted to a general officer rank
- Olivia Hooker (M.A. 1947), first African-American woman to serve in the U.S. Coast Guard
- Hazel Johnson-Brown (M.A. 1963), the first female African-American general in the United States Army
Politics and government
[edit]- Muhammad Fadhel al-Jamali (M.A. 1930; PhD 1934), Prime Minister of Iraq
- Hafizullah Amin (M.A.), president of Afghanistan
- Nahas Gideon Angula (M.A. 1978; Ed.M. 1979), Prime Minister of Namibia
- William Ayers (Ed.M.; Ed.D. 1987), founder of Weather Underground; professor of education
- C. Louise Boehringer (B.S. 1911), the first female to be elected to office in Arizona
- Peter L. Buttenwieser (Ph.D.), Democratic donor and fundraiser
- Betty Castor (1963), Florida Senate, Florida Education Commissioner, and President of the University of South Florida
- P. C. Chang (PhD), philosopher and diplomat
- Shirley Chisholm (M.A. 1952), first African American woman elected to Congress and former US presidential candidate
- Betsy Gotbaum (M.A. 1967), Public Advocate for New York City
- Lee Huan (M.A.), premier of the Republic of China
- Kevin Jennings (M.A. 1994), former assistant deputy secretary at the U.S. Department of Education
- Thomas Kean (M.A. 1963), former governor of New Jersey
- John King Jr. (Ed.M.; Ed.D. 2008), 10th United States secretary of education
- Guillermo Linares (Ed.D.), the first Dominican elected to public office in the US
- Olga A. Mendez (M.A. 1960), the first Puerto Rican woman elected to a US state legislature
- Jiang Menglin (PhD), president of Peking University; minister of education for the Republic of China
- Chester Earl Merrow (1937), educator; U.S. Representative from New Hampshire
- Yvonne B. Miller (M.A. 1962), the first African-American woman to be elected to the Virginia state house
- Richard P. Mills (Ed.D. 1977), former commissioner of education for Vermont and New York
- Diane Ravitch (PhD 1975), historian of education; former U.S. Assistant secretary of education
- Tian-Ming Sheu (Ed.D. 1993), president of the National Academy for Educational Research in Taiwan
- Hu Shih (PhD 1917), Chinese diplomat
- Merryl Tisch (Ed.D.), chancellor of the New York State Board of Regents, presiding over University of the State of New York and the New York State Education Department
- Deborah Wolfe (M.S. 1938; Ed.D. 1945), education chief of the US House of Representatives Committee on Education and Labor
Religion
[edit]- Barnett R. Brickner (M.A.), rabbi
- Carl Henry Clerk (PGDip. 1926), fourth synod clerk of the Presbyterian Church of the Gold Coast
- Minnie Vautrin (M.A. 1919), educator and missionary
- Moshe Weinberger, rabbi and author
Science
[edit]- George Albert Llano (M.A. 1939), polar explorer and lichenologist with the National Academy of Sciences
Sports
[edit]- Clarence Gaines (M.A. 1950), hall of fame basketball coach of Winston-Salem State University
- Maya Lawrence (M.A. 2010), Olympic fencer
- Sid Luckman, quarterback in the Pro Football Hall of Fame
- Adolph Rupp (M.A.), hall of fame basketball coach of the University of Kentucky
- Henry Wittenberg (M.A.), Olympic wrestling champion
References
[edit]- ^ Trenton, Patricia; D'Emilio, Sandra (1995). Independent Spirits: Women Painters of the American West, 1890–1945. University of California Press. pp. 126–130. ISBN 978-0520202030.
- ^ "J. Paul Leonard, TC Educator, India Expert, Is Dead at Age 93". Columbia University Record. Vol. 20, no. 22. March 31, 1995. ISSN 0747-4504. Retrieved 2022-08-04.
- ^ "Mary Eileen O'Brien to Retire From Presidency of Dominican University in Orangetown, New York". Women In Academia Report. 2023-10-27. Retrieved 2023-12-20.
- ^ Encyclopedia of New Jersey. Lurie, Maxine N., 1940–, Mappen, Marc. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press. 2004. ISBN 0813533252. OCLC 57590112.
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