Louisiana Tech University

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Louisiana Tech University
Image:Techlogo.jpg

Established1894
Type:Public coeducational
President:Daniel Reneau
Staff:394
Undergraduates:9,331
Postgraduates:2,379
LocationRuston, LA, USA 32°31′47″N, 92°38′26″W
Campus:Rural
Nicknames:Bulldogs and Lady Techsters
Colors:Red & Reflex Blue           
Mascot:Tech XIX, a Bulldog and Champ
Website:www.latech.edu

Louisiana Tech University, located in Ruston, Louisiana is a coeducational public institution of higher learning with an approximate enrollment of 12,000 students. First instituted as the Industrial Institute and College of Louisiana in 1894, and then as Louisiana Polytechnic Institute in 1921, it is perhaps best known for its engineering programs and its athletics, especially women's basketball. Louisiana Tech has since 1970 been classified as a university and is attended by students from 50 states and 70 countries.

Louisiana Tech operates on the quarter system while awarding semester hours. Three quarters (fall, winter, spring) equal two semesters at other universities. Louisiana Tech operates a satellite campus at Barksdale Air Force Base in Bossier City and maintains an academic relationship with Grambling State University, the area's historically African-American university located a few miles west of Ruston in Grambling.

Contents

[edit] History

Louisiana Tech University (founded as the Industrial Institute and College of Louisiana) was created by Act 68 of the Acts of the State of Louisiana of 1894, established "for the education of the white children of the State of Louisiana in the arts and sciences" (Act 68, Section 1). Classes began September 5, 1895, with 202 students and five faculty members. The Industrial Institute conferred its first degree, a Bachelor of Industry, on 5 June 1897 to Harry Howard.

After a short time, the name of the school was changed to Louisiana Industrial Institute. During its first decade, the school was limited to two structures, the main building or Old Main, and a mechanics building, but during the 1910s and 1920s, additional structures were built, including dormitories and a dining hall. In 1921, the state constitutional convention changed the name of the school to the Louisiana Polytechnic Institute, and gave it permission to grant the Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees.

In 1927, the library had outgrown Old Main and was given its own building. During the 1930s, the South Campus was constructed for the School of Agriculture. In 1935, the first football stadium was completed. On January 6, 1936, Old Main burned to the ground. The modern library stands on its site.

During WWII, the school played host to several military organizations, including a Naval officer training unit.

In 1970, the school's named was changed again, to Louisiana Tech University, reflecting its new status as a doctorate granting institution.

During this time, the university constructed the 16-story Wyly Tower, named for two benefactors, alumni Charles Wyly and Sam Wyly of Dallas. The project architect was Hugh G. Parker of Monroe.

Dr. Daniel Reneau has led the University as President since 1987 and the length of his tenure has now nearly equaled that of former longtime President F. Jay Taylor, who led the university through a period of expansion from 1962 through 1987.

Following Hurricane Katrina Louisiana Tech, like many other universities, opened its doors to those displaced by the storm. Students and non-students alike were welcomed into the Ruston community while the reconstruction efforts continued in southern Louisiana. Affected students were offered deferred tuition while non-students were allowed to stay in a dorm previously scheduled for demolition. Additionally, the Bulldog athletic program also opened up the football facilities including dorms, weight rooms, practice fields, and stadium to the Tulane Green Wave.

[edit] Academics

[edit] Rankings

Louisiana Tech, a member of the University of Louisiana System, has recently moved up from the Fourth to the Third Tier in the prestigious US News & World Report listing of National Universities. The only other Louisiana public university to rate as highly is the much larger Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. Requirements for admission for all applicants includes at least a 15 Composite ACT Score or a 710 combined SAT score, and at least a 2.0/4.0 high school grade point average. Louisiana Tech supports 394 faculty, 80% of whom hold the doctoral or equivalent degree. The University's program in Nanosystems Engineering has become very highly regarded by both industry and media on a national scale. On May 19, 2007, Louisiana Tech awarded the world's first Bachelor of Science, Nanosystems Engineering Degree to Joshua M. Brown (who simultaneously earned a BS in Electrical Engineering).

[edit] Colleges

The College of Business is made up of the Departments of Accounting, Economics & Finance, Graduate Studies & Research, Management & Information Systems, and Marketing & Analysis. It grants the Bachelor of Science in Accounting, Business Administration, Business Economics, Finance, Computer Information Systems, Management/Business Management and Enterprise, Management/Human Resources, and Marketing. Through the Graduate School, it grants the Doctor of Business Administration, Master of Business Administration, and Master of Professional Accountancy.

  • Engineering and Science[2]

The College of Engineering and Science has an interdisciplinary structure; as such, each faculty member may be associated with one or more degree programs within the College. It grants the Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Chemistry, Civil Engineering, Computer Science, Construction Engineering Technology, Electrical Engineering, Electrical Engineering Technology, Industrial Engineering, Mathematics and Statistics, Mechanical Engineering, Nanosystems Engineering, and Physics. Through the Graduate School, it grants the Master of Science in Engineering and Technology Management, Engineering, Microsystems Engineering, Molecular Science and Nanotechnology, Computer Science, Mathematics, and Physics.

The College of Engineering and Science also confers the Doctor of Philosophy in Computational Analysis and Modeling, Engineering, and Biomedical Engineering, with a joint MD/PhD program with the Louisiana State University at Shreveport Medical Center. Beginning in 2008, the College will also confer a PhD in Engineering Physics.

The College of Education is made up of the departments of Curriculum, Instruction and Leadership, Health and Exercise Science, and Psychological and Behavioral Sciences. It grants the Bachelor of Arts in Art Education, Educational Services, English Education, French Education, Social Studies Education, and Psychology. It grants the Bachelor of Science in Early/Childhood Education, Elementary Education, Special Education, Middle School Education Math and Science, Agriculture Education, Biology Education, Business Education, Chemistry Education, Earth Science Education, Mathematics Education, Physics Education, Speech Education, Speech, Language, and Hearing Therapy, Health and Physical Education, and Kinesiology and Health Promotion. It confers the Bachelor of Music Education (Instrumental or Vocal.)

Through the Graduate School, the College of Education confers the Doctor of Education in Curriculum and Instruction, and Educational Leadership, the Master of Education in Education Leadership, and Education, the Master of Arts in Teaching in Secondary Education, Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education, Middle School Education Mathematics, Middle School Education Science, Multiple Levels, and Special Education, the Master of Science in Curriculum and Instruction, and Health and Exercise Science, the Master of Arts in Counseling and Guidance, Educational Psychology, and Industrial/Organizational Psychology, and the Doctor of Philosophy in COunceling Psychology.

  • Applied and Natural Sciences[4]

The College of Applied and Natural Sciences is made up of the Departments of Agricultural Science, Biological Sciences, Forestry, Health Information Management, Human Ecology, and Nursing. It confers the Associate of Science in Nursing, and the Bachelor of Science in Forestry, Environmental Science, Agricultural Business, Animal Science, Biology, Medical Technology, Geographic Information Science, Wildlife Conservation, Health Information Administration, Health Information Technology, Merchandising and Consumer Studies, Family and Child Studies, Family and Consumer Sciences Education, and Nutrition and Dietetics.

Through the Graduate School, the College confers the Master of Science in Biology, Family and Consumer Sciences, and Nutrition and Dietetics, and the Master of Health Information Management.

  • Liberal Arts[5]

The College of Liberal Arts is made up of the Departments of Architecture, Art, History, Journalism, Literature and Language, Performing Arts, Professional Aviation, Social Science, and Speech. The College confers the Associate of General Studies, the Bachelor of General Studies, the Bachelor of Arts in History, Journalism, English, French, Spanish, Music, Geography, Political Science, Sociology, Speech, and Preprofessional Speech-Language Pathology, the Bachelor of Science in Architecture, Professional Aviation and Aviation Management, the Bachelor of Interior Design, the Bachelor of Fine Arts, and the Bachelor of Music.

Through the Graduate School, the college confers the Master of Architecture, Master of Fine Arts, Master of Arts in History, English, Speech, and Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, and the Doctor of Audiology.

[edit] Specialty programs

  • Program in Nanosystems Engineering[6](The first of its kind in the nation.)
  • Institute for Micromanufacturing[7]
  • Interdisciplinary Ph.D. program in Computational Analysis and Modeling[8]

[edit] Student life

Students can opt to participate in a Greek system, intramural athletics, or Student Government. For students interested in more focused activities, Louisiana Tech offers many special interest organizations. Among these are a student-run radio station and closed-circuit television station Louisiana TechTV, as well as service organizations such as Circle K International and Habitat for Humanity.

Louisiana Tech requires students to live on campus for 7 quarters or 80 credit hours, in turn coming to a little over two years, unless deemed a commuter. Housing is an issue on campus, and a building program is underway to move from traditional dormitories to apartment-style complexes. The first of these, University Park, was opened in 2005 and houses up to 450 students.

[edit] Air Force/Army ROTC Sessions

Since 2006, Louisiana Tech has played host to Summer Leadership School for Air Force Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps cadets from public school systems all over the United States. It is operated by normal USAF retirees, but mostly by college level Cadet Training Officers. These sessions are held towards the end of the month of June for nine days.

Also, Louisiana Tech has an ROTC exchange program with Grambling State University. Due to the close proximity of the two schools, Grambling does not offer Air Force ROTC; so, any GSU student who wishes to take part in AFROTC may drive to LA Tech to participate. Grambling however does offer Army ROTC and the same exchange program applies to LA Tech students to participate at GSU.

[edit] Athletics

Currently Louisiana Tech sponsors men's intercollegiate baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, indoor track and outdoor track along with women's intercollegiate basketball, bowling, indoor track, outdoor track, volleyball, soccer, softball and tennis.

Louisiana Tech currently competes as a NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision institution in the Western Athletic Conference. The football team has competed at the Division I FBS level since 1989 after previously competing at both the Division I Football Championship Subdivision and Division II levels. Notable alumni, including Charles Wyly, Willie Roaf, Karl Malone, and Terry Bradshaw, have made significant donations to enhance Tech's athletic facilities and sense of insitutional sports history.

The women's basketball program is notable for having won several NCAA national championships, including a title in the first NCAA National Women's Basketball Championship in 1982. The Lady Techsters most recent title came in 1988. Until they failed to make the 2007 tournament the Lady Techsters had participated in every NCAA postseason women's basketball tournament going back to 1982.

[edit] Notable people

Presidents of Louisiana Tech University

List of Louisiana Tech University alumni William Leslie McNease-Class of 1974. Bill McNease was a member of the first aviation class taught at La Tech in September, 1967. He was Vice President of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and a 4 year letterman on the tennis team. In 2007 he was elected to be the Chairman of the Aviation Department Alumni Advisory Board. He retired from the Federal Aviation Administration in 2007 and was awarded the Adm. Luis deFlorez award by the Flight Safety Foundation in October 2007.

This award, presented since 1966, recognizes “outstanding individual contributions to aviation safety, through basic design, device or practice.” A retired U.S. Navy admiral and a Foundation president in the mid-1950s, de Florez was influential in the development of early flight simulators. He received the 1943 Collier Trophy — one of the most prestigious awards for aeronautical achievement in the United States — for his work in training combat pilots and flight crews. De Florez established a trust to support the award that carries his name and to provide each recipient with $1,000. The award includes a handsome, wood-framed, hand-lettered citation.

Recipients of the Admiral Luis de Florez Flight Safety Award

2007 William L. McNease and Gerald Pilj, U.S. Federal Aviation Administration

2006 J. Kenneth Higgins, Boeing Commercial Airplanes

2005 Alan Klapmeier

2004 Thomas J. Yager

2003 Capt. Paul A. Woodburn

2002 Scott Shappell, Ph.D., Civil Aerospace Medical Institute U.S. Federal Aviation Administration; Douglas Wiegmann, Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

2001 Capt. Warren Vanderburgh, American Airlines Flight Academy

2000 Thomas Imrich, U.S. Federal Aviation Administration

1999 Ivan Efremovich Mashkivsky, Flight Safety Foundation International, Moscow

1998 Donald Bateman, AlliedSignal

1997 Capt. K. Scott Griffith, American Airlines; Edward D. Mendenhall, Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. 1996 No award 1995 Capt. Chester L. Ekstrand, Boeing Commercial Airplane Group 1994 No award 1993 Richard Milton 1992 John McCarthy, U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research 1991 John J. Neligan, American Airlines 1990 Peter L. Gallimore, Lester G. Lautman and Richard L. Sears, all with The Boeing Co. 1989 Felix L. Pitts, U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Langley Research Center 1988 Richard G. Hill 1987 Huey D. Carden 1986 Sidney B. Pickles 1985 Richard F. Chandler 1984 Richard S. Bray 1983 J.R. Sturgeon, U.K. Royal Aircraft Establishment 1982 Capt. John X. Stefanki, Air Line Pilots Association, International 1981 Richard Gerald Snyder, Ph.D., University of Michigan 1980 Gunnar Antvik (retired), Board of Civil Aviation, Sweden 1979 David Johnson, U.K. Royal Aircraft Establishment 1978 J. Anderson Plumer, Lightning Technologies 1977 Dr. T. Theodore Fujita, University of Chicago 1976 Daniel F. Sowa, Northwest Airlines 1975 C.D. (Don) Bateman, Sundstrand Data Control 1974 Kenneth B. Olsen, American Airlines 1973 No award 1972 Dr. John T. Dailey, U.S. Federal Aviation Administration 1971 No award 1970 Capt. Victor Hewes, Air Line Pilots Association, International 1969 Douglas Moreton; S. Harry Robertson, AvSer 1968 No award 1967 Franklin W. Kolk, American Airlines; Don Mitchell, Piper Aircraft Corp. 1966 George Cooper, U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Flight Safety Foundation Admiral Luis de Florez Flight Safety Award is presented to William L. McNease U.S. Federal Aviation Administration

For his role in developing an electronic worksheet that reduces the workload of calculating CFIT risk. For years, during preflight planning, pilots have used a laminated paper checklist produced by Flight Safety Foundation to ascertain the CFIT risk of the flight. Although pilots have found the checklist an immensely valuable tool, it requires handwritten data entry and numerical scoring by the pilot. Flight safety inspector McNease, along with his FAA colleague, aviation safety engineer Gerald Pilj, devised a digital CFIT worksheet that allows pilots to make simple choices and yes/no entries in a Microsoft Excel version of the checklist. Rather than the pilot having to add and subtract numbers based on various factors, the digital application automatically calculates the CFIT risk. Pilots can use the Excel checklist on laptop computers, “smart” phones or personal digital assistants. McNease and Pilj have provided their work to Flight Safety Foundation, which has made the tool available to the aviation industry as a free download from its Web site. Flight Safety Foundation is pleased to recognize William L. McNease for his contribution to reducing CFIT risk.

FSF 60th annual International Air Safety Seminar Seoul, Korea October 3, 2007

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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