
Paul L. Dressel
Paul L. Dressel (1910-1989) served at Michigan State College and
Michigan State University. He was distinguished Professor for the
College of Education, established the Office of Institutional
R...
Click here for more information.
|
|
College To University
The Hannah Years at Michigan State, 1935-1969
Paul L. Dressel
The Michigan State College of Agriculture and Applied Science, which
appointed John Alfred Hannah as board secretary in 1935 and president
in 1941, was a very different institution from the Michigan State
University from which he retired in 1969, after serving twenty-eight
years as president. During Hannah's tenure, overall enrollment
increased from 4,401 to 40,820, while graduate student numbers went
from below 200 to more than 10,000. The number of departments also
grew from 44 in 1935 to 104 in 1969. Hannah's expansion of academic
courses went far beyond the original agricultural and applied
sciences, as was reflected in the two changes of name for the
college: In 1955, the college became Michigan State University of
Agriculture and Applied Science, and in 1964 it was renamed Michigan
State University.
In examining this transformation, Dressel - who spent a very
distinguished forty-four year career at Michigan State
College/University and is noted for his writings on evaluation in
higher education - produced neither a biography of Hannah nor a
history of Michigan State during the Hannah years. Instead, his book
describes the character of the institution before Hannah's arrival,
examines Hannah's vision for the college, and evaluates Hannah's
methods for "the transformation of a small land-grant college into a
major university under the leadership of a man thoroughly committed
to the land-grant mission." Dressel examines how Hannah sought to
infuse the university with an expanded concept of public service and
extended this concept to an international audience.
World rights
442 pp., 6.00" x 9.00", 1987
Cloth, $20.85,
0-940635-00-3 978-0-940635-00-5

|
|