Schools
- Pratt Institute School of Architecture
- Department of Undergraduate Architecture
- Department of Graduate Architecture
- Department of Construction Management
- Department of Facilities Management
- Department of Graduate Architecture and Urban Design
- Graduate Center for Planning and the Environment
- School of Art and Design
- Department of Foundation Art
- Department of Art and Design Education
- Department of Creative Arts Therapy
- Department of Arts and Cultural Management
- Department of Communications Design
- Department of Graduate Communications/Packaging Design
- Department of Digital Arts
- Department of Design Management
- Department of Fashion Design
- Department of Fine Arts
- Department of the History of Art & Design
- Department of Industrial Design
- Department of Interior Design
- Department of Media Arts
- Associate Degree Programs
- School of Liberal Arts and Sciences
- Department of English and Humanities
- Critical and Visual Studies
- Intensive English Program
- Department of Math and Science
- Department of Social Science and Cultural Studies
- Writing Program
- School of Information and Library Science (Pratt has the oldest continuously accredited library-science school in the US.)
- Center for Continuing Education and Professional Studies
Read more about this topic: Pratt Institute
Famous quotes containing the word schools:
“Good schools are schools for the development of the whole child. They seek to help children develop to their maximum their social powers and their intellectual powers, their emotional capacities, their physical powers.”
—James L. Hymes, Jr. (20th century)
“To be a Negro is to participate in a culture of poverty and fear that goes far deeper than any law for or against discrimination.... After the racist statutes are all struck down, after legal equality has been achieved in the schools and in the courts, there remains the profound institutionalized and abiding wrong that white America has worked on the Negro for so long.”
—Michael Harrington (19281989)
“In America the taint of sectarianism lies broad upon the land. Not content with acknowledging the supremacy as the Diety, and with erecting temples in his honor, where all can bow down with reverence, the pride and vanity of human reason enter into and pollute our worship, and the houses that should be of God and for God, alone, where he is to be honored with submissive faith, are too often merely schools of metaphysical and useless distinctions. The nation is sectarian, rather than Christian.”
—James Fenimore Cooper (17891851)