A Message from National Technion President Joel S. Rothman
http://israel-commentary.org/?p=3759http://israel-commentary.org/?p=3759
Last December I was thrilled to attend a news conference with New
York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Technion President Professor Peretz
Lavie, and Cornell University President David Skorton. Mayor Bloomberg
formally announced that the Technion and Cornell partners were the
winners of the highly publicized competition to create what he called a
“game-changing” applied sciences and technology campus on Roosevelt
Island in New York City. After reviewing some 10,000 pages of proposals
and interviewing applicants from 17 institutions around the world, the
project went to “a dynamic joint submission from two world-class
institutions/’ he said.
The mayor envisions that the new campus will seed the city with
entrepreneurs and tech oriented start-ups, much like the Technion has
done in Israel. Just a year earlier, Mayor Bloomberg announced that the
city would provide $100 million to the institution or consortium of
institutions with the best proposal for an applied science campus. The
announcement set off a closely watched competition among elite
universities vying for the honor. The strength of both the Technion and
Cornell University in generating entrepreneurial activity was one of the
major factors cited in the city’s selection of the team.
The Cornell NYC Tech campus mission is to focus on technology in the
service of business to produce budding entrepreneurs who not only excel
in science and engineering, but are also business savvy. As such, the
heart of the program is the Technion-Cornell Innovation Institute
(TCII)/ a new academic model based on applied science.
Students will initially pursue master’s and doctorate degrees from
Cornell in the traditional fields of computer science, electrical and
computer engineering and information science and engineering. But once
accredited by the state of New York/ the TCII will offer a novel
Technion-Cornell dual Master of Applied Science degree (MASc) tracked to
reflect the student’s additional studies in business economics
advertising or other social sciences relevant to his or her hub.
Eventually the new tech campus is expected to boost the city’s
percentage of full-time, graduate engineering students by 70 percent
The projected $2 billion tech campus will cover 10 acres of land on
Roosevelt Island, enroll approximately 2,500 graduate students and
accommodate 280 faculty members at full build in 30 years. Limited
classes will start in temporary quarters off-site as soon as this
September.
Comment: Our nephew attends the Technion here in Israel-just selected as the top student in his class-yes, we are so very proud of him and our commitment to education
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