
It has been said that we don’t choose our passions, they choose us. As an undergraduate in Steinhardt’s studio art program, Jessie Mott painted pictures with animal themes. (click for more) 
In 1889, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of George Washington's inauguration, a wooden arch was built across lower Fifth Avenue about half a block north of Washington Square. (click for more) 
Styles change and politicians leave office, but nothing endures like the NYU Semi-Formal. (click for more) 
A photo history of past deans of The Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development. (click for more) 
High School students celebrated their art at a recent opening at the Department of Art and Art Professions' Rosenberg Gallery. (click for more) 
For Immediate Release: New York, NY, December 4, 1941. (click for more) 
Neil Postman -- education reformer, humanist, social visionary and renowned media critic -- was a professor in The Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development for nearly 40 years and former chair of the Department of Culture and Communication. (click for more) 
On March 15, 1956, Eleanor Roosevelt spoke to a standing-room only crowd at Education Auditorium at 25 West 4th Street. (click for more) 
Lauren Adelman (MA '05) worked with her students for an hour and a half each week, creating poems, essays, and artwork, and believes the project made the young women feel a sense of freedom through art. (click for more) 
For forty-seven years, School of Culture, Education, and Human Development students received college credit for taking classes at summer camp. (click for more)
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