Harrison Jacobs/Business Insider
Cornell Tech grad students John Quinn, Noshin Nisa, Kiyan Rajabi, and Carolina Peisch talk before their Startup Studio class.
" We are definitely not the startup school," Daniel Huttenlocher , the dean of Cornell Tech, said to me recently. One might be forgiven for thinking so.
Cornell Tech, a joint partnership between Cornell University and the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology , the oldest university in Israel, was born from a public competition launched in 2010 by then-Mayor Michael Bloomberg to develop an elite graduate school of engineering and applied sciences in New York City.Bloomberg aimed to expand the city' s growing Silicon Alley scene and develop the kind of virtuous cycle that exists between Stanford University and Silicon Valley . His administration estimated that the school would generate $23 billion in economic activity, 8,000 permanent jobs, and hundreds of new companies over the next several decades.
The school, now in its sixth year, is a new kind of graduate school - multidisciplinary, hands-on, and explicitly tech-focused - that is still building its reputation.
While it teaches a combination of graduate course heavyweights - business, computer science, law, and electrical engineering, among them - it also has newly-invented disciplines. Connective media, for example, aims to combine computer science with sociology and psychology to create "human-centric" engineers . Like all startups, it's nothing if not ambitious.
"Our core value is about building the future," said Huttenlocher. "We want to build a better digital world that has a focus on humanity and on the things that matter to people."
For Cornell Tech, that future is dependent on bringing its vision of world-leading research on digital technology and innovative, impactful companies to fruition.
Last year, the school moved into its permanent home on Roosevelt Island, a gleaming campus of high-tech buildings. We visited recently to get an inside look.
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