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On campuses across the
United States, fall brings homecomings, which tend toward
beer-laced nostalgia amid the swirling autumnal leaves.
Some of us will return to architecture schools, shudder
as we pass through the design labs, puzzle over incomprehensible
student work, clap old friends on the back, eat and
drink to excess, then gratefully retreat to paying jobs.
One universitys graduates
have cause for another kind of celebrationan unanticipated
one. On October 22, graduates of Tulane Universitys
architecture program gathered for a ceremony celebrating
the retroactive conferral of the Masters of Architecture
degree. You heard that correctly: Throughout most of
its long history, the Tulane School of Architecture
offered the B.Arch. as the first professional degree.
In May, with a wave of the academic wand, those degrees
automatically converted to a masters.
In renaming its degree after
the fact, Tulane (which now grants the M.Arch. and the
Ph.D.) joins an extremely short list of other universities;
13 schools of architecture offer a 5-year M.Arch. program
at present. While such a gift to its graduates might
seem precipitate, there is precedent in legal education.
Forty years ago, the American Bar Association recommended
that the Juris Doctor (J.D.) replace the more ordinary
LL.B.
Certainly, the granting of
degrees involves more than pleased alumni; larger benefits
should accrue from the action, and the arguments for
the M.Arch. are several. The first is clarity: For most
people in the larger world, a bachelors diploma
signifies a 4-year undergraduate degree. Few outside
of architectures inner circle understand that
the B.Arch. is designated as a First Professional
Degree, or that it stands for a 5-year education
often accompanied by a thesis or other rigorous requirements.
Although the public admires
architects and architecture, few understand what we
do, much less care how we are schooled. Unfortunately,
weve only compounded the confusion. For all of
our vaunted love of order, we have created a cholesterol-clogged
education system jammed with choices and resulting diplomas.
Who can parse them out? Alternative programs, from the
B.A. in Architecture to the 3-year accelerated masters
to the 4+2 clutter our understanding. In such a polyglot
environment, some consistency is called for; everyone
understands the masters.
To the need for clarity,
add degree inflation. We all know that the masters
has become de rigueur for anyone with the hope of teaching
on a university campus, including valued practitioners
hoping to return to the classroom. Unfortunately, the
perception of the B.Arch. has become devalued on campuses
overrun with Ph.D.s, ergo a strong impetus for
change. There would be much homework to accomplish to
ensure that the pedagogical system be equal to the designation.
No one suggests the masters
as a panacea for fundamental problems surrounding architectural
education. Our best minds, including the five collateral
organizations with a stake in the efficacy of architectural
education, have been debating the pros and cons for
years. Some programs simply are not suited for the masters,
and others will chafe at the notion. However, for those
of us bobbing about in society at large, including the
editor in chief of architectural record (yours truly
is one of those graduates who pursued an accelerated
3-year program following a liberal arts degree, resulting
nonsensically in two bachelors degrees), the M.Arch.
offers a recognizable standard that elevates our position
and allows us to hold our heads higher. This is a retroactive
ceremony well worth a homecoming.
The implications of Tulanes
largesse remain unclear. But as Joanna Lombard stated
in a paper for the ACSA in 1997, If law schools
are an example, then without a specific degree mandate
from any of the five architecture organizations, individual
schools will set the course. The time for consensus
in architectural education has come, or outside forces
may force us into unanticipated or unwelcome change.
Join Robert Ivy as he jots down
notes on his travels and the state of architecture today
in the Editor's Journal.
Check out our index
of past editorials.
If you wish to write to our
editor-in-chief you can email him rivy@mcgraw-hill.com.
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