Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The New School for Social Research has a legendary history, upholding the university’s long-standing tradition of challenging orthodoxy, promoting public debate, and cultivating academic rigor. Studying and working alongside prominent faculty, you will develop new perspectives and bring new ideas into the world in the areas of social sciences, philosophy, and historical inquiry.

  2. The New School’s students, alums, and faculty engage in groundbreaking scholarly research, creative practice, and scholarship that has a global and social impact. Our 34 academic centers and institutes defy disciplinary boundaries to address the world’s most pressing problems.

  3. The New School in New York City is the only comprehensive university where a renowned design school, Parsons, joins a liberal arts college, a performing arts college, and many programs and graduate schools including The New School for Social Research. Here, students develop new ways to create a more just, more beautiful, and better-designed world.

  4. The New School’s students, alums, and faculty engage in groundbreaking scholarly research, creative practice, and scholarship that has a global and social impact. Our 34 academic centers and institutes defy disciplinary boundaries to address the world’s most pressing problems.

  5. The New School is a STEAM hub with an Innovation Center and Tinkering Studio. Students focus on project-based learning and tactile experiences, exposing them to the most up-to-date technology.

  6. To apply to any of our Bachelor's Program for Adults and Transfer Students and Parsons Associate of Applied Science programs, complete and submit the New School Online Application. New School Online App. Learn more about How to Apply. Graduates. To apply to any of our Master's, Doctoral, Professional Studies Diploma, and Graduate Certificate ...

  7. In 1919, they founded the New School for Social Research. Now formally named The New School, the university has grown to include five colleges, with courses that reflect the founders' interest in the emerging social sciences, international affairs, liberal arts, history, and philosophy, as well as art, design, management, and performing arts.