[1] MSU is well known for its academic programs in education and agriculture, and the university pioneered the studies of packaging, horticulture and music therapy.
Research performed at MSU has greatly contributed to scientific progress and discoveries related to hybrid corn, homogenized milk, chemotherapy drug cisplatin, and Germanium isotope Ge-60.
[13] Indeed, MSU's Physics & Astronomy department ranks highly based on the number and impact of faculty publications.
In addition to this, U.S. News ranks MSU's undergraduate and graduate Supply Chain Management programs in the Eli Broad College of Business number one in the nation.
Other programs of note include criminal justice,[15] music therapy,[16] hospitality business,[17] packaging,[18] political science,[19] and communications.
In the early 20th century, MSU dairy professor and industry pioneer G. Malcolm Trout made significant progress in milk production methods, though he did not invent the processes of pasteurization nor homogenization.
In the 1960s, Chemistry professor Barnett Rosenberg and colleagues Loretta VanCamp and Thomas Krigas observed that certain platinum compounds inhibited cell division, and by 1969 demonstrated that these compounds cured solid tumors, leading to the development of the leading chemotherapy drug that eventually resulted from this work, cisplatin.
[23] In 2004, Michigan State, in consortium with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the government of Brazil, broke ground on the 4.1-meter Southern Astrophysical Research Telescope (SOAR) in the Andes Mountains of Chile.
[26] Albert Fert, an Adjunct professor at MSU, was awarded the 2007 Nobel Prize in Physics together with Peter Grünberg.
[29] While this opened the door for other types of private donations, MSU has often lagged behind peer institutions in terms of endowments.
As recently as the early 1990s, MSU was last among the eleven Big Ten schools, with barely over $100 million in endowment funds.
Classes in the college are small, with an average of 25 students, and most instructors are tenure track faculty with PhDs or occasionally PhD candidates.
As part of its "living-learning" philosophy, JMC requires freshmen students to live in Case during their freshman year.
All of JMC's majors require two years of foreign language and one "field experience”, either in the form of an internship or study abroad program.
Madison boasts numerous major award recipients, including Rhodes, Truman, Fulbright and Marshall Scholars to name a few.
Founded October 21, 2005,[35] the college provides around 600 undergraduates with an individualized curriculum in the liberal, visual and performing arts.
Many Lyman Briggs students intend to pursue careers in medicine, but the school supports 37 coordinate majors, from human biology to computer science.
[47] MSU's supply chain management program is currently ranked number one by the U.S. News & World Report.
[13] High school students who select a Broad major on the MSU Freshman application are considered for direct admission.
[49] The Eli Broad Graduate School of Management, which Forbes magazine ranks 19th in the U.S.,[51] offers 3 MBA programs, as well as joint degrees with the College of Law.
Members of the Honors College at Michigan State University enjoy a great deal of freedom over their academic planning.
Clinical practice, undergraduate medical education during the clinical years three and four, graduate medical education, and research takes place across six campuses located in the Michigan cities of Flint, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Traverse City, Midland, and Marquette.
In response, the committee members recommended to Hannah that Michigan State College Press be created.