Released in 1916, it became the standard intelligence test in the United States and brought worldwide fame to Terman and to Stanford.
[3] The department awarded its first Ph.D. in 1916, and in 1917 it was renamed the Stanford University School of Education (SUSE).
[4] In 2013 the school's name was changed to the Stanford Graduate School of Education to better reflect its advanced research and its graduate-level preparation of educators, scholars, policy makers and entrepreneurs.
[6] The Berman Archive (previously the Berman Jewish Policy Archive), housed at the School of Education,[7] is a centralized electronic database of Jewish communal policy research.
[10] The associate director is Ari Y. Kelman Ever since U.S. News & World Report began ranking schools of education, Stanford has ranked among the top ten overall in the United States and has received the top peer assessment score of any school each year.