Back to School
First Published May 2006
The story behind "The Olin Experiment"
PHOTO: Leah Fasten
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On a bright spring day last year, IEEE
Spectrum Associate Editor Erico Guizzo [photo] arrived
on the campus of Olin College, in Needham, Mass. We had
sent him there to get the inside story on this radically
new engineering school, which is at the vanguard of a
movement in engineering education that seeks to plunge
students almost immediately into real design work,
rather than making them go through two or three years of
more-theoretical studies first.
Guizzo's mission was to make contact with Olin's
administration and then go undercover, passing himself
off as a student to get the full experience. But within
hours of arriving at the school, he realized he needed a
new plan. "The school has only 300 students," he points
out. "They can recognize each other across campus by
their haircuts."
So Guizzo arranged a series of visits to the school,
where he sat in on classes and lab sessions, socialized
with students, attended a schoolwide exposition of
student presentations, spoke with administrators and
professors, and hung out at a barbecue. And in the end,
Olin even allowed him to spend a night in the school's
modern dormitory.
"It's a very different school from all the others I've
ever seen," says Guizzo, who has a bachelor's degree in
electrical engineering. For more on this remarkable
little school and its big aspirations, see "The Olin
Experiment," in this issue.