Skip to main content

Just who was W. P. Carey, anyway?

ASU's business college marks 60 years


W.P. Carey School of Business marks 60 years.
|
November 23, 2015

Nearly 100,000 people have been launched into the business world from Arizona State University.

It's an impressive number, and only after six decades of work.

The W. P. Carey School of Business is marking its 60th anniversary as a standalone college this year, having started out as the College of Business Administration in 1955 with 800 students and 11 faculty. This year, the school has more than 10,000 undergraduates, nearly 1,000 graduate students and more than 250 faculty members — including a Nobel laureate.

Amy Hillman, dean of the college, is proud of the school's past, but is also looking ahead.

"Out of humble beginnings, ASU's W. P. Carey School of Business has accomplished extraordinary things over its 60-year history," she said. "We are a story of pioneers, visionaries, innovation and leadership — a story of faculty, staff, students and administrators forging new areas of study for a world constantly changing through technology and increasing globalization.

"What is most striking about this story, though, is that it’s still being written. We are proud of where we came from and even more excited about where we are going."

Looking into the future is rather difficult, so let's examine portraits of history from one of ASU’s biggest colleges.

More Business and entrepreneurship

 

A group of people seated on an outdoor staircase all wearing black

Hispanic Business Students Association marks half a century of impact, growth

When Michelle Macias, a native of Yuma, Arizona, became a business entrepreneurship and management student at Arizona State University in 2020, she was three hours away from home and stuck in her…

Photo illustration of large hand holding binoculars

5 easy ways to improve your focus

Editor's note: This story originally appeared in the summer 2024 issue of ASU Thrive magazine. Do goldfish really have a longer attention span than the average person? No, thankfully, data busted…

Two men holding a plaque.

Honoring homegrown leadership

When Phoenix native David Jackson was a finance student at Arizona State University’s West Valley campus, he gave separate presentations on two of the country’s largest trucking companies. Little did…