Brigham Young University. College of Business
Dates
- Existence: 1959 - 1988
Biography
The College of Business (1959-1988) was the college relating to business administration at Brigham Young University.
The College of Commerce was renamed the College of Business in 1959. In 1979 it came under the administration of the School of Management, where it remained until it was dissolved in 1988. Between 1959 and 1979, the college was administered by the following deans and acting deans: Weldon J. Taylor, Bryce B. Orton, and Merrill J. Bateman.
The College of Business was originally organized to provide training for students to make an effective contribution to the stability and abundance of the economy in order to acquire economic self-reliance and personal satisfaction. Moreover, some of the objectives of the college included training in analysis, business operations, oral and written communication, and understanding human characteristics and social aspects of business.
The College of Business was the administering body for the following departments: Accounting, Business Education and Office Management, Business Management, Economics, Statistics, Business Education, and Organization Behavior. The college was administered by a dean under the direction of the president of the university.
Citation:
Brigham Young University organizational history project website, viewed Jul. 26, 2011 (College of Business; established 1959; previously the College of Commerce; came under the administration of the School of Management, 1979; dissolved in 1988; administered by the following deans and acting deans: Weldon J. Taylor, Bryce B. Orton, and Merrill J. Bateman; organized to provide training for students to make an effective contribution to the stability and abundance of the economy in order to acquire economic self-reliance and personal satisfaction. Moreover, some of the objectives of the college included training in analysis, business operations, oral and written communication, and understanding human characteristics and social aspects of business; administering body for the following departments: Accounting, Business Education and Office Management, Business Management, Economics, Statistics, Business Education, and Organization Behavior. The college was administered by a dean under the direction of the president of the university)Found in 37 Collections and/or Records:
College of Business files, 1947-1986
Published documents of the College of Business
College of Business files, 1967-1987
Brochures, Convocation/Commencement
College of Business records
Contains a variety of brochures, publications, and newsletters published by the BYU College of Business. Includes little in the way of official correspondence or minutes.
College of Business records
Contains correspondence, memoranda, speeches, minutes, reports and surveys from deans, Brigham Young University presidents, personnel, students, Church General Authorities, committees, councils, universities, and corporations, 1921-1976.
College of Business records
Contains correspondence, information on awards (Jesse Knight Industrial Citizen Award and Distinguished Alumni Award), meeting minutes, productivity reports for various departments, an annual report for 1975, and other information related to the College of Business.
College of Business Survey Research Center files, 1970-1974
Department survey reports, form letters, newsletter
Dean A. Peterson class instructional and resource materials, 1933-1967
Contains materials used while teaching at Brigham Young University (Business Education 377, involving businesss English, bookkeeping, grammar, letter writing, shorthand, and typing). Includes course outlines, personnel data, student evaluations, commercial contest material, correspondence, pamphlets, exams, class notes, essays, projects, grammar notes and handouts, lecture material, student assignments, secondary teaching procedures resource material, and roll books.
Dean A. Peterson papers on special administrative assignments, 1957-1961
Contains files on the BYU Destiny Fund, the College of Business building, the Dean of Summer School, and Assistant to the President (correspondence, memos, minutes, resolutions, reports, pamphlets, newsletters, newspaper articles; planning, program requirements, specifications, floor plans, and dedication materials).
Dean A. Peterson personal correspondence, 1953-1967
Includes personal correspondence, published and unpublished writings, instructional materials relating to his administrative assignments which included U.S. Point Four Program in Iran, the Destiny Fund, and planning a new building for the College of Business.