Originally published in the inaugural edition of Carroll Capital, the print publication of the Carroll School of Management at Boston College. .


When the College of Business Administration building鈥攌nown as Fulton Hall鈥攐pened in the fall of 1948, The Heights reported that the new facilities were 鈥渃omplete in all the tangible elements necessary for the sound and thorough training of business administration.鈥 Students could study in the 50,000-book capacity library, tour the Exhibition Room displaying goods made in New England, or even try operating a lathe machine in the Industrial Management Laboratory.

The Industrial Management Laboratory, 1950

The Industrial Management Laboratory, 1950

The laboratory, one of the first of its kind among colleges, was established to help ensure that students were familiar with operating conditions in industries, like manufacturing, which they may have been heading into after graduation. This commitment to hands-on learning hasn鈥檛 waned over the years, but it has changed shape.

These days, if you find yourself in one of the state-of-the-art Maker Labs in the 245 Beacon Street building, which opened in 2022, you won鈥檛 find anyone learning how to use a power saw, but you may come across students crafting robots powered by Circuit Python code for Physical Computing class.

The premise is unchanged: Future business leaders need hard skills to go along with their big ideas. Whatever the next wave of innovation is, there will be a Carroll School class dedicated to helping students gain the necessary skills in tangible ways.


Jaclyn Jermyn is the deputy editor of听Carroll Capital听and the senior content writer at the Carroll School of Management.听

Photography courtesy of University Communications.