At the beginning, it was a
normal school: a teacher preparation school. After the turn of the 20th century, the school introduced several new areas of study, including
liberal arts and
music education. With the acquisition of the Wisconsin School of Fine and Applied Arts in 1911, the school taught classes for both artists and art teachers. This was an academic department that offered classes in art history, art needlework, basketry, book binding, commercial design, drawing, interior design, jewelry, lettering, metal work, mural decoration, outdoor landscape, painting, pottery, silver smithing, and wood carving. The normal school also provided training for a kindergarten diploma, which authorized recipients to teach kindergarten and the first three grades of elementary school. However, by 1935, the normal school had become a college, and the Milwaukee State Teachers College dropped academic programs that were less than four years. In 1937, it began offering Bachelor's of Science degrees in education, expanding to liberal arts degrees in 1951. It awarded its first Master's of Education in 1945. ==Student life==