University of Auckland

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The University of Auckland

Motto: Ingenio et labore (Latin)
Motto in English: By natural ability and hard work
Established: 1883
Type: Public
Chancellor: Hugh Fletcher
Vice-Chancellor: Stuart McCutcheon
Students: 37,924 total
Postgraduates: 9,008 graduate
Location: Auckland, New Zealand
Campus: Urban
Affiliations: Universitas 21, AMBA, EQUIS, AACSB. APRU
Website: www.auckland.ac.nz
The clock tower building (Old Arts Building) on the City campus. The building is protected as a 'Category I' historic place, and was finished in 1926. It is considered an Auckland landmark and icon of the university.[1]

The University of Auckland (Māori: Te Whare Wānanga o Tāmaki Makaurau) is New Zealand's largest university and the top-ranked New Zealand university in the THES - QS World University Rankings. Established in 1883 as a constituent college of the University of New Zealand, the university is now made up of eight faculties over six campuses, and has more than 39,000 students at April 2006.[2] Over 1300 doctoral candidates were enrolled at the University of Auckland in 2004.

It offers a wide range of programmes including Arts, Business, Education, Music, Teacher Training and Special Education, Architecture, Planning, Nursing, Creative and Performing Arts, Theology, Science, Information Management, Engineering, Medicine, Optometry, Food and Wine Science, Property, Law, Fine and Visual Arts and Pharmacy.

It also provides the most conjoint combinations across the entire nation, with over 35 combinations available. Conjoint programs allow students to achieve multiple degrees in a shortened period of time.

Contents

[edit] Locations

[edit] Campuses

The City campus, in the Auckland CBD, has the bulk of the students and faculties. It covers 160,000 m².[citation needed]

The Tamaki campus, established in 1991, covers 320,000 m² in the suburb of Glen Innes, 12 km from the City campus. The degrees available here are based on Health, Sports Science, Environmental Science, Wine Science, Information Technology, Communications and Electronics, Materials and Manufacturing, Food and Biotechnology and Information Management.

The Medical and Health Services Campus, established in 1968, is located close to the City Campus in the suburb of Grafton, opposite Auckland City Hospital. The Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, School of Pharmacy and Department of Optometry are based here.

The North Shore Campus, established in 2001, was located in the suburb of Takapuna. It offered the Bachelor of Business and Information Management degree. At the end of 2006, the campus was closed and the degree relocated to the City campus.

On 1 September 2004, the Auckland College of Education amalgamated with the University to form the newest Faculty of the University (by merging the School of Education (previously part of the Arts Faculty) and the college). The faculty is based at the Epsom Campus of the former college with an additional campus in Whangarei.

Part of the Tamaki Campus.

[edit] Accommodation

The University provides a range of accommodation options for students. Several hundred live in Residential Halls which provide food, accommodation, social and welfare services. Some of the Halls have developed a strong institutional personality over the years. This becomes self-perpetuating as applicants choose the Hall most suited to their own personality.

  • O'Rorke Hall
  • Grafton Hall
  • International House
  • Parnell Student Village
  • Number 14 Whitaker Place
  • Park Road Student Flats
  • Huia Residence (acquired by the school in 2008)

The university ceased leasing Railway Campus in November 2008.[3]

[edit] History

[edit] Current events

Professor Stuart McCutcheon became Vice-Chancellor on 1 January 2005. He was previously the Vice-Chancellor of Victoria University of Wellington. He succeeded Dr John Hood (PhD, Hon. LLD), who was appointed Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford.

The University opened a new business school building in 2007, following the completion of the new Information Commons, to revitalize the School of Business.

The Business School boasts one of the strongest International Business departments in Asia Pacific, offering two masters programmes, a Master of Commerce in International Business and a Master of International Business. It has recently gained International Accreditations for all its programmes and now completes the "Triple Crown" (AMBA, EQUIS and AACSB).

[edit] Faculties

Part of the Medical School buildings at Grafton.

[edit] Faculty

Currently, the longest serving staff member is Emeritus Professor of Prehistory, Roger Curtis Green, BA BSc (New Mexico), PhD (Harv.), FRSNZ, MANAS. He has been among the staff from 1961-66 and from 1973 onwards.

The longest serving, non-'retired' staff member is B.J. Brown, ONZM, LLB (Hons) (Leeds), LLM (Sing.). Full-time senior lecturer in the faculty of law 1962-65, 1969 onwards.

William Phillips the influential economist, largely famed for his Phillip's curve, taught at the university from 1969 until his death on 4 March 1975.

[edit] Rankings

[edit] THES - QS World University Rankings

The University of Auckland was the only New Zealand institution ranked in the top 50 of the THES - QS World University Rankings in 2007, ranked at number 50. It was ranked at number 65 in 2008.

[edit] PBRF rankings

The University of Auckland is a research-led University, and had the second highest ranking in the 2006 Performance Based Research Fund (PBRF) exercise conducted by the government that evaluated the quality of researchers and research output of all tertiary institutions in New Zealand. With only 18% of PBRF-eligible staff in New Zealand's 33 tertiary institutions Auckland has 33% of the country's A-rated researchers and gained 30% of PBRF funding.[13]

In the previous PBRF evaluation in 2003, when the University was ranked the top research university in New Zealand, the Commission commented: “On virtually any measure, the University of Auckland is the country’s leading research university. Not only did it achieve the highest quality score of any TEO [tertiary education organisation], but it also has by far the largest share of A-rated researchers in the country.” [14]

[edit] Students' association

The Auckland University Students' Association (AUSA) represents students at the University. AUSA publicises student issues, administers student facilities, and assists affiliated student clubs and societies. AUSA also produces the student magazine Craccum and runs the radio station bFM.

[edit] Cecil

Cecil (CSL, short for Computer Supported Learning) is the university's learning management and course management system and was developed in house. It has more than 44,000 logins per day (2008 April). Cecil support staff work with academics on research into cheating detections during online assessment,[15] productivity improvement using a learning management system (LMS),[16] and effectiveness of tools in LMS.[17] Cecil contains many of the features of similar systems such as Sakai Project and WebCT. Cecil also provides interactive tools for collaboration and other tools specific to the University.[18]

[edit] Prominent alumni and alumnae

[edit] References

  1. ^ Heritage Sites to Visit: Auckland City. New Zealand Historic Places Trust. Retrieved 6 November 2008.
  2. ^ Auckland University worth $4.4 billion to the region. The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 6 November 2008.
  3. ^ Gibson, Anne. "Uni quits Railway Campus over repairs". New Zealand Herald. November 7, 2008.
  4. ^ Faculty of Arts. The University of Auckland. Retrieved on 6 November 2008.
  5. ^ Faculty of Business and Economics. The University of Auckland. Retrieved on 6 November 2008.
  6. ^ Creative Arts and Industries. The University of Auckland. Retrieved on 6 November 2008.
  7. ^ Faculty of Education. The University of Auckland. Retrieved on 6 November 2008.
  8. ^ Faculty of Engineering. The University of Auckland. Retrieved on 6 November 2008.
  9. ^ Faculty of Law. The University of Auckland. Retrieved on 6 November 2008.
  10. ^ Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences. The University of Auckland. Retrieved on 6 November 2008.
  11. ^ Faculty of Science. The University of Auckland. Retrieved on 6 November 2008.
  12. ^ School of Theology. The University of Auckland. Retrieved on 6 November 2008.
  13. ^ PRBF report. See figure 5.4 and table 8.3PDF (2.25 MB)
  14. ^ Full reportPDF (174 KB)
  15. ^ Detecting Cheaters using a Learning Management System. Cecil. Retrieved 6 November 2008.
  16. ^ Increasing Teaching Productivity with EuropeMMM. Cecil. Retrieved 6 November 2008.
  17. ^ On-Line Course Surveys: Do Incentives Work. Ed/ITLib Digital Library, AACE. Retrieved 6 November 2008.
  18. ^ Cecil Training. Cecil. 6 November 2008.

[edit] External links

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