Lincoln University, New Zealand

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Lincoln University

Motto: Scientia et industria cum probitate (Science and industry with integrity)
Established: 1878
Type: Public
Chancellor: Tom Lambie
Vice-Chancellor: Roger Field
Students: 3484 (2007) [1]
Location: Lincoln, New Zealand
Website: www.lincoln.ac.nz

Lincoln University (Māori: Te Whare Wanaka o Aoraki) is a New Zealand university that was formed in 1990 when Lincoln College, Canterbury was made independent of the University of Canterbury. Its undergraduate study areas include agriculture, commerce, computing, engineering, environment, food, forestry, horticulture, hospitality, landscape, Māori planning, property, recreation, sciences, transport and winemaking.

Lincoln University has a student population from more than 65 different countries[2]. Its primary campus is situated on 50ha of land located about 15 km outside the city of Christchurch in Lincoln, Canterbury.

Contents

[edit] History

Lincoln University library.

Lincoln University began life in 1878 as a School of Agriculture. From 1896 to 1961 it served students under the name "Canterbury Agricultural College", and offered qualifications of the University of New Zealand until that institution's demise. From 1961 to 1990, it was known as Lincoln College, a constituent college of the University of Canterbury, until achieving autonomy in 1990 as Lincoln University.[3] It is the oldest agricultural teaching institution in the Southern Hemisphere. It remains the smallest university in New Zealand.

In March 2009 AgResearch announced that it planned to merge with Lincoln University.[4]

[edit] Academic units

  • Faculty of Agriculture and Life Sciences: animal science, farm management, horticultural management, Systems Biology, Computational Modelling, food and wine science, entomology; plant pathology and crop protection; ecology, conservation and wildlife management; evolution, molecular genetics and biodiversity.
  • Faculty of Commerce: accounting, business management, economics, finance, marketing and property studies.
  • Faculty of Environment, Society and Design: natural resources and complex systems engineering, environmental design, resource planning, transport studies, landscape architecture, Māori and indigenous planning and development, recreation management, social sciences, tourism, communication and exercise science.

[edit] Research at Lincoln

The NZ Tertiary Education Commission's first Performance Based Research Fund ranking exercise in 2003 – equivalent to the UK's RAE – ranked the quality of Lincoln University's research at sixth place. It also received highest percentage increase in research funding.

[edit] Research centres

[edit] Notable people

[edit] Alumni and Alumnae

[edit] Faculty

[edit] Rhodes Scholars from Lincoln

  • 1940 Henry Garrett
  • 1951 Dr Lloyd Evans
  • 1986 Forbes Elworthy
  • 1991 Dr Grant Edwards

[edit] Notes

[edit] External links


Coordinates: 43°38′40″S 172°28′07″E / 43.64444°S 172.46861°E / -43.64444; 172.46861

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