University of Auckland

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University of Auckland
Image:UOA Logo RGB Vert.jpg
Motto Ingenio et labore
"By natural ability and hard work"
Established 1883
Chancellor Hugh Fletcher
Vice-Chancellor Professor Stuart McCutcheon
Location Auckland, New Zealand
Students 33,500 total (5,000 graduate)
Member of Universitas 21, AMBA, EQUIS, AACSB
Homepage http://www.auckland.ac.nz/

The University of Auckland is New Zealand's largest research-based university by student numbers. Established in 1883 as the third constituent college of the University of New Zealand, the university is now made up of eight faculties over six campuses, and has more than 33,500 students. University of Auckland's page.

It is a research-led University that tops the 2003 Performance Based Research Fund (PBRF) exercise conducted by the government that evaluates the quality of researchers and research output of all tertiary institutions in New Zealand.

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, students can get the best out of the multiple degrees in a shortened period of time.

Over 1200 doctoral candidates are enrolled at the University of Auckland.


Contents

Locations

Image:UoA-ClockTower.jpg
The Clock Tower building on the City campus

The City campus, in central Auckland, has the bulk of the students and faculties. It covers 160,000 m².

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 Hospital. The Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences and the Department of Optometry are based here.

The North Shore Campus, established in 2001, is located in the suburb of Takapuna. It offers a Bachelor of Business and Information Management degree.

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.

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, LLD), who was appointed Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford.

The University is currently developing a new business school building, 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).

The University was ranked the top research university in New Zealand in the 2003 evaluation of research excellence conducted by the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC). In its overall findings, 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.” Full report.

Faculties

Schools outside faculties

Auckland University 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 Craccum and bFM.

The AUSA was founded in 1891. The constitution of the AUSA centers the organisation around student advocacy and the provision of welfare services.

As required by new legislation, the University council conducted a student referendum in 1999 on whether membership in AUSA should be voluntary or compulsory. The majority of students supported voluntary unionionism, and so AUSA membership become voluntary. Referenda on the same issue were held in 2001 and 2003 (anyone can request a referendum and the University council must conduct one, provided no two referenda are less than two years apart), and in each case, the majority of students voted for voluntary unionism. The current position has AUSA contracted by the University to provide student services. Detractors of voluntary student unionism say that AUSA suffers drastically from VSU, and that VSU undermines AUSA's ability to advocate on behalf of students and provide welfare services. They also say that in controlling the flow of money, the University dictates the terms to some extent of its operations through a Student Services Agreement. Proponents of VSU, on the other hand, claim VSU means freedom of choice for students. They also paint AUSA executives under compulsory unionism as being wasteful, and cite examples of weekly Ski trips for executives. They claim that the level of intervention is very limited (for example, the conditions are only that AUSA must run orientation and the like).

Craccum

Image:Craccum cover.jpg
Cover of Craccum, issue 19, 2005

Craccum is the weekly magazine produced by the AUSA. The name originated from the scrambled acronym of "Auckland University College Men's Common Room Circular".

Craccum is the largest student magazine in New Zealand, with a weekly distribution of 10,000 copies. It is anomalous as a publication due to the fact of it having annual student elections for the position of editor.

The magazine is infamous for its deliberate attempts at being controversial, with certain editors choosing to publish stories on "Suicide and how to do it", as well as recipes for illegal drugs. It is also a popular proving ground for New Zealand mainstream media, with most of its alumni moving on to a variety of "serious" publications such as The Listener, The Herald and Metro magazine.

In more recent years Craccum has become a haven for fringe stories, reporting and discussing topics outside the eye of most mainstream media, and outside the scope of politically correct discourse. As one might expect of a student magazine, it is also a haven for photographs of naked students engaged in beer consumption competitions.

Former editors of Craccum include -

  • 2005 - Alec Hutchison and Stian Overdahl
  • 2004 - Allan Swann and Hannah Jennings-Voykovich
  • 2003 - Chris Garland
  • 2001 - 'Dr' John Marshall
  • 2000 - Ben Thomas and James Cardno
  • 1999 - Gareth Elliot and Thomas Shadbolt
  • 1998 - Alistair Bone
  • 1997 - Martyn "Bomber" Bradbury

Ryan Sproull has been elected editor for 2006.

bFM

95bFM (or simply 'bFM') is a typical student radio station that plays a lot of alternative music. Like other student broadcasters, it supports local artists well before they become mainstream. The 'b' in bFM stands for bosom. However, it is not 100% student owned and it is a commercial station, with paid advertising.

Prominent alumni and alumnae

External links

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