University of Sydney
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The University of Sydney
Image:SydneyUniversityCrest.png
| Motto | Sidere mens eadem mutato (Latin: "The stars change, [but] the mind [remains] the same") |
|---|---|
| Established | 1850 |
| University type | Public |
| Chancellor | Justice Kim Santow |
| Vice-Chancellor | Professor Gavin Brown |
| Location | Sydney, NSW, Australia |
| Campus | Urban, parks |
| Enrolment | 30,478 (2004) undergraduate, 16,818 post-graduate |
| Faculty | 2,451 | Organisations | Member of Group of Eight, APRU |
| Homepage | www.usyd.edu.au |
The University of Sydney, established in 1850, is the oldest university in Australia, and it is located in Sydney, the capital city of the state of New South Wales. It is a member of Australia's "Group of Eight" lobby group and remains one of the country's largest and most prestigious educational institutions. In 2004, the University of Sydney reported an enrolment of 47,296 students and employed 2,451 (full-time equivalent) academics. In November 2005, the University of Sydney was confirmed as one of Australia’s leading research universities, when it was again announced as being the recipient of the most grants of any Australian university from the Australian Research Council [1] .
Centred on the Oxbridge-inspired grounds of the University's Main Campus on the south-western outskirts of the Sydney CBD, the University of Sydney now possesses a number of campuses as a result of mergers in recent years.
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Establishment
During 1848 William Charles Wentworth proposed a plan to expand the existing Sydney College into a university in the Legislative Council. Wentworth argued that a state university was imperative for the growth of a society aspiring towards self-government, and that it would provide the opportunity for 'the child of every class, to become great and useful in the destinies of his country'. It would take two attempts on Wentworth's behalf however, before the plan was finally adopted.
The University was established via the passage of the University of Sydney Act, which was signed on October 1 1850. The University was finally inaugurated on October 11, 1852. By 1859, the university had moved to its permanent and current site in the Sydney suburb of Camperdown.
In 1858, the passage of the Electoral Act provided for the university to become a constituency for the Legislative Assembly as soon as there were 100 graduates with higher degrees. This seat in Parliament was first filled in 1876, but was abolished in 1880 one year after its second Member, Edmund Barton, was elected to the Legislative Assembly.
Campuses
The University has a number of campuses and has continued to expand over the years. Until recently, the University also operated the Museum of Contemporary Art.
As of 2004, the campuses are:
Camperdown/Darlington (main) campus
Image:University of Sydney Main Quadrangle.jpg Originally housed in what is now Sydney Grammar School, in 1855, the government granted the university land in Grose Farm, three kilometres from the city, which is now the main Camperdown campus. The architect Edmund Blacket designed the original Neogothic sandstone Quadrangle and Great Tower buildings, which were completed in 1862. The great expansion of the university in the mid-20th century resulted in the acquisition of land in Darlington across City Road. The Camperdown/Darlington campus houses the headquarters of the University, and the Faculties of Arts, Science, Education and Social Work, Pharmacy, Veterinary Science, Economics and Business, Architecture, and Engineering. It is also the home base of the large Faculty of Medicine, which has numerous affiliated teaching hospitals across the State.
The main campus is also the focus of student life at campus, with the student-run University of Sydney Union (also known simply as the Union) in possession of three buildings on-site - Wentworth, Manning and Holme Buildings. These buildings house the large proportion of the university's catering outlets, and provide space for game rooms, bars and function centres. One of the more prominent activities organised by the Union is the Orientation Week (or 'O-week'), centering on stalls set up by clubs and societies on the Front Lawns.
The University is currently undertaking a large capital works program, which will see the amalgamation of the smaller science and technical libraries into a larger library, and the construction of a central administration and student services building along City Road.
Mallett Street campus
Image:Usyd easternave.jpg The Mallett Street campus is home of the Faculty of Nursing. As of 2005, the Faculty no longer offers undergraduate Bachelor of Nursing programs.
Cumberland campus
Formerly an independent institution (the Cumberland College of Health Sciences), the Cumberland campus in the Sydney suburb of Lidcombe was incorporated into the University as part of the higher education reforms of the late 1980s. It is home to the Faculty of Health Science, which covers various allied health disciplines, including physiotherapy, speech therapy, radiation therapy, occupational therapy, etc.
Sydney Law School
Image:Sydneylawschool.jpg Near St. James Railway Station in the centre of Sydney, this is located across the road from the Supreme Court of New South Wales building. In 2007, the Faculty of Law will move to the main campus following the completion of the new law building between Fisher Library and the Eastern Avenue Lecture Theatre and Auditorium Complex.
Sydney College of the Arts, Rozelle
Main article: Sydney College of the Arts
The Sydney of the College of the Arts (SCA) is based in a former sanitorium in the Sydney suburb of Rozelle, overlooking Sydney Harbour. The college specialises in the creative arts.
Conservatorium of Music
Main article: Sydney Conservatorium of Music.
The Conservatorium of Music is located near Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens a short distance from the Sydney Opera House; it was acquired by the University in the 1990s. It is not to be confused with the University of Sydney's main campus Department of Music, which was the subject of a notable documentary called Facing the Music.
Orange Agricultural College
Located at Orange in rural NSW, the Orange Agricultural College joined in 1994. Orange campus was principally the domain of the former Faculty of Rural Management; however other undergraduate courses from the Faculties of Arts, Science, Nursing and Pharmacy were also taught at Orange.
The Orange Campus and the Faculty of Rural Management were transferred to Charles Sturt University in 2005 amid objections from the staff and students of at the University of Sydney.
Camden campus
Located on Sydney's south-west rural fringe, the Camden campus houses research farms for agriculture and veterinary science.
Narrabri Plant Research Centre
The Narrabri Plant Research Centre is located at Narrabri, near the Queensland border.
Higher Education (Amalgamation) Act 1989
Under the terms of the Higher Education (Amalgamation) Act 1989 (NSW), the following bodies were incorporated into the University of Sydney in 1990:
- the Sydney Branch of the NSW State Conservatorium of Music
- the Cumberland College of Health Sciences
- the Sydney College of the Arts of the Institute of the Arts
- the Sydney Institute of Education of the Sydney College of Advanced Education
- the Institute of Nursing Studies of the Sydney College of Advanced Education
- the Guild Centre of the Sydney College of Advanced Education.
The Orange Agricultural College was originally transferred to the University of New England under the Act, but then transferred to the University of Sydney in 1994, as part of the reforms to the University of New England undertaken by the University of New England Act 1993 and the Southern Cross University Act 1993.
The New England University College was founded as part of the University of Sydney in 1938, and separated to become the University of New England in 1954.
Colleges and faculties
The University is comprised of seventeen faculties, which have been grouped into three colleges:
- College of Health Sciences
- Faculty of Dentistry
- Faculty of Health Sciences
- Faculty of Medicine
- Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery
- Faculty of Pharmacy
- College of Humanities and Social Sciences
- Faculty of Arts
- Faculty of Economics and Business
- Faculty of Education and Social Work
- Graduate School of Government
- Faculty of Law
- Sydney College of the Arts
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music
- College of Sciences and Technology
- Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources
- Faculty of Architecture
- Faculty of Engineering
- Faculty of Science
- Faculty of Veterinary Science
Library
Image:Fisher Library, University of Sydney.JPG
Main article: University of Sydney Library.
The University of Sydney Library consists of numerous individual libraries with the main building, Fisher Library, named after an early benefactor. The University library is the largest in the southern hemisphere, with a collection of over 5.1 million items. It possesses many rare items such as one of the two extant copies of the Gospel of Barnabas, and a first edition of Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica by Sir Isaac Newton.
Museums and galleries
Museums and galleries which are part of the university include the Nicholson Museum of Antiquities and the Macleay Museum.
Residential colleges
- St Andrew's
- St John's
- St Paul's
- Sancta Sophia
- Wesley
- The Women's College
- Mandelbaum House
- International House, University of Sydney
In 2003, the University completed the Sydney University Village, consisting of studio and apartment accommodation operated by a private company on behalf of the university. There is also a university-affiliated housing cooperative, the Stucco Co-operative.
Sports
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The University fielded a rugby league team in the New South Wales Rugby League's Sydney premiership from 1920 to 1937.
Student clubs and societies
Possibly one of the most attractive features of Sydney University is its rich cultural and political campus community. Fostered primarily by the University of Sydney Union, a student run organisation, the Sydney experience includes a strong debating, dramatic and sporting tradition, with over a hundred clubs and societies to cater to the University's diverse student population. The extent to which this can continue is under doubt with the advent of legislation implementing voluntary student unionism.
Notable alumni
The University of Sydney boasts a large number of alumni, some quite famous and influential, who have gone on to make significant contributions in their fields of endeavour. These include:
- President of the United Nations General Assembly (1948-1949), Dr H.V. Evatt
- Governors-General of Australia - Sir Zelman Cowen, Sir John Kerr, Sir William Deane
- Prime Ministers of Australia - Sir Edmund Barton, Sir William McMahon, Gough Whitlam and John Howard
- Chief Justice of Australia - Murray Gleeson
- Governors of New South Wales - Sir Roden Cutler, Professor Marie Bashir AC,
- Premiers of New South Wales - Neville Wran, Nick Greiner, Morris Iemma
- Chief Justice of New South Wales - James Spigelman
- Justices of the High Court - Dr H.V. Evatt, Michael Kirby, William Gummow
- Lord Mayors of Sydney - Frank Sartor
- Nobel Laureates - Sir Robert Robinson (Sydney's first Professor of Pure and Applied Organic Chemistry 1912 - Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1947), Sir John Cornforth (graduated with BSc 1938 and University Medal and MSc 1939 - Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1975), John Harsanyi (graduated with Masters in Economics 1966 - Nobel Prize in Economics 1994)
- President of The Royal Society - Lord Robert May
- President of the World Bank (1995-2005) - James Wolfensohn
- Archaeologists - Vere Gordon Childe (1913), Basil Hennessy (1950), Stephen Bourke, Alison Betts, Karin Sowada, Paul James Cowie (1991)
- Writers - Christopher Brennan, Kate Grenville, Les Murray, Dr Germaine Greer, Robert Hughes and Clive James
- Film Directors - Jane Campion, Peter Weir and Bruce Beresford
- Geologist and Antarctic explorer, Sir Douglas Mawson
- Aboriginal leaders Charles Perkins and Noel Pearson
- Opera divas Dame Joan Sutherland and Yvonne Kenny
- Federal Members of Parliament - Tony Abbott
From December 2, 2003 to January 28, 2005, the leaders of Australia's four largest political parties were all Sydney alumni.
- John Anderson, National Party of Australia leader (resigned July 2005)
- Bob Brown, Australian Greens leader
- John Howard, Liberal Party of Australia leader
- Mark Latham, Australian Labor Party leader (resigned January 2005)
Currently, John Howard and Bob Brown are still leaders of their respective parties.
Notable faculty
- Basil Hennessy, Emeritus Professor of Near Eastern Archaeology
- Daniel Potts, Professor of Near Eastern Archaeology
- Karl Kruszelnicki, Julius Sumner Miller Fellow at the School of Physics, and popular science commentator
External links
- University of Sydney website
- Map of the Main Campus
- Satellite image of the Main Campus, on Google Maps
- University of Sydney Library
- University of Sydney Act
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nl:Universiteit van Sydney ja:シドニー大学 zh:悉尼大學
