Australian National University
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For more information on Australian National University, visit Britannica.com.
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The Australian National University |
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| Motto | Naturam Primum Cognoscere Rerum (Latin: "First, to know the nature of things") |
| Established | 1946 |
| Type | Public |
| Chancellor | Dr Allan Hawke |
| Vice-Chancellor | Professor Ian Chubb AC |
| Staff | 1,441 |
| Undergraduates | 8,100 |
| Postgraduates | 4,382 |
| Location | Acton, Australian Capital Territory, Australia |
| Campus | Urban, 350 acres/1.4km² |
| Affiliations | Group of Eight, APRU, IARU, AURA, ASAIHL |
| Website | www.anu.edu.au |
The Australian National University, or ANU, is a public university located in Canberra, Australia. It was created 1 August 1946 as a postgraduate research university. In 1960 undergraduate education was added to the ANU by amalgamation with the Canberra University College. The University is governed by a 15 member Council.
ANU is a member of Australia's Group of Eight, the Association of Pacific Rim Universities, the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy and the International Alliance of Research Universities. The university is often ranked as the leading university in Australia on a number of measures [1], and has had many notable staff and alumni, including five Nobel Prize winners.
The ANU is the only Australian university to be established by an act of federal Parliament.[2] The Australian National University Act 1946-47 was introduced into parliament by the then Prime Minister, Ben Chifley, and Minister for Post-war Reconstruction, J.J. Dedman. The bill was passed on 1 August 1946 with support from Opposition Leader Robert Menzies. A group of eminent Australian scholars were involved in the infancy of the ANU, including a leader in radar development and nuclear physics, Sir Mark Oliphant; the discoverer of the benefits of penicillin, Sir Howard Florey; eminent historian, Sir Keith Hancock; and renowned economist and public servant, Herbert ‘Nugget’ Coombs. [3]
In 1960, ANU began offering undergraduate degree programs.
Academic leaders have included Professors: Manning Clark (historian); Bart Bok (astronomer) and Hanna Neumann (mathematician). Notable alumni include current leader of the opposition in Australian Parliament, Kevin Rudd.
The academic structure of the ANU is made up of three parts: The Institute of Advanced Studies, The Faculties and the University Centres.
The Institute is focused on post-graduate education and research and comprises nine research schools and a research centre:
ANU's seven Colleges combine research with research-led teaching and are responsible for undergraduate and postgraduate courses.
The University Centres are organisational structures that can draw from both the Faculties and the Institute.
The ANU's main campus is located in, and occupies most of the Canberra suburb of Acton. The campus covers 1.45 km² (350 acres) adjoining native bushland, Black Mountain, Lake Burley Griffin, the suburb of Turner and the city centre. Eight of the university's nine affiliated halls and colleges are located on campus, while Fenner Hall is located on Northbourne Avenue in the nearby suburb of Braddon. The halls and colleges are:
With over 10,000 trees on its "green" campus, the ANU was awarded the Silver Greenhouse Challenge Award at the annual Australian Engineering Excellence Awards in 2003.
The Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics (RSAA) is located away from the main campus in Acton, at the Mount Stromlo Observatory, near Weston Creek in south Canberra. RSAA also runs the Siding Spring Observatory near Coonabarabran, New South Wales. Since the destruction of Mount Stromlo's telescopes in the Canberra bushfires of 2003, this is ANU's only telescope site. The university also runs a coastal campus at Kioloa on the South Coast of New South Wales dedicated to field work training, and a North Australia Research Unit in Darwin in the Northern Territory.
Students on all campuses are represented by the ANU Students' Association. Representation for postgraduate students is provided by the Postgraduate and Research Students' Association (PARSA), a member of the Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations.
The ANU campus is divided into eight precincts, with three on the west side of Sullivans creek, and five on the east side.
The university sponsors various prizes. The list includes:
The university has also been the recipient of a number of teaching awards. These include:
Dr. Richard Baker:
Dr. Alastair Greig:
Dr. Baker & Dr. Greig co-teach SRES 1001.
In 2006, London's Times Higher Education Supplement and Newsweek[1] ranked ANU 16th and 38th in the world respectively, - both indicies ranking it as the top university in Australia.
| Universities in Australia |
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Adelaide • Australian Catholic • Australian National • Ballarat • Bond • Canberra • Central Queensland • Charles Darwin • Charles Sturt • Curtin • Deakin • Edith Cowan • Flinders • Griffith • James Cook • La Trobe • Macquarie • Melbourne • Monash • Murdoch • New England • New South Wales • Newcastle • Notre Dame • Queensland • QUT • RMIT • South Australia • Southern Cross • Southern Queensland • Sunshine Coast • Swinburne • Sydney • Tasmania • UTS • Victoria • Western Australia • Western Sydney • Wollongong |
| Group of Eight universities |
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Adelaide • Australian National • Melbourne • Monash • New South Wales • Queensland • Sydney • Western Australia |
| Association of Pacific Rim Universities | |
|---|---|
| Australia | Australian National (ANU) • Melbourne • Sydney |
| Canada | British Columbia (UBC) |
| Chile | Chile |
| China | Fudan • HKUST • Peking • Tsinghua • USTC • Zhejiang |
| Indonesia | Indonesia |
| Japan | Keio • Kyoto • Osaka • Tokyo • Waseda |
| Korea | Seoul National (SNU) |
| Malaysia | Malaya |
| Mexico | UNAM |
| New Zealand | Auckland |
| Philippines | Philippines |
| Russia | Far Eastern National (FENU) |
| Singapore | NUS |
| Taiwan | National Taiwan (NTU) |
| Thailand | Chulalongkorn |
| United States of America | Caltech • Stanford • UC
Berkeley • UC Davis • UC Irvine • UCLA • UCSD • |
| International Alliance of Research Universities |
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Australian National (ANU) • UC Berkeley • Cambridge •
Copenhagen • |
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