University of Queensland: University profile
The University of Queensland (UQ) is one of Australia’s leading research
and teaching institutions. We strive for excellence through the
creation, preservation, transfer and application of knowledge. For more
than a century, we have educated and worked with outstanding people to
deliver knowledge leadership for a better world.
World rankings
UQ ranks in the top 50 as measured by the Performance Ranking of
Scientific Papers for World Universities. The University also ranks 51
in the QS World University Rankings, 52 in the US News Best
Global Universities Rankings, 60 in the Times Higher Education World
University Rankings and 55 in the Academic Ranking of World
Universities.
The University’s global research positioning was highlighted by the election of five UQ scientists
to the Australian Academy of Science (AAS) in 2015 – almost one quarter
of the 21 new Fellows and the most from any institution in the country.
The five new Fellows joined an existing group of 29 UQ scientists
admitted to the AAS as Fellows since 1988, bringing the total number of
UQ academics who are members of one of Australia’s six prestigious
learned academies to 166.
UQ is one of only three Australian members of the global Universitas 21, a founding member of the Group of Eight (Go8) universities, and a member of Universities Australia.
Teaching and learning excellence
Skilled and motivated teachers are integral to providing positive teaching and learning outcomes for students.
UQ has a strong focus on teaching excellence,
winning more Australian Awards for University Teaching than any other
in the country and attracting the majority of Queensland's highest
academic achievers, as well as top interstate and overseas students.
The educators of UQ are committed to excellence in learning experiences and outcomes for their students.
edX
In late 2013, UQ joined edX – the
world’s leading consortium of Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs),
jointly founded by Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT).
UQ is one of only two Australian charter member universities included in the not-for-profit edX enterprise, and UQx
represents this organisation on behalf of the University. UQx works
with the University’s academic teaching staff to create and present a
range of MOOCs through the edX platform and to further the goals of the
UQ Student Strategy with respect to on-campus teaching.
UQx has sixteen MOOCs
running on edX with more under development. UQx MOOCs cover subjects
drawn from many disciplines along with meta-skills courses in
employability and teamwork. Since releasing its first course on edX in
March 2014, UQx has registered more than 1 million participants
representing every country.
Student experience
The UQ Advantage
provides students with opportunities, choices and support that will
enable them to achieve their individual aspirations, to become leaders
in their chosen fields and to positively impact on the society in which
they live. In addition to flexibility in program choice, student
benefits include the opportunity to enjoy a wide range of
extracurricular activities during their studies. Students can study
abroad, participate in conferences and research opportunities, access
more than 190 clubs and societies, and utilise sporting and cultural
facilities.
In 2015, the University had 50,836 students including 12,666
international students from 141 nations. It has one of Australia's
largest PhD enrolments, with more than 13,800 postgraduate students, and
celebrated its 12,000th PhD graduation in 2015.
UQ is continually discovering and practising innovative approaches to
fostering student retention and employability. The University works
towards and achieves its strategic objectives by developing ways to
engage students – and by pursuing best-practice inductions and student
experiences.
Notable alumni
The University’s outstanding 225,000-plus alumni include a Nobel
laureate, two Fortune 500 company CEOs, an Academy Award winner, and
leaders in government, law, science, public service and the arts. The
University celebrates its alumni as its greatest assets. Their
achievements make the University great – and, in return, the University
will work hard to strengthen its reputation.
Research focus
The UQ Graduate School offers
significant support to research higher degree (RHD) students through a
broad range of scholarships and research travel awards, dedicated office
spaces, skills training, and professional development opportunities.
The University introduced the Career Development Framework–
another first nationally – designed to accelerate RHD students’ career
development and enhance their employability. Evidence indicates that the
University’s research excels in both quality and impact.
The Federal Government’s 2015 Excellence in Research for Australia
exercise confirmed The University of Queensland as one of the nation’s
top three universities, measured by the quality of its comprehensive
range of specialised research fields. UQ’s outstanding critical mass
offers researchers significant interdisciplinary capability. The
assessment rated ninety five percent of UQ’s broad fields of research as
above or well above world standard.
Over the last five years UQ has attracted more Australian Research Council funding for discovery and early-career research
than any other Australian university. With three major campuses –
located at St Lucia and Herston in Brisbane, and Gatton in South-East
Queensland – the University has invested substantially in construction
and development, helping create great environments in which to study and
research. UQ is committed to developing state-of-the-art learning
spaces that are in step with industry demands and expectations.
UQ has established nine research institutes, many with a multidisciplinary focus:
- Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology;
- Global Change Institute;
- Institute for Molecular Bioscience;
- Institute for Social Science Research;
- Mater Research Institute-UQ
- Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation;
- Queensland Brain Institute;
- Sustainable Minerals Institute; and
- UQ Diamantina Institute.
UQ is also a partner in the Translational Research Institute (TRI)
– an Australian-first that represents the future in biomedical
research. TRI has the capacity to discover, produce, test and
manufacture new treatments and vaccines in one location.
In 2014, UQ attracted more than $377m in research funding from
government, industry and community sources. The University is also
grateful to the many alumni and community members who donate towards
teaching and research initiatives.
UniQuest, established by
UQ in 1984, is one of Australia’s leading research commercialisation
companies. UniQuest’s innovation portfolio includes Australia's first
blockbuster vaccine Gardasil®, pioneer pain drug developer Spinifex
Pharmaceuticals, the internationally acclaimed Triple P Positive
Parenting Program, and UQ’s superconductor technology, which is used in
two-thirds of the world's MRI machines.
http://www.uq.edu.au/about/university-profile
University of Queensland: University profile
Reviewed by Humana Digital Media
on
11:01
Rating:
Nenhum comentário: