Griffith University: Difference between revisions
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==Campuses== |
==Campuses== |
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[[Image:Griffith University Nathan Campus.jpg|left|300px|thumb|Griffith University (Nathan Campus) from Stadium Path]] |
[[Image:Griffith University Nathan Campus.jpg|left|300px|thumb|Griffith University (Nathan Campus) from Stadium Path]] |
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Griffith University has campuses located at the [[Gold Coast, Queensland|Gold Coast]] and [[Nathan]], [[Mount Gravatt]] and [[Logan City|Logan]] in the outer suburbs of Brisbane and the [[Queensland Conservatorium]] in [[South Brisbane|Inner Brisbane]]. The Mount Gravatt campus is also home to the [[Queensland Institute of Business and Technology]]. The Nathan Campus was designed by prominent Australian architect Robin Gibson and was the founding campus of the University. |
Griffith University has campuses located at the [[Gold Coast, Queensland|Gold Coast]] and [[Nathan]], [[Mount Gravatt]] and [[Logan City|Logan]] in the outer suburbs of Brisbane and the [[Queensland Conservatorium]] and the [[Queensland College of Art]] in [[South Brisbane|Inner Brisbane]]. The Mount Gravatt campus is also home to the [[Queensland Institute of Business and Technology]]. The Nathan Campus was designed by prominent Australian architect Robin Gibson and was the founding campus of the University. |
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The university has a campus on High Street, Southport specifically designed and built for Oral Health and Medicine students called the "Centre for Medicine and Oral Health". It contains lecture theatres, cadaver labs, pathology labs and a dental clinic which serves the public. Building has commenced for a new University Hospital at the Gold Coast campus, which is due to open in December 2012 and will replace most functions of the Centre for Medicine and Oral Health. |
The university has a campus on High Street, Southport specifically designed and built for Oral Health and Medicine students called the "Centre for Medicine and Oral Health". It contains lecture theatres, cadaver labs, pathology labs and a dental clinic which serves the public. Building has commenced for a new University Hospital at the Gold Coast campus, which is due to open in December 2012 and will replace most functions of the Centre for Medicine and Oral Health. |
Revision as of 03:06, 27 March 2011
File:Griffith University logo.png | |
Type | Public |
---|---|
Established | 1971 |
Chancellor | Leneen Forde |
Vice-Chancellor | Ian O'Connor |
Deputy V-C | Ned Pankhurst (research); Sue Spence (academic) |
Students | Over 37,000 |
Undergraduates | 31,000 |
Postgraduates | 6,000 |
Location | Gold Coast and Brisbane , , |
Affiliations | ASAIHL |
Website | www.griffith.edu.au |
Griffith University is a public university that has five campuses in the Gold Coast and Brisbane regions of the State of Queensland, Australia. Current total enrollment is approximately 38,000 with 4,000 full-time equivalent staff.[1] Griffith University offers undergraduate and postgraduate degrees across ten discipline areas including Arts, Education, Business, Health, Law, Engineering, IT, Environment, Music and Visual Arts.
History
In 1965, 174 hectares of natural bushland at Nathan were set aside for a new campus.[2] By 1970, a new institution was being mooted. The university was formally founded in 1971 and opened its doors in 1975 to 451 students in four schools: Australian Environmental Studies, Humanities, Modern Asian Studies and Science. The University started with its Nathan campus, and several of its campuses are distinctive for their nature based settings within large urban agglomerations. Buildings were designed to fit into the environment by following the slope of the land and by using architectural means of cooling.[2] The library building was designed by Robin Gibson and won the first national award for library design. The clusters of buildings, sports facilities, bushland reserves and recreational areas are connected by integrated networks of walking paths. The university was distinguished by its 'problem-based' rather than disciplinary approach to course design and research. The university now has a full suite of programs including arts, education, medicine, dentistry, engineering, business, science, and law.
The University is named after the former Premier of Queensland, and High Court of Australia judge, Sir Samuel Walker Griffith, who was also the principal author of the Australian constitution.
Academic Structure
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b4/Griffith_University.jpg/300px-Griffith_University.jpg)
Faculties, Schools and Centres
- Arts, languages and criminology
- School of Humanities
- School of Criminology and Criminal Justice
- School of Languages and Linguistics
- Business and commerce
- Griffith Business School
Griffith Business School has international accreditation from AACSB International, making it part of an elite group that makes up less than 5 percent of the world’s business schools.[3]
- Education
- School of Education and Professional Studies (Brisbane, Logan)
- School of Education and Professional Studies (Gold Coast)
- Engineering and Information Technology
- School of Information and Communication Technology
- Griffith School of Engineering
- Science
- School of Biomolecular and Physical Sciences
- Environment, planning and architecture
- Griffith School of Environment
Home to the Queensland Sports Technology Cluster[4] at the Nathan Campus. An Electronic Sports Engineering degree was introduced in 2009 as a world first.
- Health
- Dentistry and Oral Health
- Human Services and Social Work
- Medical Science
- Medicine
- Nursing and Midwifery
- Pharmacy
- Physiotherapy and Exercise Science
- Psychology
- Public Health
- Law
- Music
- Visual and creative arts
- Queensland College of Art
- Griffith Film School
Independent academic centres, institutes and colleges
- Centres
- Centre for Environment and Population Health
- Centre for Financial Independence and Education
- Continuing Professional Learning Enterprise
- EcoCentre
- Multi-Faith Centre
- Queensland Centre for Public Health (Griffith Node)
- Institutes
- Griffith English Language Institute
- Griffith Institute for Higher Education
- Colleges
- Griffith Honours College
- Griffith Sports College
- Units
- Gumurrii Student Support Unit
- Unit for Italian Studies
Campuses
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/40/Griffith_University_Nathan_Campus.jpg/300px-Griffith_University_Nathan_Campus.jpg)
Griffith University has campuses located at the Gold Coast and Nathan, Mount Gravatt and Logan in the outer suburbs of Brisbane and the Queensland Conservatorium and the Queensland College of Art in Inner Brisbane. The Mount Gravatt campus is also home to the Queensland Institute of Business and Technology. The Nathan Campus was designed by prominent Australian architect Robin Gibson and was the founding campus of the University.
The university has a campus on High Street, Southport specifically designed and built for Oral Health and Medicine students called the "Centre for Medicine and Oral Health". It contains lecture theatres, cadaver labs, pathology labs and a dental clinic which serves the public. Building has commenced for a new University Hospital at the Gold Coast campus, which is due to open in December 2012 and will replace most functions of the Centre for Medicine and Oral Health.
Research Centres
Externally Supported Centres and Facilities
- ARC Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security
- National Centre for Adult Stem Cell Research
- National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility
- Smart Water Research Centre
Collaborations with External Research Institutions
- Griffith Medical Research College
Arts, Education and Law
- Australian Centre for Intellectual Property in Agriculture
- Early Childhood Education Centre
- Griffith Centre for Cultural Research
- Griffith Institute for Educational Research
- Griffith Institute for Social and Behavioural Research
- Griffith Islamic Research Unit
- Institute for Ethics, Governance and Law
- Key Centre for Ethics, Law, Justice and Governance
- Queensland Conservatorium Research Centre
- Socio-Legal Research Centre
Business
- Centre for Governance and Public Policy
- Centre for Tourism, Sport and Service Innovation
- Centre for Work, Organisation and Well Being
- Griffith Asia Institute
Health
- Griffith Health Institute
- Behavioural Basis of Health
- Research Centre for Clinical and Community Practice Innovation
- Heart Foundation Research Centre
- Molecular Basis of Disease
- Population Health
- Australian Institute for Suicide Research and Prevention
Science and Technology
- Atmospheric Environment Research Centre
- Aviation
- Australian Rivers Institute
- Centre for Infrastructure Engineering and Management
- Centre for Quantum Dynamics
- Centre for Wireless Monitoring and Applications
- Environmental Futures Centre
- Eskitis Institute for Cell and Molecular Therapies
- Forensic Science Research and Innovation Centre
- Griffith Centre for Coastal Management
- Griffith University DNA Sequencing Facility
- International Centre for Ecotourism Research
- Institute for Glycomics
- Institute for Integrated and Intelligent Systems
- International Centre for Management of Pest Fruit Flies
- National Centre for Adult Stem Cell Research
- Queensland Micro- and Nanotechnology Centre
- Software Quality Institute
- Urban Research Program
Rankings
- The QS World University Rankings places Griffith in 291st universities in the world. It was ranked 200th in Social Sciences, 268th in Arts and Humanities, 294th in Natural Sciences in the world by Times Higher Education in 2009[5] and ranked 256th in the world according to Global University Rankings 2009.[6]
- Griffith Business School is recognised by the Aspen Institute's ‘Top 100’ for its leadership in integrating social, environmental and ethical issues into its programs. It was the highest Australian ranking.[7]
- Griffith Law School has been ranked as No. 1 in the country by the respected publication, the "Good Universities Guide", both in 2005 and 2006.[8]
- Griffith ranked sixth in the world for Tourism Research contributions.[9]
- The Griffith MBA received a five star rating for the seventh consecutive year from the Graduate Management Association of Australia. Griffith is only one of two universities nationally to achieve this feat and the International MBA program also received five stars in only its second year.[10]
- Griffith is ranked 2nd by getCITED’s Top 10 Institutions by Publications in Sports Marketing Journals over the past 3 years (2005) and 1st by getCITED’s Top 10 Institutions by Publications in Sports Management Journals over the past 3 years(2005).[11]
- Its Accounting research has been ranked 7th (out of 37 universities) in Australia and in the top 100 in the world. The ranking, published in the Accounting and Finance, was based on the top 24 accounting journals internationally and ranked Griffith 72nd out of more than 1000 institutions in the world.[12]
- Its Business program has been ranked 5th (out of 25 universities) in Australia and among top 100 in the world by Times Higher Education in 2009.
- The prestigious QS World University Rankings places Griffith in the top 300 universities in the world, which means the University is in the top 5% of universities in the world - as at 8 October 2009 [13]
Sporting, social and cultural
Griffith University has a wide array of cultural, intellectual, sporting and social groups. Its Student Guild[14] is an organisation within the university which takes care of these clubs on the Gold Coast campus, as well as student issues, accommodation, employment, publication, events, sport and recreation.
On the Nathan campus, Campus Life[15] supports many clubs including the long running GRUBS (Griffith University Bushwalking Club), The Karate and Kickboxing club and the Griffith University Aikido Club, recently incorporated and independent of the University. The Griffith University Rugby Union Club, established by Phil Verheijen in 2002, were runners up in the Northern University Games in 2005 and are consistently ranked in the top 6 at Australian University Games. Past captains include Nick Hurrell (2006), who is now an international rugby representative of Hong Kong.[16]
The Griffith University Australian Football Club (GUAFC) is an Australian rules football club formed in 2001, competing in the AFLQ State Association. The Griffith University Gladiators finished runners up in two of their first five seasons in the AFLSQ. The club plays out of Griffith's Nathan Campus, which features one of Queensland's leading amateur Australian football grounds with state-of-the-art playing lights and club rooms. [citation needed]
Student Union and representation
Griffith University students are uniquely represented by two statutory embedded student organisations. The Griffith University Student Representative Council (GUSRC) represents undergraduate students and the Griffith University Postgraduate Students Association (GUPSA) represents post-graduate students in all campuses apart from the Gold Coast. GUPSA is a constituent member of the Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations. Unique to the Gold Coast is the Student Guild (GUSG) which represents all students from this campus and holds an administrative structure that is apparently independent to the university. Griffith also has a significant representation of foreign students. Many (from the US or other Western nations) come for just one or two semesters, others for a longer period of time.
Notable alumni
- Aidan McLindon, Member of Queensland Legislative Assembly
- Nick Vujicic, preacher, motivational speaker
- Andrew Fraser, Queensland Treasurer[17]
- Phil Reeves (politician), Minister Queensland Legislative Assembly
- Shayne Sutton, Opposition Leader Brisbane City Council[18]
- Peta-Kaye Croft, Member of Queensland Legislative Assembly
- Justine Elliot, Federal Member for Richmond & Parliamentary Secretary for Trade [19]
- Gary Hardgrave, former Federal Minister & Member for Moreton (1996–2007)
- Brett Mason, Senator for Queensland
- Julie Owens, Federal Member for Parramatta (Queensland Conservatorium of Music)
- Ross Vasta, Former Federal Member for Division of Bonner (2004–2007)
- Judy Spence, Leader of the House Queensland Legislative Assembly
- Steven Bradbury, Olympic Gold medal winning speed skater[20]
- Sara Carrigan, Olympic Gold medal winning cyclist[21]
- Libby Lenton, Olympic gold medal winning swimmer[21]
- Jeong Ryeo-won, Korean singer/actress[22]
- Lucy Decoutere, ex-actress
- James Smith Page, educationist
- Van Thanh Rudd, artist
- Rajnesh Singh, engineer and entrepreneur
- Karen Tso, television journalist
- Barbara Vernon, birth activist
- David Vernon, writer
- Robert Warren, musician
- Alecia Moore (US rock star - study abroad 1992)
- JP Bray (Canadian hockey player)
- Adam Ferguson, photographer
- Paulina Porizkova (model - study abroad 1982)[23]
- Liz Cantor, Seven News personality and winner of the fifth season of The Mole
- Kieran Ricketts, reporter for the ABC's news/comedy program Hungry Beast.
- Amanda Ware, model[24]
Sister Schools
Taiwan -Taipei Medical University[citation needed]
See also
- NICTA - national information and communication technology research centre, co-supported by Griffith University
- [9] - Queensland Sports Technology Cluster - Griffith University is the host of this Sports engineering group
References
- ^ [1] Griffith History
- ^ a b Hogan, Janet (1982). Living History of Brisbane. Spring Hill, Queensland: Boolarang Publications. pp. 130–131. ISBN 0908175418.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - ^ [2].
- ^ [3] Centre for Wireless Monitoring and Applications
- ^ [4] QS World University Rankings
- ^ [5] Global University Ranking
- ^ [6] The global 100
- ^ [7] Griffith Law School
- ^ source: Tourism Management 26 (2005) 641-648 report by Elsevier on a study of research contributions into tourism journals around the world over the decade 1992-2001
- ^ [8] Australian MBA Star Ratings
- ^ http://www.eurolearn.org/upload/File/AcademicGuides/Sports.pdf
- ^ http://wwwdocs.fce.unsw.edu.au/fce/News/AccountingResearchChan.pdf
- ^ Griffith University | Fast facts < About Griffith
- ^ Student Guild Gold Coast Campus
- ^ Campus Life
- ^ Hong Kong Sevens
- ^ Griffith University | News
- ^ Sutton aims for City Hall | Courier Mail
- ^ The Hon Justine Elliot MP, Australian Government Parliamentary Secretary for Trade
- ^ Griffith University News Service
- ^ "For Jung Ryeo-won, It's Time to Kick Back". The Chosun Ilbo. 2005-12-04. Retrieved 2008-12-02. [dead link]
- ^ "Paul Yang's Paulina Porizkova Supersite "
- ^ Lewis, Maria (July 15, 2010). "Top model Kimberly Thrupp". goldcoast.com.au. News Limited. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2008) |
External links
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)