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The '''Ariel University Center of Samaria''' ({{lang-he|המרכז האוניברסיטאי אריאל בשומרון}}, ''HaMerkaz HaUniversitai Ariel BaShomron'') is the largest [[Council for Higher Education in Israel|Israeli public college]], located on the [[Israeli settlement|settlement]] of [[Ariel (city)|Ariel]] in the [[West Bank]].<ref>http://www.ariel.ac.il/site/portals/english/</ref> The center was founded in [[1982]] to serve as a regional branch of [[Bar-Ilan University]]. Originally located in [[Kedumim]], it moved to the larger city of [[Ariel (city)|Ariel]] in order to expand. Its association with Bar-Ilan University lapsed in the 2004-05 academic year with the school administration's decision to become independent and pursue [[university]] status. the center has 26 departments for [[B.A]], M.A, [[B.Sc]] and [[B.Arch]] studies, in 3 [[faculties]] and 3 [[schools]]. The [[university]] Center contains over 12000 [[students]] and it has and extension in [[tel aviv]] for studies and continuation. All of the degrees are recognized by the [[Council for Higher Education in Israel]].
The '''Ariel University Center of Samaria''' ({{lang-he|המרכז האוניברסיטאי אריאל בשומרון}}, ''HaMerkaz HaUniversitai Ariel BaShomron'') is the largest [[Council for Higher Education in Israel|Israeli public college]], located on the [[Israeli settlement|settlement]] of [[Ariel (city)|Ariel]] in the [[West Bank]].<ref>http://www.ariel.ac.il/site/portals/english/</ref> The center was founded in [[1982]] to serve as a regional branch of [[Bar-Ilan University]]. Originally located in [[Kedumim]], it moved to the [[Israeli Settlement|settlement]] of [[Ariel (city)|Ariel]] in order to expand. Its association with Bar-Ilan University lapsed in the 2004-05 academic year with the school administration's decision to become independent and pursue [[university]] status. the center has 26 departments for [[B.A]], M.A, [[B.Sc]] and [[B.Arch]] studies, in 3 [[faculties]] and 3 [[schools]]. The university center contains over 12,000 students and it has and extension in [[Tel Aviv]] for studies and continuation. All of the degrees are recognized by the [[Council for Higher Education in Israel]].


==University status==
==University status==

Revision as of 15:32, 9 September 2011

Ariel University Center of Samaria
המרכז האוניברסיטאי אריאל בשומרון
File:Ariel College logo.PNG
TypePublic
Established1982
ChairmanMoshe Arens
ChancellorYigal Cohen-Orgad
PresidentDan Meyerstein
ProvostMichael Zinigrad
PrincipalEli Cohen
DeanShmuel Shacham
Studentsover 12,000
Location
CampusUrban
WebsiteEnglish
Hebrew

The Ariel University Center of Samaria (Hebrew: המרכז האוניברסיטאי אריאל בשומרון, HaMerkaz HaUniversitai Ariel BaShomron) is the largest Israeli public college, located on the settlement of Ariel in the West Bank.[1] The center was founded in 1982 to serve as a regional branch of Bar-Ilan University. Originally located in Kedumim, it moved to the settlement of Ariel in order to expand. Its association with Bar-Ilan University lapsed in the 2004-05 academic year with the school administration's decision to become independent and pursue university status. the center has 26 departments for B.A, M.A, B.Sc and B.Arch studies, in 3 faculties and 3 schools. The university center contains over 12,000 students and it has and extension in Tel Aviv for studies and continuation. All of the degrees are recognized by the Council for Higher Education in Israel.

University status

In 2005, the Israeli government voted to support upgrading the College to university status. On one level, this was viewed as a political decision to appease more conservative elements in Israeli politics before the implementation of the disengagement plan; on another, the high quantity and quality of academic research by the faculty could not be ignored. The reaction from the academic community in Israel was not openly receptive, partly because of its location beyond the Green Line, as well as allowing a new institution into the fold. The change of status was not immediate since the decision only allowed the College to apply for revision by the Council for Higher Education in Israel, which must ultimately approve the change. University status is an issue of prestige, increased government funding for research, as well as the ability to issue doctorate degrees.

In July 2006 the Council for Higher Education rejected the proposal (which had been paired with an initiative by Shimon Peres to unite several regional colleges in the Galilee into one umbrella university). The Council accepted the conclusion of a committee it had itself set up that decided that no new university would be established in Israel in the next five years. The committee did not discuss, or perhaps avoided the discussion of, the merits or shortcomings of the two initiatives. Subsequently, criticism was directed at the Council for ignoring the decision of the government.[2]

In August 2007, the "College of Judea and Samaria", in the interim period and anticipation of achieving official university status, was renamed by the Certification Authorities Registrar the "Ariel University Center of Samaria".[3]Although Prime Minister Ehud Olmert endorsed the change, both Minister of Education Yuli Tamir and the Council for Higher Education vowed to block it,[4] with the latter announcing in 2008 that they would not recognise degrees awarded by the college.[5] The name change was recognised in 2010, although the college remains without university accreditation.[6]

View towards the lower campus and the settlement of Ariel.

Visiting lecturers

AUC hosts visiting lecturers from universities around the world. In 2010 University of Hartford communications professor Don Ellis taught the course "Communication Issues and Political Conflict." He said: "My only goal is to help them improve their critical thinking skills. I don't expect that either side will acknowledge the other side as being right."[7]

Faculties and departments

Research institutes

  • Center for Radiation Sources & Applications (FEL)
  • Materials Research Center
  • Integrative Brain Science Center - Ariel (IBSCA)
  • Center for Robotics Research and Applications
  • Samaria & Jordan Valley Regional R&D Center
  • Homeland Security R&D Center
  • Israel National Strategic Assessment Center
  • Mass Media Research Center
  • The kinematics and computational geometry (KCG) multidisciplinary laboratory
  • Cluster computation system
  • Human Factors Engineering Laboratory


Enrollment

Current enrollment at the university is about 11,000, including Jewish, Arab, Druze and Circassian Israeli students.[8][9][10] As of 2010 there are 500 Israeli Arab students among the 9,000 undergraduates, making up about 6 percent of the students.[11]

See also

References

External links