Victoria University ( VU ) is an Australian state university based in Melbourne, Victoria. It is a dual-sector tertiary institution that provides courses in both higher education and Advanced Engineering and Education (TAFE). 2016 marks the VU century as an educational institution and its 25th anniversary as a university.
The university has several campuses in Melbourne Central Business District, Melbourne Western Region, and in Sydney, consisting of six academies, six research institutes, seven research centers and VU Victoria Polytechnic (providing vocational education and training). It also offers courses at partner institutions throughout Asia.
Video Victoria University, Australia
Histori
The idea for an engineering school based in Melbourne's western suburbs was first proposed in 1910. The Footscray Engineering School opened its doors for 220 students and 9 teachers in 1916 after five years of fundraising.
Charles Archibald Hoadley was the principal from his founding until his death in 1947. His vision was to help students with good technical knowledge and appreciation of the arts, sports, outdoor activities and society. He believes in educating students "for life as well as for life", wants students to see education as opening the door of opportunity.
Under Hoadley's leadership, the school grew rapidly and began offering trade certificate courses, diplomas in architecture, development, and contracts, as well as night classes. War and Depression saw a decrease in student numbers. However, in 1943, there were 2500 students enrolled in courses taught at Footscray Park and the Footscray Nicholson campus.
The next decade sees gender and cultural shifts. In 1958, the school changed its name to College of Footscray Engineering. Ten years later, his name changed again, this time, becoming the Footscray Technology Institute (FIT). Women were first enrolled in a day diploma program in 1960, and changes to the federal government's immigration policy resulted in more European and Asian students entering the school. The secondary school component was separated from the rest of the institute in 1972. In the mid-1970s, the expanded curriculum included a degree program and was far beyond the technical focus of the original Footscray Engineering School. Further changes occurred in the 1980s, with a section of technical and trade education separating from FIT to form Footscray and TAFE Colleges in Newport.
In 1990, FIT joined the Western Institute, which had been established three years earlier to provide TAFE and higher education programs to a remote suburb in western Melbourne. In 1990, the university was founded as a university by the Victorian State Parliament as Victoria University of Technology. The University subsequently merged with the Western Melbourne Institute of TAFE in 1998. In 2005, the Victoria University of Technology Act of 1990 was changed to change the name of the University as a University of Victoria, reflecting the development of its teaching and research.
The institutions incorporated to form the VU include:
- Footscray Technical School, renamed Footscray Technical College and then Footscray Institute of Technology
- Newport Technical College, renamed Newport College of TAFE
- Melbourne's Hairdressing School
- School of Painting, Decorating, and Signature
- Melbourne Technical College of Hairdressing
- Melbourne College of Decoration
- Footscray College of TAFE
- Flagstaff College of TAFE
- Western Institute
- Gellibrand College of TAFE, renamed Western Metropolitan College of TAFE
- West Melbourne Institute TAFE
- Victoria University of Technology
- Victoria Polytechnic
Maps Victoria University, Australia
Campus
The University of Victoria has campuses located throughout western Melbourne and downtown. One campus is located in central Sydney.
VU courses are also delivered by partner agencies throughout Asia, including China, India, Malaysia, Singapore, Sri Lanka and Vietnam. Two of the largest partners are Sunway University College in Malaysia and Liaoning University in China.
Footscray Park
Footscray Park Campus on Ballarat Road, Footscray is the main campus and administrative center of the University. It offers higher education programs especially in engineering, education and sports-related disciplines. It occupies 7 hectares (17 acres) site overlooking Flemington Racecourse and the Maribyrnong River. A $ 68.5 million sports and learning area, including the sports science and exercise research lab, was completed in early 2011. The campus also has a 25-meter swimming pool and childcare center.
St Albans
St Albans Campus at McKecknie Street St Albans is a university health and education center, focusing on the science of psychology, nursing, the arts, and paramedics and biomedicine. It is set on 32 hectares (79 acres) of original meadows and gum sugar. St Albans Health and Wellness Center has just opened in 2013.
Footscray Nicholson
Footscray Nicholson Campus is in central Footscray, on the corner of Nicholson and Buckley Road. It provides TAFE, VCE and short courses. The new learning union opened in 2012 offering a range of educational and student services.
City Flinders and City Flinders Lane
Located in two buildings on 300 Flinders Street and 301 Flinders Lane in central Melbourne. The Flinders Lane Building focuses on osteopathy and English language training, and is also the University's administrative center for recruitment and support of international students. The 19-storey Flinders Street building overlooks Melbourne's historic Flinders Street station, the Yarra River, and the Southbank police station. The University's postgraduate business course and its many programs in graphic design, visual arts and multimedia are taught on this campus. The Flinders Street building also has a convention facility.
City King
The City King campus is located in a high-rise building close to Southern Cross station. It provides health and beauty courses, and includes hair and beauty salons open to the public.
Queen City
City Queen Campus occupies two heritage buildings at 283 and 295 Queen Street in the heart of Melbourne's legal area. The campus has the University's Faculty of Law and Justice, the law library, the Sir Zelman Cowen Center and two courts that can be debated. It offers undergraduate and postgraduate law courses, including continuing legal education courses for legal professionals.
Werribee
The 16 hectare (40 hectare) Werribee campus is located in the agricultural and higher education area of ââWerribee. It offers trade training as well as facilities for water, food and fire safety research.
Sunshine
Sunshine Polytechnic Victoria Campus is located on Ballarat Road, Sunshine. It offers a TAFE course, with a primary focus on business and the construction industry. A $ 44 million High Technology Construction Hub opened in 2013 for building and construction training. The campus also has a convention center with a 200 seat auditorium.
Sydney
Victoria University provides a number of business courses for international students on its campus in central Sydney, operating in partnership with the Australian Education Center (ECA).
Whitten Oval
At the end of 2010, VU opened A $ 8 million Sports and Recreation Learning Center in partnership with West Bulldog at the Whitten Oval in West Footscray. The center contains a publicly opened massage therapy clinic, as well as 140 seat seating theater, library, classroom and office.
Organization
Some university colleges offer internationally recognized qualifications ranging from certificates and diplomas to degrees, postgraduate and diploma certificates, as well as masters and doctoral degrees (PhDs). Victoria Polytechnic and VU College offer vocational education and higher education diploma courses.
- The Arts and Education College offers a range of pre-degree, undergraduate and postgraduate programs and conducts research in education, youth employment, art, communications, community development, creative and industrial arts, psychology, social sciences, and social work. The College emphasizes workplace learning in teacher and youth education through its partnerships with schools, community organizations and industry, especially in western Melbourne. VU is one of several Australian universities offering undergraduate education programs (P-12), so graduates can teach at any level. The Victoria Institute, which focuses on inclusive education, is part of the College of Education.
- The College of Business is one of the largest business schools in Australia. Training is provided in a variety of business areas including business, management, accounting, finance, supply chain and logistics, marketing and human resources. It conducts research in related centers: the Institute of Supply Chain and Logistics and the Institute of Strategic Economic Studies of Victoria.
- The College of Engineering and Science offers architecture, building, civil, mechanical, electrical, and sports engineering courses, as well as courses in information technology, building surveys, and science.
- The Faculty of Health and Bio-Medicine provides direct learning, teaching, and research in nursing and midwifery, dermal therapy, osteopathy, beauty therapy, nutrition, and paramedics. Most programs include the use of simulated laboratories, training clinics, and salons.
- The Faculty of Law and Justice operates through the Victoria Law School at the University's Sir Zelman Cowen Center. Offers undergraduate and law degree, as well as continuing law education, including migration law courses. Second and third year students participated in real cases in Melbourne, Sunshine, and Werribee courts.
- The College of Sports and Exercise Science offers courses in aspects of sports, physical education, recreational management, coaching and science exercises. The course is primarily based at Camps Footscray Park, a new University sports and learning area site, which includes the Institute of Sport, Exercise, and Active Life (ISEAL).
- VU College provides a variety of student support programs for local and international students, including help and courses in English, literacy, and numeracy. It also provides nationally accredited and nationally accredited education courses, foundation studies and career development services.
Victoria Polytechnic
Victoria Polytechnic is a TAFE division of the University of Victoria. It offers qualified National Training Packages in construction, engineering and machinery, hairdressing, hospitality, and cosmetology. These courses include skills development for pre-apprenticeship, internships, trainees, and current workers, as well as the development of workforce tailored for the company, both nationally and internationally.
Student
By 2014, VU has 46,198 students. Approximately 60% study in higher education degree programs, and 40% enrolled in TAFE training courses. Of these students, 5,682 are international students studying at one of the VU campuses in Melbourne or Sydney, and 8,761 are international students studying at VU programs abroad at one of its partner organizations located primarily in Asia.
Academics
Ratings
The University of Victoria is ranked 301-350 in the world in the Higher Education World University Rankings in 2018.
The University of Victoria emphasizes research that is relevant to society, industry and government - both nationally and internationally, but particularly in western Melbourne. The University's Research Plan 2012-2016 supports multidisciplinary research in several target areas: applied informatics, creative and written arts, diversity and well-being, education, diversity and lifelong learning, food and nutrition, medical and health science, supply chain, logistics and transportation, sport, sport and active life, strategic economy and sustainable environmental technology.
The University of Victoria has six research institutes and seven research centers.
Research institute
- Victorian Institute
- Institute of Sustainability and Innovation (ISI)
- Supply Chain and Logistics Institute (ISCL)
- Institute of Sports, Sports, and Active Life (ISEAL)
- Victoria Institute of Strategic Economic Studies (VISITING)
- Mitchell Institute
Research center
- Centers for the Prevention and Treatment of Chronic Illness
- Applied Information Center (CAI)
- Center for Cultural and Welfare Diversity
- Center for Environmental Security and Risk Engineering (CESARE)
- International Center for Educational System Research (CIRES)
- Center for Policy Studies (CoPS) âââ ⬠<â ⬠<
Partnership
The University of Victoria has developed partnership agreements with several organizations, with the aim of strengthening public relations and the University's industry. These include:
- Melbourne Writers Festival: Victoria University manages the "Reviewer for a Day" program, a blogging festival experience.
- Malthouse Theater: as an official education partner, the staff and students of the University of Victoria can access Malthouse production and facilities, including placement opportunities.
- Footscray Community Arts Center (FCAC): Long-term relationships with FCAC offer student engagement opportunities throughout the center program. The first incarnation of this center was stored in a tin warehouse on the campus of the Footscray Institute of Technology.
- West City Water: West Kota Water and VU collaborate on a number of research projects in water treatment and sustainable water resource management.
- Western health: Western Health is VU's main industry training partner for the provision of ongoing nursing and midwifery learning. Each year, hundreds of VU students complete more than 110,000 hours of clinical placement at Western Health locations. Real Madrid Graduate School Universidad Europea: Through this partnership, students enrolled in Master of Sports Science and Master of Sport Business and Integrity have the opportunity to complete a two-week residential program in Madrid, Spain.
- Western Bulldog: Students can take up placements with the Australian Bulldogs Football League team in various fields including biomechanics, sports physiology, recovery massage and sports rehabilitation, business, administration, event management, marketing, tourism and hospitality. VU and Bulldogs also have a shared commitment to the development of the western region of Melbourne through a collaborative community building program.
- Melbourne Vixens: workplace learning opportunities across the disciplines of sports, massage, management, psychology, nutrition, marketing, accounting and more are offered with the Vixens netball team and at the VU Netball Academy.
- Western Jets: The VU partnership with the football club began in 2000 and currently offers community engagement opportunities in western Melbourne and employment opportunities for students.
- Footscray University Town: Victoria University and Maribyrnong City Council are partners in a ten-year revitalization plan for the area. These include the VW MetroWest community hub at Footscray, which consists of cafes, bookstores, hot tables, conference rooms, psychology clinics, exhibition halls and more.
Student accommodation
VU owns and operates student accommodation for students, staff, and guests of the University. In February 2016, Student Village in Maidstone was replaced with UniLodge @ VU newly built, a 13-storey apartment building across the street from Camps Footscray Park on Ballarat Road, Footscray.
The International House, a traditional residential college located at the University of Melbourne, also offers a place for students of the University of Victoria.
Famous people
Staff
- Tony Birch, poet, novelist, author
- Craig Emerson, a former Australian politician
- Gary Foley, indigenous activist and historian
- Ian Gray, the judge
- Michael Kirby, retired High Court judge
- Alan Kohler, financial journalist and editor
- Chris Maxwell QC, lawyer
- Robert Richter QC, attorney
- Nicola Roxon, the first female prosecutor in Australia
- Robert Stary, criminal law specialist
Alumni
- Ali Abdo, the Olympic wrestler
- Liam Adams, the long-distance runner
- Ngconde Balfour, former South African sports and recreation minister
- Ron Barassi, Australian Football League legend
- Nathan Buckley, former Collingwood Football Club captain and current Collingwood coach
- Doug Chappel, comedian and actor
- Marion May Campbell, author and Associate Professor of Professional and Creative Writing at Deakin University
- Jeffrey Cheah, founder of Sunway Group
- Simon Garlick, CEO of the Western Bulldog
- Andrew Gaze, a former basketball player
- Brad Green, former Melbourne football player and current Carlton Football Club development coach
- Alwyn Jones (born 1985), jumper champion three national
- Alan Kohler, financial journalist
- Telmo Languiller, Member of Parliament Victoria
- Tammy Lobato, Member of the Victorian Parliament
- Mike McKay, Olympian, and a member of "Oarsome Foursome"
- Pia Miranda, the actress
- Campbell Rose, former CEO of the Western Bulldogs
- Larry Sengstock, a former basketball player
- Fatai Veamatahau, finalist in The Voice 2012
- Mitch Wallis, footballer, Western Bulldog
- Kim Wells, Treasurer of the Victorian State Government
- Deepak Vinayak, Community Leader, Melbourne
Sex sexual assaults, attacks and harassment statistics
A report released by Victoria's Crime Statistics Agency in 2015 highlighted that a third of the reported sex offenses on campuses in Victoria occurred at the University of Victoria campus. Compared to the other eight Victoria universities, six contain larger students than the University of Victoria, the University has the highest number of sexual violations recorded from 2004 to 2015. From 2004 to 2015, 31 sexual violations and 10 reports of sexual harassment, stalking, and threatening behavior were recorded by the Victoria Crime Statistics Agency. VU announced a zero tolerance policy against sexual harassment and harassment and has partnered with the University of Australia at Respect. Now. The program is always .
See also
- List of universities in Australia
References
Further reading
- Rasmussen, Carolyn (1989), University of the Poor: 75 years of Technical Education at Footscray , Melbourne: Press from Football Institute ISBN Technology 1-86297-000-9
- 90 Years, 90 Legend (2006), Melbourne: Published by University of Victoria ISBN 1-86272-665-5
External links
- Victoria University website
Source of the article : Wikipedia