University of Haifa
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Motto | מצויינות אקדמית מתחילה ביחס אישי (Academic Excellence with a Personal Touch) |
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Established | 1963 |
Type | Public |
Rector | Yossi Ben-Artzi |
Chancellor | Eliezer Rafaeli |
President | Aharon Ben-Zeev |
Location | Haifa, Israel |
Campus | Urban, Parks |
Website | www.haifa.ac.il/ |
The University of Haifa (אוניברסיטת חיפה) is a university in Haifa, Israel.
About 16,500 undergraduate and graduate students study in the university a wide variety of topics, specializing in social sciences, humanities, law and education. The University is broadly divided into six Faculties: Humanities, Social Sciences, Law, Science and Science Education, Social Welfare and Health Studies, and Education. There is also the Graduate School of Business.
Beyond the objective of a first-rate higher education, the University of Haifa aims to provide equal educational opportunities to all sectors of the society, and in particular to encourage mutual understanding and cooperation between the Jewish and Arab populations on and off campus.
The University of Haifa is home to a vibrant archeology and art museum: the Hecht museum, several very active research centers and institutions, such as the Evolution Institute, Center for the Study of the Information Society, Center for the Study of National Security, Tourism Research Center, and more. The University also hosts a large IBM research center on its campus.
[edit] History of the University
The University of Haifa was founded in 1963 by the mayor of the city of Haifa Abba Hushi, under the academic auspices of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
In its first year 472 students attended the University. Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences were offered in the following departments: Biblical Studies, Hebrew Literature and Language, Jewish History, General History, French Literature and Language, English Literature and Language, Arabic Literature and Language, Geography, Sociology, and Political Science. The academic staff included 180 teachers, 50 out of them were Haifa residents.
In 1967, the Institute awarded a diploma to its first graduates, 75 in number, three quarters of whom intended to be teachers.
The first home of the Institute was in Erdstein House in the Hadar Hacarmel section of Haifa, it quickly became too crowded. The University moved to Merkaz Hakarmel, and was housed in the building that now serves the Fifth Municipal High School. In 1966 the University moved to the top the Carmel mountain, location of its current main campus.
The institution's first building, the "Multi-purpose Building", was erected in 1966. It contained classrooms, halls, laboratories, a library with 110,000 books, and a cafeteria. The well-known Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer planned the campus, to include all the University's facilities in one complex.