University of Toronto Mississauga

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Coordinates: 43°32′56″N 79°35′28″W / 43.54889, -79.59111

           University of Toronto
University of Toronto Mississauga

Motto
Tantum Nobis Creditum
So much has been entrusted to us

Established 1967[1]
UofT affiliation Campus
Religious affiliation Non-denominational
Mascot Eagles

Principal Ian Orchard[2]
Vice-President and Principal

Students
Undergraduate 8,990 full-time
1,458 part-time
Postgraduate Over 400

Public transit access
Subway station None
Surface routes Mississauga Transit:
1C Dundas
44 Mississauga
110 University

Address 3359 Mississauga Rd N
Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
Website www.utm.utoronto.ca
U of T Mississauga Campus - South Building
U of T Mississauga Campus - South Building

The University of Toronto Mississauga (U of T Mississauga or UTM), also known as Erindale College,[3] is a campus of the University of Toronto, with an enrollment of approximately 10,500 students. U of T Mississauga is in Mississauga, Ontario, a suburb of Toronto on its western border, set upon a park-like campus on the Credit River. The surrounding neighbourhood (the Mississauga Road area and the Credit Woodlands) is a fairly affluent section of the city. U of T Mississauga is approximately 33 km away from downtown Toronto.

U of T Mississauga offers 125 programs among 70 areas of study.[1] The University's most popular programs include anthropology, biology, commerce, management, CCIT (Communications, Culture and Information technology), computer science, crime and deviance, english, environmental studies, history, philosophy, psychology, and sociology.

U of T Mississauga students can apply for joint-degree programs in art and art history or theatre and drama through an arrangement with Sheridan College, allowing students to obtain both a university degree from U of T Mississauga and a college diploma from Sheridan. The CCIT program is a recent creation and partnership between U of T Mississauga and Sheridan College. These programs allow students to benefit from the practical experience of a college.[4]

Other undergraduate programs offered at U of T Mississauga include, but are not limited to professional writing and communication, mathematics, chemistry, languages, physics, environmental sciences, geography, and earth sciences (geology).

U of T Mississauga also hosts one of the few palaeomagnetism laboratories in Canada. Currently run by Dr. Henry Halls, this lab investigated the palaeomagnetic properties of rocks collected from the Apollo missions in the 1970s. U of T Mississauga's most famous president was Dr. J. Tuzo Wilson, a geologist and pioneer in plate tectonics. A research wing in the South Building of U of T Mississauga is named after him.[3]

Graduate degrees offered include the Master of Management and Professional Accounting, Diploma in Investigative and Forensic Accounting, Master of Biotechnology, Master of Management of Innovation and the Master of Biomedical Communications.

Recently U of T Mississauga celebrated its 40th anniversary, a milestone which was celebrated with much fanfare, capped off with the Grand opening of the Hazel McCallion Academic Learning Center, on June 2 2007.[3] Several notable public figures were on hand to celebrate this momentous occasion including Hurricane Hazel herself. The Academic Learning Center has quickly evolved to become the cultural and social hub of the campus, and is quite possibly the most active site on the entire campus.

U of T Mississauga is in the midst of an expansion, with student enrollment being projected to reach 12,000 by the end of the decade.

Contents

[edit] Campus

The campus was the former estate of Reginald Watkins, which was acquired by the University of Toronto in 1965, and today consists of a number of buildings arranged across a large, treed lot. The largest building was built as a megalithic structure, predominantly out of concrete, as was typical of the brutalist architecture style of the late 1960s. It was one of architect Raymond Moriyama's first major commissions. Other buildings were added over the decades, but, with the enlarged enrollment at the beginning of the new millennium, the pace of construction increased.

A new CCT building, designed by Saucier + Perrot, was opened in September of 2004. The new library and academic learning centre, designed by Shore Tilbe Irwin + Partners and named after Mississauga's mayor, Hazel McCallion, opened October 8, 2006, and the new Wellness, Recreation and Athletics Centre, also by Shore Tilbe, opened less than a month previous to that.

Mississauga campus will be home to a first in Canadian education. Canada's first Forensic Science Institute will be created at the U of T Mississauga location, opening for the 2007 - 2008 school year. The new institute for postgraduate students will forge close ties with the Centre of Forensic Sciences. Plans have also been finalized for the establishment of an Academy of Medicine at the Mississauga campus, an expansion of the University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine.[5] It will provide a community oriented program to increase the number of primary care physicians and general practitioners. The first students are slated for enrollment in 2008.

The campus is home to CFRE-FM, broadcasting twenty-four hours a day at 91.9FM out of the Student Centre. With a focus on Canadian and independent music, students and community members are encouraged to apply for a show, as no experience is required. The main practice facility of the Toronto Argonauts football club is also located on campus.[6]

[edit] Notable alumni

  • Dionne Brand - poet, novelist and community activist
  • Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga - former president of the Republic of Latvia
  • Bilal Jaffery- Serves as a Director of Technology at DesiVibe.ca- South Asian Urban Webzine Startup and a Business Development Manager at IBM/ Lotus Foundations.
  • John Roberts (J.D. Roberts) - CNN Senior National Correspondent (former CBS News White House reporter and fill-in national news anchor for Dan Rather).
  • Eira Thomas - President and Chief Executive Officer, Stornoway Diamond Corporation
  • Roberta Bondar - female Astronaut[7]
  • Ruben Vicente Gomes Tavares - Award winning scientist and philanthropist
  • Bruce Dowbiggin - former CBC TV sports journalist, author of hockey books, and current Calgary Herald columnist
  • Herb Irving - Comedian
  • Richie Mehta - Art and Art History alumni and movie director of "Amal," recently screened at the Toronto International Film Festival
  • Vikas Kohli - producer and founder of Fatlabs

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b UTM Quick Facts. University of Toronto Mississauga (2007-09-05). Retrieved on 2008-03-26.
  2. ^ Office of the Vice-President and Principal. University of Toronto Mississauga (2008-02-27). Retrieved on 2008-03-26.
  3. ^ a b c History of UTM. University of Toronto at Mississauga. Retrieved on 2008-03-26.
  4. ^ Art & art history program. University of Toronto at Mississauga & Sheridan College. Retrieved on 2008-03-26.
  5. ^ U of T Faculty of Medicine Creates Fourth Medical Academy in Mississauga. University of Toronto Mississauga (February 2006). Retrieved on 2008-03-26.
  6. ^ Athletic Management - Fitness Cener Retrofit at U of T. Sandford Group (1997). Retrieved on 2008-03-26.
  7. ^ Roberta Bondar. Retrieved on 2008-03-26.

[edit] External links