James Cook University | |
---|---|
Motto |
Crescente Luce |
Established | 1970 |
Type | Public |
Chancellor | John Grey |
Vice-Chancellor | Sandra Harding |
Undergraduates | 12,093[1] (2007) |
Postgraduates | 3,663[1] (2007) |
Location | Townsville, Cairns, Qld., Australia |
Campus | Suburban |
Affiliations | IRUA |
Website | http://www.jcu.edu.au |
James Cook University (JCU) is a public university based in Townsville, Queensland, Australia and was proclaimed on 20 April 1970[2] in Townsville. JCU is the second oldest university in Queensland and the first tertiary education institution in North Queensland. JCU is one of only 17 Australian universities that was listed in the ARWU top 400 academic world universities in 2008.[3]. The main fields of research include marine sciences, biodiversity, sustainable management of tropical ecosystems, tropical health care and tourism.
Contents |
The University is named after the British sea captain James Cook who popularised the discovery and potential colonial value of the east coast of Australia and whose exploratory vessel HM Bark Endeavour ran aground for repairs in North Queensland.
After being proclaimed on 20 April 1970 as an Act of Queensland Parliament, The University College of Townsville became James Cook University of North Queensland on 29 April 1970.[4] The official opening of the University was conducted by Queen Elizabeth II.[5] On 1 January 1982, JCU amalgamated with The Townsville College of Advanced Education located adjacent to the main campus in Douglas. The university established a presence in Cairns in 1987 and moved to its current location in the suburb of Smithfield in 1996. On 1 January 1991, the School of Art and Design of the Townsville College of TAFE was transferred to JCU.[4] The current name of James Cook University became official on 1 January 1998.[6] In 2003 the University opened an international campus referred to as JCUS in Singapore. The university further expanded its presence by establishing another campus in Brisbane, Queensland in 2006.
A year after JCU's proclamation, Cyclone Althea struck the Townsville region. This, together with the destruction caused by Cyclone Tracy in Darwin 1974, prompted the establishment of a cyclone research facility.[5][7] The Cyclone Testing Station started out as a small project of Professor Hugh Trollope and began its operations on 1 November 1977 as James Cook Cyclone Structural Testing Station.[7] The facility has since grown and changed its name to Cyclone Testing Station in 2002 to better indicate its scope of testing and services provided.[7] The Cyclone Testing Station operates as an independent unit of The School of Engineering and serves as an advising member to the Australian Standards committee in areas of structural design, more specifically wind actions.[8]
The Discovery Rise project was announced in September 2007.[9] The $1 billion project is aimed at completely redeveloping the University campuses, faculties and attracting more students to JCU.[10] Initial stages of planning and design are currently under way and the project is estimated to be finished in 2015.[11] Included in the project will be major upgrading of student facilities, creation of extra on-campus residential housing, commercial site-leasing, a student village and upgrading of sports facilities.[12]
JCU's main campus moved from a small campus in the coastal city of Townsville (Pimlico suburb) to a 386-hectare[13] area of bush land in the suburb of Douglas, near the army base and the lee of Mount Stuart, during the early 1970s. It has a widely spread out area of buildings in between native managed bushland. Close to the university is the new Townsville Hospital, CSIRO Research Facility and Tropical North Queensland Institute of TAFE.
The Cairns Campus of James Cook University is located 15 kilometres NNW of Cairns CBD, a city on the east coast of Australia, in the suburb of Smithfield. Opened in 1987, this campus is situated in a mountainous rainforest area of tropical North Queensland.[14]
The Singapore International Campus was opened in 2003 as JCU's first offshore campus.[15]. There are currently around 2200 students studying with JCUS.
On 18 July 2008, JCU Singapore relocated to a new campus at 600 Upper Thomson Road.
Apart from the three main campuses, JCU has more than 20 specialist research centres and institutes throughout Queensland and New South Wales with the most prominent ones being in Mount Isa, Thursday Island, Mackay, Brisbane and Sydney.
The University is home to the "Cyclone Testing Station" which operates as a self-funded unit within the School of Engineering and is a contributing member of the Australian Standards with regards to Wind Actions.[7][8]
The university serves as a catchment area for students in the whole region and in 2007 its student population was at 16,338 which includes 3,450 international students.[1]
The university is well known for its medicine, marine sciences[16], comparative genomics, engineering and tourism. In 2001 the university took in its first medical students in its then-new School of Medicine. An undergraduate veterinary degree was added to the university for the first time in 2006. The University is also offering degrees in astronomy, including a Doctor of Astronomy degree, through on-line courses.
In 2007, James Cook University again ranked in the list of the top 500 world universities by the Shanghai Jiao Tong University.[3]
James Cook University became the seventh member of Innovative Research Universities Australia in 2007.[17]
The University is organised into Faculties, Schools and Departments/Divisions.
Research produced by the Melbourne Institute in 2006 ranked Australian universities across seven main discipline areas: Arts & Humanities, Business & Economics, Education, Engineering, Law, Medicine, and Science. For each discipline, James Cook University was ranked[19]:
Discipline | R 1 | No. | R 2 | No. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Arts & Humanities | 23 | 38 | 20 | 38 |
Business & Economics | 30 | 39 | 32 | 38 |
Education | 26 | 35 | 22 | 34 |
Engineering | 18 | 28 | 25 | 28 |
Law | 23 | 29 | 25 | 28 |
Medicine | 12 | 14 | 13 | 13 |
Science | 10 | 38 | 10 | 35 |
Students are represented by the James Cook University Student Association[20] which includes sub organisations of Cairns Campus Student Association and the James Cook University Postgraduate Student Association [21], a member of the Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations.
Among the services provided by the Student Association are academic support, general administrative help, student welfare and non-academic activities. The Student Association publishes the student newspaper, The Hack, fortnightly while the University is in session.
Justin Ganzer is the president of the Cairns Campus Student Association.[22] Dennis Guild is the current president of the Postgraduate Student Association.[23]
The Douglas Campus has 8 on-campus residential colleges which can accommodate about 1,400 students. Student accommodation at the Cairns Campus can accommodate 240 students. However, this accommodation is not located on the campus grounds, being directly opposite the campus.[24] The halls of residence/colleges are:
College | Affiliation |
---|---|
St Mark's Colleges | 1965[25] |
University Hall | 1967[26] |
The John Flynn College | 1968[27] |
St Paul's Colleges | 1969[28] |
St Raphael's Colleges | 1971[29] |
Western Hall | 1981 - 2007[26][30] |
Western Courts | |
Rotary International House | 1990[26] |
George Roberts Hall | 2002[26] |
Accommodation is also available when the university is not in session.[31]
The individual colleges provide different services and support to students and are also situated in the tropical gardens of the campus.
|
|
|
|