Jacobs University Bremen

Jacobs University Bremen

Logo of Jacobs University Bremen
Established 2001 (2001)
Type Private
President Joachim Treusch
Academic staff 375 academic/research staff (of which 127 are Professors).
Admin. staff 137
Students 1334 (2011/12)
Location Bremen, Germany
Campus Urban, 80 acres (0.32 km2)
Website www.jacobs-university.de

Jacobs University Bremen (previously International University Bremen, IUB) is a highly selective, top-ranked, private, independent research university in Bremen, Germany.

Jacobs University is an English-speaking higher education institution. Jacobs University combines aspects from the American and German academic systems to form an environment with a "transdisciplinary" approach between diverse disciplines and subject areas.

Contents

History and Accreditation

Jacobs University was founded in 1999 as the 'International University Bremen (IUB)' but changed its name early in 2007 in recognition of the philanthropist Klaus Johann Jacobs, whose donation allowed IUB to avoid bankruptcy.

The university developed from an initial collaboration between the local government of the city-state of Bremen, the University of Bremen and Rice University, USA.

On November 1, 2006 the current President, Joachim Treusch, announced a donation to university by the Jacobs Foundation of 15 million per year during the following 5 years. It is the biggest private donation ever made to a German university.[1] The Jacobs Foundation plans to make another donation of 125 million € in 2011. This donation is conditional on the university's achievements up to this point. In 2010, President Treusch announced that the lump sum was to be split in smaller installments totaling up to 75 million € which are to be donated to the university in decreasing yearly installments up to 2017.

Jacobs University has been certified as a family-friendly institution by the Hertie Foundation since 2005 for introducing measures for university members with family obligations.[2]

In 2008, Jacobs University Bremen was the focus of a five-part television series produced by Deutsche Welle titled "Leaders of Tomorrow."[3]

The university is accredited locally by the City-State of Bremen and nationally by the Academic Council of the Federal Republic of Germany (Wissenschaftsrat). The undergraduate major courses are accredited by ACQUIN, a German higher education accreditation agency.

The University

University Leadership

The President of Jacobs University is Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. mult. Joachim Treusch, who succeeded the University’s founding President Dr. Fritz Schaumann on July 1, 2006. Since January 2007 Prof. Dr. Karin Lochte, Director of the Director of the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine, is Chair of the Board of Governors.

Faculty and Student Body

There are currently 1334 students from 111 countries pursuing Bachelor’s, Master's, and PhD degrees. The students and the academic staff demographic are proportionally more international than at other German universities.

Alumni

Jacobs University’s alumni association was founded in 2004 by the university’s pioneer graduating class. Since then, the number of Jacobs alumni has increased more than tenfold from 130 to over 1,500, about 80 % of which have joined the alumni association. To provide a legal framework for the alumni’s participation in shaping the university’s future, the Jacobs University Bremen Alumni & Friends GmbH was founded in 2008. Co-owned by the alumni association (99%) and the university (1 %), the company became one of Jacobs University’s three shareholders.[4]

Academic Profile

The university’s profile in research and teaching focuses on the general topics:

That way, Jacobs University Bremen wishes to contribute to solutions for the major challenges of the 21st century world. [5]

Research

In January 2010 Jacobs University restructured its research forming nine transdisciplinary centers in which scientists from different fields work together. These centers approach the university’s general topics from different scientific angles.[6]

Teaching

Teaching at Jacobs University comprises three Schools that provide undergraduate programmes, and aResearch Center:

Degrees

Jacobs University’s offers study programs leading to a Bachelor’s degree in 3 years, a Master’s degree in 1.5 to 2 years, a Ph.D. or an Executive MBA.

Ranking

Jacobs University is a small private university and offers fewer programs than traditional universities in Germany. Due to its young age and small size, it typically goes unranked in international comparisons. In the German CHE-Ranking of 2009, the university received high rankings in the subjects Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Geosciences, and Mathematics; in particular in Biology and Geosciences it achieved top rank.[1] In the 2010 Die Zeit ranking, Computer Science and Electrical Engineering related programs of Jacobs University were highly rated with its programs comparing well with those offered at 9 technical universities, lagging only in third-party funding which can be attributed to the young age of the private institution. In 2011, Jacobs University was ranked 1st in Germany for political science and 2nd for sociology[7]

Study Programs

Undergraduate courses (Majors)

BA Majors in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences:

BSc Majors in the School of Engineering and Sciences:

BSc/BA Majors in Systems and Management:

To achieve "transdisciplinarity", students complete additional courses from their School (but that do not stem from their Major), from the other School, and courses that are typically taught by one instructor from each school presenting a common topic (so-called University Studies Courses).

Masters and PhD programs

MA programmes organised by the School of Humanities and Social Science (SHSS) or the Bremen International Graduate School of Social Sciences (BIGSSS), the joint Excellence Initiative funded by the German Research Council (DFG) between Jacobs University and University of Bremen:

PhD programs organized by the School of Humanities and Social Sciences (SHSS) or the Bremen International Graduate School of Social Sciences (BIGSSS), the joint Excellence Initiative funded by the German Research Council (DFG) between Jacobs University and the University of Bremen:

MSc programme organized by the Jacobs Center for Lifelong Learning and Institutional Development:

PhD programme organized by the Jacobs Center for Lifelong Learning and Institutional Development:

PhD programs organized by Bremen International Graduate School of Social Sciences (BIGSSS):

Additional graduate programs (2-year MSc followed by a 3-year PhD) are organized by the School of Engineering and Sciences (SES), where continuation to the PhD is conditional on the successful completion of the MSc and acceptance by a PhD supervisor. The first two years are often funded by a stipend directly from Jacobs University, and the following three years are supported by research grants. An integrated PhD program also exists that includes a four year programs including obligatory courses.

The following graduate programs exist:

Most of these programs provide funded places and stipends. At Jacobs University, the convention is for PhD students to meet members of their examination committee early and submit yearly reports to assess their progress. Often an alternative academic advisor is appointed in addition to the PhD Supervisor.

International Foundation Year Program

Jacobs University offers an International Foundation Year Program that is designed to provide high school graduates with academic skills essential for undergraduate studies. Among these are the necessary credentials for admission to English-speaking universities, advanced competence in English, strong study and academic skills as well as fundamental subject orientation in economics, engineering and the natural sciences. Students who complete the program successfully have the opportunity to apply to regular Jacobs University undergraduate programs or to other universities worldwide.

Professional programs

Currently, the School of Humanities and Social Sciences also provides an Executive MBA:

Exchange Programs

Jacobs University has established student exchange programs with Universidad de Murcia Spain, Rice University, Washington State University, Carnegie Mellon University in the USA, Sciences Po in France, Lafayette College in the USA, Thammasat University in Thailand, Università degli Studi di Cagliari and Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza" in Italy, and more recently with the University of Aberdeen in Scotland and Instituto de Empresa in Spain.

Admission

Jacobs University has an achievement-oriented need blind admission policy. Its admission criteria are:

Location and Facilities

Campus

Like British and American universities, Jacobs University is a campus university. The campus grounds and buildings were developed from the former grounds of the Roland Barracks in Bremen-Grohn.

Today the campus is composed of 30-hectare park-like grounds including student housing in colleges, the university’s teaching, research, and administration buildings, including the Reimar Lüst Hall named after the founding chair, the Information Resource Center (IRC) – a library with extensive digital resources and future oriented information technology – apartments for visiting scientists as well as sports and other leisure facilities.

Residential colleges

Jacobs University has four residential colleges modeled on student halls of residence and residential colleges found at British and American universities. These residential colleges (in chronological order of establishment: Krupp College, Mercator College, College 3 and College Nordmetall) are intended primarily as accommodation for undergraduate students, although a limited number of rooms are available for graduate students. The colleges offer similar amenities but foster their own unique identities with different traditions and events (Mercator College's Country Information Days, for example, or the annual College Nordmetall Christmas Market).

Each college is headed by a College Master, a professorial member of academic staff and their family, and each has its own kitchen, common room, and full-time support staff. Some colleges have associated members of faculty who are active in social and extracurricular events. PhD students or experienced staff and their families are appointed as Residence Associates (RAs) and serve a range of roles. Students may move out of their College into one of the off-campus residences, the Blue, Yellow, Red and Green Houses.

Staff and student facilities

For the benefit of all staff and students, there is a gym, two sports halls and playing fields, a cinema, a bar and a dedicated student facility building (the Student Activity Center) including a late night shop, the Interfaith House (serving the multiple purpose of a church, concert venue and praying location), a café, multiple student clubs and even a kindergarten/preschool. In terms of academic resources, there are lecture halls, classrooms and laboratories in different locations around the campus as well as the modern Information Resource Centre (including an actual library and access to online research resources).

Science Park

In August 2010, Jacobs University held a ground-breaking ceremony to celebrate the start of the site development and construction work for a Science Park in the direct campus neighborhood.[9] On 4 hectares, the Science Park is supposed to provide research and technology oriented companies with space for future establishment.

Extracurricular Activities

There is a variety of student clubs at Jacobs University. They can basically be divided into sports clubs and “Arts and Culture” clubs. Sports activities include, for example, rowing, soccer, basketball, volleyball, cricket, rugby, cheerleading, ball Room Dance, salsa, breakdance, slacklining, frisbee and martial arts. Exemplary clubs within the category “Arts and Culture” are the campus newspaper “Pulse of the World”, the model United Nations society “BRIMUN”, the debating society, the environmental club, the art club, and the new Yachay Initiative.

References

  1. ^ The New York Times: Billionaire’s $250 Million Donation Saves Private University in Germany . November 8, 2006
  2. ^ http://www.jacobs-university.de/about/community/audit/
  3. ^ http://jacobs-realitytv.blogspot.com/
  4. ^ ”Privilege and Challenge”, In: Jacobs Magazine, Winter 2010/11, p. 37
  5. ^ Website Jacobs University Bremen: Facts and Figures. Last Update: November 2010
  6. ^ ”The New Nine - Jacobs University’s Research Centers at a Glance”, In: Jacobs Magazine, Winter 2010/11, p. 28f
  7. ^ "CHE-Spitzenplatz für Jacobs University". http://uni-protokolle.de/nachrichten/id/216038/. 
  8. ^ www.jacobs-university.de/undergraduate-admission
  9. ^ www.jacobs-university.de/news/sciencepark_kick-off

External links