Kryvyi Rih National University

Kryvyi Rih National University
Криворізький національний університет
Established 2011 (1922 as Technic University)
Type Public
President Yuriy Vilkul
Rector Mycola Stupnik
Academic staff
900
Students 20,000
Location Kryvyi Rih, Ukraine
Campus urban
Colors
     
Website knu.edu.ua/

Kryvyi Rih University or officially the Kryvyi Rih National University (Ukrainian: Криворізький національний університет), colloquially known in Ukrainian as KNU (Ukrainian: Криворізький національний університет - КНУ) is located in Kryvyi Rih, one of the main industrial cities of Ukraine. Currently, its structure consists of seven faculties (academic departments) and five institutes. It was founded in 1922 as the Kryvyi Rih Evening Working College, and reorganized onto Kryvyi Rih Mining University. During the Soviet Union era, Kryvyi Rih University was one of the top professional universities in the USSR. In 2011 Cabinet of Ukraine founded Kryvyi Rih National University by uniting Technic University,[1] Pedagogical University, Economic Institute of Kyiv National Economic University and Department of the National Metallurgical Academy of Ukraine. It is ranked as one of the best universities in Ukraine in many rankings (see below).

History

In 1929 the college was converted into the evening working institution, and from 1931 in Kryvyi Rihv Mining Institute.

Next year in Kryvyi Rih was founded Institute of Vocational Training, reorganized in Pedagogical Institute. In the prewar period the institute has trained about 1,000 teachers. in 1999 on the basis of the State Pedagogical Institute was established Kryvyi Rih State Pedagogical University.

During World War II, being evacuated from 20 September 1941 to August 1944, Kryvyi Rih Mining Institute worked in Nizhny Tagil. In September 1944 Institute resumed classes for the students in the hometown. Increasing number of specialties, which prepared the engineering staff. Five teachers honored with the Lenin and State Prizes. Since 1994 the institute became charter Technical University.

The proclamation of the independence of Ukraine in 1991 brought about radical changes in every sphere of University life. In 2011 Cabinet of Ukraine founded Kryvyi Rih National University by uniting Mining Institute, Pedagogical University, Economic Institute of Kyiv National Economic University and Department of the National Metallurgical Academy of Ukraine.

Organisation and administration

Schools / Faculties

These are the 7[2] faculties into which the university is divided:

  • Mining Faculty
  • Geological and Environmental Faculty
  • Information Technologies Faculty
  • Mechanical Engineering Faculty
  • Building Faculty
  • Electrical Engineering Faculty
  • Transportation Faculty

Institutes

  • Research Mining Institute
  • Research Institute of Ecology and safety in the mining and metallurgical industry

Other institutes

Academics

KNU main campus building.

Foreign Partner Universities

The University currently maintains relations and, in some cases, student exchange programs with universities of forty countries;[3] a figure which includes a number of former republics of the Soviet Union and other countries which Ukraine traditionally, over the past 70 years prior to independence in 1991, did not have official bilateral relations with. A small selection of partner universities is displayed below.

Country University Country University
 Belarus Belarus State University  Vietnam Ho Chi Minh City University of Technology
 Morocco University of Hassan II Casablanca  Germany Ruhr University Bochum
 Germany Dresden University of Technology  Poland Silesian University of Technology
 Russia Moscow State Mining University  Poland Rzeszów University

Campus

Library

The library of KNU originated in 1922. The library holds over 1.7 million physical volumes. Library staff are making great efforts to promote reading. Regularly held book exhibitions, literature reviews, readers' conferences, thematic and literary evenings, book presentations, meetings with famous people in the city, including writers and journalists.

Notable alumni and faculty

Notable past faculty include Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Vilkul, Petro Dyminskyi, alumni are especially visible in soviet government of Ukraine and modern steel-mining industry.

References

External links

Coordinates: 47°54′20″N 33°24′05″E / 47.9055°N 33.4013°E