National University of Sciences and Technology (Pakistan)
National University of Sciences and Technology | |
---|---|
Motto | Defining Futures |
Established | 1991 |
Type | Public |
Chancellor | Prime Minister of Pakistan |
Rector | Muhammad Asghar |
Academic staff | 817[1] |
Students | 7196 |
Undergraduates | 6259 |
Postgraduates | 937 |
Location | Islamabad, Pakistan |
Campus | Multi-campus |
Affiliations | PEC, HEC |
Website |
www |
National University of Sciences and Technology, commonly known by its acronym NUST, is a public research university in Pakistan. Initially, NUST was founded by the government of Pakistan in 1981 to train members of the Pakistani Armed Forces after merging established military institutes and colleges.[2] The university was chartered in 1993.[2][3][4] NUST is a multi-school university with its headquarters formerly located in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. In 2008, the headquarters were shifted to the newly constructed campus in Islamabad. Other campuses are situated in Karachi, Rawalpindi and Risalpur.
NUST is deemed to be among the very best institutions of Pakistan and the world. QS has been including NUST in the list of top 500 universities of the world since 2007. In 2014 the university stood at 129th rank in Asian universities as ranked by QS World ranking. Times Higher Education of UK which is considered to produce the most influential ranking lists has listed NUST among the top 100 universities from BRICS and Emerging Economies. [5]Scimago Institution Rankings has ranked NUST 280th in the world for Innovative Knowledge and 358th globally for Technological Impact. [6] The university is co-educational, established to promote higher scientific education in the country especially in the field of sciences and technology. It offers undergraduate and postgraduate degrees leading to Ph.D in the fields of engineering, information technology, medical sciences, and management sciences. NUST is affiliated with Pakistan Engineering Council and Higher Education Commission Pakistan.[7]
History
After the independence of Pakistan in 1947, the training of military corpsmen became one of the top priorities of the new Government. In 1947, Military College of Signals was established as School of Signals. A year later, in 1948, Military College of Engineering (MCE) was established at Sialkot to train the corps in the field of engineering. In 1951, MCE was given the status of college and was shifted to its present location in Risalpur. On 1 April 1957, College of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering (CEME) was established at Quetta as EME School and a few years later in 1962 PNEC was established in Karachi.
To train the members of the Pakistan Air Force, the College of Aeronautical Engineering (CAE) was established at Korangi Creek, Karachi in 1965. In 1969, EME School was given the status of college and civilians were admitted. In 1976, the College of Medical Sciences was established as the Army Medical College (AMC) and a year later in 1977 the first MBBS course started there. In the same year the School of Signals was upgraded to a college. In 1981 a BSc program started at CEME giving it the status of a university and a few years later in April 1984 CEME moved to its current location in Rawalpindi from Quetta. In May 1986, CAE was shifted to the PAF Academy in Risalpur.
NUST was established in 1991 by pooling together military and civil educational resources. After its development, existing military schools and colleges became constituent colleges of NUST. The first college to be affiliated with NUST was MCS in 1991. In 1993, the university was granted a charter and CEME and MCE became part of the university. In December 1994 and November 1995, CAE and PNEC became constituents of NUST respectively. All the constituent colleges were upgraded, in September 1997 MS program was started at CAE, in 1998 MS program was started at PNEC and in the same year Bachelor of Dental Surgery was started at AMC. In 1999, CEME and CAE attained ISO 9001 Certification, School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences (SEECS) was launched in Islamabad, and NUST Business School (then known as NIMS) was established.
In 2003, CEME received ISO 9001-2000 certification. In the same year, the Center for Cyber Technology and Spectrum Management was launched in Islamabad. In May 2004, the Center for Advanced Mathematics and Physics was created. A Ph.D program started at CEME in 2006. In 2007, the Center of Virology and Immunology was developed to increase research in the field of medical sciences in Pakistan. In 2008, a new campus was developed in Islamabad. Some old colleges are being shifted to this campus and new schools are being developed such as School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, School of Chemical and Materials Engineering, School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, and Research Center for Modeling and Simulation. In 2012, NUST renamed NUST Center of Virology & Immunology as Atta ur Rahman School of Applied Biosciences to honor Prof. Atta ur Rehman.
Academics
Profile
NUST is the first model university established by the Ministry of Science and Technology like KAIST of Korea.[2] The student body consists of 7,000+ students, including 102 international students and 884 postgraduate students. In 2009, 34,000 candidates applied for the undergraduate program at NUST. NUST has 675 full-time employed faculty staff including 17 members from international universities, and many professors and lecturers are a part of visiting faculty of NUST. In addition to this, professors from universities around the world visit NUST under collaborative arrangements.
The majority of the faculty members are PhD and M.Phil professors from universities around the world. A large number of sponsored students and faculty members, doing their PhD abroad, are scheduled to return to NUST from 2008 onwards which will further increase the number of PhD professors in the faculty.
Admission
Admission to engineering undergraduate courses in NUST is granted through written entrance examinations. NUST written test commonly known as NUST Entry Test (NET) is a MCQ style test. The test is held three times a year. A student can attempt the admissino test for all three times, however only the highest score would be counted for admission.[8] Admission to medical, business, master and PhD programs is based primarily on an interview along with a written test in most cases. The basic requirement for admission in undergraduate program is FSc Pre-Engineering or Pre-Medical from any Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education or any equivalent qualification (like Overseas High School Certificate, British Advanced Level of Certificate, International Baccalaureate etc.). Minimum 60% marks is required in each Matriculation and FSc/Equivalent Exam. Students can also apply on the basis of their SAT scores, however there are reserved seats for admissions on the basis of SAT scores. NUST has reserved seats in most of the disciplines for students applying from abroad. International students can apply only on the basis of their SAT I and SAT II scores. There is no age limit for admission to NUST.
Financial aid is offered to bright students who are financially handicapped and from underrepresented areas. Financial incentives for the high achievers in undergraduate programs is awarded to about 25% of students on performance and need basis. Students who secure top positions in each discipline in the NUST admission test are not required to pay any tuition fee during first semester on joining in that discipline. Remaining students in discipline are given financial assistance worked out as per their merit for first semester on joining. Apart from that the students who maintains a GPA of 3.5 and above in subsequent semesters get financial assistance within the range of 15-75% of their tuition fees. Students directly admitted in PhD program in IT related disciplines are given scholarships from Endowment Fund and Mega Project Fund.
Research
A Research and Development (R&D) Directorate is established at the NUST headquarters which encourages the growth of research in the university. All efforts of R&D Directorate are coordinated through an organizational structure consisting of NUST headquarters, R&D Cells at each constituent college, and NUST's commercial arms (Technology Incubation Center and NUST Consulting).[9][10]
R&D cells
Each college, institute, and center has an R&D Cell headed by a PhD qualified faculty member who co-ordinates, monitors and records all the R&D activities of the college. The head coordinates all the activities among departments, faculty members, researchers, students, and industries identifying potential projects and sources of funds.
NUST Consulting
NUST Consulting helps researchers undertake consultancy services with external agencies. In this regard, all centers are involved with NC to improve efficiency, reduce of wastage, increase productivity, and improve quality.[9]
Technology Incubation Center
NUST has established a Technology Incubation Center with an aim to combine industrial development and technological research together and establish the linkages between institutes and the industry. TIC will also help faculty members in identifying the end users apart from commercializing of R&D output.[10]
University research journals
The university publishes the following journals:[11]
- NUST Journal of Engineering Sciences, ISSN: 2070-9900
- NUST Journal of Business and Economics, ISSN: 2073-994X
- NUST Journal of Natural Sciences, ISSN: 2072-4659
- Pakistan Armed Forces Medical Journal, ISSN: 0030-9648
- TECHNOCRAT - Journal of Science and Technology, ISSN: 1728-5690
University-industry linkages
The new campus established in Islamabad is co-located with Tech Town in Sector I-12, where IT and electronics related industries and Technology Parks are planned to be set up, so as to promote university and industry linkages.[10] Apart from this, NUST is providing training and consultancy services to the industry and other business organizations.[10]
NUST has also bought lab equipment needed for doctoral and postdoctoral research work, with financing through Islamic Development Bank (IDB). IDB has provided 26 US$ as grant for buying the services of researchers from abroad, over and above the programs of Ministry of Science and Technology, Pakistan.[12]
Rankings and quality assurance
According to a survey, NUST is the most popular choice for engineering students in Pakistan.[13] Google Trends show that NUST is the most searched Pakistani university ever since 2004 outranking some of the famous international universities as Sabanci University of Turkey. [14][15]
Year | AsiaWeek (Asia) | Higher Education Commission, HEC (Pakistan) |
---|---|---|
2000 | 20[16] | |
2007 | 2[4] | |
2010 | 2 (Engineering & Technology)[17] | |
6 (Overall)[18] | ||
2013 | 1 (General Universities: Large)[19] |
Scimago Institutions Rankings
Report Year | SCImago Report Period[20] | Research Output | World Rank | Regional Rank | Country rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | |||||
2010 | 2004-08 | 890 | 1909 | 590 | 6 |
2011 | 2005-09 | 1196 | 1779 | 548 | 6 |
2012 | 2006-10 | 1443 | 1689 | 515 | 5 |
2013 | 2007-11 | 1770 | 1568 | 480 | 6 |
QS World University Rankings
Year | QS World University Rankings[21] | Arts & Humanities | Natural Sciences | Engineering & IT | Social Sciences | Life Sciences |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2007 | 470 | 463 | 394 | 355 | 445 | 387 |
2008 | 376 | 292 | ||||
2009 | 350 | 260 | 285 | 293 | ||
2010 | 366 | 274 | 274 | 301-350 | ||
2011 | 401-450 | 230 | ||||
2012 | 401-450 | 324 | ||||
2013 | 481-490 | |||||
2014 | 481-490 | 398 |
Webometrics World University Rankings
Year | World Rank | Country Rank | South Asian Rank |
---|---|---|---|
2014 | 2133 | 3 | 22 |
Times Higher Education Rankings
Year | World Rank | BRICS and Emerging Economies Rank | Asian Universities Rank |
---|---|---|---|
2014-2015 | NA | 95 | TBA |
NUST was the first university in Pakistan to achieve ISO 9000 certification. The constituent colleges that have been certified for ISO Quality Management System include College of Aeronautical Engineering, Military College of Engineering, College of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering, Pakistan Navy Engineering College and College of Telecommunication.[1] NUST won two gold and a silver medal out of three gold and three silver medals awarded by the Pakistan Engineering Council for 2005, 2006 and, 2007 for Best Graduate of the Year Award.[1] NUST faculty members won seven awards, including President's Gold Medal, Best Researcher, Distinguished Scientist and Best University Teacher awards during 2007.[1]<<<<qq
Campus
NUST is a multi-campus university, with the headquarters located in Islamabad. Campuses of NUST are located in the following cities:
Rawalpindi
Army Medical College (AMC):
AMC is also known as the College of Medical Sciences and is located on Abid Majid Road in Rawalpindi. Separate computer labs are available for both post-graduate and undergraduate students. Other facilities in the campus include a library, cafeteria, college mosque, swimming pool, gym, squash court, and auditorium. There are seven hostels for male and female students near the college campus.
College of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering (CEME):
Located on Grand Trunk Road in Rawalpindi, EME is the largest constituent college of NUST. The campus includes all on-campus facilities, auditorium and conference hall, accommodation and mess facilities. The library is fully computerized, with a collection of 70,000 volumes.
Sports facilities at EME includes three tennis courts, a basketball court, a squash court, a badminton court, football ground, cricket pitch and a gymnasium.
Military College of Signals (MCS):
Located on Hamayun Road in Rawalpindi Cantt, it is the oldest constituent college of NUST, founded in 1947 after the independence of Pakistan to train the members of Pakistan Armed Forces. The College of Telecommunication Engineering is located on this campus. The MCS library is computerized, with over 55,000 volumes.
Risalpur
College of Aeronautical Engineering (CAE):
The college comprises four departments; Aerospace Engineering Department, Avionics Department, Industrial Engineering Department, and Humanities and Sciences Department.
Aerospace Engineering Department has five major labs; aerodynamics lab, structure lab, propulsion and heat transfer lab, material science lab, and numerical analysis lab. Avionics Department has six labs which include guidance lab, navigation and control system lab, antennal lab, communication lab, radar, microwave and digital system lab, and embedded system lab.
The campus is equipped with a library, auditorium, conference hall, dining facilities, and hostel facilities. The college library has a collection of 80,000 technical and reference books. Sports facilities at the campus include table tennis, badminton, basketball, tennis, volleyball, football, hockey, and cricket.
Military College of Engineering (MCE):
College of Civil Engineering and National Institute of Transportation are located in this campus. MCE is one of the oldest constitute colleges of NUST, founded in 1948. The campus houses laboratories, a computer center, library with 41,000 books, sports facilities, and hostels.
Karachi
Pakistan Navy Engineering College (PNEC)
The college campus is spread over an area of about 75 acres (300,000 m2) comprising the administration block, four academic blocks, postgraduate studies center, labs and workshops, professional development center, an auditorium, a mosque, a dispensary, hostel and dining facilities. The campus is home to the Computer Aided Designing and Manufacturing Center and the Professional Development Center.
The campus has a library. A section known as the "Book Bank" stocks used textbooks, loaning them out to undergraduate students for a whole semester, charging 10% of the original cost of the book. The campus offers undergraduate courses in Electrical,Mechanical and Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering.The students of PNEC are one of the finest Engineers in Pakistan and have a high demand both inside and outside of the Country.
Islamabad
Sector H-12 Campus:
The campus in Sector H-12 Islamabad was initiated in 2008. Besides NUST Headquarters, the schools and institutes that were relocated to this campus include School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, NUST School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, School of Chemical and Materials Engineering, Research Center for Modeling and Simulation, School of Natural Sciences (formerly known as Center for Advanced Mathematics and Physics), Atta-ur-Rehman School of Applied Bio-sciences, School of Art Design and Architecture, NUST Business School), Professional Development Center, Technology Incubation Center, Marketing and Industrial Relations Organization, NUST Publishing, and NUST Outreach and Talent Hunt Initiative.
The campus is spread over 707 acres (2.86 km2) of land.[1] Sports facilities such as cricket, volleyball courts, basketball, soccer and squash courts are present while hockey stadium and tennis courts are under construction. Hostels for both male and female students are present inside the campus. Facilities in the hostels include badminton courts, basketball, and gymnasiums. Some hostel rooms have attached baths while others have community baths. Various cafeterias are constructed in the campus to facilitate the students, along with a tailor shop, a barber shop and various bakeries and shopping marts. Separate housing facility for the university staff is also present in the campus. It has been announced that in the near future, the campus will also have a 500 bed hospital, a lake, a separate central gymnasium, and a technology park.[23]
Foreign collaborations
International universities
NUST has developed collaborations with international universities to ensure two-way flow of knowledge. The universities with which NUST has developed collaborations in the include Stanford University, Iowa State University, University of Michigan, University of Central Florida, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, CALTECH, Cranfield University, University of Manchester, University of West England, University of Southampton, University of Surrey, Charles Darwin University, University of Melbourne, University of New South Wales, University of Queensland, Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Nanjing University, and Beijing Institute of Technology. Universities from Japan (AGU, Tokyo Institute of Technology), Denmark (DTU), Germany and France are also part of NUST international collaboration.[1]
NUST has collaborations with universities in the field of medical sciences, such as Harvard University Medical School, New York Medical College, Virginia Cancer Institute, King's College London (University of London), Queen Mary, University of London, Imperial College London, University of New South Wales, University of Sydney, University of Queensland, Edith Cowan University, and University of Dublin (Trinity College, St. James Hospital, School of Pharmacy) of Ireland.[1]
Quality networks and associations
NUST is amember of the International Network for Quality Assurance Agencies in Higher Education (INQAAHE)[24] and Asia-Pacific Quality Network (APQN).[25] NUST has also been granted the membership of Association of Commonwealth Universities[26] and International Association of Universities.[1][27]
Other entities
NUST has the following international collaborations:[1]
- Collaboration with CERN since December 2001. NUST has been awarded Associate Membership of CERN.
- Collaboration with Caltech on a project titled 'Interactive Grid Analysis Environment'. Research funding of US$ 0.18 million has been approved under Pak-US collaboration for this project.
- Collaboration with Stanford University since February 2004 in a project titled 'Measurement and Analysis for the Global Grid and Internet End-to-End Performance (MAGGIE)'. Research funding of US$ 0.162 Million has been approved under Pak-US collaboration for this project.
- NUST Institute of Information Technology (formerly NIIT) has been declared Microsoft Authorized Academic Training Program Institute (AATPI) by Microsoft Corporation, USA.
- Intel Corporation has established a computer lab at SEECS.
- NCR Corporation has established their Data warehouse and Data mining lab at SEECS.
- IBM has registered NUST on worldwide offering for higher education to selected universities.
Student life
The institute offers opportunities for students to participate in technical and professional societies. Study trips to industries and organizations are arranged, guest speakers from institutes and industry are invited and seminars and workshops are held. Sports facilities are available in all campuses.
Student Bodies
Student run organizations, societies, and clubs are present in almost all the NUST campuses. These include Computer Society of Pakistan - NUST Chapter,NUST Community services club, NUST Volunteer Club, NUST Science Society, NUST Adventure Club, Literary Circle, Book Club, Fine Arts Club, Innovation and Entrepreneurship Society, Media (Photography) Club, Bazm-e-Pakistam, Innovation Society, Debating Society, Aeromodeling Club, NUST Environment Club, Telecom Society, Software Society, IT Club, Automobile Club and Sports Club. Deep Sea Diving and Sailing Club is available for the students of the Pakistan Navy Engineering College in Karachi.
Sports facilities
All the campuses have their own sports facilities. Courts for indoor games and activities such as table tennis, badminton, and squash are available in almost all campuses. Tennis, basketball and volleyball courts, hockey, football and cricket grounds are also present in all the main campuses. Some colleges have swimming pools and gymnasiums.
Student residence
Separate hostels for boys and girls are available in most colleges and is at various stages of completion in the rest. Students of CAE are provided separate accommodations, while students at MCS, CEME and AMC are placed in the newly constructed dormitories at the campus. Pakistan Navy Engineering College has sufficient hostel facilities for both male and female students.The H-12 campus of NUST also has separate hostels for boys and girls. These include Attar, Ghazali, Razi, Rumi hostels for boys and Fatima, Zainab and Ayesha hostels for girls.Dining and mess facilities are located in all campuses.
Notable Alumni
- Chaman Lalwani (IT Director at OvalOunce)
- Haris Ali ( Managing Director- Pakistan at Aircom International)
- Ammar Zaheer (Assistant Manager at Fauji Fertilizer Bin Qasim Limited)
- Ammar Khan ( Managing Director- Middle East at Nexus Telecom)
- Talha Khan ( Principal Engineer at Elastica Inc.)
- Yousef Khan (Software Engineer at Global Rescue)
- Muhammad Usman Mansha (Software Engineer at Global Rescue)
- Usama Qayyum (Regional Coordinator, MS/Operations at Nokia Siemens Networks)
- Ali Hussain (Malware Researcher at Ebryx (Pvt.) Ltd.)
- Asma Nisar (Associate Software Engineer at Globalrescue)
- Neelam Ejaz (Consultant at World Bank)
- Rizwan A. (Application Solutioning Leader at Hewlett Packard)
- Muzaffar Ahmed (Deputy Director Coordination and Management at Government of Pakistan)
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 "Where to Study". Top Universities. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2
- ↑ http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=141199
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 - Ranking of Higher Education Commission (HEC) Recognized Universities in Pakistan
- ↑ http://tribune.com.pk/story/851475/nust-makes-it-to-times-higher-education-top-100-universities/
- ↑
- ↑ "List of Accredited Engineering Programmes in Pakistan (Schedule First)". PEC. 2013-02-12. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- ↑ "NUST Entry TEST Paper Pattern and Format". Pakprep.com. 2015-02-18. Retrieved 2015-04-10.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 "NUST Consulting welcomes you". Nustconsulting.com. 2002-07-01. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 "Technology Incubation Center". NUST. Retrieved 2013-06-26.
- ↑ "University Journals". Nust.edu.pk. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- ↑ "FBISE's HSSC exams | NUST Convocation". Interface.edu.pk. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- ↑ "Top Colleges & Universities in Pakistan | 2013 University Web Rankings". 4icu.org. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- ↑ http://www.google.com/trends/explore#q=%2Fm%2F03x268%2C%20%2Fm%2F09l6fr%2C%20%2Fm%2F06gnh6%2C%20%2Fm%2F032ryk%2C%20%2Fm%2F03709f&cmpt=q
- ↑ http://www.google.com/trends/explore#q=%2Fm%2F03x268%2C%20%2Fm%2F03400z&cmpt=q
- ↑ "Country Listing". CNN. 22 June 2000. Retrieved 19 May 2010.
- ↑ http://www.hec.gov.pk/INSIDEHEC/DIVISIONS/QALI/OTHERS/RANKINGOFUNIVERSITIES/Pages/CategoryWise.aspx
- ↑ http://www.hec.gov.pk/InsideHEC/Divisions/QALI/Others/RankingofUniversities/Pages/TopTenUniversities.aspx
- ↑ http://www.thenews.com.pk/article-108140-HEC-announced-ranking-of-Pakistani-universities-2013
- ↑ "SIR - SCImago Institutions Rankings". Scimagoir.com. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- ↑ "Word universities ranking". Retrieved 2013-11-20.
- ↑ http://www.webometrics.info/en/Asia_Pacifico/South%20Asia
- ↑ "SADA". Nust.edu.pk. 2013-03-25. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- ↑ "NUST Memberships". National University of Sciences & Technology. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ↑ "Membership: View All Members". APQN. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- ↑ "Members in Pakistan". Association of Commonwealth Universities. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ↑ International Association of Universities. "International Association of Universities | Home | Building a worldwide higher education community". Unesco.org. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
External links
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