University of British Columbia Okanagan

University of British Columbia Okanagan

University of British Columbia coat of arms
Motto Latin: Tuum Est
Motto in English
It is Yours
It is up to you
Type Campus of University of British Columbia
(Public University)
Established 2005
President Santa J. Ono
Provost Cynthia Mathieson
Vice-Chancellor Deborah Buszard (deputy)
Principal Deborah Buszard (deputy)
Students 8,718
Undergraduates 7,930[1]
Postgraduates 788
Location Kelowna, Canada
Campus Suburban 516 acres (209 hectares)
Colours           Blue and Gold[2]
Nickname Heat
Affiliations AUCC, U Sports, CWUAA
Website https://ok.ubc.ca/

The University of British Columbia's Okanagan Campus (commonly referred to as UBCO) is a campus of the University of British Columbia, located in Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada. Home to approximately 8,410 undergraduate and graduate students, the 209 hectares (516-acre) Kelowna campus is located in the interior of the province, in British Columbia's scenic Okanagan Valley.[1]

History

Okanagan University College

The current site of UBC Okanagan was originally used by Okanagan University College, which had been founded in 1989 (in principle) as a part of a plan by the government to improve access to post-secondary education in the Southern Interior British Columbia. Originally degrees were awarded in partnership with other universities, but by 1995, the university college began granting degrees in its own name. In the late 1990s, Okanagan University College began lobbying efforts to gain full university status.

University of British Columbia

In December 2002 the British Columbia Progress Board submitted a report to the provincial government, recognising the need to expand post-secondary education in the Okanagan.[3] The board, chaired by then University of British Columbia president Martha Piper, recommended that the province extend “the mandate of an existing provincial University to Kelowna…”.

In March 2004, BC Premier Gordon Campbell and the UBC President Martha Piper held a press conference, announcing that OUC would be dissolved. Okanagan University College’s university operations would be consolidated at its North Kelowna Campus and would come under the control of the University of British Columbia. The other programs and campuses of Okanagan University College would form a new community college, which would later take on the name Okanagan College. The OUC Board was reportedly not invited to the press conference and had not been told in advance of the imminent demise of OUC Board and removal or the termination or the majority of the OUC board members.[4]

According to the Ministry backgrounder released at the time, the affiliation between UBC Vancouver and UBC Okanagan would be “based on the highly successful University of California model” and that “UBC Okanagan and UBC Vancouver will each have an independent senate to set academic priorities for their respective institutions, based regional needs and priorities. At the same time, they will share a common board of governors, with strong representation from each region.” [5]

As of December 2014, UBC's Okanagan campus is represented on the UBC Board of Governors by Jeffrey Krupa, Dr. Michael Treschow, and Shannon Dunn.[6]

Academics

UBC’s Okanagan campus offers a wide range of undergraduate and graduate (PhD & Masters) programs. There are more than 63 undergraduate programs[7] in Arts, Education, Engineering, Fine Arts, Human Kinetics, Management, Media, Medicine, Nursing, and Sciences.[8] The university also offers graduate programs in the following areas: Biology, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Chemistry, Computer Sciences, Education, Engineering, English, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Fine Arts, Interdisciplinary Graduate Studies, Management, Mathematics, Medical Physics, Nursing, Psychology, and Social Work.[9]

The smaller size of the university offers a unique learning and research environment. Undergraduate students in Science and Engineering have more opportunities to pursue research activities early-on thanks to various research programs such as the Work-Study program and the Undergraduate Research Award (URA).

Campus

Charles Fipke Centre for Innovative Research
Engineering, Management and Education (EME) Complex
Adding a 3rd Floor to the Science building

As of 2011 UBC's Okanagan campus underwent a rapid CA$450 million expansion.

The University Centre, was completed in 2009. The 75,000 sq. ft. facility features several UBC Okanagan departments, UBC Students’ Union Okanagan offices, meeting rooms, student club space, cafeteria and restaurants, cinema, multi-faith space, a medical clinic, learning centers, and Collegia.

The $31.5 million Charles E. Fipke Centre for Innovative Research is a multi-purpose academic and research facility. It provided 70,000 square feet of space for teaching and research, including research labs, classrooms and teaching labs, offices, student commons, lecture theatre, and an animal care facility. The building also achieved Five Green Globes and LEED Platinum standards for sustainability using geo-exchange technology.

Arts and Sciences building and Engineering and management building were completed in 2011 as well. The most recently completed building is the medical school building which was completed by end of the year 2011. The second Arts and Science building includes a new live animal testing facility. In addition, there are various student residences in various stages of construction. All construction was originally set to be complete by September 2010, later projected to be completed about a year and a half past that date.

The expansion of UBC Faculty of Medicine created a new distributed medical site, the Southern Medical Program, at UBC Okanagan. The program is located in the Kelowna General Hospital. The Southern Medical Program opened 32 seats for its first cohort of medical students at UBC Okanagan on August 29, 2011.

In 2012, the Health Science Centre was opened providing 47,000 sq. ft. of academic and research space for high-tech classrooms, research and teaching laboratories, problem-based learning rooms and faculty and administrative offices.

Along with the physical expansion of the campus, the campus' Collegia program has gained national attention as a home-away-from-home for its large commuter population.[10]

According to the UBC Okanagan Campus Plan in Sept. 2015,[11] the next 20 years will see drastic expansion in research, teaching, student residence, and commercial spaces. A proposed 85,292-square metre increase in academic space will more than double the current capacity. Student residence is proposed to increase by ~2,200 beds to a total of ~3,900 beds. Commercial space will increase from current 2,411 square metres to 4,561 square metres. The additional space will remain within the main Okanagan campus, rather than expanding into the West Campus.

In 2016, the building of a new $40 million Teaching and Learning Centre is underway that expands on the current UBC Okanagan Library. Sustainability upgrades to 11 of the existing buildings are also underway. The public consultation to redesign the current University Way is planned for January 2017. The revitalization of the University Way project will make it a pedestrian only area and is expected to facilitate greater student interactions, festivals and interactions.

Student life

The university maintains a "Campus Life" centre and other offices.

Student residences
A view looking down through the residences.
UBC Okanagan Library
UBC Okanagan Library

Greek life

The Okanagan campus currently has two sororities and one fraternity. The sororities are Theta Phi and Alpha Omega Epsilon. The Fraternity is Sigma Phi Delta. Alpha Omega Epsilon and Sigma Phi Delta are both International Organizations and have membership restrictions based upon faculty (Engineering students for Sigma Phi Delta,[12] Engineering and Technical Science[13] students for Alpha Omega Epsilon). Theta Phi is a local sorority open to all faculties.[14] The Okanagan campus does not allow Greek housing, so none of these organisations have an official house or room on campus.

Campus media

The Phoenix

The Phoenix (website), is the bi-weekly student newspaper at the University of British Columbia's Okanagan campus. It was established in 1989 at former Okanagan College.[15]

UBCO.TV

The UBCO.TV creates videos about research, teaching, current events and campus life at the Okanagan campus. Videos are available on the UBCO.TV website.

Statistics

Full time faculty

Faculty 2005 2006 2007 2008 2014 2015[16]
Applied Science (School of Eng.) 3 10 17 26 42
Barber School of Arts & Sciences 108 113 124 129
Creative & Critical Studies 47 48 50 53
Education 15 15 14 18
Health & Social Development 40 35 39 38
Management 1 1 5 11
TOTAL 214 222 249 275 445 470

Full-time equivalent students

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2013 2014 2015
Undergraduate 2,811 3,278 4,073 5,325 6,015 7,075 7,901 7,748 7,530 7,668
Graduate 19 77 155 220 337 531 710 640 682 724
Totals 2,829 3,451 4,228 5,545 7,352 8,606 8,643 8,388 8,212 8,392

Faculties and Schools

See also

References

  1. 1 2 University of British Columbia
  2. "UBC's Colours: Blue & Gold". University of British Columbia. Retrieved November 17, 2012.
  3. British Columbia Progress Board report (pdf) December 2002
  4. Kelly Hayes, "UBC Taking Over OUC," http://www.castanet.net/news/Kelowna/210/UBC-Taking-Over-OUC
  5. Office of the Premier Ministry of Advanced Education (March 17, 2004). "Backgrounder: UBC Okanagan and Okanagan College". Retrieved March 30, 2017.
  6. http://bog.ubc.ca/?page_id=3003
  7. "UBC Okanagan Academic Experience".
  8. "UBCO undergraduate programs".
  9. "UBCO graduate programs".
  10. Applying knowledge – Macleans OnCampus
  11. "UBC Okanagan campus plan 2015".
  12. "About Sigma Phi Delta". About Us. Retrieved June 3, 2011.
  13. "Alpha Omega Epsilon History". History. Retrieved June 3, 2011.
  14. "Theta Phi Sorority General Information". Theta Phi Sorority General Information. Retrieved June 6, 2011.
  15. The Phoenix – About us
  16. "UBC Facts and Figures" (PDF).
Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of British Columbia.

Coordinates: 49°56′23″N 119°23′47″W / 49.9396°N 119.3963°W / 49.9396; -119.3963

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.