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Aarhus University

  
Information about the city, attractions, facilities and the Faculties of the university. ... During the spring, the Danish University Extension in Aarhus is offering a series of ...
http://www.au.dk/en

Aarhus University - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  
Aarhus University (in Danish, Aarhus Universitet), located in the city of Århus, Denmark, ... Aarhus University was founded on 11 September 1928 as Universitetsundervisningen ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aarhus_University

University of Aarhus

  
Information om alle institutter og uddannelser ved Danmarks næststørste universitet
http://www.au.dk/

Profil - Aarhus Universitet 08/09_UK

  
Compared with other universities, Aarhus University stands out in two particular respects. ... DOLPHINs FROM AARHUs UNIvERsITy sEAL FOLDED IN DNA ORIGAMI A group of resear 18 ...
http://www.e-pages.dk/aarhusuniversitet/8/

Aarhus University Press:

  
From a variety of theoretical viewpoints, twelve brilliant scholars have come together to ... Aarhus University Press · Aarhus · Copenhagen · Phone +45 8942 5370 ...
http://www.unipress.dk/en-gb/Item.aspx?sku=1291

Aarhus University Press: Staff

  
Iben Stampe Sletten. Editor. Aarhus University Press Copenhagen. Telephone: +45 8888 9886 ... Aarhus University Press · Aarhus · Copenhagen · Phone +45 8942 5370 ...
http://www.unipress.dk/en-gb/Staff.aspx

Mergers – a response to global challenges

  
Aarhus University's strategy. AARHUS UNIVERSITY. IMHE-NUS conference Reykjavik 05-06-08 ... AARHUS UNIVERSITY. IMHE-NUS conference Reykjavik 05-06-08. Rector ...
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/47/33/41056185.pdf

Category:Århus - Wikimedia Commons

  
English: Aarhus is the second largest city in Denmark and located in central ... Aarhus University (2 C, 4 F) [+] Aerial photographs of Århus (3 F) ...
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AARHUS UNIVERSITET

  
Aarhus University has decided to issue this statement in response to a num ... pital and Aarhus University (AU) under the direction of Dr. Poul Thorsen. ...
http://www.rescuepost.com/files/thorsen-aarhus.pdf

Library of the Aarhus School of Business

  
Public research library specializing in business economics and business language. In Danish and English.
http://www.lib.hha.dk/
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 Questions 'n' Answers about 'Aarhus University' Opens New Window.

Q.Does anyone know of any good hotels in Aarhus, Denmark, near the Aarhus University?Related Search:
Denmark
 For 4 people. Thanks
A.The University has its own guest house on campus, here: [Link] / But if you want a proper hotel, then the Radisson SAS isn't too far: [Link]  (although by all means have a browse on [Link] /) Here is a map of Aarhus: [Link]  Here is a map of the University buildings: [Link] 
  

Q.Accommodation at University of Aarhus, Denmark?Related Search:
Higher Education (University )
 Hi, Im going in August and i wonder if anyone has any experience of the different student halls of residence offered, and your opinions about them?Thanks Moonwing, do you know which ones she sayed in? Thanks for your help :)
A.My cousin went and she loved the residence halls
  

Q.What is the proportion of babies born prematurely statistics question.?Related Search:
Mathematics
 For 5459 pregnant women using Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark in a two year period who reported information on length of gestation until birth, the mean was 281.9 days, with standard deviation 11.4 days. A baby is classified as premature if the gestation time is 258 days or less. If the gestation times are normally distributed, what's the proportion of babies born prematurely?
A.n = 5459 m = 281.9 SD = 11.4 x = 258 z = (x - m)/SD z = (258 - 281.9)/11.4 z = -2.096 ~ -2.1 We use a table for one-tailed area of the standard curve, because we want to know percent until -2.1, in one of tails. -2.2 cuts off the lower 0.018 or 1.8 percent of the standard curve. Percent of babies born prematurely is 1.8 %. Proportion of babies born prematurely is: 0.018 or 0.018*5459 / 5459 = 98 babies of 5459
  

Q.Can you attend college part-time in Sweden or Denmark?Related Search:
Higher Education (University )
 I would be an international guest or non-exchange student wanting to take a couple classes during one semester. Is that possible? I haven't found any specific information about part-time studies on the universities' websites. I am specifically looking at University of Copenhagen, Lund University, and Aarhus University.
A.There are lots of part time courses in Swedish universities. Most of them are taught in Swedish though, so if you want to study courses taught in English I'm not sure how much you will find. Probably you will find some, at least. Try finding the answers you want at [Link] /
  

Q.University in Denmark?Related Search:
Higher Education (University )
 HI, I am planning to study a year out of my degree course in English (Literature and Language) and Linguistics in Denmark, in the University of Aarhus. I was wondering about any experiences of studying in Denmark, or Aarhus, particularly in the fields of arts and humanities. If possible, could you offer some contrasts or comparrisons between the two university systems? I am wondering if it could be more difficult etc. Thank-you.
A.Hi there, I can't really help you with a comparison as I haven't been to Canada (yet) and I didn't study humanistics. However, I did study in Aarhus for 5 years for my masters of political science, and it's a very nice city and a very nice university. At political science, the rule was more that you have few hours a week for classes (maybe 6-8 hours), but then you where expected to read A LOT at home, which meant about 30 hours of preparation per week. At Law and at French, I know the opposite was the situation: you had little home work (but had to remember all of it for the exam) but maybe 20-25 hours of classes per week - so check the programme offered for English/linguistics. Otherwise, student life is quite relaxed. You call the professor by first name and they are usually available outside classes as well. You are usually expected to show up for the first/first 2 classes (unless it says anything else in the class description) to keep your place, grades are depending on the exam alone and not attendancy - however, this might be different for languages where the grade could depend on assignments such as translations/grammatics etc throughout the semester. You would probably also be required to do a presentation during semester - either individually or in a group. In Aarhus, the faculties are located very close to each other, which gives it a more "campus-like" atmosphere, which you cannot really say about Copenhagen (if that would be an alternative for you), where the university is spread out all over the city. Aarhus is very much a students' city, has a good nightlife and a lot to offer outside the class rooms, shopping, culture, cafés, cinema, nature, sports etc (nearest beach is 10 minutes away from the English department, so you will have a nice place to study for your exams - if the weather is warm enough :-)) Not sure how your Danish is, but you should probably think of learning some while you are there; I admit it's quite difficult as a foreign language, but it can be done. Otherwise, the Danes begin English classes at the age of 9-10, so it shouldn't be a problem finding someone who could translate for you if ever needed. Registration offices, doctors, banks etc. all speak English. I wish you the best of luck and hope you will love Aarhus as much as I do!
  

Q.Stressed women ' are more likely to have a baby girl'?Related Search:
Pregnancy
 The study is the first to link everyday stress to a baby's sex and bucks the trend for more boys to be born than girls. Researchers matched the gender of more than 6,000 babies with information on their mother's stress levels at the start of her pregnancy, including sleep quality, confidence and ability to cope with everyday tasks. Results revealed that those judged to be stressed were five per cent more likely to have a girl than those deemed relaxed. In contrast, women in Western nations, including the UK, generally give birth to more boys than girls, with 105 boys typically born for every 100 girls. Past studies have also shown the number of boys being born goes down following major political and social upheaval. Writing in the medical journal Human Reproduction, the team from the University of Aarhus in Denmark, said it is unclear why stress skews the sex ratio of babies born, as the gender of a baby is determined by chromosomes in the father's sperm. However, it is possible that high levels of stress hormones may make it more difficult for male embryos to implant and stressed women may be more likely to miscarry male babies. British fertility experts have warned that stress in the womb is linked to health problems in later life including high blood pressure, obesity and diabetes. Worrying during pregnancy may also stunt a child's intelligence.
A.Ok and your question is?
  
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Aarhus University
Aarhus Universitet
Seal of the University of Aarhus
Latin: Universitas Aarhusiensis
Motto Solidum petit in profundis (Latin)
Motto in English Seek a firm footing in the depths
Established 1928
Type Public university
Rector Lauritz Broder Holm-Nielsen
Staff 10,152 (Academic 5,829) (Technical and administrative 4,323)
Students 37,047
Doctoral students 740
Location Århus, Denmark Denmark
Affiliations EUA
Website www.au.dk

Aarhus University (in Danish, Aarhus Universitet), located in the city of Århus, Denmark, is Denmark's second oldest and second largest university (after the University of Copenhagen).

The university was founded in 1928 and has an annual enrollment of more than 37,000 students.

Aarhus University housed Denmark's first professor of sociology (Theodor Geiger, from 1938–1952)[1] and in 1997 professor Jens Christian Skou received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his discovery of the sodium-potassium pump.[2]

Contents

[edit] History

Aarhus University was founded on 11 September 1928 as Universitetsundervisningen i Jylland ("University Teaching in Jutland") with an enrollment of 64 students. Classrooms were rented from the Technical College and the teaching corps consisted of one professor of philosophy and four associate professors of Danish, English, German and French. Until then the University of Copenhagen was the only university in Denmark.[3] In 1934 the faculty of humanities got state accreditation, state funding and the right to conduct exams. Until that time students had to go to Copenhagen to complete their studies. In 1936 a faculty of economics and law was created, in 1942 the faculty of divinity was created and the faculty of science was created in 1954.

The use of the name Aarhus Universitet began in 1933. Even though the name of the city, Århus, has been spelled with Å since the reform of Danish orthography in 1948, the name of the university insists on the old spelling with Aa. The official English translation of the name is Aarhus University (formerly, The University of Aarhus).

The entire campus was designed by the late C.F. Møller, whose firm, C.F. Møller Architects, has remained in charge of its further development, including its most recent additions: five new auditoria, completed in 2001.[4]

[edit] British air strike during World War II

Memorial plaque in the main building for the ten workers killed during the airstrike in 1944 and two workers killed during construction in 1941.

During the German occupation of Denmark in the Second World War the Gestapo had set up its regional headquarters in two dormitories on the campus. At request of the Danish resistance movement the Royal Air Force bombarded the campus on October 31st 1944, completely levelling the two dormitories to the ground. However one of the aircraft was hit by German guns and was forced to drop its bombs on the main building. The architect C. F. Møller was present in the main building during the air strike but survived and was later dug free from the rubble. However ten workers were killed during the bombardement.

It is said that the first thing C. F. Møller asked after his rescue was if "the arches had been destroyed", referring to the masonry arches decorating the main building. He knew that if they had been destroyed there would not have been money for reconstruction. However the arches were not damaged and survive to this day.

The airstrike on the University of Aarhus took place in a heavily populated area and the campus was surrounded by two hospitals. To avoid civilian casualties the airstrike only took place after several months of intense training on a model of the campus.

[edit] Organization and administration

The university is governed by a board consisting of 13 members: 8 members recruited outside the university form the majority of the board, 2 members are appointed by the scientific staff, 1 member is appointed by the administrative staff, and 2 members are appointed by the university students. The Rector is appointed by the university board. The rector in turn appoints deans and deans appoint heads of departments. There is no faculty senate and faculty is not involved in the appointment of rector, deans, or department heads. Hence the university has no faculty governance. [5]


[edit] Faculties

The university is organised in eight faculties:

The state library on campus (Statsbiblioteket)
  1. The Faculty of Humanities (Det Humanistiske Fakultet), which has offered courses since 1928.
  2. The Faculty of Health Sciences, consisting of the former Faculty of Medicine (which began courses in basic medical subjects in 1933) and the former Dental School (added to the Faculty of Medicine in 1992, when the name was changed to the Faculty of Health Sciences).
  3. The Faculty of Social Sciences, consisting of the former Faculty of Economics and Law (established in 1936) and of Political Science and Psychology.
  4. The Faculty of Theology, established in 1942. Courses in theology had been offered from 1932, being previously taught at the Faculty of Arts.
  5. The Faculty of Science, which was established in 1954 by moving Physics and Chemistry from the then Faculty of Medicine and Geography from the then Faculty of Arts. Mathematics was established as a new subject, followed by Biology and Geology.
  6. The Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, formerly Danmarks JordbrugsForskning (DJF), which was amalgamated with the university in 2007.
  7. Aarhus School of Business, which was founded in 1939 and amalgamated with the university in 2007.
  8. The National Environmental Research Institute (NERI), which was amalgamated with the university in 2007.

[edit] Enrollment

Rear of the main building

As of 2007, the number of students is c. 35,000. Each year more than 900 international exchange students come to Aarhus University to study for one or two semesters.[6].

[edit] Student organizations

The largest student organizations at Aarhus University are the Student Union (Studenterrådet) and Studenterlauget. The Student Union represents the main student body at Aarhus University while Studenterlauget represents the students at Aarhus School of Business. Both the Student Union and Studenterlauget are represented on The University Board.[7] The Student Union also arranges annual concerts and seminars, and publishes the student magazine Delfinen (The Dolphin).

There are political students organizations at the university, the largest of which include the Social-Democratic Students (Frit Forum), Conservative Students (Konservative Studenter), and Liberal Students (Liberale Studerende). The Conservative Students union publishes the student magazine Critique. The Liberal Students union publishes the leaflet Minerva.

[edit] Campus

University Park

The campus master plan competition was won in 1931 by the collaborative scheme of Danish architects, Kay Fisker, C.F. Møller, and Poul Stegmann with landscape architect C. Th. Sørensen. The design hosts a wide variety of buildings over a large space, but each building is composed of the same yellow brick and roofing tile, giving the whole campus a unified look. Construction commenced in 1932 and has continued into the 21st century. It was one of the first Danish, functionalist, public buildings and has been included in the Ministry of Culture's canon of Danish architecture. C.F. Møller and his company continued alone on the campus after 1942.[4]

[edit] Ranking

The university is ranked 93 in the 2008 Shanghai Academic Ranking of World Universities among 17,000 universities in the world[8], and 126 in the world by THES- World University Ranking 2007[9].

Ranking (year) World Rank European Rank
THES - QS World University Rankings (2008)[10] 63
Academic Ranking of World Universities (08/2008)[11] 93
Professional Ranking of World Universities (2007)[12] -
THES - QS World University Rankings (2007)[13] 126
Web Ranking of European Universities (08/2008)[14] 134 30

The university is ranked number 63 in the 2009 THE–QS World University Rankings and ranked number 2 of universities in nordic countries in the same list An overview of the last years:

Year Rank (Change)
2005 138
2006 126 ( 12)
2007 114 ( 12)
2008 81 ( 33)
2009 63 ( 18)

[edit] Courses

Department of Mathematics
Department of Computer Science
Department of Physics and Astronomy

Aarhus University has both undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in the following subjects:

  • Aesthetic Subjects
  • Biology
  • Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian
  • Chemistry
  • Chinese
  • Classical Archaeology
  • Classical Philology
  • Cognitive Semiotics (EliteUddannelse)
  • Comparative Religion
  • Computer Science
  • Czech
  • Dentistry
  • Economics
  • Ethnography
  • European Studies
  • Geology
  • Greek
  • History
  • History of Ideas
  • Hungarian
  • Information Studies
  • Japanese
  • Latin
  • Law
  • Linguistics
  • Management
  • Mathematical Economics
  • Mathematics
  • Media Studies
  • Medicine
  • Medieval and Renaissance Archaeology
  • Modern Languages
  • Molecular Biology
  • Nanotechnology
  • Nordic Language and Literature
  • Philosophy
  • Physics and Astronomy
  • Political Science
  • Prehistoric Archaeology
  • Psychology
  • Russian
  • Scandinavian Studies
  • Semitic Philology
  • Sports Science
  • Statistics
  • Theology

[edit] Cheminova controversy and academic freedom at AAU

Aarhus University is the owner of the chemical manufacturer Cheminova, who controversially has been selling the methyl parathion pesticide to Brazil farmers.[15]

In 2009, senior researcher Mette Jensen emailed her colleagues at AAU, asking whether they thought Cheminova should stop selling the controversial pesticides. For this, the university threatened her with dismissal.[16]

The university's Pro-Vice-Chancellor Søren E. Frandsen denies that the university had made any mistakes or threatened the freedom of speech and academic freedom of its staff.[17]

[edit] Notable Alumni and Staff

[edit] Residence Halls

  • Bronzealdervænget
  • Børglum Kollegiet
  • Dania kollegiet
  • Grundtvigs Hus Kollegiet
  • Hejredal Kollegiet
  • Herredsvej
  • Kirsebærhaven
  • Kløvergården
  • Kollegierne i Universitetsparken
  • Ladegårdskollegiet
  • Nørre Alle Kollegiet
  • Ravnsbjerg Kollegiet
  • Rundhøjkollegiet
  • Skejbygårds Kollegiet
  • Skejbyparken
  • Skelager Kollegiet
  • Skjoldhøj Kollegiet
  • Skovkollegiet
  • Stenaldervej Kollegiet
  • Tandlægekollegiet
  • Teknologkollegiet
  • Vilhelm Kiers Kollegium

Kollegierne i Universitetsparken are located on campus; the other residence halls are spread all over the city.

[edit] Partner Universities

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 56°10′N 10°12′E / 56.167°N 10.2°E / 56.167; 10.2



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