Coat of Arms of the University of Newcastle
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Latin: Universitas Novocastrium | |
Motto | "I look ahead" |
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Type | Public |
Established |
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Chancellor | Paul Jeans |
Vice-Chancellor | Caroline McMillen |
Visitor | Governor of New South Wales |
Academic staff
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1,066 |
Administrative staff
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1,477 |
Students | 39,131 |
Undergraduates | 24,445 |
Postgraduates | 8,150 |
Other students
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4,597 |
Location |
Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia 32°53′34″S 151°42′16″E / 32.89278°S 151.70444°ECoordinates: 32°53′34″S 151°42′16″E / 32.89278°S 151.70444°E |
Campus | Urban |
Colours | Maroon and White |
Affiliations | Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, Association of Commonwealth Universities |
Website | www |
University rankings | |
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University of Newcastle, Australia | |
QS World | 245 |
THE-WUR World | 201-250 |
ARWU World | 301-400 |
USNWR World | 313= |
CWTS Leiden World | 387 |
Australian rankings | |
QS National | 11 |
THE-WUR National | 9= |
USNWR National | 14= |
CWTS Leiden National | 12 |
ERA National | 11 |
The University of Newcastle (UoN), informally known as Newcastle University, is an Australian public university established in 1965. It has a primary campus in Callaghan, a suburb of Newcastle, New South Wales. The university also operates campuses in Ourimbah, Port Macquarie, Singapore and the central business districts of Newcastle and Sydney.
Historically, the University of Newcastle Medical School has implemented the problem-based learning system for its undergraduate Bachelor of Medicine program – a system later mandated for use by the Australian Medical Council throughout Australia. It pioneered use of the Undergraduate Medicine and Health Sciences Admission Test (UMAT) in the early 1990s. UMAT has since been accepted widely by different medical schools across Australia as an additional selection criteria.
The University of Newcastle is a member of Universities Australia and the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business.
In 2015 Times Higher Education ranked the University of Newcastle number 2 in Australia and number 30 in the world for universities under 50 years of age.
The earliest origins of the present-day University of Newcastle can be traced to the Newcastle Teachers College (est. 1949) and Newcastle University College (NUC, est. 1951). NUC was created as an offshoot of the New South Wales University of Technology (now known as the University of New South Wales) and was co-located with the Newcastle Technical College at Tighes Hill. At the time of its establishment, NUC had just five full-time students and study was restricted to engineering, mathematics and science. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Newcastle residents campaigned for NUC to be re-constituted as a university in its own right. The campaign was ultimately successful, with the University of Newcastle being established as an autonomous institution on 1 January 1965 by gubernatorial proclamation under the University of Newcastle Act 1964 (NSW). The new university was granted a heraldic coat of arms by the College of Arms in London, an event seen by many in the community as signifying the new institution's independence. In 1966, the University relocated from Tighes Hill to a largely undeveloped bushland site in Shortland. As enrolments grew, the University embarked on a major building program and redeveloped the Shortland site into the Callaghan campus, named for Sir Bede Callaghan, foundation member of the University council and chancellor from 1977 to 1988.