Tuesday, 10 May 2016

Stanford University United States of America

Stanford University
United States of America

Stanford University has one of the largest campuses in the US and is one of the most prestigious universities in the world.

It was established in 1885 and opened six years later as a co-educational and non-denominational private institution.

Its location, less than an hour’s drive south of San Francisco next to Palo Alto, is in the heart of California’s Silicon Valley, and the university is known for its entrepreneurial spirit.

This entrepreneurialism has its roots in the aftermath of the Second World War, when the provost encouraged innovation, resulting in a self-sufficient industry that would become Silicon Valley.

By 1970, the university had a linear accelerator and hosted part of the early network that would become the technical foundation of the internet.

The main campus spans 8,180 acres and is home to almost all the undergraduates who study at the university.

There are 700 major university buildings housing 40 departments within the three academic schools and four professional schools, alongside 18 independent laboratories, centres and institutes.

Stanford counts 21 Nobel laureates within its community, and numerous famous alumni associated with the university from the worlds of business, politics, media, sport and technology.

The 31st president of the US, Herbert Hoover, was part of the very first class at Stanford, and received a degree in geology in 1895. Currently, Stanford is also one of the leading producers of US Congress members.

The alumni include 30 living billionaires, 17 astronauts, 18 Turing Award recipients and two Fields Medallists.

Google’s co-founders met at Stanford while pursuing doctorate degrees, although neither ultimately completed their theses.

In total, companies founded by Stanford affiliates and alumni generate more than $2.7 trillion annual revenue, which would be the 10th largest economy in the world. These companies include Nike, Netflix, Hewlett-Packard, Sun Microsystems, Instagram, Snapchat, PayPal and Yahoo.

The first American woman to go into space, Sally Ride, received an undergraduate degree in physics from Stanford in 1973. Just 10 years later, she made her ascent into space.

In the five years leading up to 2012, the university embarked on a challenge to raise more than $4 billion. The fundraising exceeded this target and concluded the campaign having raised $6.2 billion, which will be used for more faculty appointments, graduate research fellowships and scholarships, and construction on 38 new or existing campus buildings.

Some of the funds have already been used for large projects, including the world’s largest dedicated stem cell research facility, a new business school campus, a law school expansion, a new Engineering Quad, a campus concert hall and an art museum.

Unofficially, the Stanford motto is a German quotation “Die Luft der Freiheit weht”, which translates as “the wind of freedom blows”.

University of Oxford United Kingdom

University of Oxford

United Kingdom
The University of Oxford is the oldest university in the English-speaking world and the world’s second oldest surviving university. While its exact founding date is unknown, there is evidence that teaching took place as far back as 1096.
Located in and around Oxford’s medieval city centre, the university comprises 44 colleges and halls, and over 100 libraries, making it the largest library system in the UK.
Students number around 22,000 in total, just over half of whom are undergraduates while over 40 per cent are international, representing 140 countries between them.
Called the 'city of dreaming spires' by Victorian poet, Matthew Arnold, Oxford has the youngest population of any city in England and Wales: nearly a quarter of its residents are university students, which gives Oxford a noticeable buzz.
Oxford has an alumni network of over 250,000 individuals, including more than 120 Olympic medallists, 26 Nobel Prize winners, seven poets laureate, and over 30 modern world leaders (Bill Clinton, Aung San Suu Kyi, Indira Ghandi and 26 UK Prime Ministers, among them).
The university is associated with 11 winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, five in physics and 16 in medicine. Notable Oxford thinkers and scientists include Tim Berners-Lee, Stephen Hawking and Richard Dawkins. The actors Hugh Grant and Rosamund Pike also went to Oxford, as did the writers Oscar Wilde, Graham Greene, Vikram Seth and Philip Pullman.
Oxford’s first international student, named Emo of Friesland, was enrolled in 1190, while the modern day university prides itself on having an ‘international character’ with connections to almost every country in the world and 40% of its faculty drawn from overseas.
As a modern, research-driven university, Oxford has numerous strengths but cites particular prowess in the sciences, having recently ranked number one in the world for medicine (if its Medical Sciences division was a university in its own right, it would be the fourth largest in the UK) and among the top ten universities globally for life sciences, physical sciences, social sciences, and the arts and humanities

California Institute of Technology United States of America

California Institute of Technology

United States of America
Caltech at a Glance

The California Institute of Technology (Caltech) is a world-renowned science and engineering research and education institution, where extraordinary faculty and students seek answers to complex questions, discover new knowledge, lead innovation, and transform our future.

Caltech's 124-acre campus is located in Pasadena, California.

Mission

The mission of the California Institute of Technology is to expand human knowledge and benefit society through research integrated with education. We investigate the most challenging, fundamental problems in science and technology in a singularly collegial, interdisciplinary atmosphere, while educating outstanding students to become creative members of society.

History

Founded as Throop University in 1891 in Pasadena, California, and renamed the California Institute of Technology in 1920.

Research and Education

Academic Divisions
•Biology & Biological Engineering
•Chemistry & Chemical Engineering
•Engineering & Applied Science
•Geological & Planetary Sciences
•Humanities & Social Sciences
•Physics, Mathematics & Astronomy

Academic options (majors)

Cross-disciplinary research institutes and centers

Faculty (1)

Approximately 300 professorial faculty
More than 600 research scholars
3:1 student-faculty ratio
Honors

Nobel Laureates (2): 34

National Medal of Science Recipients (2): 58

National Medal of Technology and Innovation Recipients (3): 13

National Academies Memberships (4): 128

Students

1,001 undergraduate students

1,254 graduate students

33% female / 67% male

99% placed in the top tenth of their high school graduating class

Class of 2019:

6,507 applicants
241 members of the freshman class
46% female / 54% male
Affording Caltech (1)

Students receiving need-based assistance: 50%

Average need-based financial-aid package: $41,669

Average need-based scholarship: $37,557

Second in the U.S. in return on investment of degree (5)

Living Alumni

22,930 in the U.S. and around the world

Global Facilities

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Founded by Caltech in the 1930s and managed for NASA since 1958
19 spacecraft and eight instruments employed in active missions
Recently launched missions include the Mars Science Laboratory, Juno, Aquarius, and NuSTAR
More than 100 research and mission collaborations with Caltech faculty
Caltech Seismological Laboratory

Internationally recognized for excellence in geophysical research
Research centers for seismic studies, high-performance computing, and mineral physics
Preeminent source for earthquake information in Southern California and around the world
International Observatory Network

W. M. Keck Observatory, Hawaii
Palomar Observatory, California
W. M. Keck Array, Antarctica
Owens Valley Radio Observatory, California
Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, Washington and Louisiana
Cerro Chajnantor Atacama Telescope, Chile (anticipated 2017)
Thirty Meter Telescope, Hawaii (anticipated 2020)
Employees (1)

Caltech: 3,900
JPL: 5,000
Budget

The FY 2014 budget, including Campus and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) totals approximately $2 billion.

JPL: $1.5 billion
Campus: $580 million
Campus Budget Allocation:

Revenue

Contracts and grants: 56.5%
Endowment payout: 16.8%
Gifts: 7.6%
Student tuition and fees: 5.8%
Other: 13.3%
Expenses

Instruction and Academic Support: 41.7%
Organized research: 40%
Institutional support: 13.1%
Auxiliary: 5.2%
Caltech endowment valued at $1.96 billion

(1) 2015–16 academic year

(2) Faculty and alumni

(3) Includes trustees

(4) Faculty only