Tallinn University
Tallinna Ülikool | |
Motto | Thinking unlimited! |
---|---|
Type | Public |
Established | 2005 |
President | Tiit Land |
Academic staff | 1200 |
Students | 10 016 |
Undergraduates | 5901 (2014) |
Postgraduates | 2789 (2014) |
370 (2014) | |
Location |
Tallinn, Harju County, Estonia 59°26′19″N 24°46′17″E / 59.43861°N 24.77139°ECoordinates: 59°26′19″N 24°46′17″E / 59.43861°N 24.77139°E |
Mascot | Eksmati |
Affiliations | EUA, UNICA |
Website |
www |
Tallinn University (TU; Estonian: Tallinna Ülikool, TLÜ) is one of the three largest institutions of higher education in Estonia. It is in the centre of Tallinn, the capital city of Estonia.
History
Tallinn University was established on 18 March 2005 as the result of a merger of several universities and research institutes in Tallinn: Academic Library of Estonia (1946), Baltic Film and Media School (1992/97), Estonian Institute of Humanities (1988), Institute of History (1946) and Tallinn Pedagogical University (1919/52/92). Courses of study offered are predominantly in the humanities, but offerings in the exact and natural sciences are increasing.
Tallinn University today
It is acknowledged both locally and internationally for its role as a centre for science and education. Tallinn University features in the QS Worldwide University ranking.[1]
The University of Tallinn describes its goal as '[supporting] the sustainable development of Estonia through research and its application to academic partnership, including the preparation of intellectuals as well as public dialogue in order to facilitate this partnership.'[2]
The university consists of 6 academic school and 2 colleges, which undertake research and teaching in Paedagogy, the Humanities, the Arts, Natural Sciences, Social Science, and Health Science.
21,656 students are presently enrolled at Tallinn University, of which 8,861 are degree students. Among degree students, 7.3% are from abrooad. There are 850 full time employees at the University.http://www.tlu.ee/en/university/About-Us/TU-in-Numbers[2]
Campus
Tallinn University's main campus buildings have Latin names.
Terra (Latin: earth) is the main and oldest building on Tallinn University's campus. It was built for the Tallinn English College in 1938. The building is under heritage protection (architects Alar Kotli and Erika Nõva).[3]
Nova (Latin: new) houses the Baltic Film and Media School. Features include individual and group work rooms, lecture halls, a film studio, a television studio, sound studios, a cinema, a computer class and editing rooms. The building was completed in 2012, and was designed by architects Karli Luik, Maarja Kask and Ralf Lõoke.[3]
Mare (Latin: sea) was designed to optimise the amount of light penetrating into the building. The building was completed in 2006; the architects were Mattias Agabus, Eero Endjärv, Raul Järg, Priit Pent and Illimar Truverk.[3]
Astra (Latin: star) is the newest building in the university. This building is features laboratories. The building was designed by Ignar Fjuk and completed in 2012.
Silva (Latin: forest) was completed in 1982 and is a typical example of Soviet architecture. Designed by the architect Ester Liiberg.
Ursa (Latin: bear) was built in 1964 and presently houses the Arts Department.
Internationalisation
One of the main aims of the university is large-scale internationalisation. With its academic degree programmes and a number of shorter programmes and courses offered in the English language, it is about to become the most international university in the Baltic area. Tallinn University currently maintains over 50 inter-university agreements with universities in Europe, U.S., Japan, China, Russia, and several other countries as well over 600 Erasmus exchange agreements with universities from all over the European Union. The university also organises Summer and Winter Schools, which host about 300 participants from 50 countries every year.[4][5]
Structure
Schools
- Baltic Film, Media, Arts and Communication School
- School of Digital Technologies
- School of Educational Sciences
- School of Governance, Law and Society
- School of Humanities
- School of Natural Sciences and Health
Colleges
- Haapsalu College
- Rakvere College
Academic Unit Centres
- BFM Production Centre
- Centre for Educational Technology
- Centre for Innovation in Education
- Centre for Landscape and Culture
- Centre of Excellence in Health Promotion and Rehabilitation
- Estonian Institute for Population Studies
- Institute for International Social Studies
- Institute of Ecology
- Institute of History, Archaeology and Art History
Centres of Excellence
- TU Centre of Excellence in Behavioural and Neural Sciences
- TU Centre of Excellence in Educational Innovation
- TU Centre of Excellence in Intercultural Studies
- TU Centre of Excellence in Interdisciplinary Lifecourse Studies
- TU Centre of Excellence in Media Innovation and Digital Culture
References
- ↑ "QS World University Rankings® 2014/15". Top Universities. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
- 1 2 "UNIVERSITY". Retrieved 17 March 2015.
- 1 2 3 "Campus". Retrieved 17 March 2015.
- ↑ http://summerschool.tlu.ee Tallinn Summer School
- ↑ http://winterschool.tlu.ee Tallinn Winter School
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of Tallinn. |
- Official website (English)
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