Curtin University, formerly known as Curtin University of Technology and Western Australian Institute of Technology (WAIT), is an Australian public research university based in Bentley, Perth, Western Australia. It is named after John Curtin, Prime Minister of Australia from 1941 to 1945, and is the largest university in Western Australia, with 59,939 students in 2021.[1]
University in Perth, Western Australia
Curtin University
Looking east across Edinburgh Oval at Chancellery.
Former names
Western Australian Institute of Technology (1966–1986)
Curtin was conferred university status after legislation was passed by the Parliament of Western Australia in 1986. Since then, the university has expanded its presence and has campuses in Singapore, Malaysia, Dubai and Mauritius, and has ties with 90 exchange universities in 20 countries.[3] The university comprises five main faculties with over 95 specialists centres. It had a campus in Sydney from 2005 to 2016.[4]
Curtin University is a member of the Australian Technology Network. Curtin University is active in research in a range of academic and practical fields.[5] Curtin is the only Western Australian university whose students have won the Australian Institute of Nuclear Science and Engineering's Postgraduate Student Gold Medal as at 2020.[6]
History
Curtin University was founded in 1966 as the Western Australian Institute of Technology.[7] Its nucleus comprised the tertiary programs of the Perth Technical College, which opened in 1900.[8] The university's Bentley campus was selected in 1962, and officially opened in 1966. The first students enrolled the following year.
In 1969, three more institutions were merged with WAIT: the Kalgoorlie School of Mines (opened in 1902), the Muresk Agricultural College (opened in 1926), and the Schools of Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy (in operation since the 1950s at Shenton Park).[9] Between 1966 and 1976 WAIT experienced an expansion from 2,000 to 10,000 students.[10]
In December 1986 WAIT was made a university, under provisions of the WA Institute of Technology Amendment Act 1986.[11] Curtin University took its name from the former Prime Minister of Australia, John Curtin. In 1987, Curtin University of Technology became Western Australia's third university and Australia's first university of technology.
In 1993, Curtin founded a graduate business school in St Georges Terrace. It was moved to Murray Street in 2002, where it remains today. The school was developed on the foundation of Curtin's existing Master of Business Administration program.[12]
In 2005, Curtin and Murdoch University were engaged in a feasibility study into the possibility of a merger.[13] However, on 7 November 2005, both institutions announced that a merger would not be undertaken.[14] In 2008, Curtin opened a campus in Singapore, its second offshore presence.[12] In 2009, Curtin became the first university in the Australian Technology Network to be listed on the Academic Ranking of World Universities of research universities.[15]
In 2010, Curtin dropped the "of Technology" suffix, from then operating as "Curtin University".
Campuses
Entrance to campus as viewed from the Curtin University bus stationBuilding 408 (Business and Physiotherapy)Curtin Stadium
The main Curtin University campus is located in Bentley, Western Australia, about 6 kilometres (3.7mi) south-east of the Perth central business district.[16] Curtin has three smaller off-site campuses within the Perth metropolitan area. The Graduate School of Business building is located in the Perth central business district in the renovated former Government Printing Office and the law school is located on Murray Street in the old Public Health Department and Chief Secretary's building, a listed building on the State Register of Heritage Places.
Exploration Geophysics and Petroleum Engineering are located at the co-location research facilities of the Australian Resources Research Centre (ARRC)[17] which also houses offices of CSIRO Earth Science and Resource Engineering[18] and National Measurement Institute.[19] The ARRC is located in the Technology Park Bentley, adjacent to the main Bentley campus.
Some university staff, researchers and students on practicum work in other locations such as the Oral Health Centre of WA (OHCWA) in Nedlands[20] and at Royal Perth Hospital, amongst other organisations.
Curtin has campuses outside Perth, the largest being the Western Australian School of Mines at Kalgoorlie, and a number of micro-campuses in locations such as Esperance, Margaret River and Geraldton. Nursing is the only course offered in Geraldton. The Muresk Institute at Northam left Curtin in 2012.
Dubai campus
In April 2017 Curtin University established its newest campus in Dubai at Dubai International Academic City.[21] Australian Ambassador to the UAE HE Arthur Spyrou officially opened the campus on 10 September 2017.[22] Curtin University Dubai courses use the same structure and unit curriculum as those offered at the Bentley campus. Curtin University Dubai is accredited by the Knowledge and Human Development Authority (KHDA).[citation needed] The academic qualifications granted by Curtin University is certified by KHDA and is recognised in the Emirate of Dubai by all public and private entities.[citation needed]
Malaysia campus
Main article: Curtin University, Malaysia
The campus in Miri, Sarawak, Malaysia is Curtin's largest international campus. Curtin's operations in Miri began in February 1999. In 2002, a purpose-built campus was opened as Curtin's first offshore campus and the first foreign university campus in East Malaysia. It has around 4,000 students from over 45 countries, and academics from more than 15 countries.[23] Curtin Malaysia is the only approved CISCO Networking University in Miri and Brunei.[24]
Singapore campus
Main article: Curtin Education Centre
Curtin University opened a Singapore-based campus on 23 November 2008.[25][26]
Curtin Singapore courses use the same structure and unit curriculum as those offered at the Bentley campus.
Mauritius campus
Curtin University opened its fourth international campus in Mauritius on 3 May 2018 on the campus of Charles Telfair Institute in Moka south of Port Louis.[27][28]
Former Sydney campus (2005–2016)
Curtin University Sydney (Curtin Sydney) was established on 20 June 2005. The first campus was located in The Rocks area. It was later relocated to the suburb of Chippendale where it occupied the historical Berlei Building. The operation of Curtin Sydney was contracted out to private tertiary education provider Navitas Group. It offered diploma, undergraduate and postgraduate courses to international students. In 2014 Curtin Sydney was involved in a cash-for-results scandal where students since 2012 had paid MyMaster, a Sydney company, up to $1,000 each to write essays and assignments for them, as well as sit online tests.[29] In 2015, Curtin announced the closure of Curtin Sydney from early 2017.[4]
Organisation
Faculties
From 2007, the university's teaching and research is divided into five faculties (previously known as divisions), which each include a number of schools.[30] These schools were consolidated in 2020 during a period of staff cuts.[31] These are:
Centre for Aboriginal Studies
Faculty of Business and Law
School of Accounting, Economics and Finance
School of Management and Marketing
Curtin Law School
Faculty of Health Sciences
Curtin Medical School
Curtin School of Allied Health
Curtin School of Nursing
Curtin School of Population Health
Faculty of Humanities
School of Design and the Built Environment
School of Media, Creative Arts and Social Inquiry
School of Education
Faculty of Science and Engineering
School of Civil and Mechanical Engineering
School of Earth and Planetary Sciences
School of Electrical Engineering, Computing and Mathematical Sciences
School of Molecular and Life Sciences
Western Australian School of Mines: Minerals and Energy Engineering
Libraries
The main library is TL Robertson Library, located on the Bentley campus.[32] The university library includes the John Curtin Prime Ministerial Library collection.[33]
John Curtin Gallery
The John Curtin Gallery (JCG) is located on the Bentley campus, in building 200A.[34] It has a focus on contemporary art, learning and research.[35]
Transport
Curtin has two of its own bus stations, which is connected to the Transperth public transport network. The station is also linked to the Mandurah railway line's Canning Bridge Station by a shuttle bus service. The university also has its own internal bus network trialling autonomous buses on campus.
Academic profile
The university is one of the partners in the Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort (Raine) Study, one of the largest cohorts of pregnancy, childhood, adolescence and early adulthood to be carried out anywhere in the world.[36]
Curtin University has achieved 'Top 10 Australia University' status in 6 out of 10 major global rankings (ARWU, US News, CWUR, Leiden, RUR, URAP). Curtin is ranked 160th globally and 10th nationwide by U.S. News & World Report Best Global Universities Rankings in 2023.[45] Curtin University is again ranked in the world's top one percent of universities and ninth in Australia based on the 2022 Academic Ranking of World Universities.[46]
In addition, Curtin University has achieved its highest-ever result in the annual QS World University Rankings[47] by rising to 193rd globally in the 2023 edition. It was ranked 2nd in the world for Engineering - Mineral & Mining, and ranked 5th in Australia for Architecture in the 2022 QS World University Rankings by Subject.[48][49]
Curtin's Creative Writing staff and alumni have won the Miles Franklin Award seven times.[50]
Student life
Accommodation
Curtin University offers on campus accommodation at four separate precincts which is managed by UniLodge.[51] These accommodation options include Kurrajong Village,[52] Erica Underwood House,[53] Guild House,[54] Vickery House[55] and St Catherine's College.[56]
Student guild
The Curtin Student Guild is the student union at Curtin University. The guild was founded as the WAIT Student Guild in January 1969.
The guild provides student representation services through the provision of faculty, international, postgraduate and equity representatives and the professional support service Student Assist.[57]
The guild operates most of the food and beverage outlets on campus, including Guild Cafés (Central, Engineering, Library), Angazi, Concept Coffee Co, Mallokup and Beakers food outlets. Other commercial services include G-Mart, Curtin University's general store, printing, stationery and news outlet and The Tav.[58]
The guild operates and funds all Curtin student clubs and societies. The guild also runs a number of events throughout the year, most notably the Toga Party held in semester one and the previous notable event Grasslands Music Festival held in semester two. The guild publishes Grok magazine.
The Student Guild is governed by students through the Guild Council which consists of executive members: president, vice-presidents, secretary and chair of the Representation Board and councillors. All other representatives sit on the Representation Board. Student representatives are elected to their positions by students in annual elections held in September.[59] Major Groups that contest elections include Illuminate, Progress, Left Action and the Joke Ticket.[60] The Guild is currently operated by an Illuminate majority.
Sport
Men's soccer
The men's team of the Curtin University Football Club is based on the main campus. The club currently (2021) competes in the Football West State League Division 2.
Women's soccer
The Curtin University FC Women's team are one of the inaugural teams in the new National Premier Leagues WA Women competition (which commenced in 2020), and is a part of the National Premier Leagues Women’s structure.[61] Previously they had been a part of the Women State League Division 1 from (at least) 2012 to 2019.
Notable people
Faculty and staff
Curtin's faculty includes prominent scholars such as environmental scientist Peter Newman, writer Kim Scott and isotope geochemist Kliti Grice.
Past prominent faculty members include the post-modernist Niall Lucy, writer Elizabeth Jolley and journalist Robert Duffield.
Alumni
This section needs additional citations for verification. (February 2022)
This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: An unwieldy and endless list is uninformative except to convey it is unwieldy and endless. It ought to be trimmed to a short and respectable list of the 5–8 most notable in each discipline, or moved into wikidata.(March 2022)
Samantha Hall, entrepreneur, environmental and Antarctic researcher
Andrew Long, geophysicist
Zaneta Mascarenhas, engineer and Labor member for Swan
Controversies
Curtin has become active in research and partnerships overseas, particularly in mainland China, and has received funding from major Chinese companies such as Tencent.[72] It is involved in a number of business, management, and research projects, particularly in supercomputing, where the university participates in a tri-continental array with nodes in Perth, Beijing, and Edinburgh.[73] The Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao visited the Woodside-funded hydrocarbon research facility during his visit to Australia in 2005.[74] Funding from major Chinese companies connected to the state have led to concerns that Curtin University has limited academic freedom on certain topics.[72]
In 2020, a roof at Curtin University collapsed, killing a 23-year-old construction worker after he fell more than 20m (66ft), and leaving two other construction workers injured.[75][76]
See also
Western Australia portal
API Network, a publisher associated with the university and University of Queensland
List of universities in Australia
References
"Curtin University Annual Report 2021"(PDF). Annual reports, governance, corporate responsibility. Bentley, WA: Curtin University. 2022. Archived(PDF) from the original on 18 April 2022. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
"AINSE Gold Medals". AINSE. Australian Institute of Nuclear Science and Engineering. Archived from the original on 18 April 2021. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
White, Michael (1996), WAIT to Curtin: a history of the Western Australian Institute of Technology, Paradigm Books (Curtin University), ISBN978-1-86342-490-5
Gable, Guy (September 2008). "Overview of WA universities". The information systems academic discipline in Australia. ANU E-Press. ISBN978-1-921313-94-3. Archived from the original on 9 March 2011. Retrieved 16 October 2011.
"Western Australian Institute of Technology Amendment Act 1986: Proclamation". Western Australia Government Gazette. 19 December 1986. p.1986:4861.
Morse, Robert; Vega-Rodriguez, Juan (19 October 2020). "Curtin University". Best Global Universities in Australia. Washington, D.C.: U.S. News & World Report. Archived from the original on 18 April 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
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