Victoria University of Wellington, also known in Māori as Te Whare Wānanga o te Ūpoko o te Ika a Māui, was established in 1897 by Act of Parliament, and was a former constituent college of the University of New Zealand. It is particularly well known for its programmes in law, the humanities, and some scientific disciplines, but offers a broad range of other courses as well. Entry to all courses at first year is open, although entry to second year in some programmes (eg, law, criminology, creative writing, architecture) is restricted. Victoria had the fourth highest average research grade in the New Zealand Government's Performance-Based Research Fund exercise in 2006, having been ranked 3rd in 2003.
General information
Victoria has 21,889 students (including 2966 international students), of whom 14,000 are undergraduates. It has 1,985 full-time equivalent staff.
Its main campus is in Kelburn, a suburb on a hill overlooking the Wellington central business district, where its administration and humanities & social science and science faculties are based. The law and commerce and administration faculties are in the Pipitea Campus, near Parliament Buildings, which consists of Rutherford House, the restored Government Buildings, and the West Wing of the Wellington Railway Station. A smaller campus in the Te Aro district of Wellington is the base for the architecture and design schools. The Faculty of Education is in the Karori campus.
Day-to-day governance is in the hands of the University Council, which consists of 20 people: five elected by the Court of Convocation, three elected by the academic staff, one elected by the general staff, two appointed by the student union executive, four appointed by the Minister of Education, four selected by the Council itself, and the Vice-Chancellor. The Court of Convocation is composed of all graduates who choose to participate.
For New Zealand residents entry to most courses is open, with a few exceptions. Performance Music requires an audition. There is selection for entry into the second year in degrees such as the LLB, BArch and BDes. BA in criminology and creative writing is also based on selection.
The University is one of only three institutions (University of Auckland and Unitec New Zealand being the others) to offer a degree in Architecture in New Zealand.
Victoria in conjunction with Massey University also own The New Zealand School of Music
History
Victoria is named after
Queen Victoria, as 1897 was the 60th anniversary of her coronation. There was initially a dispute as to where to site it, and it opened in temporary facilities in Thorndon. It was eventually decided to place it in
Kelburn, where it still has its primary campus. This decision was influenced by the
Cable Car company's offer of a donation of £1000 if Victoria were located in Kelburn so students would patronise the car between the city and the University. The foundation stone of the historic
Hunter Building was laid in
1904. The original name was
Victoria University College, but on the dissolution of the
University of New Zealand in
1961 Victoria or "Vic" became the independent Victoria University of Wellington, conferring its own degrees.
An extramural branch of Victoria was founded at Palmerston North in 1960. It merged with Massey College on 1 January 1963. The merged college itself, having become a branch of Victoria upon the University of New Zealand's 1961 demise, became an independent Massey University on 1 January 1964.
In recent years, Victoria has had to expand out of its original campus in Kelburn, and new campuses have been set up in Te Aro (architecture and design), Pipitea (opposite Parliament, housing the law, and commerce and administration schools) and Karori (education) - the Wellington College of Education, established in 1880, merged with the University to become its revived Faculty of Education on 1 January 2005.
Organisation
Faculties and Schools
The university's faculties are:
The University's Schools are:
Other important Teaching and Learning entities are:
Institutions
Undergraduate Degrees Offered
Postgraduate Degrees offered
Victoria offers more than 25 Masters degrees in around 100 specialist subject areas, including:
Notable Alumni
Of the university and/or college of education:
- Fleur Adcock, MA (distinguished poet and Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry recipient)
- Barbara Anderson, BA (prominent author & poet)
- Sir Brian Barratt-Boyes, BSc (pioneering cardiologist)
- Jacqueline Sturm, BA, MA, Honorary Doctor of Literature, (wife of the late James K. Baxter, the first Maori woman to earn BA at this university).
- Dr John Cawte Beaglehole, BA, MA (Captain Cook expert and OM recipient)
- Sarah Billinghurst, BA (artistic director Metropolitan Opera)
- Dr Robert Burchfield, BA (lexicographic scholar)
- Alistair Campbell, BA & DipT (renown Cook Island poet and novelist)
- John Campbell, BA(Hons) (New Zealand television personality)
- Jane Campion, BA (Oscar and Palme D'Or-winning director/screenwriter)
- John Clarke, Honorary DLitt (creator of Fred Dagg)
- Baron Cooke of Thorndon, LLB & LLM (former Law Lord)
- Frank Corner, MA, Honorary Doctor of Laws, (New Zealand diplomat and public servant)
- Sir Thomas Eichelbaum, LLB (former Chief Justice of New Zealand)
- Gareth Farr, BMus(Hons.) (Composer and Percussionist)
- Sir Michael Fay, LLB (merchant banker & third-richest person in New Zealand)
- John Feeney (documentary filmmaker, nominated for two Academy Awards)
- Patricia Grace, DipTchg, honorary Doctor of Literature (prominent author)
- Sir Michael Hardie Boys, BA/LLB (former Governor-General of New Zealand)
- Prof Harry Hawthorn, BA (eminent NZ-Born Canadian anthropologist)
- Dr Fred Hollows, BA (eminent NZ-Born Australian eye surgeon)
- Prof Witi Ihimaera, BA, honorary Doctor of Literature (prominent author of Whale Rider)
- Lloyd Jones, BA (author & Commonwealth Writers' Prize recipient)
- Sir Robert Jones, BA (property tycoon)
- Sir Kenneth Keith, LLM, Honorary Doctor of Laws, (international jurist)
- Roger Kerr, Executive director of New Zealand Business Roundtable
- Hon. Doug Kidd, LL B (former Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives)
- Dr Michael King, BA, DLitt (respected historian)
- Sir George Laking, LLB (New Zealand diplomat and public servant)
- Dianne Macaskill, Chief Executive and Chief Archivist (Archives New Zealand)
- Sir Jack Marshall, BA, LLB (former Prime Minister)
- Sir Thaddeus McCarthy, LLM (Court of Appeal judge)
- Prof Alan MacDiarmid, BSc, MSc, Honorary Doctor of Science (2000 winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry)
- Sir Alister McIntosh, MA (New Zealand public servant)
- Dr John Money, BSc (world-renowned sexologist)
- Sam Neill, BA (famous character Actor)
- W. H. Oliver, MA (historian, poet, writer)
- Sir Guy Powles, LL B (New Zealand diplomat and first Ombudsman)
- Dr Christopher Pugsley, military historian
- Beverley Randall, BA, TTC (children's author)
- Sir Paul Reeves, BA, MA (former Governor-General of New Zealand & Archbishop and Primate of New Zealand)
- Dr Jonathan Sarfati, BSc(Hons) & PhD (New Zealand Chess Champion and author)
- Conrad Smith LLB(Hons), (current All Black)
- Dr Bill Sutch, BCA, MA (public servant, suspected spy)
- Sir Ronald Syme, MA (pre-eminent classicist historian & OM recipient)
- Sir Brian Talboys, BA (former Deputy Prime Minister)
- Hon. Georgina Te Heuheu, BA, LLB (MP and first Māori woman to gain a law degree)
- Don Hunn, MA, (State Services Commissioner)
- Sir Jack Hunn, LLM (New Zealand public servant)
- Fran Walsh, BA, Honorary Doctor of Literature, (multiple Oscar winner, wife of film director Peter Jackson)
- Dr Marilyn Waring, BA(Hons) (feminist, former MP, and Professor at AUT University)
- Albert Wendt, MA (renown Samoan poet and author)
- Maarten Wevers, diplomat and civil servant. Current Chief Executive of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet
- Gillian Whitehead, BMus(Hons), Honorary DMus (New Zealand composer)
- Sir Richard Wild, LL M (former Chief Justice of New Zealand)
- Thomas Stafford Williams, BCA (New Zealand's only living cardinal)
- Jack Yan, LL B, BCA(Hons), MCA (businessman, publisher, and Good Morning panellist)
- Lorae Parry, MA, (Playwright and Actress)
- Jemaine Clement, Flight of the Conchords
- Bret McKenzie, Flight of the Conchords
Notable Academics
Of the university or the
college of education:
- Dr James Belich (prominent New Zealand historian, currently Head of Victoria's notable History Department) (Alumnus MA)
- (Vera) Doreen Blumhardt (art educationalist, potter, former WCE lecturer) (honorary graduate, 2003
)
- Richard Boast (prominent New Zealand Historian and Treaty of Waitangi expert.
- Prof Paul Callaghan (Alan MacDiarmid Professor of Physical Sciences and Director of the MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials & Nanotechnology)
- Mai Chen (law, prominent public law expert)
- Sir Frank Holmes (Emeritus Professor of Economics) (Alumni BA)
- George Hughes (1918 - 1994), first Professor of Philosophy
- Jack Lasenby (children's author, teacher education lecturer 1975-1987
)
- Douglas Lilburn (late Professor of Music)
- Leslie Lipson (Founder of Political Science)
- Richard Cockburn Maclaurin (Foundation Professor of Mathematics 1899-1907 then President of MIT)
- Prof Bill Manhire (creative writer, author, poet)
- Peter Munz (1921 - 2006), Professor of History
- David Norton (Professor of English, editor of the New Cambridge Paragraph Bible)
- Terence O'Brien (former diplomat, founder of Centre for Strategic Studies)
- Sir Tipene O'Regan (Māori leader, former WCE lecturer) (Alumnus BA (Hons), honorary graduate, 2006)
- Vincent O'Sullivan (English literature, Emertius Professor, prominent New Zealand poet)
- The Rt. Hon. Sir Geoffrey Palmer (law, former New Zealand Prime Minister) (Alumnus BA/LLB, honorary graduate).
- Dr Matthew Palmer (former Dean of Law School, son of Sir Geoffrey Palmer above) (Alumnus LLB)
- The Rt. Hon. Sir Ivor Richardson Member of the Privy Council and former President of the Court of Appeal (former Dean of Law School).
- Mamari Stephens writing the first Maori legal dictionary
- Prof Matt Visser (Specialist in general relativity)
Panorama
References
External links