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Sandstone universities

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Group of Australia's oldest universities
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Location of Sandstone Universities across Australia

Thesandstone universities are an informally defined group comprisingAustralia's oldesttertiary education institutions.[1] Most were founded in the colonial era, the exceptions being theUniversity of Queensland (1909) andUniversity of Western Australia (1911).

All the universities in the group have buildings constructed primarily ofsandstone. Membership of the group is based on age; some universities, such as the privateBond University, have sandstone-plated buildings but are not considered sandstone universities.

The label "sandstone university" is not completely synonymous with membership of theGroup of Eight, which includes theAustralian National University,Monash University and theUniversity of New South Wales, but not theUniversity of Tasmania. Nevertheless, the connotations (prestige, a focus on research, and curricula that have a strong emphasis on theory rather than practice) are much the same for the two groups. Australian Government survey data of university graduates has indicated in the past that students who enter the sandstone universities come from higher-income families, and that graduates largely have higher paid occupations or positions of influence, prompting claims of elitism and social division.[2][3]

Constituent institutions

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Sandstone universities can be taken to be either universities founded beforeWorld War I, or the oldest university in their respectivestate; either definition gives the same set of universities.

UniversityLocationEstablishedUndergraduatesPostgraduatesEndowmentAcademic staffColours
University of AdelaideAdelaide,South Australia187420,0057,352$929 million[4]1,481[5]   
University of MelbourneMelbourne,Victoria185326,75122,543$1.335 billion[6]4,631  
University of QueenslandBrisbane,Queensland190935,07618,620$224.3 million[7]2,908   
University of SydneySydney,New South Wales185035,35125,958$2.5 billion[8]3,743     
University of TasmaniaHobart,Tasmania189027,8805,999$561 million[9]1,255  
University of Western AustraliaPerth,Western Australia191119,8395,967$709 million[10]1,538  

Gallery

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Other Australian university groups

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Red brick universities

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TheUniversity of New South Wales,Monash University and theAustralian National University have been termed 'red brick' universities.[11] They are similar to thered brick universities in the UK, both groups coming after theancient universities and sandstone universities.

Verdant (gumtree) universities

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Further information:Verdant universities

Universities founded in the 1960s and 70s have been known informally as 'verdant' or 'gumtree' universities.[12][13]These universities were established in their state capitals, often next to native bush land (now nature reserves), and have lush vegetative campuses. They are predominantly the second or third established university in their state.[14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Marginson, Simon (29 November 1999)."THE ENTERPRISE UNIVERSITY COMES TO AUSTRALIA"(PDF).Annual Conference of the Australian Association for Research in Education.
  2. ^Department of Education Training and Youth Affairs (1998), The Characteristics and Performance of Higher Education Institutions, Canberra: Higher Education Division, Department of Education, Employment and Youth Affairs
  3. ^Department of Education Training and Youth Affairs (1999), Completions, Undergraduate academic outcomes for the 1992 commencing students, Melbourne: DETYA.
  4. ^"2017 University of Adelaide Annual Report"(PDF).adelaide.edu.au. Retrieved30 July 2019.
  5. ^"2018 Pocket Statistics"(PDF). Retrieved18 October 2018.
  6. ^"2018 Annual Report"(PDF). University of Melbourne. Retrieved31 August 2019.
  7. ^"Annual Report 2018"(PDF). The University of Queensland.
  8. ^"University of Sydney 2018 Annual Report"(PDF). University of Sydney.
  9. ^"Higher Education Financial"(PDF). Department of Education.
  10. ^"2018 Annual Report"(PDF). University of Western Australia.
  11. ^Gable, Guy (2008).The Information Systems Academic Discipline in Australia. ANU E PRESS. p. 319.ISBN 9781921313943.
  12. ^"Types of Australian universities".www.academia.edu. Retrieved2015-10-09.[dubiousdiscuss]
  13. ^Marginson, Simon;Considine, Mark (2000).The Enterprise University: Power, Governance and Reinvention in Australia. Cambridge University Press. p. 15-16.ISBN 052179448X.
  14. ^The only exception isMacquarie, which is the third university isSydney, but the fourth university inNew South Wales. It follows theUniversity of Sydney (1850),University of New South Wales (1949) andUniversity of New England (1954).

Bibliography

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University groupings in Australia
Technology
Group of Eight
Innovative
NUW
Regional
Sandstone
Red brick
Verdant
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