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University of Western Australia

Coordinates:31°58′49″S115°49′07″E / 31.9803°S 115.8186°E /-31.9803; 115.8186 (University of Western Australia)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Public university in Crawley, Western Australia, Australia
"UWA" redirects here. For other uses, seeUWA (disambiguation).

University of Western Australia
Motto
Seek Wisdom[2]
TypePublicresearch university
Established16 February 1911; 114 years ago (1911-02-16)[3]
AccreditationTEQSA[4]
AffiliationGroup of Eight (Go8)
Academic affiliations
BudgetA$1.04B (2023)[5]
VisitorGovernor of Western Australia (ex officio)[6]
ChancellorDiane Smith-Gander[7]
Vice-ChancellorAmit Chakma[8]
Academic staff
1,702 (2023)[5]
Administrative staff
2,093 (2023)[5]
Total staff
3,795 (2023)[5]
Students29,426 (2023)[5]
Undergraduates18,792 (2023)[5]
Postgraduates8,740 coursework (2023)
1,894 research (2023)[5]
Address
35 Stirling Highway
,,,
6009
,
31°58′49″S115°49′07″E / 31.9803°S 115.8186°E /-31.9803; 115.8186 (University of Western Australia)
CampusSuburban andregional with multiple sites, 300 ha (741.3 acres)[citation needed]
ColoursBlueGold
Sporting affiliations
MascotLaurence the Peacock[10]
Websitewww.uwa.edu.auEdit this at Wikidata
Map

TheUniversity of Western Australia (UWA) is apublic research university inCrawley, Western Australia, Australia.[11] UWA was established in 1911 by an act of theParliament of Western Australia.[12]

The university is classed as one of the "sandstone universities", an informal designation given to the oldest university in each state. It is a member of theGroup of Eight.

History

[edit]
See also:Shenton House
Winthrop Hall, a prominent landmark on the main campus

The university was established in 1911 following the tabling of proposals by a royal commission in September 1910.[13] The original campus, which received its first students in March 1913, was on Irwin Street in the centre ofPerth, and consisted of several buildings betweenHay Street andSt Georges Terrace. Irwin Street was also known asTin Pan Alley, as many buildings had corrugated iron roofs. These buildings served as the university campus until 1932, when the campus relocated to its present-day site inCrawley.[14]

The founding chancellor,John Winthrop Hackett, died in 1916, and bequeathed property which, after being carefully managed for ten years, yielded£A 425,000,[citation needed] equivalent toA$38.2 million in 2022, to the university, a far larger sum than expected.[by whom?] This allowed the construction of the main buildings. Many university buildings and landmarks bear his name, including Winthrop Hall and Hackett Hall. In addition, his bequest funded many scholarships, because he did not wish eager students to be deterred from studying because they could not afford to do so.

During UWA's first decade there was controversy about whether the policy of free education was compatible with high expenditure on professorial chairs and faculties. An "old student" publicised his concern in 1921 that there were 13 faculties serving only 280 students.[15]

A remnant of the original buildings survives to this day in the form of theIrwin Street Building,[16] so called after its former location. In the 1930s it was transported to the new campus and served a number of uses until its 1987 restoration funded by convocation, after which it was moved across campus to James Oval. Since then, the northern end of the building has accommodated the convocation council meeting room while the remainder is used for change rooms and meeting rooms as part of thecricket pavilion. The building has been heritage-listed by both theNational Trust and theAustralian Heritage Council.

ArchitectRodney Alsop won the 1932 bronze medal by theRoyal Institute of British Architects for Winthrop Hall.[17] Those who knew him before his death, which occurred later that year, reported that Alsop had thought of little else but the Hackett Memorial buildings, including Winthrop Hall, for six years, and considered the buildings his life's greatest achievement.[18]

The university introduced theDoctorate of Philosophy degree in 1946 and made its first award in October 1950 to Warwick Bottomley for his research of the chemistry of native plants in Western Australia.[19] The university introduced a Bachelor of Philosophy program in 2013.[20]

Campus

[edit]
Designations
Official nameHackett Memorial Buildings
TypeState Registered Place
Designated4 April 1996
Reference no.3519
Official namePark Avenue Building
TypeState Registered Place
Designated28 June 1996
Reference no.3545
Official nameSunken Garden
TypeState Registered Place
Designated28 June 1996
Reference no.19952

UWA is one of the largest landowners in Perth as a result of government and private bequests, and is constantly expanding its infrastructure. Developments in the last two decades include the $22 million University Club, opened in June 2005, and the UWA Watersports Complex, opened in August 2005. In September 2005 UWA opened its $64 million Molecular and Chemical Sciences building. In 2008, a $31 million Business School building opened. In 2014, a $9 million newCO2 research facility was completed, providing modern facilities for carbon research. The Indian Ocean Marine Research Centre, a $62 million research facility on campus, was completed in 2016.[21][22] The Centre for Integrative Bee Research (CIBER) is located on the Crawley campus inPerth. CIBER conducts basic scientific research intohoneybee reproduction, immunity and ecology and aligns its work with the needs of industrial and governmental partners.[23][24]

Centre for Integrative Bee Research

Arts and cultural facilities

[edit]
Limestone arches are a prominent feature along the older undercover walkways.

The 65-hectare (160-acre) Crawley campus sits at theSwan River, about 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) west of the Perthcentral business district. Many of the buildings are coastallimestone and Donnybrook sandstone, including the large, iconic Winthrop Hall,[25] with itsRomanesque Revival architecture.

The Arts Faculty building (first occupied in 1964) encompasses the New Fortune Theatre.[26] This open-air venue was built to celebrate Shakespeare's 400th anniversary, at the time the only replica in the world of the original ElizabethanFortune Theatre, and used for 1964Perth Festival performances.[27] Since then it has hosted regular performances of Shakespeare's plays co-produced by the Graduate Dramatic Society.[28] and the University Dramatic Society.[29] The venue is also home to a family ofpeafowl donated to the university by thePerth Zoo in 1975 after a gift byLaurence Brodie-Hall.[30]

The university's cultural precinct[31] is in the northern part of the Crawley campus. Other performance venues include the Octagon and Dolphin Theatres and Somerville Auditorium, the Winthrop Hall, Sunken Garden, Undercroft and Tropical Grove, which play host to a range of theatre and musical performances, including during the Perth Festival.[32]

TheUWA Conservatorium of Music hosts many concerts each year by students and visiting artists, including series of free lunchtime concerts.[33]

TheBerndt Museum of Anthropology, in the Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery (formerly on the ground floor of the Social Sciences Building), contains one of the most significant collections of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultural material in the world. Its Asian and Melanesian collections are also of strong interest. It was established in 1976 by Ronald and Catherine Berndt.[34]

Libraries

[edit]
Main article:University of Western Australia Library
Reid Library

The University of Western Australia has five libraries on campus, including the architecturally recognisedReid Library building, the largest of the five.[35] The other libraries are theBarry J Marshall Library (Biological and Physical Sciences, Mathematics, Psychology and Geography); the J Robin Warren Library (Medical and Dental); the Beasley Law Library; and the Education, Fine Arts and Architecture Library.[35]

Offsite locations

[edit]
UWA Centre Albany

The university established aUWA Albany Centre in 1999 to meet rural education needs. UWA Albany offers postgraduate coursework and research programs through the Institute for Regional Development and the Centre of Excellence in Natural Resource Management. The UWA Rural Clinical School provides year-long rural placements for third-year medical students inAlbany, Derby, Broome, Port Hedland, Karratha,Geraldton, Bunbury, Narrogin, Esperance, andKalgoorlie; Western Australia. Additionally, the university is involved in the Combined Universities Centre for Rural Health inGeraldton.

The university has further facilities across Stirling Highway inNedlands, linked by pedestrian underpasses beneath the highway, and paths in front of the residential colleges. Although not directly contiguous with the main Crawley site, the university owns almost every parcel of land between them and has long-term plans to expand the two sites towards each other. The university also has facilities in Claremont, purchased in 2005 fromEdith Cowan University. The university prefers to call these facilitiesUWA Claremont rather than a campus because it wants to remain a single campus institution that is located on the main Crawley campus.[36] UWA Claremont is about 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) west of the main Crawley campus. Further west, the university has staff in central Claremont.

Overseas, the university has strategic partnerships with institutions inMalaysia andSingapore, where students study for UWA qualifications, but does not operate these foreign institutions directly.[citation needed] UWA plans to establish two campuses in India following approval by the country'sUniversity Grants Commission in June 2025. The campuses will be located inMumbai andChennai.[37]

The university has also developed a relationship withAustralian Doctors for Africa with whom it sends academic staff to conduct medical student teaching inSomalia,Madagascar, andEthiopia. There are two to four visits to each location per year.[citation needed]

Academia

[edit]
Irwin Street building

The university's degree structure changed in 2012 to bring together the undergraduate and postgraduate degrees available. Justification for this new system is due to its simplicity and effectiveness in outsiders understanding the system. It is the first university in Western Australia to have this new system. Students entering the university at an undergraduate level must choose a three-year bachelor's degree. The university offers a Bachelor of Science (BSc), Bachelor of Commerce (BCom), Bachelor of Arts (BA) and Bachelor of Biomedical Science (BBiomedSc). As of 2017[update], Bachelor of Design (BDes) is no longer offered to non-first-year students.[38]

Bachelor of Philosophy

[edit]

The university also offers theBachelor of Philosophy (BPhil) course for high-achieving new students. This is a research intensive degree which takes four years because the honours year is an integral part of the degree (most other degrees last three years with the honours year as a separate degree). Students studying the course choose disciplines from any of the four bachelor's degrees. Places are very limited with on average only about 30 places offered to students each year. Thus there is a lot of competition for places and the cut-offadmission rank is very high.[39]

Assured entry pathways

[edit]

High school graduates with high academic achievement are able to apply for "assured pathways". This means they are assured a place in the postgraduate degree for their chosen discipline while they complete their undergraduate degree. Assured pathways are offered for studies in fields such as medicine, law, dentistry and engineering.[40] Prospective students may apply for an assured pathway through the Bachelor of Philosophy. The assured pathways to dentistry via the Bachelor of Philosophy is the most difficult undergraduate and postgraduate pathway to obtain from the university. Only one place is offered each year.

Students

[edit]

UWA's student body is generally dominated by school-leavers from within Western Australia, mostly from the Perth metropolitan area. There are comparatively smaller numbers of mature-age students. In recent years, numbers of full-fee-paying foreign students, predominantly from south-east Asia, have grown as a proportion of the student population. In 2020, the university had 4,373 international student enrolments in a total student body of 18,717.[41]

The foyer of the Chemical and Molecular Sciences building, featuring the "double helix staircase"

Academic profile

[edit]

The university recently attracted more competitive research funding than any other Western Australian university.[42] Annually the university receives in excess of $71 million of external research income, expends over $117 million on research and graduates over 300 higher degree by research students, mostly doctorates.[43]

In 2013, during the University of Western Australia’s centenary year, ChancellorMichael Chaney AO announced a long-term objective for the university to be ranked among the top 50 research universities globally by 2050.[44][45] As part of a related fundraising campaign, Andrew and Nicola Forrest made a $65 million donation to the university, one of the largest philanthropic contributions to Australian higher education at the time.[46]

Research

[edit]

The university’s research priorities include sustainability, health, emerging technologies, environmental resilience, cultural studies, and Indigenous research.[47] In the 2024 Academic Ranking of World Universities by subject, UWA was ranked 9th globally inagricultural sciences and placed within the global top 50 inbiological sciences,water resources engineering, and marine/ocean engineering.[48]

ThePerformance Ranking of Scientific Papers for World Universities, published byNational Taiwan University (NTU Ranking), placed the University of Western Australia 138th globally in 2024. The ranking evaluates universities based on the quality and quantity of their scientific research publications. In subject-specific rankings, UWA was ranked 19th globally in agriculture and 12th in plant and animal science, environment and ecology ranked 45th.[49]

The Center for World University Rankings (CWUR), which ranks institutions based on indicators including research output and citations, placed the University of Western Australia at 129th globally in 2024, up from 121st in 2018/19.[50] In the same ranking, UWA was ranked 7th nationally.

The university has over 80 research institutes and centres, including the Oceans Institute, Institute of Agriculture, the Energy and Minerals Institute and the Centre for Software Practice.[51][52] In 2008, it collaborated with two other universities in formingThe Centre for Social Impact.

In 2009, the university received funding from theGovernment of Western Australia for the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, this funding was extended again in 2013 and 2024, the total investment from the WA Government across this period nears $100 million.[53] The centre is a multi-disciplinary research centre for science, engineering and data intensive astronomy.[54] UWA drove Australia's bid to be the site of theSquare Kilometre Array, a very large internationally funded radio astronomy installation capable of seeing the early stages of the formation of galaxies, stars and planets.[55] The UWA ranks 61st globally for Space Science according to NTU rankings.[49]

The university is one of the partners in theWestern Australian Pregnancy Cohort (Raine) Study, one of the largestcohorts of pregnancy, childhood, adolescence and early adulthood to be carried out anywhere in the world.[56]

Academic reputation

[edit]
University rankings
Global – Overall
ARWU World[57]101–150 (2025)
CWTS World[58]211[a] (2024)
QS World[59]77 (2026)
QS Employability[60]111–120 (2022)
THE World[61]153 (2026)
THE Reputation[62]151–200 (2025)
USNWR Global[63]98 (25/26)
National – Overall
ARWU National[64]6–7 (2025)
CWTS National[65]8[a] (2024)
ERA National[66]7 (2018)
QS National[67]7 (2026)
THE National[68]8 (2026)
USNWR National[69]8 (25/26)
AFR National[70]7 (2024)


In the 2024Aggregate Ranking of Top Universities, which measures aggregate performance across the QS, THE and ARWU rankings, the university attained a position of #91 (7th nationally).[71]

National publications

In theAustralian Financial Review Best Universities Ranking 2024, the university was ranked #7 amongst Australian universities.[72]

Global publications

In the 2026Quacquarelli SymondsWorld University Rankings (published 2025), the university attained a position of #77 (7th nationally).[73]

In theTimes Higher Education World University Rankings 2026 (published 2025), the university attained a position of #153 (8th nationally).[74]

In the 2025Academic Ranking of World Universities, the university attained a position of #101–150 (tied 6–7th nationally).[75]

In the 2025–2026U.S. News & World Report Best Global Universities, the university attained a position of #98 (8th nationally).[76]

In theCWTS Leiden Ranking 2024,[a] the university attained a position of #211 (8th nationally).[77]

Student outcomes

[edit]

The Australian Government's QILT[b] conducts national surveys documenting the student life cycle from enrolment through to employment.[78] These surveys place more emphasis on criteria such as student experience, graduate outcomes and employer satisfaction[78] than perceived reputation, research output and citation counts.[79]

In the 2023 Employer Satisfaction Survey, graduates of the university had an overall employer satisfaction rate of 84.3%.[80]

In the 2023 Graduate Outcomes Survey, graduates of the university had a full-time employment rate of 69.6% for undergraduates and 89.2% for postgraduates.[81] The initial full-time salary wasA$67,300 for undergraduates andA$86,900 for postgraduates.[81]

In the 2023 Student Experience Survey, undergraduates at the university rated the quality of their entire educational experience at 75.4% meanwhile postgraduates rated their overall education experience at 74.3%.[82]

Student life

[edit]
Further information:University of Western Australia Student Guild
TheReflection Pool was largely built by student volunteers.

TheUniversity of Western Australia Student Guild is the premier student representative body on campus. It is affiliated with the National Union of Students.[83] The Guild provides a variety of services from catering to financial counselling. There are also over 100 clubs and societies funded by and affiliated with the Guild. The Guild publishes the student newspaper,Pelican, as well as several other publications and is home to theProsh charity event newspaper.[84]

The Postgraduate Students' Association is the representative body for postgraduate students at UWA and is a department of the UWA Guild.

Residential colleges

[edit]

Residential colleges and additional student residential buildings close to the campus include University Hall (formerly known as Currie Hall),St George's College, St Catherine's College, Trinity Residential College and St Thomas More College. St Catherine's College also offers short stays for non-student visitors.

The colleges border each other and run along the main campus. Students of UWA refer to the location of the colleges, which run along a common road, as "college row".[citation needed] All the colleges are co-ed and host several inter-college events throughout the year, in which residents of the various hostels compete against one another in a selection of events.[citation needed] Notable inter-college events include lip dub,[85][86] in which the colleges compete against one another in a series of lip dub videos, and battle of the bands.[87]

Some of the residential colleges have their own mascots. St Catherine's mascot is a cat,[88] St George's a dragon[89] and St Thomas More's a rooster.[90]

Students along college row tend to have short names for each of the colleges, and nicknames for the hostels have become a part of the resident culture.[citation needed] St Catherine's College is known asSt Cat's, St Thomas More College nicknamedTommy More, St George's CollegeGeorge's, University HallUni Hall and Trinity Residential CollegeTrin.

Publishing

[edit]
Main article:UWA Publishing

UWA has had a publishing arm since 1935, when the university was the sole tertiary campus in Western Australia.[91] In 2009 it was renamed asUWA Publishing.

Outskirts

[edit]

The journalOutskirts: feminisms along the edge is a feminist cultural studies journal which was published biannually, in May and November, from 1997 to 2020.[92] Formerly published by the Centre for Women's Studies,[93][94] it has most recently through the School of Humanities.[92]

It is adouble-blind,peer-reviewed academic journal. It was supported by editorial consultants and independent academic referees[92] from a number of other Australasian universities, includingFlinders University, theUniversity of Adelaide, theUniversity of Auckland,Monash University and theUniversity of Queensland.[95]Outskirts began as a printed magazine in 1996, and went online in 1998 as anOpen Access Journal. The last edition published was Volume 14, in May 2019.[92]

Its stated aim was "to provide a space in which new and challenging critical material from a range of disciplinary perspectives and addressing a range of feminist topics and issues is brought together to discuss and contest contemporary and historical issues involving women and feminisms".[96]

Notable people

[edit]
Main article:List of University of Western Australia people
Main category:University of Western Australia alumni

Many notable UWA graduates have excelled in various professions, in particular in politics and government. Premiers of Western Australia have included graduatesAlan Carpenter,Colin Barnett,Geoff Gallop,Richard Court andCarmen Lawrence. Former federal ministers includeKim Edward Beazley, his son, former deputy prime ministerKim Beazley, and Australia's 23rd prime minister,Bob Hawke.Troy Pickard, local government politician. The formerChief Justice of theAustralian High Court,Robert French is also a graduate of the UWA Law School. Scientific and medical graduates includeNobel Prize laureateBarry Marshall, theAustralian of the Year for 2003Fiona Stanley and theAustralian of the Year for 2005Fiona Wood. The former CEO ofAnsett Airlines andBritish Airways, SirRod Eddington, is a graduate of the UWA School of Engineering. ProfessorRoss Day was appointed Foundation Chair of the Department of Psychology at Monash University in 1965 and contributed to the standing of the discipline amongst the sciences. Graduates with outstanding sporting achievements include formerKookaburras (hockey) captain andHockeyroos coachRic Charlesworth. British-born Australian comedianTim Minchin also attended UWA.Parwinder Kaur, inducted into the WA Women's Hall of fame and WA Parliamentarian, is a graduate of UWA. Mining magnateAndrew Forrest and businessman and sport administratorRichard Goyder are graduates of UWA.

Current staff of note include clinical psychologistDavid Indermaur (also a graduate of the university), 2009 Western Australian Scientist of the yearCheryl Praeger, former Western Australian PremierColin Barnett and former Labor federal ministerStephen Smith.

Gallery

[edit]
  • Socrates bust
    Socrates bust
  • Great gate mosaic
    Great gate mosaic
  • Clock tower balcony
    Clock tower balcony
  • Winthrop Hall foyer
    Winthrop Hall foyer
  • Administration building
    Administration building
  • North entrance to geology building
    North entrance to geology building
  • The Geology building seen through the Grove
    The Geology building seen through the Grove
  • Sundial near the Sunken Garden
    Sundial near the Sunken Garden
  • Adult white peacock, New Fortune Theatre
    Adult white peacock, New Fortune Theatre
  • St George's College
    St George's College

See also

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^abcTheCWTS Leiden Ranking is based on P (top 10%).
  2. ^Abbreviation for Quality Indicators for Learning and Teaching.[78]

References

[edit]
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