Auckland University of Technology ( AUT )
Auckland University of Technology (AUT) (Māori: Te Wānanga Aronui o Tāmaki Makau Rau) is a university in New Zealand, designed on 1 January 2000 when a former methodological college (formerly established in 1895) was established university eminence. It has five capacities across three campuses in Auckland: City, North, and South campuses, and an further three authority locations: AUT Millennium, Warkworth Radio Astronomical Building and AUT Center for Expatriate
Education.
AUT enrolled more than 29,000 students in 2016, comprising 4,194 international students from 94 countries and 2,417 advanced students. AUT’s student population is diverse with a variety of ethnic circumstances including New Zealand European, Asian, Maori and Pasifika. Students also characterize a wide age range with 22% being aged 25–39 years and 10% being 40 or older.
Data suggests that 86% of AUT's graduates are laboring full-time within nine months of graduating. In the 2016 QS World University Position, AUT was ranked as 441–450.
History
AUT was founded as Auckland Technical School in 1895, contribution evening classes only. Daytime classes began in 1906 and its name was transformed to Auckland Technical College. In 1913 it was renamed Seddon Memorial Technical College. In the early 1960s educational improvements occasioned in the parting of subordinate and tertiary teaching; two educational formations were formed; the tertiary (polytechnic) accepting the name Auckland Technical Institute (ATI) in 1963 and the secondary school endures with the same name. For three years they co-existed on the same site, but by 1964 the subordinate school had moved to a new site in Western Mainsprings and finally became Western Springs College. In 1989 ATI developed Auckland Institute of Technology (AIT), and the present name was accepted when university status was settled in 2000.
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