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Lawrence
Visitor's Bureau Fast Facts for Media
2,201 faculty members at the main campus and the medical center combined.
96 percent of full-time faculty with Ph.D. or equivalent in their fields.
More than 170 fields of study.
More than 100 opportunities to study abroad.
14 schools: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; the Graduate School; and the schools of allied health, architecture and urban planning, business, education, engineering, fine arts, journalism and mass communications, law, medicine, nursing, pharmacy and social welfare.
KU awards about $180 million in financial aid and scholarships to more than 15,000 students. The average award is almost $8,500.
More than 1,500 international students from more than 110 countries.
Average age of undergraduate students: 21
Average age of graduate students: 31
Percentage of men to women: 49 to 51
Percentage of multicultural students: 13
Average ACT score for freshmen: 24.6 (31.3% above score of 27)
Freshman retention rate: 82.4
"KU has a distinctive 'sense of place' that instills school pride and an excitement about learning," the DEEP Report stated.
KU has more than 40 nationally ranked academic programs, including 24 in the top 25 among public universities, according to U.S. News & World Report. Two graduate programs — special education and city management/urban policy — are No. 1 in their fields among public universities.
KU is rated in the top 50 public national universities in academic reputation in U.S. News and World Report's America's Best Colleges issue for 2007.
The Fiske Guide to Colleges, which USA Today called "the best college guide you can buy," praises KU's "solid academics, outstanding extracurricular programs, winning athletics and stellar social life." KU was the only Kansas university ranked by the Fiske guide.
In 2006, KU's law school jumped 16 places in U.S. News & World Report's "America's Best Graduate Schools."
Hispanic Outlook in Higher Education magazine named KU 17th in the nation for the number of doctoral degrees awarded to Hispanic students. Hispanic Business magazine, one of the leading Hispanic magazines in the country, has named KU's School of Medicine one of its "Top 10 Medical Schools for Hispanics." The medical school ranked sixth.
"Choosing the Right College 2006: The Whole Truth about America's Top Schools," a college guide book for conservatives, lauds KU for offering "one of the best state-school educations now available" and "one of the more highly regarded public schools in the nation."
Library collections on the Lawrence campus contain more than 4 million volumes and thousands of microforms, manuscripts, maps and photographs. Scholars from all over the world use the Kenneth Spencer Research Library's valuable collections of rare and historic material. At the medical center, the Archie R. Dykes Library for Health Sciences and Clendening History of Medicine Library and Museum are major resources for health professionals.
Among the projects completed in 2006:
Continuing or planned projects include:
Lecturers, scholars, artists, concert musicians, actors and dancers perform at the university's beautiful Lied Center of Kansas, a 2,020-seat performing arts hall. The adjacent 250-seat Bales Organ Recital Hall provides cathedral-like acoustics for its three-manual pipe organ, built by Wolff and Associés of Quebec
The University Theatre programs provide active learning opportunities for students of acting, directing and technical theatre. Committed to presenting classics of world dramatic literature as living theatre, it is also developing new dramatic texts and forms.
The Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics features limestone walls, soaring stained-glass windows and a large reflecting pool reminiscent of Washington's Tidal Basin. The $11-million, 28,000-square-foot facility houses dynamic exhibits and the world's largest congressional archive as well as meeting spaces and KU's first satellite uplink.
The Spencer Museum of Art, with more than 23,000 works of art, has long been considered one of the top teaching museums in the nation.
About 50,000 people a year visit the Natural History Museum. The fossil exhibits of extinct mammals, dinosaurs, reptiles and fishes are especially popular. The panorama of North American plants and animals, the centerpiece exhibit, contains realistic scenes of animal and plant life from Alaska to Mexico. It's the world's largest diorama.
Metropolitan Kansas City offers attractive cultural resources, including the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, the Jazz Museum, the Lyric Opera, the Kansas City Ballet and the Linda Hall Library, one of the largest engineering, science and technology libraries in the world. Dinolab, KU's fossil preparation laboratory, is a public exhibit at Kansas City's Science City museum in Union Station.
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