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University at Albany, SUNY
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University at Albany, SUNY : ウィキペディア英語版
University at Albany, SUNY

The State University of New York at Albany, also known as University at Albany or SUNY Albany, is a research institution with campuses in Albany, Guilderland, and Rensselaer, New York, United States. Founded in 1844, it carries out undergraduate and graduate education, research, and service. It is a part of the State University of New York (SUNY) system.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.bizjournals.com/albany/news/2012/12/14/cuomo-oks-ualbany-grant-to-build-165m.html )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.legislativegazette.com/Articles-Top-Stories-c-2012-09-24-82108.113122-Gov-UAlbany-roll-out-ETEC-plan.html )
The University has three campuses: the Uptown Campus in Albany and Guilderland's McKownville neighborhood, the Downtown Campus in Albany, and the East Campus in the City of Rensselaer, just across the Hudson River from Albany. The University enrolls more than 17,300 students in nine schools and colleges, which offer 50 undergraduate majors and 138 graduate degree programs. The University's academic choices include new and emerging fields in public policy, globalization, documentary studies, biotechnology and informatics.
Through the UAlbany and SUNY-wide exchange programs, students have more than 600 study-abroad programs to choose from, as well as government and business internship opportunities in New York’s capital and surrounding region. The Honors College, which opened in fall 2006, offers opportunities for well-prepared students to work closely with faculty. The University at Albany faculty had $89.1 million in research expenditures in 2013-2014. for work advancing discovery in a wide range of fields. The research enterprise is in four areas: social science and public policy, life sciences and atmospheric sciences.
In addition to offering many cultural benefits, such as a contemporary art museum and the New York State Writers Institute, UAlbany plays a major role in the economic development of the Capital District and New York State. An economic impact study in 2004 estimated UAlbany’s economic impact to be $1.1 billion annually in New York State — $1 billion of that in the Capital Region
==History==

The University at Albany was an independent state-supported teachers' college for most of its history until SUNY was formed in 1948. The institution began as the New York State Normal School on May 7, 1844, by a vote of the State Legislature. Beginning with 29 students and four faculty in an abandoned railroad depot on State Street in the heart of the city, the Normal School was the first New York State-chartered institution of higher education.〔Birr, Kendall A. ''A Tradition of Excellence: The Sesquicentennial History of the University at Albany, State University of New York, 1844 to 1944''. Virginia Beach, VA: The Donning Company, 1994: p11. ISBN 0-89865-889-6〕
Dedicated to training New York students as schoolteachers and administrators, by the early 1890s the “School” had become the New York State Normal College and, with a revised four-year curriculum in 1905, became the first public institution of higher education in New York to be granted the power to confer the bachelor's degree.〔Birr, Kendall A. ''A Tradition of Excellence: The Sesquicentennial History of the University at Albany, State University of New York, 1844 to 1944''. Virginia Beach, VA: The Donning Company, 1994: p49-50. ISBN 0-89865-889-6〕
A new campus — today, UAlbany’s Downtown Campus — was established in 1909 on a site of between Washington and Western avenues. By 1913, the institution was home to 590 students and 44 faculty members, it offered a master's degree for the first time, and bore a new name — the New York State College for Teachers. Enrollment grew to a peak of 1,424 in 1932.〔Birr, Kendall A. ''A Tradition of Excellence: The Sesquicentennial History of the University at Albany, State University of New York, 1844 to 1944''. Virginia Beach, VA: The Donning Company, 1994: p56, 63. ISBN 0-89865-889-6〕
In 1948 the State University of New York system was created, comprising the College for Teachers and several other institutions throughout the state. SUNY, including the Albany campus, became a manifestation of the grand vision of Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller, who wanted a public university system to accommodate the college students of the post–World War II baby boom. To do so, he launched a massive construction program that developed over 50 new campuses.〔Birr, Kendall A. ''A Tradition of Excellence: The Sesquicentennial History of the University at Albany, State University of New York, 1844 to 1944''. Virginia Beach, VA: The Donning Company, 1994: p120-121. ISBN 0-89865-889-6〕
In 1962 the State University of New York at Albany was officially designated a doctoral-degree granting university center of SUNY. The same year, Rockefeller broke ground for the current Uptown Campus on the former site of the Albany Country Club. The new campus's first dormitory opened in 1964, and the first classes on the academic podium in the fall of 1966. By 1970, a year beyond the University’s 125th anniversary, enrollment had grown to 13,200 and the faculty to 746. That same year the growing protest movement against the Vietnam war engulfed the University when a student strike was called for in response to the killing of protesters at Kent State. The Uptown Campus, designed by architect Edward Durell Stone, accommodated this growth and gave visible evidence of the school's transition from a teachers college to a broad-based liberal arts university. The Downtown Campus became dedicated to the fields of public policy: criminal justice, public affairs, information science and social welfare. In 1985, the university added the School of Public Health, a joint endeavor with the state’s (Department of Health ).〔Birr, Kendall A. ''A Tradition of Excellence: The Sesquicentennial History of the University at Albany, State University of New York, 1844 to 1944''. Virginia Beach, VA: The Donning Company, 1994: p122-128, 131, 187. ISBN 0-89865-889-6〕
In 1983, the (New York State Writers Institute ) was founded by Pulitzer Prize-winning author William Kennedy. As of 2013, the Institute had hosted over time more than 1,200 writers, poets, journalists, historians, dramatists and filmmakers. The list includes eight Nobel Prize winners, nearly 200 Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award winners, several Motion Picture Academy Award winners and nominees, and numerous other literary prize recipients. In addition the institute has hosted up-and-coming writers to provide them with exposure at the beginning of their writing careers.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The Center for the Literary Arts in New York State )
During the 1990s, the University built a $3 billion, Albany NanoTech complex, extending the Uptown Campus westward. By 2006, it became home to the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering, which in 2014 merged with the State University of New York Institute of Technology in Utica, New York to become a separate SUNY institution: the SUNY Polytechnic Institute.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Nano college is officially SUNY Polytechnic Institute )
In 1996, a third campus — the East Campus — was added east of the Uptown Campus in Rensselaer County, when the University acquired former Sterling-Winthrop laboratories and converted them into labs, classrooms, and a business incubator concentrating on advances in biotechnology and other health-related disciplines. In 2005, the East Campus became home to the University’s Gen
*NY
*Sis Center for Excellence in Cancer Genomics.
In the spring of 2005, the University created a College of Computing and Information (CCI), which has faculty on both the Uptown and Downtown campuses. In the fall of 2015, CCI was replace and its programs incorporated into a totally new college, the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences. At the same time, the University unveiled another new college, the College of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security and Cybersecurity.

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