Curtin University - Faculties


From 2007, the university's teaching and research is divided into five faculties (previously known as divisions). These are:

  • Centre for Aboriginal Studies
  • Curtin Business School
    • School of Accounting
    • School of Business Law and Taxation
    • School of Economics and Finance
    • School of Information Systems
    • School of Management
    • School of Marketing
    • Graduate School of Business
  • Faculty of Health Sciences
    • Centre for International Health
    • School of Nursing and Midwifery
    • School of Occupational Therapy and Social Work
    • School of Pharmacy
    • School of Physiotherapy
    • School of Psychology and Speech Pathology
    • School of Public Health
  • Faculty of Humanities
    • School of Built Environment
    • School of Design and Art
    • School of Media, Culture and Creative Arts
    • School of Education
    • School of Social Sciences and Asian Languages
    • Curtin English Language Centre
    • Centre for Human Rights Education
  • Faculty of Science and Engineering
    • School of Science
    • School of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering
    • School of Civil and Mechanical Engineering
    • School of Electrical Engineering and Computing http://www.computing.edu.au/
    • School of Agriculture and Environment (Muresk Institute)
    • Western Australian School of Mines
      • Department of Spatial Sciences http://spatial.curtin.edu.au/

Read more about this topic:  Curtin University

Famous quotes containing the word faculties:

    In our daily intercourse with men, our nobler faculties are dormant and suffered to rust. None will pay us the compliment to expect nobleness from us. Though we have gold to give, they demand only copper.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    You may read any quantity of books, and you may almost as ignorant as you were at starting, if you don’t have, at the back of your minds, the change for words in definite images which can only be acquired through the operation of your observing faculties on the phenomena of nature.
    Thomas Henry Huxley (1825–95)

    Is boredom anything less than the sense of one’s faculties slowly dying?
    John Berger (b. 1926)