University of Gaziantep

University Of Gaziantep

The Gaziantep University (Turkish Gaziantep Üniversitesi) is a state research university located in Gaziantep, Southeastern Anatolia, Turkey. University of Gaziantep has 10 faculties, containing a total of 22 academic departments, with a strong emphasis on scientific and technological research.

Gaziantep is the largest trade and industrial center in the west of Southeastern Turkey. Culturally and socio-economically, it is the most developed city in the region. The University of Gaziantep was founded as a state university on 27 June 1987, but higher education on campus began as early as 1973 when the institute was an extension campus of the Middle East Technical University. The main campus is located at Gaziantep, which is close to the city centre, with its extension campuses situated in the neighbouring cities.

The University of Gaziantep has always tried to train its students as enlightened, research-minded, scientifically oriented graduates of good character. The main objectives of the University are:

  • Cultural, scientific, technical, medical and vocational education and training,
  • Fundamental and applied research,
  • Development of perspectives with respect to social issues, responsibilities and ethics,
  • Technical, scientific and cultural exchanges with similar institutions at national and international levels,
  • Professional adaptation to our rapidly changing society and the world in general, with particular attention to European Higher Education Area,
  • Increasing industrialization of the development of Turkey.

The University of Gaziantep enrolled 24,406 undergraduates, 482 postgraduate students, and employed 1,048 faculty members in the 2008/09 school year. The official language of instruction at the Gaziantep University is English.

Read more about University Of Gaziantep:  History and Profile, Faculties, Research Opportunities, Libraries

Famous quotes containing the word university:

    To get a man soundly saved it is not enough to put on him a pair of new breeches, to give him regular work, or even to give him a University education. These things are all outside a man, and if the inside remains unchanged you have wasted your labour. You must in some way or other graft upon the man’s nature a new nature, which has in it the element of the Divine.
    William Booth (1829–1912)