York University (YorkU) is a large comprehensive university, located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. In terms of physical size, it is Canada's largest university, and third-largest in terms of student population. York has almost 50,000 students and 7,000 staff and faculty spread over two campuses.
In 1965, York moved into its permanent home on the Keele campus. The campus, located at the northern edge of the City of Toronto, was regarded as somewhat isolated, in a generally industrialized part of the city. Petrol storage facilities are still located across the street. Some of the early architecture was unpopular with many, not only for the brutalist designs, but the vast expanse between buildings, which was not viewed as suitable for the climate. In the last two decades, the campus has been intensified with new buildings, including a dedicated student centre and new fine arts, computer science and business administration buildings, as well as a small shopping mall, and hockey arena. York has hosted the Canadian open tennis tournament for years. Faced with a threat of losing the high-profile competition, an agreement was reached to build a new stadium on campus. In 2004, the result was the tennis stadium on the west end of campus. As Toronto has spread further out, York has found itself in a relatively central location within the built-up Greater Toronto Area (GTA), and in particular, near the maligned Jane and Finch neighbourhood. Although its master plan envisions a denser on-campus environment commensurate with that location, the university's administration has made very limited efforts towards creating a centralized, urban feel. A controversial low-density, suburban-style housing development has served as a flashpoint for this tension.
York University has eleven faculties, one of them--the Faculty of Health--was recently initiated on 1 July, 2006. This new faculty houses the School of Health Policy & Management, School of Kinesiology and Health Science, School of Nursing, and the Department of Psychology. Several of these faculties' programs overlap. The Faculties of Arts, Science & Engineering, Liberal & Professional Studies (Atkinson), and Glendon College, for instance, each house separate mathematics departments. The Schulich School of Business, which figures in a number of MBA rankings, offers an International Business Administration program which is the first of its kind in Canada, while the Atkinson Faculty of Liberal and Professional Studies' School of Administrative Studies is the largest business undergraduate program in Canada.
Other faculties are unique, such as the Faculty of Environmental Studies. Its interdisciplinary pedagogy views the environment not just as "natural," but also built, organizational, spatial, socioeconomic, political and cultural. It thus brings together social scientists and scientists, activists and scholars, writers and artists. It is well known for its 2-year Master's degree, one of the largest and most respected in Canada and around the world.
Steps have been undertaken to begin to unify departments in separate faculties, and in some areas these overlaps have in fact contributed to York's efforts to brand itself as a university focused on interdisciplinarity. York University's Faculty of Graduate Studies is Ontario's second largest graduate school offering graduate degrees in a variety of disciplines, such as psychology, which is the largest in Canada. There are several joint graduate programs with the University of Toronto and Ryerson University. The university has also been traditionally strong in arts and social sciences: York's Faculty of Arts is the largest in Canada and the school has the greatest number of humanists and social scientists in Canada. The political science department, a leading centre for the study of radical political economy, has been singled out in Maclean's annual ranking of universities. Its history department is especially strong in Canadian history. The School of Women's Studies at York University is one of the oldest of its kind and offers the largest array of courses in this field in the country, some of which are offered in French. The Canadian Centre for Germanic and European Studiesis co-housed at York University and Université de Montréal. The Centre was awarded to York University and Université de Montréal by the German Academic Exchange Service.
The Faculty of Fine Arts offers programs such as ethnomusicology and a degree in cultural criticism referred to as "cultural studies"; York's joint Bachelor of Design program with Sheridan College is the first and largest such joint program in the province of Ontario. York's Faculty of Education is distinguished by the unusual amount of teaching experience that students acquire. The prestigious Osgoode Hall Law School is Canada's largest and among its oldest, having moved from a downtown location to the York campus in 1969 following the requirement that every law school affiliate with a university.
While engineering is new to York University, the school has long been involved in certain niche areas related to engineering within its Faculty of Science, now Faculty of Science & Engineering. Space projects are a particular strength, and York offers both a unique Space & Communication Sciences undergraduate degree and a pair of small telescopes on campus to help support it. York’s Centre for Vision Research, for example, has developed a ‘virtual reality room’ called IVY (Immersive Virtual Environment at York) in order to study spatial orientation and perception of gravity and motion. The Canadian Space Agency and National Space Biomedical Research Institute (NSBRI) use this research to strengthen astronauts’ sense of ‘up’ and ‘down’ in zero-gravity environments; the room, a rare six-sided immersive environment in Canada, is made of the glass used in the CN Tower’s observation deck and includes walls, ceiling, and a floor comprised of computer-generated pixel maps.
York's five libraries contain more than six-and-a-half million items including more than two million books and subscriptions to over 13,000 electronic journals. The Osgoode Hall Law School houses the largest law library in the Commonwealth of Nations. The Clara Thomas Archives contains the literary and personal papers of many notable Canadian cultural figures such as Margaret Laurence, Rohinton Mistry, Adele Wiseman, bill bissett, and others.
York's approximately 1,200 full-time professors and academic librarians are represented by the York University Faculty Association.
SportYork offers 29 interuniversity sport teams, 12 sport clubs, 35 intramural sport leagues, special events and 10 pick-up sport activities offered daily.
York U has several athletic facilities, some of which are used for major tournaments. These include a football stadium, 4 gymnasia, 5 sport playing fields, 4 softball fields, 9 outdoor tennis courts, 5 squash courts, 3 dance/aerobic studios, an ice arena, a swimming pool, an expanding fitness centre and the new Rexall Centre (Home of the Rogers Tennis Cup).
Plans in 2005 to build a new football and soccer stadium to host the Toronto Argonauts Canadian Football League team and future football tournaments were scuttled, however, when a deal was signed by the Argos to remain at the Rogers Centre (formerly known as the SkyDome). York's proximity to many of Toronto's cricket-playing communities and role as host of an annual "York is U" cricket tournament has led to speculation that the university might act as a permanent home for Canada's growing cricket program, which headed to the World Cup in 2003 and has qualified again for 2007. No concrete plan for a permanent cricket facility has yet been developed, however.
Glendon College, a bilingual liberal arts faculty which conducts its own recruitment and admissions and hosts its own academic programs, is also housed on its own campus in a tonier part of North York. Glendon is the only university-level institution in Southern Ontario that offers university courses in both French and English; others elsewhere in Ontario include the University of Ottawa and Laurentian University in Sudbury. A shuttle bus runs regularly between the Glendon and the Keele campuses.
Curtis Lecture Halls is a 3-4 floor complex of lecture halls of varying sizes built in 1971. Above the halls is the Ross Building, containing offices of professors, faculty offices and the Senate. Curtis Lecture Halls was named for Air Vice-Marshal Wilfrid A. Curtis, founding organizing committee and first Chancellor of York (1959-1968).
The Ross building opened in 1966 is named for the late Dr. Murray G. Ross, founding president of York (1960-1970) and law professor at the University of Toronto. It was originally called Humanities and Social Sciences building .
The building looks out towards the York Commons, a park at the university. Prior to the Hall's construction, a massive ramp provided access to the Ross Building from the Commons. York's crest adorns the outer face of the rotunda.
A roadway circulating the park and the buildings and serves mainly for buses and drop-offs. A shallow pool is also located in the tree lined park.
The lower level has restaurants and retail stores including the York University Bookstore at the East end. Also housed in the mall is the Campus Cove (an arcade/LAN gaming centre/pool hall) and the on-campus medical office. Offices for faculty of various departments as well as various student groups are located on the second floor.
The layout of the mall is rectangular (long in the East-West direction). It is divided into three sections (arbitrarily based on the bends of the corridor, and not on any other difference between the sections or their contents). One main corridor runs along its length. Slightly diagonal towards the South-West corner at the start (the West Market), then East-West (The Main Wing), and finally turning south for a short span at the East end (the East Market). There is one branch off to a North exit where the West Market meets the Main Wing (where the corridor bends), and there is also a door to a narrow passageway at the West end (just adjacent to the bookstore and opposite the main East exit) to another back exit to the North.
York University is a classic commuter school. Over 85% of the students and 90% of the staff have home addresses in the GTA, and most of them commute by car or transit. Due to the high numbers of commuters leaving and entering the campus every day, traffic congestion, shortage of parking space and long bus lines result.
York University's Glendon and Keele campuses are served by the Toronto Transit Commission, the Keele site is also served by York Region Transit buses (both regular and Viva) from the immediate north, GO Transit express buses from several other Toronto suburbs and Greyhound buses for regional transportation. The department of Security, Parking and Transportation Services operates a shuttle service to GO Transit's York University train station on its Bradford corridor, as the station is not within walking distance. Close to fourteen hundred buses move people through the campus each day. A proposed extension of the Yonge-University-Spadina subway line beyond its current terminus would run directly under the campus, creating new stations at Keele and Finch (Finch West), at the centre of campus (York University), and at Steeles Avenue, interfacing with York Region Transit (Steeles West).
As well, a recent (2005) controversy arose regarding the sale of university land for a low density housing development. The land was sold for *]15.8 million to a developer, Tribute Communities which has close ties with the university administration. Tribute Communities allegedly did not pay the full market price for the land. York University maintained that the proposal, mostly consisting of townhouses, was the best overall proposal. An independent investigation conducted by retired judge Edward Saunders reported that there had been no misconduct.
In October 2005, Professor David F. Noble, in opposition to York's practice of cancelling classes on the Jewish High Holidays, which originated in 1974 in deference to the university's large proportion of Jewish students and faculty members at that time, applied to the university's senate body for review of the policy. Upon the York senate's affirmation of the policy, he pledged that he would teach on those days anyway, but later decided to instead poll students in his courses, asking if they wished future classes to be cancelled out of respect for other religious holidays.
March 31, 2006 the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled that the University, and its President Dr. Lorna Marsden could be sued by plaintiff Daniel Freeman-Maloy for "misfeasance in public office."*
York University | Universities and colleges in Toronto | Nursing schools in Canada | Educational institutions established in 1959
York University | Université York | Uniwersytet York | Universidade York | 约克大学
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"York University".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world