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马里兰大学-巴尔的摩县
University of Maryland, Baltimore County

世界著名大学
世界大学排名
十大机构权威世界大学排名汇总
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
校训 An Honors University in Maryland
建立于 1966
类型 Public university
校长 Freeman Hrabowski III
教职员工 1,018
学生 12,268
本科生 9,612
研究生 2,656
位置 Catonsville, Maryland, United States
(39°15′19.80″N 76°42′40.52″W / 39.2555°N 76.7112556°W / 39.2555; -76.7112556Coordinates: 39°15′19.80″N 76°42′40.52″W / 39.2555°N 76.7112556°W / 39.2555; -76.7112556)
校园 Suburban, 500 acres (2 km²)
颜色 Black, Gold and Red
              
昵称 Retrievers
Mascot True Grit
体育运动 The UMBC Retrievers,
17 varsity teams,
NCAA Division I
归属 America East Conference; MAISA; University System of Maryland
网址 www.umbc.edu
www.umbcretrievers.com
UMBC Logo

The University of Maryland, Baltimore County (generally known as UMBC) is a public research university, located in Baltimore County, Maryland, mostly in the community of Catonsville, Maryland. 建立于 as a part of the University System of Maryland in 1966, the university specializes in the natural sciences and engineering, while also offering a breadth of programs in the liberal arts and education. This University is not a satellite campus of the University of Maryland at College Park, but rather UMBC stands on equal footing within the University System of Maryland, just as the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Texas at San Antonio have equal standing within their university system. The university is in the top tier of research universities nationally; the Carnegie Foundation classifies UMBC as a Doctoral / Research-Extensive university.

学术

Main article: University of Maryland, Baltimore County Majors and Programs

UMBC's Undergraduate School offers 54 majors and 42 minors and 20 certificate programs in the physical and biological sciences, social and behavioral sciences, engineering, mathematics, information technology, humanities, economics and visual and performing arts. New degree programs include management of aging services, media and communication studies, and gender and women's studies.

UMBC's Graduate School offers 33 master's degree programs, 23 doctoral degree programs and 20 graduate certificate programs. Programs are offered in emergency health services, education, engineering, imaging and digital arts, information technology, life sciences, psychology, public policy and a host of other areas of interest. A new gerontology Ph.D. program is one of only six in the United States.

Financial Aid and scholarships

UMBC is home to the Meyerhoff Scholarship Program, a program focused on the cultivation of underrepresented minority scholarship and awareness in the math, science, and engineering disciplines.

Other scholarship programs include the CWIT Scholars Program, the Humanities Scholars Program, the Linehan Artist Scholars Program, the Sondheim Public Affairs Scholars Program and the Sherman Teacher Education Scholars Program.

Major businesses in the Baltimore-Washington area recruit using scholarships and internship opportunities.

Rankings

University National Rankings
Prestigious faculty awards= 76
Chemistry and Biochemistry degree production= 7th
Chemistry and biochemistry degrees awarded to African Americans= 1st
Chemistry and biochemistry awarded to Asian Americans= 4th
Most Diverse Universities = 2nd
Up and Coming School = 1st
Public National University in Undergraduate Teaching= 1st
National University in Undergraduate Teaching= 4th

The University of Maryland, Baltimore County is particularly regarded for its natural science and engineering programs. According to the National Science Foundation, the University is among the top three Ph.D-granting universities in the United States in the production of IT degrees at the undergraduate, master’s and doctoral levels. UMBC ranks second nationally in degrees awarded by colleges that grant bachelor's, master's and Ph.D. degrees in the computing sciences. The university continues to be the largest producer of IT graduates in the Maryland area. The Carnegie Foundation's new classification of American colleges and universities places the university alongside other extensive doctoral/research universities. UMBC is one of only two public universities in Maryland to hold this position, the other being University of Maryland, College Park. Only 152 universities are part of this category nationwide.

The university is also regarded for its diverse student population. The Princeton Review ranks UMBC 2nd on its Diverse Population list, as well as including it on its Best in the Northeast list. According to the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, UMBC is ranked 1st nationally in the total number of undergraduate chemistry and biochemistry degrees awarded to African Americans, 4th nationally in the total number of chemistry and biochemistry undergraduate degrees awarded to Asian Americans, and 7th nationally in overall undergraduate chemistry and biochemistry degree production.{|

The Carnegie Foundation's new classification of American colleges and universities, issued this month, places UMBC in the top tier of America's research universities. Of the nearly 4,000 colleges and universities nationwide, UMBC is one of only 152—the top 3.8 percent—to be included in the elite category, "Doctoral-Research Universities/Extensive."

UMBC also is among the top 100 national public universities ranked in the 2001 U.S. News & World Report's America's Best Colleges. U.S. News ranked UMBC 14th nationwide in its listing of national universities graduating students with the least amount of debt; UMBC was the only Maryland institution represented in this category, which also includes the California Institute of Technology, Ohio State University, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

The 2001 edition of the Kaplan Newsweek College Catalog rated UMBC a "best value," based on a national survey of guidance counselors, who cited UMBC's strong professional, computer-technology, and arts programs. UMBC is Maryland's only university named in this category, which also includes William and Mary, the University of Virginia, and the University of California, Berkeley.

In recognition of its multicultural campus and academically exceptional students from all backgrounds, the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) has been ranked second on The Princeton Review “Most Diverse Student Body” list.

UMBC’s student body is among the most diverse nationally (37 percent minority, including 18 percent Asian, 15 percent African American and 4 percent Hispanic and Native American).

The Princeton Review recognized UMBC in its newly released rankings of U.S. colleges, The Best 368 Colleges: 2009 Edition. The annual publication offers updated reviews of each institution and separate rankings lists about student life, based on responses from administrators and student surveys.

The “Most Diverse Student Body” ranking lists 20 leading institutions. UMBC placed ahead of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, Temple University and State University of New York-Stonybrook University.

The 2003 Kaplan/Newsweek How to Get Into College guide has hit the newsstands featuring UMBC as one of “America’s Hot Schools.” This exclusive list of a dozen schools that are among students’ top picks is “dominated by some of the country’s top public universities,”

Faculty Research Recognized with Top Rankings

This section does not cite any references or sources.
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2009)

UMBC faculty continue to be recognized for excellence in research. The University now ranks second among U.S. universities in NASA research funding, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. The university's NASA-funded centers are the Joint Centers for Earth Systems Technology (JCET), the Joint Center for Astrophysics (JCA), Goddard Earth Systems and Technology Center (GEST) and the Center for Research and Exploration in Space Science and Technology (CRESST).

"We are training a new generation of scientists that the nation needs to conduct research which literally may be critical to the health of the planet in the future," said Raymond Hoff, professor of physics and director of JCET and GEST. "The opportunity for a medium-sized state research university to become the number two partner with NASA on grant-based research could not have happened without the effort of strong supporters at NASA and the research performed by the young faculty that UMBC has been able to hire through these centers."

In addition, the University's geoscience research was ranked third nationally for citation impact (the number of times peer professors cite UMBC faculty work in their own research papers) by Thomson Scientific's Science Watch. Harvard and the Georgia Institute of Technology are the only other U.S. universities with more frequently cited research on the environment, water, soil, atmosphere, pollution and climate change, according to Science Watch.

The Departments of Information Systems and Public Policy were ranked eighth and tenth respectively in their fields by the 2007 Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index, which measures the number of books and journal articles written by faculty members, the number of times other scholars have cited these publications and the grant monies, honors and awards the faculty members received. The index is prepared by Academic Analytics, a for-profit company that ranks academic programs in a wide range of fields.

Notable professors

Africana Studies
  • Dr. Acklyn Lynch- noted scholar, writer, cultural critic and activist
Aging Studies
  • Dr. William H. Thomas - an international authority on geriatric medicine and eldercare, founder of The Eden Alternative and author of What Are Old People For?
American Studies
  • Warren Belasco - food scholar and renown historian, author of Meals to Come: A History of the Future of Food
Biological Sciences
  • Suzanne Ostrand-Rosenberg - a leading immunologist
Chemistry
  • Ramachandra S. Hosmane- a leading organic synthesis and medicinal chemist.
  • Michael F. Summers - a Howard Hughes Investigator and a leading biological NMR spectroscopist
Emergency Health Services
  • Dr. Stephen Dean - An internationally recognized expert in Emergency Medical Services system design.
  • Dr. Brian Maguire - A Fulbright Scholar and leading expert on the safety of EMS professionals.
  • John Ashworth - Senior Vice President of the University of Maryland Medical System, Associate Dean of the University of Maryland School of Medicine, and former director of the world-renowned R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center
English
  • Christopher Corbett - A former news editor and reporter with The Associated Press, and the adviser for UMBC's student newspaper, The Retriever Weekly.
Gender and Women's Studies
  • Carole McCann - reproductive politics, cultural politics of gender, sexuality, race and science, U.S. women's history
  • Anne Brodsky, Director of the Gender and Women's Studies Program, author of With All Our Strength: The Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan
Mathematics
  • Thomas Mathew - one of the leading statisticians
  • Bimal Sinha - one of the leading statisticians
  • Manil Suri - bestselling author
Political Science
  • (Former Professor) Nabil Mikhail - expert in the field of Middle Eastern Relations
  • Thomas Schaller - talk show host, political commentator, and author of Whistling Past Dixie
Philosophy
  • Stephen E. Braude - a leading parapsychologist and a noted thinker in Temporal Logic and the Philosophy of Mind.
  • Jim Thomas - ranked ninth on RateMyProfessors.com Top-Rated Professors of 2008 list.
Psychology
  • Christopher Murphy - one of the country's premiere domestic violence researchers
  • Carlo DiClemente - a leading expert in addictions, co-developer of the Stages of Change model.
Public Policy
  • Tim Brennan - was the 2006 T. D. MacDonald Chair in Industrial Economics at the Canadian Competition Bureau, expert in antitrust law and policy and regulatory economics
  • Donald F. Norris - expert in urban and metropolitan politics and electronic government


校园

Research and Technology Park

BWTECH@UMBC is a 41-acre research and technology community at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC). bwtech@UMBC has a total development capacity of 350,000 square feet of office and laboratory space. The park will ultimately comprise five new state-of-the-art buildings occupied by research and technology firms. The firms have access to university expertise, students, technology, programs and facilities.

RWD Technologies' headquarters is located in the 62,000 square foot three-story building at 5521 Research Park Drive. A second building, with three stories and 60,000 square feet of Class A space at 5523 Research Park Drive, is fully occupied by several companies, including BDMetrics, Solvern Innovations, Convergent Technologies, Med-IQ, Goddard Earth Science and Technology Center (GEST), Erickson School of Aging Studies, Joint Center for Earth Systems Technology (JCET), ACTiVATE and Invoke Systems. Both buildings are owned and managed by Merritt Properties, LLC.

A one-story, 23,500-square-foot building houses the United States Geological Survey (USGS) MD-DE-DC Water Science Center, with which UMBC's researchers have collaborated over the years in analyzing the region's water resources and how to preserve them. Corporate Office Properties Trust (COPT) developed the USGS building, 5522 Research Park Drive. COPT is also developing a 110,000 square-foot multi-tenant facility, 5520 Research Park Drive, which will be available for occupancy in Summer 2008.

Erickson Retirement Communities is developing a $20million building, 5525 Research Park Drive . Erickson will move its information technology department, adult living national broadcast network Retirement Living TV (RL-TV) and private charitable foundation to the 100,000 square-foot building, expected to be completed in 2008. The move will increase research collaboration and internship opportunities between the Erickson organization and UMBC students and faculty in The Erickson School and visual arts, communications and information technology programs.


Notable buildings

Public Policy Building

Completed in 2003 at an estimated cost of $18,700,000, the Public Policy Building houses the Shriver Center and related departments. This 62,000 GSF academic building includes public and general classroom space, as well as faculty offices for the Departments of Sociology and Anthropology, Economics, Political Science, Public Policy and the Maryland Institute for Policy Analysis and Research (MIPAR). An outdoor terrace and an interior double-story lobby with multi-media displays serve as areas to facilitate open discussion, supporting Public Policy's mission to increase environmental and social awareness.

The Hillcrest Building

Originally, the Hillcrest Building was an auxiliary building that served patients at nearby Spring Grove Hospital Center. It was the first institution designed specifically for the containment and rehabilitation of criminally insane patients to be erected in the United States.. In 1965 the land that UMBC currently occupies was sold by its proprietors, which included the Hillcrest Building. In this period it functioned as an administration building, with rooms for student organizations and clubs and housed the Residential Life office. The basement of the building was renovated into a club known as "The Rattskeller". The building ceased to be used by the university in 2000, and future plans to demolish it were announced. Some students took an interest in trying to preserve the building on the grounds of its historical significance.

Trevor J. Blank, a former student at UMBC, led a historic preservation effort to halt administrative efforts to raze the structure. He co-authored a book with David S. Helsel, M.D., titled "Spring Grove State Hospital," which includes a brief spotlight on the Hillcrest Building's history.

During the Summer of 2007 the building began to be demolished. In August 2007, the building was razed.

The Commons

The Commons, which opened in January 2002, is the hub of student life on campus. It consists of multiple dining opportunities, the campus bookstore, Off-campus Student Services, the Women’s Center, various student lounges, meeting rooms, administrative offices, as well as office space for many of the 180-plus UMBC student organizations, including the Graduate Student Association. Occupying more than 144,000 square feet (13,400 m), The Commons is equipped with wireless internet access and information displays. Architecturally, the facility is quite unusual in design featuring a multitude of glass windows that provide an appealing environment for the many social activities.

Other locations

Steam tunnels

The steam tunnels are a series of maintenance tunnels that connect almost all major buildings on campus; they're underground, where tunnels usually are. The main tunnel runs directly under the "main concourse" that leads from the library to the administration building, and is about a half-mile long. They carry all heating, water, electrical, and data lines within them. They are only accessible from secured entrances within the buildings themselves and a few select grates near Erickson Field. Also, the steam tunnels lead to an entrance to maintenance paths that lead to every building. This is the only outside entrance to the tunnels. Students are expelled for entering these areas.

Grassy knoll

The "Grassy Knoll" is a landmark in a somewhat hidden clearing in the woods between the Administration Drive and the Commons Garage. It is accessible via a path near the drainage tunnel.

Pig Pen Pond

Located on the south end of campus, Pig Pen Pond is one of the few remaining elements of the farmland upon which UMBC was built. It is home to much wildlife, including the Baltimore oriole.

Campus Police

The University of Maryland, Baltimore County Police Department is a nationally accredited law enforcement agency servicing a population of 10,628 students and faculty not including daily visitors on over 50 acres (200,000 m) of campus property and adjoining streets and roadways. The Police Department also employs a number of students as Police Student Marshals. Their main function is to provide campus wide escorts, event security, and to unlock and lock buildings.

Night Life

Flat Tuesdays- is a pub in the Commons at UMBC. It offers a space for hosting events, as well as live music.

Every Freakin' Friday- Each Friday in the commons, the Student Events Board offers free pool and ping pong, video game tournaments, concerts, stand-up comedy, and other social functions. Movies are played in the nearby lecture hall on the projector screen.

The Fish Head Cantina (known by students as 'The Fish Bowl') is a local bar and highly popular with college students from UMBC on Thursday nights.

Student life

Approximately 75% of freshman students live on campus. With the completion of Erickson Hall, Harbor Hall, and the Walker Avenue Apartments, UMBC is making the transition from a commuter school to a residential school. As more students move onto campus, organizations such as the Resident Student Association (RSA) and Student Events Board (SEB) are continually creating more activities for students to become involved in. In addition to events created and sponsored by the University, hundreds of university-sanctioned clubs and organizations are present on campus to build a sense of community. These clubs and organizations range from Greek life to academic and cultural clubs, to activity-based clubs including cycling, ice hockey, sky diving, sailing, tennis, ultimate frisbee, rowing, and the martial arts. The school is known for the ethnically diverse student body and remains in the top 20 most diverse schools in the country.

Student activities and organizations

Main article: University of Maryland, Baltimore County student organizations

体育运动
Main article: UMBC Retrievers
UMBC Retrievers Logo

The school's sports teams are called the Retrievers, with colors black and gold with red. The mascot of the University is the Chesapeake Bay Retriever, the state dog of Maryland, named True Grit. There is a statue of True Grit that stands in front of the Retriever Activities Center (RAC). The Retrievers participate in NCAA Division 1 as a part of the America East Conference, fielding 17 varsity sports; eight men and nine women. The Retrievers fight song is the UMBC Riser, and was written by Dr. George LaNoue, a professor of policy sciences.

The men's lacrosse team has risen to prominence in recent years. In 2009, the Retrievers secured their fifth consecutive outright or shared America East regular season championship and their third America East tournament championship in four years. UMBC has secured a berth in the NCAA tournament each of the past four seasons. In 2007, the unseeded Retrievers upset seventh-seeded Maryland, 13–9, in the NCAA tournament to advance to the Division I second round for the first, and so far only, time in school history.

The Retrievers won their first regular season American East Men's Basketball title in 2007-08, and also qualified for their first NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament. They had previously competed in the Division II men's basketball tournament.

[edit] Notable alumni

Arts and entertainment
  • Dennis Bowen - musician, internationally toured as drummer of the Dan Deacon Ensemble, and drummer of Double Dagger on Thrill Jockey Records.
  • Brian Dannelly - Director/writer of the 2004 film Saved!; series director/producer for the television shows Weeds, Pushing Daisies, and others.
  • Duff Goldman - the star of the Food Network reality television show Ace of Cakes, the owner of Charm City Cakes.
  • Robert Mugge - Film writer, director & producer.
  • Johnathon Schaech - Actor, writer, director, and producer.
  • Kathleen Turner - Oscar-nominated actress.
  • Crystal Chappell - Daily "Soaps" Television Actress, Twitterer.
Education
  • James Clements - 23rd president of West Virginia University.
Journalism
  • Tony Harris - CNN news anchor.
Politics
  • Ron Dillon, Jr. - Anne Arundel County Councilman, District 3.
  • Allan H. Kittleman - Maryland state senator, District 9.
  • James N. Mathias, Jr - former mayor of Ocean City, MD, member of the Maryland House of Delegates.
  • Dan Patrick - Texas State Senator, Radio Talk Show host.
  • Victoria L. Schade, former member of Maryland House of Delegates, District 31.
Sports
  • Mehdi Addadi - Olympic swimmer at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney.
  • Wayne Franklin - Former Major League Baseball (MLB) pitcher for the York Revolution in the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball.
  • Dan Marohl - National Lacrosse League (NLL) forward for the Philadelphia Wings.
  • Steve Marohl - NLL forward for the Baltimore Thunder and the Pittsburgh Crossefire; Major League Lacrosse (MLL) attack for the Baltimore Bayhawks.
  • Brendan Mundorf - NLL forward for the New York Titans; MLL forward for the Denver Outlaws.
  • Jeff Ratcliffe - NLL forward for the New York Titans.
  • Brian Rowland - United Soccer Leagues Second Division goalkeeper for Crystal Palace Baltimore.
  • Drew Westervelt - NLL attack for the Philadelphia Wings; Major League Lacrosse attack for the Denver Outlaws.
  • Jay Witasick - MLB pitcher who is currently a free agent.

更多

  • Mid-InfraRed Technologies for Health and the Environment (MIRTHE) (largely based at Princeton University)
  • Swoogle (search engine)

参考文献

  1. ^ UMBC Facts
  2. ^ Graphic Standards
  3. ^ "UMBC Style Guide" (PDF). UMBC. http://www.umbc.edu/umbcstyle/writing_stand.pdf. Retrieved 2008-05-28. 
  4. ^ http://www.umbc.edu/gradschool/gradcatalog/
  5. ^ UMBC Honors and Achievements, Leadership and Innovation
  6. ^ 2009 Princeton Review Rankings
  7. ^ Princeton Review
  8. ^ http://www.retrieverweekly.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=4066&format=print
  9. ^ Blank, Trevor J. “Contesting the Contested: Preservation Politics, Collective Memory, and the First Institution for the Criminally Insane in America,” Material Culture: Journal of the Pioneer America Society, Vol. 41, no.1 (2009): 39-60.
  10. ^ UMBC campus birdlist
  11. ^ America East announces all-league honors, Inside Lacrosse, April 28, 2009.
  12. ^ All-Time Records (PDF), 2009 UMBC Retrievers Men's Lacrosse Media Guide, p. 41–50, UMBC, 2009.
  13. ^ UMBC 13, Maryland 9, NCAA, May 13, 2007.
  14. ^ UMBC Retrievers Hall of Fame, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, retrieved June 14, 2009.
  15. ^ Big signings for Titans, NLL.com, November 16, 2006.
  16. ^ Ratcliffe retires after eight seasons, NLL.com, August 25, 2008.
  17. ^ #14 Drew Westervelt, A, Denver Outlaws, retrieved June 14, 2009.

External links

  • University of Maryland, Baltimore County
  • Official UMBC Retrievers site
  • Albin O. Kuhn Library & Gallery, UMBC
  • UMBC Freeform Radio Station
  • UMBC Wrestling Homepage
  • Retriever Weekly - A weekly print and online newspaper created by UMBC students for UMBC students.
  • UMBC Underground - An alternative news blog created by anonymous individuals for UMBC students.
  • Overheard at UMBC - A daily blog posting humorous and out of context quotes overheard at UMBC.
  • Baltimore Weather - Provided by the weather station at UMBC.
  • College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences
  • College of Engineering and Information Technology
  • College of Natural and Mathematical Sciences
  • Continuing & Professional Studies
  • Erickson School of Aging Studies
  • Graduate School
  • School of Social Work
  • UMBC Men's Ice Hockey
  • UMBC Campus on Google Street View
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