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University in Western Cape, South Africa From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stellenbosch University (SU) (Afrikaans: Universiteit Stellenbosch, Xhosa: iYunivesithi yaseStellenbosch) is a public research university situated in Stellenbosch, a town in the Western Cape province of South Africa. Stellenbosch is the oldest university in South Africa and the oldest extant university in Sub-Saharan Africa, which received full university status in 1918.[5] Stellenbosch University designed and manufactured Africa's first microsatellite, SUNSAT, launched in 1999.[6]
This article may have too many links. (November 2024) |
Universiteit Stellenbosch or Stellenbosch Universiteit | |
Motto | Latin: Pectora roborant cultus recti |
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Motto in English | "A sound education strengthens the spirit" |
Type | Public |
Established | 2 April 1918 |
Endowment | ZAR 5.04 Billion[1] |
Chancellor | Edwin Cameron |
Vice-Chancellor | Wim de Villiers |
Academic staff | 1,028[2] |
Administrative staff | 2,183[2] |
Undergraduates | 25,042[3] |
Postgraduates | 10,051[3] |
Location | , , South Africa (SA) 33°55′58″S 18°51′51″E |
Campus | 2 suburban, 2 urban and 1 rural |
Colours | Maroon |
Nickname | Maties |
Affiliations | |
Mascot | Pokkel[4] |
Website | www |
Stellenbosch is organised in 139 departments across 10 faculties offering bachelor's (NQF 7) to doctoral degrees (NQF 10) in the English and Afrikaans language.[7][8] Across five campuses in the Western Cape, the university is home to 32,000 students.
The students of Stellenbosch University are nicknamed "Maties". The term probably arises from the Afrikaans word "tamatie" (meaning tomato, and referring to the maroon sports uniforms and blazer colour). An alternative theory is that the term comes from the Afrikaans colloquialism maat (meaning "buddy" or "mate"), originally used diminutively ("maatjie") by the students of the University of Cape Town's precursor, the South African College.[9]
The origin of the university can be traced back to the Stellenbosch Gymnasium, which was founded in 1864 and opened on 1 March 1866. The first five students matriculated in 1870, but capacity did not initially exist for any tertiary education. However, in the 1870s, the Cape Colony's first locally elected government took office and prioritised education. In 1873, four of the five 1870 matriculates became the institution's first graduates by attaining the "Second Class Certificate" through distance learning, and the gymnasium's student numbers rose to over a hundred.
In 1874, a series of government acts provided for colleges and universities, with generous subsidies and staff. A personal intervention by the Prime Minister in the same year ensured that Stellenbosch qualified, after initially being allocated to be purely a secondary school. Later in 1874, the institution acquired its first Professor and, in the coming few years, its capacity and staff grew rapidly. Its first academic senate was constituted at the beginning of 1876, when several new premises were also acquired. The first MA degree (in Stellenbosch and in South Africa) was completed in 1878, and also in that year, the Gymnasium's first four female students were enrolled.[10][11]
The institution became the Stellenbosch College in 1881, and was located at the current Arts Department. In 1887, this college was renamed Victoria College; when it acquired university status on 2 April 1918 it was renamed once again, to Stellenbosch University.[12] Initially only one university was planned for the Cape but after the government was visited by a delegation from the Victoria College, it was decided to allow the college to be a university if it could raise £100,000.[13]: 290–1 Jannie Marais, a wealthy Stellenbosch farmer, bequeathed the money required before his death in 1915.[13]: 291 There were certain conditions to his gift which included Dutch/Afrikaans having equal status to English and that the lecturers teach at least half their lectures in Dutch/Afrikaans. By 1930, very little, if any, instruction was delivered in English.[13]: 291
In December 2014, specialists at the university performed the first successful penis transplantation on a 21-year-old man.[14]
Stellenbosch University was the first African university to sign the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities.[15]
Although the university was originally named the University of Stellenbosch (Afrikaans: Universiteit van Stellenbosch), it nowadays uses two forms: the English version Stellenbosch University (abbreviated SU) and the Afrikaans version Universiteit Stellenbosch (abbreviated US).[16][17] In all its official documents, such as degree certificates, as well as the university coat of arms, both the English "Stellenbosch University" and the Afrikaans "Universiteit Stellenbosch" are used.
Stellenbosch is located about 50 kilometres from Cape Town, and is situated on the banks of the Eersterivier ("First River") in the famous wine-growing region and is encircled by picturesque mountains. Teaching at Stellenbosch University is divided across five campuses.
Stellenbosch University consists of 139 departments across 10 faculties.[18]
The Southern African node of the Pan-African University is based in South Africa and will concentrate on space sciences.[19]
This decision was connected with South Africa's bid to host the Square Kilometre Array of radio telescopes. In September 2009 Jean-Pierre Ezin, African Union commissioner for science, said the node at the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa was hoped to open in February 2010.[20] According to University World News, however, "The PAU project continues in other regions although Southern Africa has been lagging behind."[21]
Stellenbosch University has the facilities for the more than 30 competitive and recreational sports that are supported by the university include Danie Craven Stadium, Indoor and Outdoor Swimming Pools, the Coetzenburg Centre, a multi-purpose center for ceremonies and indoor sports, playing fields, including two artificial hockey fields, a gymnasium, and a new football complex.
The university offers several sports to its students. Some of them are athletics, bouldering, badminton, basketball, canoeing, cricket, cross country running, cycling, fencing, golf, gymnastics, field hockey, judo, kendo, netball, rowing, rugby union, soccer, squash, surfing, swimming, taekwondo, tennis, underwater hockey, volleyball, water polo, and yachting.[citation needed]
The Stellenbosch University Library has collections scattered around the campus outside of the main facility, and all of which are catalogued on a computerized database, using the university's original mainframe, a UNIVAC. There are several other satellite libraries servicing the different faculties, including the Theology Library, Law Library and Tygerberg Medical Library.
Stellenbosch University also has a Conservatory, with two concert halls. The Conservatory is the home of the internationally acclaimed[22] Stellenbosch University Choir, who, along with being the oldest South African choir have received numerous awards overseas.[23] The university also has a 430-seat theatre, known as the HB Thom Theatre and an open-air amphitheatre. Accompanying these facilities is the university's own Drama Department, under the guidance of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. The department regularly puts on plays, dramas, productions, cabarets and musicals.
The Stellenbosch University Botanical Garden is the oldest university botanical garden in South Africa.
The Langenhoven Students' Centre (Neelsie) houses the Student Representative Council, a food court, a cinema, a post office, a shopping centre, an advice office and all the student societies' offices. Student bands and various entertainment and activity promotions usually appear in the main food court during lunch hour.
The university has its own radio station known as MFM (Matie FM), situated in the Neelsie. It broadcasts a mix of music, news, entertainment and campus news over the entire Stellenbosch area at 92.6 FM.
The university also distributes regular publications, Die Matie (appearing every fortnight) for its students and Kampusnuus (appearing monthly) for its staff. An official yearbook, Stellenbosch Student, is published annually and presented to all graduating students. Matieland[24] is the name of the official alumni magazine. It is published twice a year and distributed to some 100 000 alumni and friends of the university.
Stellenbosch University has historically been a predominantly Afrikaans-medium university. However, as the student body became more diverse, pressure mounted for more classes in English. Today, the university's language policy[25] promotes multilingualism as a means to increase equitable access for all students and staff. Afrikaans, English and Xhosa are used in academic, administrative, professional and social contexts, and classes are offered in Afrikaans and English.
At postgraduate level the language of tuition is determined by the composition of the class. Most advanced postgraduate courses are conducted in English. According to the 2016 language profile of the university, 40.7% of its students stated Afrikaans as their home language, 46.1% stated English, 0.9% stated English and Afrikaans, and 3.1% of students stated isiXhosa as their home language.[26]
The language policy is still an ongoing issue for the university, since it is one of the very few tertiary institutions in South Africa offering instruction in Afrikaans.[27] It is situated in the Western Cape province, where 67% of the population have Afrikaans as home language, and the only one of four universities in the province to offer degree courses in Afrikaans. The university annually hosts the SU Woordfees, a predominantly Afrikaans-language festival of the written and spoken word.[28]
Year | White (Number) | White (%) | Black African (Number) | Black African (%) | Coloured (Number) | Coloured (%) | Indian (Number) | Indian (%) | Withheld (Number) | Withheld (%) | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | 18,764 | 62.2% | 5,355 | 17.8% | 5,238 | 17.4% | 793 | 2.63% | - | - | 30,150 |
2016 | 18,907 | 61.3% | 5,629 | 18.2% | 5,443 | 17.6% | 875 | 2.84% | - | - | 30,854 |
2017 | 18,937 | 59.9% | 6,018 | 19% | 5,718 | 18.1% | 952 | 3.01% | - | - | 31,625 |
2018 | 18,447 | 58.1% | 6,375 | 20.1% | 5,757 | 18.1% | 996 | 3.14% | 136 | 0.43% | 31,711 |
2019 | 17,935 | 56.6% | 6,665 | 21% | 5,747 | 18.1% | 1,005 | 3.2% | 244 | 0.77% | 31,596 |
2020 | 17,607 | 55.5% | 6,873 | 21.8% | 5,679 | 18% | 1,004 | 3.2% | 370 | 1.17% | 31,533 |
2021 | 17,541 | 54.4% | 7,270 | 22.5% | 5,794 | 18% | 1,087 | 3.4% | 443 | 1.37% | 32,135 |
2022 | 16,788 | 51.6% | 7,590 | 23.3% | 5,766 | 17.7% | 1,106 | 3.4% | 1,163 | 3.6% | 32,413 |
2023 | 16,770 | 49.8% | 8,270 | 24.6% | 5,735 | 17% | 1,186 | 3.52% | 1,541 | 4.6% | 33,502 |
Stellenbosch has 34 residence halls in configurations for women only, men only and mixed gender. Each residence is supervised by a resident head assisted by a House Committee of senior students. The House Committee assists students with security, maintenance, and social programs. Each first year student on campus gets access to a be-well mentor who assist them with their social-emotional transition from school to university. Each residence for undergrads incorporates a laundry room, a common living room and a dining hall where meals are provided for which students book beforehand on their student account.
The number of available rooms in university residences is limited, which requires some students to find private boarding.[30] Students in private lodgings are assigned to one of 6 Commuter Student Organisations (CSO), also known as Private Wards. These CSOs give private students exposure to the same campus experience as students residing in residences. The oldest residence is Wilgenhof men's residence, established in 1903.[31]
The CSO wards along with the Residence Halls are grouped into six clusters with nearby residences to form student communities (a seventh cluster is on the Tygerberg campus).[32] For each of these clusters, a hub facility is being built, of which three have already been completed, namely amaMaties, Wimbledon and Victoria.[33] In this way, commuter students can enjoy the same benefits as residence students, such as mentor support, meals and a well-appointed place to go to between classes.
The university is one of three public universities in the Western Cape and one of about 20 universities in the country.
In the latest edition of the Times Higher Education World University Rankings, Stellenbosch University was ranked in the 251-275 category in the world and third in Africa. Another reputable ranking system, QS World University Rankings recently ranked the university at 390 in the world and also third in Africa.[43]
Leiden University ranked Stellenbosch 395th out of the top 500 universities worldwide on its CWTS Leiden Ranking list of 2013.[44] This list also ranked the university second in both South Africa and Africa, behind only the University of Cape Town.
Stellenbosch University Times Higher Education Ranking 2012 to 2024 | |
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Year | World Rank |
2024 | 301–350 |
2023 | 251–300 |
2022 | 251–300 |
2021 | 251–300 |
2020 | 251–300 |
2019 | 251–300 |
2018 | 351–400 |
2017 | 401-500 |
2016 | 301-350 |
2015 | 276-300 |
2014 | 301-350 |
2013 | 301-350 |
2012 | 251-275 |
[45][46][47][48][49][50][51][52][53][54][55][56][57][58] |
Stellenbosch University consistently ranks in the top 200 worldwide in law, politics and geography.
Stellenbosch University is ranked in the top 100 worldwide in development studies, theology, agriculture and forestry.[59]
In 2012, Webometrics ranked Stellenbosch's web footprint 2nd largest in Africa, again behind the University of Cape Town.[60]
The University of Stellenbosch Business School's MBA program was ranked 65th out of 100 MBA programmes of the leading business schools in the world the Aspen Institute's 2011-12 edition of its Beyond Grey Pinstripes survey. The USB is also the only business school in South Africa, as well as the rest of the continent, to be included in the Top 100 list.[61]
The University of Stellenbosch Business School has triple accreditation (AMBA, EQUIS and AACSB accreditation) and is ranked second in Africa by Eduniversal. The University of Stellenbosch Business School is ranked in the top 100 worldwide in executive education by Financial Times.[62]
In October 2022, an incident of alleged racism occurred where a white student urinated onto the study material of a black student.[63]
In 2023, Vice-Chancellor Wim de Villiers was charged of nepotism.[64][65] He allegedly used his discretionary right to secure a place for his wife's nephew at the university's medical school.[66][67] An investigation into the case found that there was no misconduct that warranted his removal from office but that he would have to face financial consequences.
General Management[68] | |
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Prof Wim de Villiers | Rector and Vice-Chancellor |
Edwin Cameron | Chancellor |
Prof Stan du Plessis | Chief Operating Officer |
Prof Hester Klopper | Deputy Vice-Chancellor: Strategy, Global and Corporate Affairs |
Prof Nico Koopman | Deputy Vice-Chancellor: Social Impact, Transformation & Personnel |
Prof Sibusiso Moyo | Deputy Vice-Chancellor: Research, Innovation and Postgraduate Studies |
Prof Deresh Ramjugernath | Deputy Vice-Chancellor: Learning and Teaching |
Dr Ronel Retief | Registrar |
Mr Mohamed Shaikh | Executive Manager: Rectorate |
Rector[69] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Period | Surname | Name(s) | Date of Birth | Date of Death | |||
1 | 1919-1925 | Cillié | Gabriël Gideon | 10 September 1870 | 1 April 1958 | ||
2 | 1925-1934 | Wilson | Douglas George | 25 April 1856 | |||
3 | 1934-1955 | Wilcocks | Raymond William | 23 January 1892 | 16 March 1967 | ||
4 | 1955-1970 | Thom | Hendrik Bernardus | 31 December 1905 | 4 November 1983 | ||
5 | 1970-1979 | de Villiers | Jan Naude | 17 August 1923 | |||
6 | 1979-1993 | de Vries | Michiel Josias | 5 May 1933 | 5 July 2002 | ||
7 | 1993-2002 | van Wyk | Andreas Hercules | 17 September 1941 | |||
8 | 2002-2007 | Brink | Chris | 31 January 1951 | |||
9 | 2007-2014 | Botman | Hayman Russel | 18 October 1953 | 28 June 2014 | ||
10 | 2014-2025 | de Villiers | Willem Johan Simon | 26 September 1959 | |||
11 | 2025–Present | Ramjugernath | Deresh | 26 July 1972 |
Chancellor | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Period | Surname | Name(s) | Date of Birth | Date of Death | |
1 | 1918-1919 | Marais | Johannes Izak | 23 August 1848 | 27 August 1919 |
2 | 1919-1931 | Vos | Pieter Jacobus Gerhard | 29 October 1842 | 31 October 1931 |
3 | 1931-1932 | de Villiers | Jacob Abraham Jeremias | 14 December 1868 | 16 September 1937 |
4 | 1932-1939 | Moorrees | Adriaan | 18 August 1855 | 17 November 1938 |
5 | 1939-1941 | Kestell | John Daniel Kestell | 15 December 1854 | 9 February 1941 |
6 | 1941-1959 | Malan | Daniel Francois | 22 May 1874 | 7 February 1959 |
7 | 1959-1968 | Dönges | Theophilus Ebenhaezer | 8 March 1898 | 10 January 1968 |
8 | 1968-1983 | Vorster | Balthazar Johannes | 13 December 1915 | 10 September 1983 |
9 | 1983-1983 | Thom | Hendrik Bernardus | 31 December 1905 | 4 November 1983 |
10 | 1984-1988 | Botha | Pieter Willem | 12 January 1916 | 31 October 2006 |
11 | 1988-1998 | van der Horst | Johannes Gerhardus | 19 September 1919 | 23 April 2003 |
12 | 1998-2008 | Botha | Elizabeth | 19 November 1930 | 16 November 2007 |
13 | 2008-2009 | Slabbert | Frederik Van Zyl | 2 March 1940 | 14 May 2010 |
14 | 2009-2019 | Rupert | Johann Peter | 1 June 1950 | |
15 | 2019- | Cameron | Edwin | 15 February 1953 |
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