The University of Antioquia was preceded by the Franciscan College (Spanish: Colegio de Franciscanos), which was founded in 1803 after King Charles IV of Spain issued the Royal Decree of February 9, 1801,[10] allowing the establishment of a college-convent in Villa de la Candelaria [citation needed], Medellín.[1]
The first classes were held in March 1803, programs for Latin and philosophy were available for higher education. On June 20, 1803, the council of Medellín bought land for the main building and construction started in August. The structure is known as the San Ignacio building (Spanish: Edificio San Ignacio)[5]
During a great part of the 19th century, the country faced political and armed struggles and the university was closed and occupied by belligerents impeding the institution's development.[1]
20th century
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Once the Thousand Days' War was over, the country experienced stability and the university grew.[5] In the first thirty years the university reorganized its curriculum, redesigned some of the buildings, acquired bibliographic material and employed renowned professors.[1][5]
University City (Spanish: Ciudad Universitaria) was built in the 1960s with debt and international aid. This allowed the increase in the numbers of both students and professors and the creation of new faculties and academic programs.[1]
In the late 20th century, as part of its regionalization program, the university opened campuses and facilities in several regions of the department of Antioquia and established the University Research Headquarters.
Today
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UdeA started in the mid-1990s a regionalization program to offer higher education in other municipalities within the department of Antioquia, reaching 11 regional campuses outside of Medellín.[3]
In 2004 the university established the University Research Headquarters (Spanish: Sede de Investigación Universitaria (SIU)) an advanced project to promote a qualitative and quantitative transformation of its research system.[11]
Campus
The university spreads across Medellín, while University City is the main campus. The other Medellín campuses are the Citadel Robledo and the Health Area. The San Ignacio Building is located in the downtown area. Eleven regional campuses are located outside the city.
Medellín
University City
Built in the 1960s with an area of 23.75 hectares (58.7 acres),[2] University City is the main campus of the university. The campus contains eight faculties, three schools, three institutes and the Administrative Building (Spanish: Edificio Administrativo).[12][13] It hosts the University Museum (Spanish: Museo Universitario), the University Theater(Spanish: Teatro Universitario), the Central Library (Spanish: Biblioteca Central) and the Sport Unit (Spanish: Unidad Deportiva).[14]
Citadel Robledo
With an area of 89 hectares (220 acres),[2] Citadel Robledo hosts the Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, the School of Nutrition, Veterinary Clinic and the Institute of Physical Education.[12] The campus library is widely known for its collections in veterinary medicine and zootechnics.
It also contains a sport unit with two football pitches, a pool, two basketball/futsal courts and a handball court.[14]
Health area
This area hosts the nursing, dentistry, medicine and public health faculties, near the St Vincent de Paul University Hospital (Spanish: Hospital Universitario San Vicente de Paúl).[14]
San Ignacio Building
The historical campus of the university was declared a national monument in 1982.[15] It hosts seven exhibition halls, ten lecture rooms, one movie theater, two computer labs, one restaurant, one multipurpose room and one auditorium.[16]
The Superior University Council (Spanish: Consejo Superior Universitario) is the university's governing body. It is formed by the Governor of Antioquia who is the president of the SUC, the Minister of Education or his delegate, a representative of the President of Colombia, a dean elected as the representative of the Academic Council, a representative of the professors, a representative of the students, an alumnus, a representative of the industry, an ex-rector of the university and the rector (non-voting).[19]
The Academic Council (Spanish: Consejo Académico) is the highest academic body of the university. It is formed by the rector, who is the president of the AC; vice-rectors of Investigation, Teaching, Extension and Administration; deans of each faculty; a representative of the professors and a student representative.[20]
The rector is the legal representative and top executive of the university. He is responsible for academic and administrative management. He is not permitted to take another job in the private or public sector. He takes office before the President of the Superior University Council.[21]
Academics
The university has 25 academic divisions at its flagship campus:[12]
Academic divisions of the University of Antioquia
Faculties
Faculty of Arts
Faculty of Agricultural Sciences
Faculty of Economics
Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences
Faculty of Communications and Philology
Faculty of Law and Political Sciences
Faculty of Education
Faculty of Nursing
Faculty of Engineering
Faculty of Medicine
Faculty of Dentistry
Faculty of Pharmaceutical and Food Sciences
Faculty of Public Health
Schools
School of Languages
Inter-American School of Library Studies
School of Microbiology
School of Nutrition
Institutes
Institute of Philosophy
Institute of Physical Education and Sports
Institute of Political Studies
Institute of Regional Studies
Corporations
Academic Environmental Corporation
Academic Corporation Basic Biomedical Sciences
Academic Corporation for the Study of Tropical Pathologies
The university offers 87 undergraduate degrees, 48 specializations, 41 medical specializations, 53 master's degrees and 22 doctoral degrees in Medellín.[2] In the regional campuses, they offer 126 undergraduate degrees and two master's degrees.[2] The UdeA has also a number of international partnerships, offering student exchange programs and some double degrees with foreign institutions, among them: Politecnico di Torino, Universidade de São Paulo, and Politecnico di Milano.[22]
Admission
Undergraduate education
The undergraduate admission is done through a knowledge test, which is conducted twice a year. The entrance examination is an instrument that measured some basic skills and knowledge that have been obtained is in high school. It is a general aptitude test and as such does not evaluate the applicant regarding the career you want to enter.
The exam consists of two components, Reading Proficiency Test (Spanish) and Logical Reasoning Test (Mathematical Logic) and is equal to the candidates of all programs except for the Faculty of Arts.
To be eligible you must pass a minimum cutoff score and also be within the number of seats available for each academic program. For each semester, the test is often extremely competitive, meaning that the selectivity in admission to each of the academic programs is very high, in some cases presenting the proportion of applicants admitted less than 10%.
Postgraduate education
In graduate school admission is as complex as in the undergraduate. For general graduate requirements differ depending on the title to obtain and the academic unit in which you want to be done. In general at all levels requires the mastery of a foreign language and there are different requirements such as exams, interviews, proposed work and / or research, undergraduate grades, publications, awards, honors, work experience, research experience, participation in events, presentations, and more.
Research
The university has 228 research groups in the categories established by Colciencias (A1, A, B, C and D).[2] In 2006, the university provided an investment of about $145 billion COP for research.[23]
The majority of the excellence groups (A1, A and B) are concentrated at University Research Headquarters (Spanish: Sede de Investigación Universitaria -SIU-) an advanced project created by the university to promote a qualitative and quantitative transformation of its research system..[citation needed]
The SIU supports currently 36 research groups that are classified by Colciencias as categories A and B, working in diverse areas such as biotechnology, chemistry, materials science, genetics, environment, immunology, infectious and tropical diseases.[11]
Along with providing facilities for the development of scientific and technological projects, the SIU encourages promotes interdepartmental research and cooperation with the larger research community.[11]
The university supports student groups and organizations involved in academic, art, ecological, social and sports activities. Three cultural groups are administered by the university (academic divisions can run their own groups, however). The three are the Folk Dances Group, the Traditional Student Music Group and the Club of Singers.[27]