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Overview | The University of Texas at Austin
src: www.utexas.edu

The University of Texas System (UT System) encompasses 14 educational institutions in the U.S. state of Texas, of which eight are academic universities and six are health institutions. The UT System is headquartered in Downtown Austin, and has a total enrollment of over 216,000 students (largest university system in Texas) and employs more than 87,000 faculty and staff. The UT System's $24 billion endowment (as of the 2016 fiscal year) is the largest of any public university system in the United States. Reuters ranks The UT System among the top 10 most innovative universities in the world.


Video University of Texas System



Component institutions

Academic institutions

The University of Texas System has eight separate and distinct academic institutions; each institution is a stand-alone university and confers its own degrees. Its oldest and flagship institution is The University of Texas at Austin.

Notes

Former institutions merged

University of Texas Rio Grande Valley

On June 14, 2013, Texas Governor Rick Perry signed SB 24 into law, officially approving the creation of a new university in South Texas within the UT System, officially replacing UT-Brownsville and UT-Pan American. The initiative resulted in a single institution, including a medical school, spanning the entire Rio Grande Valley, with a presence in each of the major metropolitan areas of Brownsville, Edinburg, Harlingen, and McAllen. On December 12, 2013, the UT Board of Regents voted to name the new university the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. The new university began full operation in the 2015-16 school year.

Health institutions

In addition to eight academic institutions, the University of Texas System also has six health institutions.

  • The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
  • The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
  • The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
  • The University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler
  • The University of Texas Medical Branch
  • The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

Two other medical schools in the UT System enrolled their first classes in the 2016-17 school year--the Dell Medical School at the Austin campus and the UTRGV School of Medicine.


Maps University of Texas System



Student profile


53-acre campus expansion, $37.6 million engineering/academic ...
src: www.edinburgpolitics.com


Administration

Headquarters

The administrative offices are in Downtown Austin. The UT system approved moving the system headquarters in November 2012. Boonds from the UT System's endowment funded the construction of the new 15-story, 258,000-square-foot (24,000 m2) headquarters, which had a price tag of $102 million. The UT system planned to lease a portion of the facility for shops and other offices, with the approximately 200,000-square-foot (19,000 m2) remaining portion used for its own employees. The system headquarters, named Replacement Office Building (ROB), were scheduled to open on August 1, 2017.

The University of Texas System was previously headquartered in O. Henry Hall in Downtown Austin. The system headquarters complex previously included multiple buildings, which had 550 employees in 2014. These faciliies included O. Henry Hall, Claudia Taylor Johnson Hall (named after Lady Bird Johnson), Ashbel Smith Hall, the Colorado Building, the Lavaca Building, and the Norwood Tower. Parking garages serving the complex include Parking Garage I, Parking Garage II, Parking Garage III, 300 West 6th Street Parking Garage, and the garage between the Colorado and Lavaca buildings.

In 2013 the UT system approved the demolitions of the Colorado Building and the Lavaca Building, and the new UT headquarters was built where these buildings previously stood. The Texas State University System purchased O. Henry Hall in 2015 for $8.2 million; the UT System leased it and continued using it as its administrative headquarters prior to the 2017 completion of the UT System's current headquarters. The UT system replaced Claudia Taylor Johnson Hall and Ashbel Smith Hall with a commercial property that used the façade of Johnson Hall and is leased by Trammell Crow. The Ashbel Smith name is no longer used, and in this way UT Austin removes any references to the Confederate States of America, now highly controversial in 2017; Ashbel Smith was involved in the Confederacy.

Regents

  • Paul L. Foster, Chairman, El Paso
  • Steven Hicks, Vice Chairman, Austin
  • Jeffrey Hildebrand, Vice Chairman, Houston
  • Ernest Aliseda, McAllen
  • David Beck, Houston
  • Sara Martinez Tucker, Dallas
  • Kevin Paul Eltife, Tyler
  • Janiece M. Longoria, Houston
  • James Conrad "Rad" Weaver, San Antonio
  • Varun P. Joseph, Student Regent, UT Health Science Center San Antonio

Executive Committee

  • William H. McRaven, Chancellor
  • David E. Daniel, Deputy Chancellor
  • Raymond S. Greenberg, Executive Vice Chancellor for Health Affairs
  • Scott C. Kelley, Executive Vice Chancellor for Business Affairs
  • Steven Leslie, Executive Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs
  • Stephanie Bond Huie, Vice Chancellor for Strategic Initiatives
  • Patricia D. Hurn, Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation
  • Barry McBee, Vice Chancellor and Chief Governmental Relations Officer
  • Randa S. Safady, Vice Chancellor for External Relations
  • Daniel Sharphorn, Vice Chancellor and General Counsel
  • William H. Shute, Vice Chancellor for Federal Relations
  • Amy Shaw Thomas, Vice Chancellor and Counsel for Health Affairs
  • Francie A. Frederick, General Counsel to the Board of Regents

Officials

  • Randy Wallace, Associate Vice Chancellor, Controller and Chief Budget Officer
  • Terry Hull, Associate Vice Chancellor for Finance
  • Michael Peppers, Chief Audit Executive
  • Phil Dendy, Chief Compliance Officer
  • Ed Mattison, Chief Information Security Officer
  • Marg Knox, Chief Information Officer
  • Michael O'Donnell, Associate Vice Chancellor for Facilities Planning and Construction
  • Dan Stewart, Associate Vice Chancellor for Employee Benefits and Services
  • Mark Warner, interim, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Investment Officer, The University of Texas Investment Management Co. (UTIMCO)

Atlas of Texas - Perry-Castañeda Map Collection - UT Library Online
src: legacy.lib.utexas.edu


Coordinated Admissions Program

The Coordinated Admissions Program (more colloquially known as "CAP") offers some UT Austin applicants the chance to attend the university if they complete their freshman year at another system school and meet specified requirements. Each institution in the University of Texas System sets its own admissions standards, and not all schools may accept a particular CAP student. UT Dallas does not participate in the CAP program, and UTSA, the largest recipient of CAP students, has stated it will be phasing out the program within the next ten years.


The University of Texas at Austin
src: www.utexas.edu


Gallery


Ballet Austin's Butler Center for Dance and Fitness | University ...
src: www.utsystem.edu


See also

  • Education in Texas
  • University of Texas admissions controversy
  • List of colleges and universities in the United States by endowment over $1 billion

University of Texas System Chancellor William McRaven talks about ...
src: c8.alamy.com


Notes


53-acre campus expansion, $37.6 million engineering/academic ...
src: edinburgpolitics.com


External links

  • Official website

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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