fbpx
Wikipedia

University of Tennessee system

The University of Tennessee system (UT system) is a system of public universities in the U.S. state of Tennessee. It is one of two public university systems, the other being the Tennessee Board of Regents (TBR). It consists of four primary campuses in Knoxville, Chattanooga, Pulaski and Martin; a health sciences campus in Memphis; a research institute in Tullahoma; and various extensions throughout the state.

University of Tennessee
TypePublic university system
Established1968
EndowmentUS$1 billion
PresidentRandy Boyd
Academic staff
2,250
Administrative staff
6,950
Students49,000
Undergraduates34,539
Postgraduates10,056
Location, ,
United States
CampusFive campuses
Websitewww.tennessee.edu
class=notpageimage|
University of Tennessee system locations.

The UT system has a combined student enrollment of more than 49,000 students, over 320,000 living alumni, and a total endowment that tops $1 billion.[1]

History edit

The University of Tennessee was founded in Knoxville as Blount College in 1794. It became East Tennessee College in 1807, and gained university status in 1840. It was designated as the state's land-grant institution in 1869, and was renamed the "University of Tennessee" in 1879.[2]

The medical campus, the UT Health Science Center, was founded in Memphis in 1911. An adult education extension center was founded in Nashville in 1947.

In 1927, UT founded the University of Tennessee Junior College, and bought the campus of the defunct Hall-Moody Institute, a Baptist institution in the northwest Tennessee town of Martin, to use for the new college. In 1951, the school began awarding bachelor's degrees and became the University of Tennessee Martin Branch. In 1967, the campus was elevated to an autonomous four-year institution under the name of the University of Tennessee at Martin.

In 1968, the UT system was officially formed, with the Knoxville and Martin campuses as primary campuses. That same year, the Tennessee state legislature gave UT permission to establish a campus in Chattanooga, which was the largest city in Tennessee without a public university. The private University of Chattanooga determined that it could not raise enough private capital to compete with a public institution, and agreed to merge with another private school, Chattanooga City College, to form the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga in 1969.

Also in 1968, UT announced plans to expand the Nashville extension center into a full-fledged University of Tennessee at Nashville. Rita Sanders Geier filed a desegregation lawsuit against the state. Geier contended that if UT were allowed to build a campus in Nashville, where Tennessee State University was located, it would perpetuate a dual system of higher education. As a result, the UT Nashville campus was eventually merged with TSU by court order in 1979.[3]

On December 9, 2020, UT's board of trustees unanimously voted in favor of integrating Martin Methodist College into the UT system as UT Southern. This merger is aimed at providing higher education to the residents of rural southern Middle Tennessee.[4][5] On June 27, 2021 The Tennessean reported that MMC had been fully accepted as a system campus, with the tuition to be adjusted accordingly.[6]

Campuses edit

There are six educational units of the university system, four of which are separate universities within this statewide higher education system.

University of Tennessee, Knoxville (UTK) edit

UT Knoxville is the flagship campus of the UT system, based in Knoxville. The largest university in the state, it has a current total enrollment of 27,523. UT awarded 6,345 degrees in over 300 programs in the 2009–10 academic year.

While not a separate entity, UT Knoxville operates a campus in Nashville that is part of the UT Knoxville College of Social Work. The Nashville Campus awards the M.S.S.W. in conjunction with UT Knoxville.

University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (UTC) edit

UTC is a large university located in downtown Chattanooga. The university was founded as a private school in 1886, joined the UT system in 1969, and currently has over 10,000 students.

University of Tennessee at Martin (UT Martin) edit

Located in rural northwest Tennessee in Martin, UT Martin began in 1900 as Hall-Moody Institute, a private Baptist school. In 1927, the Tennessee Baptist Convention merged Hall-Moody Institute with Union University. The University of Tennessee System took over the former Hall-Moody campus and the school became known as The University of Tennessee Junior College in Martin. It operated under this name until 1951 when four-year fields of study leading to bachelor's degrees were added. The name was then changed to The University of Tennessee Martin Branch. In 1967, it was designated a primary campus in the UT system and was given its current name, The University of Tennessee at Martin. With approximately 8,000 students, UT Martin comprises the main campus in Martin and four extended campuses located in Parsons, Selmer, Jackson, and Ripley.

University of Tennessee Southern (UT Southern) edit

As a consequence of a planned meeting between then-Acting System President Randy Boyd (later named the system's permanent head) and Martin Methodist College President Mark La Branche in 2020 about the plans for UT to open an Agricultural Extension Office in MMC's hometown of Pulaski, a wider-ranging discussion ensued about the low level of affordable higher educational opportunities in Southern Middle Tennessee. MMC was founded as a women's college in 1870, but became co-educational in the 1930s. In December 2020, The University of Tennessee Board of Trustees voted to accept MMC as a primary campus of the University of Tennessee System. On June 27, 2021 The Tennessean reported that the merger had been consummated, with La Branche to serve as the first chancellor of the campus as a unit of the UT system designated the University of Tennessee Southern.[7]

University of Tennessee Health Science Center (UTHSC) edit

The University of Tennessee Health Science Center (UTHSC) has its main campus in Memphis. UTHSC offers a wide variety of degree programs among its six colleges: Allied Health Sciences, Dentistry, Graduate Health Sciences, Medicine, Nursing, and Pharmacy. UTHSC also has colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy, in addition to an Allied Health Sciences unit in Knoxville, as well as a College of Medicine campus in Chattanooga. In addition, UTHSC has more than 100 clinical and educational sites statewide.

University of Tennessee Space Institute (UT Space Institute) edit

The University of Tennessee Space Institute is located in Tullahoma adjacent to Arnold Air Force Base, long a center of research for the United States Air Force. The Institute awards master's and doctoral degrees in conjunction with UT Knoxville.

Other units edit

The University of Tennessee system has several other units that provide service to the state of Tennessee and to the nation.

University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture edit

The Institute of Agriculture is composed of the Agricultural Experiment Station, UT Extension, and Knoxville's Herbert College of Agriculture and College of Veterinary Medicine. The institute has a presence in all 95 counties through its educational programs in agriculture, home economics, resource development, and 4-H programs.

University of Tennessee Institute of Public Service edit

The Institute for Public Service was created in 1971 as a part of the university "to provide continuing research and technical assistance to state and local government and industry and to meet more adequately the need for information and research in business and government." Components include the County Technical Assistance Service, the Municipal Technical Advisory Service, the Center for Industrial Services, the Law Enforcement Innovation Center, and the Naifeh Center for Effective Leadership.

UT-ORNL partnership edit

UT Knoxville and Battelle Memorial Institute are 50-50 partners in UT-Battelle, which manages the Oak Ridge National Laboratory for the United States Department of Energy.

Governance edit

The University of Tennessee system is governed by the Board of Trustees of the University of Tennessee. After the passage of the UT FOCUS Act in 2018, the board is made up of 12 trustees. These trustees include one ex officio voting member, the Commissioner of Agriculture, 10 voting members appointed by the Governor, and a single non-voting student member appointed by the board as a whole. One of the board's committees includes a single faculty representative. Both the Student Trustee and faculty representative rotate each year between the four main campuses.[8]

Administration edit

The university system is administered by a president. Beginning in 1970, presidents served the University of Tennessee system. Prior to that, the president served the Knoxville flagship campus.[9] Presidents and interim presidents of the University of Tennessee system, the University of Tennessee, and its predecessor schools are as follows:[10]

  • Randy Boyd, 2019–present (interim)
  • Joseph A. DiPietro, named UT System President on October 23, 2010; served until November 2018
  • John D. Petersen, named the system's 23rd President on July 1, 2004; resigned February 18, 2009
  • John W. Shumaker, 2002–2003
  • Emerson H. Fly, 2001–2002
  • J. Wade Gilley, 1999–2001
  • Joseph E. Johnson, 1991–1999; also served as interim president in 2003–2004[11]
  • Lamar Alexander, 1988–1991
  • Edward J. Boling, 1970–1988
  • Andrew D. Holt, 1959–1970; President of the UT System 1968–1970
  • C. E. Brehm, 1946–1959
  • James Dickason Hoskins, 1934–1946
  • Harcourt A. Morgan, 1919–1934
  • Brown Ayres, 1904–1919
  • Charles W. Dabney, 1887–1904
  • Thomas William Humes, (East Tennessee University), 1865–1879; President of UT 1879–1883
  • J. J. Ridley (East Tennessee University), 1860–1862
  • William D. Carnes (East Tennessee University), 1858–1860
  • George Cooke (East Tennessee University), 1853–1857
  • W. B. Reese (East Tennessee University), 1850–1853
  • Joseph Estabrook, (East Tennessee College), 1834–1840; President of East Tennessee University 1840–1850
  • James H. Piper (East Tennessee College), 1833–1834
  • Charles Coffin (East Tennessee College), 1827–1832
  • David Sherman (East Tennessee College), 1820–1825
  • Samuel Carrick, (Blount College), 1794–1807; President of East Tennessee College 1807–1809

Each of the five campuses is administered by a chancellor. Administrators on each campus report to their respective chancellors, who in turn report to the president. The only exceptions are the athletic directors of the Knoxville campus, who report directly to the president and not the Knoxville chancellor.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "About UT". University of Tennessee. Retrieved 2012-04-03.
  2. ^ Milton M. Klein (University Historian 1988-1997), University of Tennessee, Knoxville History 2004-11-27 at the Wayback Machine, accessed September 11, 2010.
  3. ^ McGinnis, Dr. H Coleman. "Geier Case History". Tennessee State University. Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  4. ^ Kast, Monica. "UT hopes to more than double enrollment at Martin Methodist after adding it to the system". Knoxville News Sentinel. Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  5. ^ "MMC | UT Discussions". mmctout.com. Retrieved 2021-05-30.
  6. ^ The Tennessean, June 27, 2021, pp. 1A and 21A
  7. ^ The Tennessean, June 27, 2021, pp. 1A and 21A
  8. ^ "State of Tennessee Public Chapter No. 657, 110th General Assembly" (PDF). Tennessee Secretary of State. April 11, 2018. Retrieved October 5, 2018.
  9. ^ "Past Chancellors".
  10. ^ UT Presidents 2010-06-09 at the Wayback Machine, The University of Tennessee website, accessed July 24, 2010
  11. ^ Joe Johnson, John Ward Honored at Pedestrian Walkway, Tennessee Today, UT-Knoxville, June 24, 2008

External links edit

  • Official website

university, tennessee, system, system, system, public, universities, state, tennessee, public, university, systems, other, being, tennessee, board, regents, consists, four, primary, campuses, knoxville, chattanooga, pulaski, martin, health, sciences, campus, m. The University of Tennessee system UT system is a system of public universities in the U S state of Tennessee It is one of two public university systems the other being the Tennessee Board of Regents TBR It consists of four primary campuses in Knoxville Chattanooga Pulaski and Martin a health sciences campus in Memphis a research institute in Tullahoma and various extensions throughout the state University of TennesseeTypePublic university systemEstablished1968EndowmentUS 1 billionPresidentRandy BoydAcademic staff2 250Administrative staff6 950Students49 000Undergraduates34 539Postgraduates10 056LocationKnoxville Tennessee United StatesCampusFive campusesWebsitewww wbr tennessee wbr eduUT KnoxvilleUT ChattanoogaUT MartinUTHSCUTSIUTSclass notpageimage University of Tennessee system locations The UT system has a combined student enrollment of more than 49 000 students over 320 000 living alumni and a total endowment that tops 1 billion 1 Contents 1 History 2 Campuses 2 1 University of Tennessee Knoxville UTK 2 2 University of Tennessee at Chattanooga UTC 2 3 University of Tennessee at Martin UT Martin 2 4 University of Tennessee Southern UT Southern 2 5 University of Tennessee Health Science Center UTHSC 2 6 University of Tennessee Space Institute UT Space Institute 3 Other units 3 1 University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture 3 2 University of Tennessee Institute of Public Service 3 3 UT ORNL partnership 4 Governance 5 Administration 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editThe University of Tennessee was founded in Knoxville as Blount College in 1794 It became East Tennessee College in 1807 and gained university status in 1840 It was designated as the state s land grant institution in 1869 and was renamed the University of Tennessee in 1879 2 The medical campus the UT Health Science Center was founded in Memphis in 1911 An adult education extension center was founded in Nashville in 1947 In 1927 UT founded the University of Tennessee Junior College and bought the campus of the defunct Hall Moody Institute a Baptist institution in the northwest Tennessee town of Martin to use for the new college In 1951 the school began awarding bachelor s degrees and became the University of Tennessee Martin Branch In 1967 the campus was elevated to an autonomous four year institution under the name of the University of Tennessee at Martin In 1968 the UT system was officially formed with the Knoxville and Martin campuses as primary campuses That same year the Tennessee state legislature gave UT permission to establish a campus in Chattanooga which was the largest city in Tennessee without a public university The private University of Chattanooga determined that it could not raise enough private capital to compete with a public institution and agreed to merge with another private school Chattanooga City College to form the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga in 1969 Also in 1968 UT announced plans to expand the Nashville extension center into a full fledged University of Tennessee at Nashville Rita Sanders Geier filed a desegregation lawsuit against the state Geier contended that if UT were allowed to build a campus in Nashville where Tennessee State University was located it would perpetuate a dual system of higher education As a result the UT Nashville campus was eventually merged with TSU by court order in 1979 3 On December 9 2020 UT s board of trustees unanimously voted in favor of integrating Martin Methodist College into the UT system as UT Southern This merger is aimed at providing higher education to the residents of rural southern Middle Tennessee 4 5 On June 27 2021 The Tennessean reported that MMC had been fully accepted as a system campus with the tuition to be adjusted accordingly 6 Campuses editThere are six educational units of the university system four of which are separate universities within this statewide higher education system University of Tennessee Knoxville UTK edit UT Knoxville is the flagship campus of the UT system based in Knoxville The largest university in the state it has a current total enrollment of 27 523 UT awarded 6 345 degrees in over 300 programs in the 2009 10 academic year While not a separate entity UT Knoxville operates a campus in Nashville that is part of the UT Knoxville College of Social Work The Nashville Campus awards the M S S W in conjunction with UT Knoxville University of Tennessee at Chattanooga UTC edit UTC is a large university located in downtown Chattanooga The university was founded as a private school in 1886 joined the UT system in 1969 and currently has over 10 000 students University of Tennessee at Martin UT Martin edit Located in rural northwest Tennessee in Martin UT Martin began in 1900 as Hall Moody Institute a private Baptist school In 1927 the Tennessee Baptist Convention merged Hall Moody Institute with Union University The University of Tennessee System took over the former Hall Moody campus and the school became known as The University of Tennessee Junior College in Martin It operated under this name until 1951 when four year fields of study leading to bachelor s degrees were added The name was then changed to The University of Tennessee Martin Branch In 1967 it was designated a primary campus in the UT system and was given its current name The University of Tennessee at Martin With approximately 8 000 students UT Martin comprises the main campus in Martin and four extended campuses located in Parsons Selmer Jackson and Ripley University of Tennessee Southern UT Southern edit As a consequence of a planned meeting between then Acting System President Randy Boyd later named the system s permanent head and Martin Methodist College President Mark La Branche in 2020 about the plans for UT to open an Agricultural Extension Office in MMC s hometown of Pulaski a wider ranging discussion ensued about the low level of affordable higher educational opportunities in Southern Middle Tennessee MMC was founded as a women s college in 1870 but became co educational in the 1930s In December 2020 The University of Tennessee Board of Trustees voted to accept MMC as a primary campus of the University of Tennessee System On June 27 2021 The Tennessean reported that the merger had been consummated with La Branche to serve as the first chancellor of the campus as a unit of the UT system designated the University of Tennessee Southern 7 UT system primary campuses nbsp Knoxville nbsp Chattanooga nbsp Martin nbsp Southern University of Tennessee Health Science Center UTHSC edit The University of Tennessee Health Science Center UTHSC has its main campus in Memphis UTHSC offers a wide variety of degree programs among its six colleges Allied Health Sciences Dentistry Graduate Health Sciences Medicine Nursing and Pharmacy UTHSC also has colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy in addition to an Allied Health Sciences unit in Knoxville as well as a College of Medicine campus in Chattanooga In addition UTHSC has more than 100 clinical and educational sites statewide University of Tennessee Space Institute UT Space Institute edit The University of Tennessee Space Institute is located in Tullahoma adjacent to Arnold Air Force Base long a center of research for the United States Air Force The Institute awards master s and doctoral degrees in conjunction with UT Knoxville Other units editThe University of Tennessee system has several other units that provide service to the state of Tennessee and to the nation University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture edit The Institute of Agriculture is composed of the Agricultural Experiment Station UT Extension and Knoxville s Herbert College of Agriculture and College of Veterinary Medicine The institute has a presence in all 95 counties through its educational programs in agriculture home economics resource development and 4 H programs University of Tennessee Institute of Public Service edit The Institute for Public Service was created in 1971 as a part of the university to provide continuing research and technical assistance to state and local government and industry and to meet more adequately the need for information and research in business and government Components include the County Technical Assistance Service the Municipal Technical Advisory Service the Center for Industrial Services the Law Enforcement Innovation Center and the Naifeh Center for Effective Leadership UT ORNL partnership edit UT Knoxville and Battelle Memorial Institute are 50 50 partners in UT Battelle which manages the Oak Ridge National Laboratory for the United States Department of Energy Governance editThe University of Tennessee system is governed by the Board of Trustees of the University of Tennessee After the passage of the UT FOCUS Act in 2018 the board is made up of 12 trustees These trustees include one ex officio voting member the Commissioner of Agriculture 10 voting members appointed by the Governor and a single non voting student member appointed by the board as a whole One of the board s committees includes a single faculty representative Both the Student Trustee and faculty representative rotate each year between the four main campuses 8 Administration editThe university system is administered by a president Beginning in 1970 presidents served the University of Tennessee system Prior to that the president served the Knoxville flagship campus 9 Presidents and interim presidents of the University of Tennessee system the University of Tennessee and its predecessor schools are as follows 10 Randy Boyd 2019 present interim Joseph A DiPietro named UT System President on October 23 2010 served until November 2018 John D Petersen named the system s 23rd President on July 1 2004 resigned February 18 2009 John W Shumaker 2002 2003 Emerson H Fly 2001 2002 J Wade Gilley 1999 2001 Joseph E Johnson 1991 1999 also served as interim president in 2003 2004 11 Lamar Alexander 1988 1991 Edward J Boling 1970 1988 Andrew D Holt 1959 1970 President of the UT System 1968 1970 C E Brehm 1946 1959 James Dickason Hoskins 1934 1946 Harcourt A Morgan 1919 1934 Brown Ayres 1904 1919 Charles W Dabney 1887 1904 Thomas William Humes East Tennessee University 1865 1879 President of UT 1879 1883 J J Ridley East Tennessee University 1860 1862 William D Carnes East Tennessee University 1858 1860 George Cooke East Tennessee University 1853 1857 W B Reese East Tennessee University 1850 1853 Joseph Estabrook East Tennessee College 1834 1840 President of East Tennessee University 1840 1850 James H Piper East Tennessee College 1833 1834 Charles Coffin East Tennessee College 1827 1832 David Sherman East Tennessee College 1820 1825 Samuel Carrick Blount College 1794 1807 President of East Tennessee College 1807 1809Each of the five campuses is administered by a chancellor Administrators on each campus report to their respective chancellors who in turn report to the president The only exceptions are the athletic directors of the Knoxville campus who report directly to the president and not the Knoxville chancellor See also editTennessee Board of Regents the other public higher education authority in the state List of state universities in the United StatesReferences edit About UT University of Tennessee Retrieved 2012 04 03 Milton M Klein University Historian 1988 1997 University of Tennessee Knoxville History Archived 2004 11 27 at the Wayback Machine accessed September 11 2010 McGinnis Dr H Coleman Geier Case History Tennessee State University Retrieved 2007 07 27 Kast Monica UT hopes to more than double enrollment at Martin Methodist after adding it to the system Knoxville News Sentinel Retrieved 2021 05 30 MMC UT Discussions mmctout com Retrieved 2021 05 30 The Tennessean June 27 2021 pp 1A and 21A The Tennessean June 27 2021 pp 1A and 21A State of Tennessee Public Chapter No 657 110th General Assembly PDF Tennessee Secretary of State April 11 2018 Retrieved October 5 2018 Past Chancellors UT Presidents Archived 2010 06 09 at the Wayback Machine The University of Tennessee website accessed July 24 2010 Joe Johnson John Ward Honored at Pedestrian Walkway Tennessee Today UT Knoxville June 24 2008External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title University of Tennessee system amp oldid 1192831120, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.