University of Oxford{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="right" style="margin:0.5em;font-size:90%"\n!colspan="2" align=center bgcolor="#336699" | University of Oxford\n|-\n|colspan="2" align=center | \n|-\n!colspan="2" align=center bgcolor="#336699" | Data\n|-\n|bgcolor="#888888" | Motto || bgcolor="#efefef" | Dominus Illuminatio Mea "The Lord is my Light" (Psalm 27)\n|-\n|bgcolor="#888888" | Established || bgcolor="#efefef" | c. 1096\n|-\n|bgcolor="#888888" | Location || bgcolor="#efefef" | Oxford, United Kingdom\n|-\n|bgcolor="#888888" | Enrolment || bgcolor="#efefef" | 17,000 total (5,600 graduate)\n|-\n|bgcolor="#888888" | Chancellor || bgcolor="#efefef" | The Right Hon. Chris Patten\n|-\n|bgcolor="#888888" | Vice-Chancellor || bgcolor="#efefef" | Sir Colin Lucas\n|-\n|bgcolor="#888888" | Homepage || bgcolor="#efefef" | http://www.ox.ac.uk\n|-\n|bgcolor="#888888" | Member of || bgcolor="#efefef" | Russell Group, Coimbra Group, EUA, LERU\n|-\n!colspan="2" align=center bgcolor="#336699" | Map\n|-\n|colspan="2" align=center | please add\n|-\n|} The University of Oxford, situated in the city of Oxford, England, is the oldest university in the English-speaking world. The universities of Oxford and the Cambridge are sometimes referred to collectively as Oxbridge. The two universities have a long history of competition with each other, as they are the two oldest and most famous universities in England (see Oxbridge rivalry). Oxford is a member of the Russell Group of research-led British Universities. It has recently come top of some league tables which rank universities in Britain. Oxford is, like Cambridge and others, a member of the Coimbra Group, a network of leading European universities, and the LERU (League of European Research Universities). \n
Brasenose College in the 1670s Admission to the UniversityAdmission to the University of Oxford is entirely on academic merit and potential. Admission for undergraduates is undertaken by individual colleges working together to ensure that the very best students gain a place in the university. Selection is based on school references, personal statements, achieved results, predicted results, written work, written tests and interviews. For graduate students, admission is firstly by the university department in which each will study, and then secondarily with the college with which they are associated. Oxford, like Cambridge, has traditionally been perceived to be a preserve of the wealthy, although this is today not the case. The cost of taking a course, in the days before student grants were available, was prohibitive unless one was a scholar (or in even earlier times, a servitor - one who had to serve his fellow undergraduates in exchange for tuition). Public schoolss and grammar schools prepared their pupils more specifically for the entrance examination, some even going so far as to encourage applicants to spend an extra year in the sixth form in order to study for it: pupils from other state schools rarely had this luxury. In recent years, Oxford has made greater efforts to attract pupils from state schools, and admission to Oxford and Cambridge remains on academic merit and potential. Around half of the students in Oxford come from state school backgrounds. Unlike the most selective American universities, Oxford (and Cambridge) are public institutions seeking only the best students, and do not practise "legacy preference": where for example children of affluent parents who attended Harvard are far more likely to be successful in the applications process than those who have no previous link with the university. Students successful in early examinations are rewarded with scholarships and exhibitions, normally the result of a long-standing endowment, although when tuition fees were first abolished the amounts of money available became purely nominal: much larger funded bursaries are available on the basis of need for current and prospective students. ("Closed" scholarships, which were accessible only by candidates from specific schools, exist now only in name.) Scholars, and exhibitioners in some colleges, are entitled to wear a more voluminous undergraduate gown; "commoners" (i.e. those who had to pay for their "commons", or food and lodging) being restricted to a short sleeveless garment. The term, "scholar", in relation to Oxbridge, therefore has a specific meaning as well as the more general meaning of someone of outstanding academic ability. In previous times there were "noblemen commoners" and "gentlemen commoners", but these ranks were abolished in the 19th century. The requirement that undergraduates belong to the Church of England was abolished in 1871. Knowledge of Ancient Greek was required until 1920, and Latin until 1960. Women were admitted to degrees in 1920.Degree namesThe system of academic degrees in the university is very confusing to those not familiar with it. This is not merely due to the fact that many degree titles date from the Middle Ages, but also due to the fact that in recent years many changes have been haphazardly introduced.\nSee also Degrees of Oxford University.Famous OxoniansOxford has produced four British and two foreign Kings, 46 Nobel prize-winners, 25 British Prime Ministers, six saints, 86 Archbishops and 18 Cardinals. More complete information on famous senior and junior members of the University can be found in the individual college articles. Note that an individual may be associated with two or more colleges, as an undergraduate, postgraduate, and/or member of staff.\n: See also: List of notable Oxford students.The "other" Oxford studentsThere is a second university at Oxford - Oxford Brookes University [1], formerly known as Oxford Polytechnic, whose entrance requirements are less stringent. It is located on a campus in the eastern suburbs of the city. There are also a number of independent "colleges" which have nothing to do with the university but are popular, particularly with overseas students, perhaps because they allow their students to state truthfully that they have studied at Oxford; these institutions vary considerably in the standard of teaching they provide. Ruskin College, Oxford, an adult education college, though not part of the university, has close links with it. \nInstitutionsEvents and organisations connected with the university include:\n
Oxford in literature and the mediaOxford University is the setting for numerous works of fiction, including:
See also\n* UK topicsExternal link\n*University of Oxford website \n\n Category:Oxbridge\nOxford, University of\nOxford, University of \n\n \n\n |
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"I think it would be a good idea." - Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948), when asked what he thought of Western civilization |
\n|-\n!colspan="2" align=center bgcolor="#336699" | Data\n|-\n|bgcolor="#888888" | Motto || bgcolor="#efefef" | Dominus Illuminatio Mea
