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Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest. Márton Bélik Rector’s Office, Department of International Education and Mobility. General Data.
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Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest Márton Bélik Rector’s Office, Department of International Education and Mobility
General Data • Eötvös Loránd University, BudapestBudapestH-1053 Egyetem tér 1-3.HungaryTel.: +36-1-266-3119 Fax: +36-1-266-9786e-mail: rektor@ludens.elte.hurektit@ludens.elte.hu
Leadership • RECTOR • Full Professor Ferenc Hudecz, Ph.D. • VICE-RECTOR for General Affairs • Full Professor Marianna Fazekas, Ph.D. • VICE-RECTOR for Research and International Cooperation • Full Professor Magdolna Orosz, Ph.D. • VICE-RECTOR for Academic Affairs • Full Professor László Zentai, Ph.D.
Brief History of ELTE • 1635 founded by Péter Pázmány, the Archbishop of Esztergom (Faculties of Arts and Theology) • 1667 Faculty of Law • 1769 Faculty of Medicine • 1777 moved from Nagyszombat (Trnava) to Buda, then to Pest • Turn of the 18th-19 cc. one of the 15 largest universities in the world • 1949 Faculty of Science • 1950 adopted the name of Loránd Eötvös (1848-1919), • 2001 Lágymányos Campus completed • 2000-2003 New faculties
The Deed of Foundation Nagyszombat (Trnava), 12 May, 1635
Law Faculty buildings 1 Informatics/Sciences/Social Sciences Humanities
Faculty buildings 2 Elementary and Nursery School Teachers' Training Special Education
ELTE University Library • oldest library in the country (1561) • 2 million titles • an 8th century Beda fragment • 185 codices, 1150 incunabula and 2600 old Hungarian printed books
BEAC sections: Athletics Badminton Basketball Chess Football Handball Hiking Karate Orienteering Students' Athletics Club Table Tennis Tennis Water Polo
Nobel Prize laureates Fülöp Lénárd 1905 Physics György Hevesy 1943 Chemistry Albert Szent-Györgyi 1937 Medicine János Harsányi 1994 Economics György Békésy1961 Medicine
Student, professor in mathematics Lipót Fejér (1880-1959 John von Neumann (1903-1957) LászlóLovász (1948-) Pál Erdős (1913-1996)
8 faculties • Faculty of Humanities • Faculty of Law • Faculty of Science • Faculty of Informatics • Faculty of Education and Psychology • Faculty of Social Sciences • Bárczi Gusztáv College of Special Education • Faculty of Primary and Nursery School Teachers' Training • Other institutions
Facts and figures(2008/09) • Number of first year students: 7 014 • Total number of students: 29 031 • Total number of academic staff: 1 415 • Full member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences 10 • Corresponding member of the Academy of Sciences 15 • Doctor of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences 201 • Candidate of sciences 346 • Master DLA 6 • dr. univ. 59 • Dr. (Title)/Doctor of Sciences 44 • Doctor (PhD) 734
Distribution of students by faculties (2007/08) Law(15.3%) Elementary and nursery school teachers(9.3%) Special Education(6.3%) Humanities(26.8%) Informatics(8.9%) Science(17.8%) Education and Psychology (8.5%) Social Sciences(7.1%)
1. (1.) ELTE 16,962 2. (3.) SZTE 14,145 3. (2.) PTE 13,759 4. (4.) DE 13,674 5. (5.) BGF 12,331 6. (6.) BCE 10,049 7. (7.) BMGE 9,938 National university ranking by applications2008 (2007)
Application and admission Applicants (all) Applicants (first) Admitted 2007 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2008
Students and degrees issued in Hungary (2007/08) ELTE 32 000 (7 %) Σ: 409 000 students 7 438 (14%) 357 (33%) 377 000 45 362 710 Σ: 53 000 degrees Σ: 1 067 PhD degrees
International Relations • Main areas: • International cooperation - networks - bilateral relations • International mobility (Teachers & Students) • Foreign language programmes/possibilities • University delegations
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONSMEMBERSHIP IN THE UNIVERSITY NETWORKS • EUA (European University Association), • UNICA (Universities from Capitals of Europe), • the Coimbra Group, • the Utrecht Network • the Danube Rectors' Conference • CEI UniNet (Central European Initiative University Network) • IAUP (International Association of University Presidents) Currently, ELTE gives the president of the DRC & Prof. László Boros is in the Executive Board of the Coimbra Group
International Relations • Bilateral agreements: • extensive relationships with universities all over the world • formal agreements with 120 universities in Europe, Asia, Africa, North and South America at an institutional or a faculty level, and 298 Erasmus partner universities. • main areas of cooperation: • joint training and research projects • joint participation in international conferences and workshops • accreditation of courses • exchange of students and guest lecturers
Erasmus programme Increasing number of partners and mobility: 1998-99: 64 institutions (quota: 178 students and 72 teachers) 2009-10: 298 institutions (quota: 985 students and514teachers) The number of Erasmus students: outgoing incoming