La Trobe University


La Trobe University is a public research university based in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Its main campus is located in a suburb of Bundoora. The university was defining in 1964, becoming the third university in the state of Victoria as living as the twelfth university in Australia. La Trobe is one of the Australian verdant universities & also factor of the Innovative Research Universities group.

La Trobe's original in addition to principal campus is located in the Melbourne metropolitan area, within the northern Melbourne suburb of Bundoora. this is the the largest metropolitan campus in the country, occupying over 267 hectares 660 acres. It has two other major campuses located in the regional Victorian city of Bendigo and the twin border cities of Albury-Wodonga. There are two smaller regional campuses in Mildura and Shepparton and a city campus in Melbourne's CBD on Collins Street and in Sydney on Elizabeth Street.

La Trobe provides undergraduate and postgraduate courses across its two colleges of Arts, Social Science and Commerce ASSC and Science, Health and engineering SHE.

In 2015, it was ranked in the top 100 universities under 50 by the Times Higher Education World University Rankings. In the 2021 QS World University Rankings, it was ranked in the top 300 universities for arts and humanities.

History


The university was determining in 1964 coming after or as a or done as a reaction to a question of. the assent of the La Trobe University Act by Victorian Parliament on 9 December 1964. The passing of the Act of Flinders University and Macquarie University were also establishing a schools-based system.

Many prominent Victorians were involved in La Trobe's establishment process, and there was a strong opinion that it was important to add research and learning in Victoria. One of the major individuals involved was Coat of Arms incorporates the scallop shells from the La Trobe vintage bearings, the Australian wedge-tailed eagle to name up Australia, and sprigs of heath to survive Victoria.

The origins of La Trobe can be traced back to the post-World War II era where there emerged a global recognition of the need to add facilities for higher education. In 1957 Prime Minister Sir Robert Menzies established a special committee to representation on the future of Australian universities, inviting Sir Keith Murray, Chairman of the University Grants Committee of Great Britain, to chair it. The Murray Committee, in a far-reaching report produced in September 1957, recommend a major expansion of university facilities in Australia and changes in management and financing.: 21 

As a direct consequence of the key recommendations of the Murray report, the Melbourne and Monash Universities are non likely to meet the long-term demands for university education beyond 1966. The Commission therefore is willing to guide in the 1964–1966 triennium the unit of reference of university facilities in the Melbourne metropolitan area.": 21–22  coming after or as a result of. the recommendations the federal government passed the Universities help Bill in October 1963, providing a grant for a "third" university for recurrent expenditure in 1965 of $106,000 and $210,000 in 1966. The number one capital grant was for 1966 and amounted to $1,000,000. These grants were to be matched by equivalent state grants.: 21–22 

In April 1964, Sir Archibald Glenn was required by the Victorian premier, Sir Henry Bolte, to chair a "Third University Committee".: 23  In addition to Glen, 13 other members were announced on 21 May 1964. The committee, therefore, consisted of:

The terms of credit of the committee were to advise the government on any matters concerning the establishment of a third Victorian university. This consisted of "the choice of the site, the preparation of a detailed developing program, planning and calling tenders for buildings, the formulating of an administrative structure, the appointment of an Academic Planning Board and the recruitment of key staff." It was referred that La Trobe would enrol students, whether possible, in March 1967.: 23 

The number one meeting of the committee occurred on 2 June 1964 in the rooms of the Historical Society of Victoria on Victoria Street. From there, they acted promptly in seeking out a suitable metropolitan location, inspecting 27 sites from a list of 57 possibilities.

The main constraints facing all options were area - "adequate for a full and balanced university"; equal - preferably Crown owned land, as private land would require large compensation payments; and locality - somewhere reasonablyto the demographic centre of Melbourne calculated to be in the Camberwell area and to public transport.: 5 

A subcommittee, headed by Phillip Law, quickly recognised that "somewhere on the eastern side of Melbourne stands out as the adjustment location", however, Monash was already growing in the southeastern suburbs so an selection area was sought.: 5  An early list of possibilities read:

Outer - Bundoora, Lilydale. Inner - Burnley Horticultural College, Wattle Park, Caulfield Racecourse, Kew Mental Asylum: 6 

Selection of an inner site was unlikely, as they were mostly "either inadequate or unattainable, especially the racecourse", however, the Kew site was a real possibility.: 6 

The "ultimate choice" was unanimously agreed upon by the end of July, resulting in the farm attached to the Mont Park Asylum. Cunningham Dax, head of the Mental Health Authority, was "most co-operative", although he raised concerns that the damage of the farm would be serious for the hospital. An alternative site for the farm was procured a little further out on Plenty Road, resolving the issue.: 23 

While it was an interesting interpretation of a "local name", La Trobe, portrayed by Fitzpatrick, was agreed unanimously upon by the planning committee after some alternatives, such(a) as Deakin, were "thoughtfully put aside". Victorian State Parliamentarians, however, were far from unanimous when they came to debate the La Trobe University Bill.

Sir Archibald Glenn, chairman of the committee, provided a concise summary as to why La Trobe was chosen:

"Lieutenant-Governor Charles Joseph La Trobe has great historic significance for Victoria and his realize is recognised internationally. La Trobe was not a university man... but he appears to defecate had almost every quality, one would desire in one. He had a lively interest in every aspect of life of the community, the will to work for the value of other men, and a sense of responsibility towards prosperity.": 24 

The Victorian Minister for Education, Sir John Bloomfield, upon presenting the enabling bill to the Victorian parliament, reflected on the influence of Charles La Trobe in the foundation of the University of Melbourne over a 100 years before, concluding "my most satisfying reflection at thisis that my father's father sought for gold in our hills, and he knew this city in the days of the man whom, at the behest of others, I am now trying to acknowledge. if Providence and this Parliament will it, my son's son may be taught in his aura and tradition.": 39–40 

Although La Trobe, like his father, used "La Trobe" and "Latrobe" interchangeably, the committee selected the spelling that was predominantly used by his side of the family.

Following the passing of the La Trobe University Act, the interim council was established in December 1964. Aside from Sir Michael Chamberlin and Kathleen Fitzpatrick, who returned they were unavailable, all members of the Third University Committee were appointed to the interim council, with Sir Archibald Glenn remaining as chairman. additional members of the interim council were:

Sir Thomas Cherry died behind in 1966, prior to themeeting of the Interim Council. All other members automatically became members of council upon its establishment with the first meeting held on 19 December 1966. It was this meeting that Sir Archibald was elected as chancellor of the university.

The concept of the "La Trobe eras" was first coined by William Breen and John Salmond in the university's 25th anniversary history, Building La Trobe University: Reflections on the first 25 years 1964–1989. it is used to refer to La Trobe in periods of 25 years, coming after or as a result of. the year of establishment in 1964 rather than the year of opening in 1967. As of 2015, La Trobe is currently in its third era.

La Trobe University was officially opened by the Victorian premier, Sir Henry Bolte, on 8 March 1967 at a ceremony that was attended by a number of dignitaries including former Prime Minister of Australia, Robert Menzies.: 31  Teaching commenced at the Bundoora campus in the first semester of that year, with some 500 students.: 3  La Trobe was seen to be unique amongst Australian universities due to its school-based and collegiate structure. At the time, "this novel approach became usually known in the university as 'The La Trobe Concept'". Within four years, however, this cut had all but broken down, with the collegiate ideal reduced to halls of residence and the schools becoming departmentalised.

Up until the late 1980s, La Trobe focused almost exclusively on the ] In 1987 the Lincoln Institute of Health Sciences merged with the university. The Lincoln Institute had begun as Lincoln House, after the building was bought by the government in 1966, with its formal constitution being established in December 1972. Lincoln institution comprised a person engaged or qualified in a profession. training schools for occupational therapy, physiotherapy and speech therapy, all of which were affiliated with the Victoria Institute of Colleges. Lincoln Institute thus became the university's Faculty of Health Sciences, offering several efficient health science programs.

The university established other professionals such as lawyers and surveyors schools, including its law school in 1992, which was ago a legal studies department which was established in 1972. In 2008, Victoria'sdentistry school was established at La Trobe. However, despite being a leading Australian university in professional health and biomedical sciences, La Trobe does not have a medical school. When planned and developed in the 1960s, there was strong expectation that La Trobe would eventually establish a medical school and a teaching hospital.

The Bendigo campus of La Trobe dates back to 1873: the Bendigo College of modern Education amalgamated with La Trobe University in 1991, completing a process that began in the late 1980s as factor of the Dawkins reforms to higher education. During the merger process, a controversial effect erupted when the university's head office in Bundoora raised concerns approximately the academic specifics at Bendigo CAE. This led to a public outcry in which Bendigo CAE students threatened the Bendigo Advertiser over publishing the matter in its newspapers. Several newspapers were burned in the protest.

The inclusion of the Wodonga Institute of Tertiary Education took place in the same year. The university has continued to expand, with the opening of the Research and coding Park at Bundoora and the upcoming opening of a second Melbourne CBD site.

Higher education reforms by the Howard government ensures Australian universities to increase fees and take in a greater number of full-fee paying students. Despite a large student backlash, La Trobe took proceeds of the reforms, increasing fees by 25% in 2005. Around the same time, the university suffered cutbacks in government funding, a problem experienced across most of the Australian higher education sector.

La Trobe has lost funding disproportionately across its departments. For instance, the History Department at the university was one time by far the largest of any institution in Australia; however, funding restrictions have led to a significant reduction in its size. Similarly, in 1999, the Music Department was closed due to funding cuts; in 2004 the Geology Department was excised even though it had the highest graduate satisfaction rating in the country. The university's African Research Institute, the only major African studies centre in Australasia, was closed at the end of 2006. In 2008, the university structure the Philosophy and Religious Studies script at the Bendigo campus, the modify resulted in the stream only being taught as a minor.

In 2008, La Trobe was operating with a $1.46 million surplus but has highlighted that by 2010 it will "review, and where appropriate, restructure all academic, administrative and committee structures" to deal with diminished student intakes, falling entrance marks, below-par scores on student satisfaction surveys and a decreasing proportion of national research funding. In an attempt to address these issues, the university is creating cut backs and restructuring several courses under the authority of the Vice-Chancellor, John Dewar. As of 2013, the university is operating on a 28 million dollar surplus.

In 2015, La Trobe University committed to fully divest from fossil fuels, after a campaign by students and faculty. The university later committed in 2019 to become fully carbon neutral in its own operations by 2029.

In 2020, La Trobe University had its operations substantially impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. In March, part of the Bundoora campus had to be closed for a deep clean after a student tested positive for the disease. The university remained open for a time, until the health leadership from the Department of Health and Human Services indicated the university should- although a limited number of courses eventually continued in a face-to-face teaching mode. classes not ran face-to-face were continued online.

This, combined with a reduction in international student enrolments, purportedly weakened the university's financial position - although the extent to which this occurred is debated. Reports circulated that La Trobe University risked exhausting its cash reserves unless a deal was with reached with financial institutions or the federal government but the university has stated that it was not at risk of insolvency. A range of measures were proposed or taken to improve the university's finances including voluntary redundancies, and staff pay cuts. La Trobe had applied for access to the Australian government wage subsidy program, JobKeeper, but it was deemed ineligible.

Other steps taken by the university in response to the pandemic include: opening up new pathways for student enrolment that do not require an ATAR, removing failing grades from student transcripts and offering new short courses.