Western Norway University of Applied Sciences explained

Western Norway University of Applied Sciences
Native Name:Høgskulen på Vestlandet
Established:2017 (1839)
Type:University College
Administrative Staff:1,800
Rector:Gunnar Yttri
Students:16,000
City:Bergen
Country:Norway
Website:www.hvl.no

Western Norway University of Applied Sciences or HVL is a Norwegian public institution of higher education, established in January 2017 through the merging of formerly independent colleges across five campuses: Bergen, Førde, Haugesund, Sogndal and Stord. Its oldest programs - teacher education in Stord - can be traced to 1839. The total number of students at HVL is about 16000, and there are 1800 academic and administrative staff.[1] Its main campus is in the Kronstad neighborhood of Bergen, Norway.

Western Norway University of Applied Sciences provides professional education within health and social sciences, engineering, economic and administrative science, music and teaching. It offers education on the Bachelor and Master levels, continuing education, and on the Doctoral (PhD) level. Around 2700 students graduate with degrees from HVL every year.

In June, 2016, after more than one year of negotiations, the executive leadership of three west Norwegian higher education institutions – Bergen University College, Stord/Haugesund University College, and Sogn og Fjordane University College – officially announced their decision to merge. From 2017, the English name is Western Norway University of Applied Sciences (abbreviated according to the Norwegian name: HVL).[2] [3]

The founding Rector (President) was professor Berit Rokne, and in 2021 Gunnar Yttri, a historian, was appointed the institution’s Rector for the period 2021-2024.[4]

Faculties

The college is organised in four faculties:[5]

Centres

HVL emphasizes professional studies, but also offers postgraduate programs through the doctoral level in some fields, and currently has ten research centers [5] to support its specialized postgraduate programs, providing opportunities for PhD research:

There is also a Centre for New Media.

Norwegian diver school

The Norwegian diver school (Norwegian: Statens dykkerskole) was a public diving school for professional divers located in Gravdal, Bergen, Norway. Established in 1980, it was merged and became part of Bergen University College (now part of the Western Norway University of Applied Sciences) in 2005.[6] [7] The diving school is a part of the Faculty of Engineering and Science, and is located in Skålevik, approximately 15 kilometers from Bergen city centre.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About us.
  2. Web site: Går for Høgskulen på Vestlandet. Mathiesen. Forfattar Marianne. 2016-05-27. Fusjonsinfo. 2016-05-30. https://web.archive.org/web/20160921130407/http://fusjonsinfo.no/2016/05/27/727/. 2016-09-21. dead.
  3. Web site: Bergen University College is merging. 2016-08-18. hib.no. 2016-11-18.
  4. Web site: Gunnar Yttri offisielt innsett som rektor ("Gunnar Yttri officially appointed Rector").
  5. Web site: Høgskulen på Vestlandet.
  6. Web site: Dykkerhistorie . . 28 September 2011 . no.
  7. http://www.nsd.uib.no/polsys/data/en/forvaltning/enhet/21799 NSD - Norwegian Centre for Research Data