University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland | |
Native Name: | Fachhochschule Nordwestschweiz |
Native Name Lang: | German |
Established: | January 1, 2006 |
President: | Crispino Bergamaschi[1] |
Students: | 12'419 (2018) |
Total Staff: | 2947 (2018) |
Academic Staff: | 524 (2018) |
Website: | www.fhnw.ch |
The University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland (German: Fachhochschule Nordwestschweiz, FHNW) is a university of applied sciences in Switzerland. It is one of the largest universities in the country in terms of student enrollment. It is an inter-cantonal public law institution with its own legal personality. The cantons are Aargau, Basel-Landschaft, Basel-Stadt, and Solothurn.[2]
As part of the state treaty, the supporting cantons manage the FHNW with a fourfold performance mandate. This includes training and further education, application-oriented research and development as well as services for the benefit of third parties.
The FHNW was founded on January 1, 2006, based on a state treaty between the cantons of Aargau, Basel-Landschaft, Basel-Stadt, and Solothurn. It was created from the merger of the Aargau University of Applied Sciences (FHA), the Basel University of Applied Sciences (FHBB), the Solothurn University of Applied Sciences (FHSO), and the Basel University of Education and Social Work and the Solothurn University of Education.
The courses are characterized by their practical relevance and are offered as full and/or part-time studies. The FHNW offers 29 bachelor's and 17 master's courses in the fields of applied psychology, architecture, construction and geomatics, design and art, life sciences, music, teacher training, social work, technology, and business.
In further education, Master of Advanced Studies (MAS), Executive Master of Business Administration (EMBA), Diploma of Advanced Studies (DAS), Certificate of Advanced Studies (CAS) as well as specialist seminars and conferences are offered.
Development of student numbers (students enrolled as of October 15, excluding continuing education).[3]
Year | Diploma/ Bachelor | Master | Total | male/female (in %) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | 10'308 | 2'111 | 12'419 | 50/50 | |
2017 | 10'218 | 2'012 | 12'230 | 50/50 | |
2016 | 9'943 | 1'945 | 11'888 | 49/51 | |
2015 | 9'436 | 1'826 | 11'262 | 49/51 | |
2014 | 8'871 | 1'663 | 10'534 | 48/52 | |
2013 | 8'424 | 1'579 | 10'003 | 49/51 | |
2012 | 7'893 | 1'543 | 9'436 | 49/51 | |
2011 | 7'405 | 1'489 | 8'894 | 50/50 | |
2010 | 7'344 | 1'316 | 8'660 | 50/50 | |
2009 | 7'115 | 1'057 | 8'172 | 50/50 | |
2008 | 6'891 | 544 | 7'435 | 50/50 | |
2007 | 6'401 | 119 | 6'520 | 51/49 | |
2006 | 6'101 | 61 | 6'162 | 52/48 |
The strategic management body of the FHNW is the Fachhochschule Council, which is elected by the governments of the supporting cantons. Operationally, the FHNW is managed by the executive committee (Crispino Bergamaschi) and the Directorate.
The overall supervision of the FHNW is exercised by the parliaments of the four supporting cantons. They set up an Interparliamentary Commission (IPK). The four cantonal governments are responsible for joint supervision of the FHNW, and their business is prepared by the government committee and the four directors of education. Financial supervision is carried out by the financial controls of the supporting cantons.
The FHNW currently consists of nine Schools (* = main location), and one more is planned (to be announced early 2025):