The Graduate School is responsible for all graduate
programs at UND, including 77 master's programs,
one specialist program, and 27 doctoral programs.
Fields of study include the humanities, social
sciences, physical and natural sciences, fine
arts, business, education and human development,
aerospace sciences, engineering, medical sciences,
and nursing. UND enrolls almost 13,000 students of which approximately 2000 are
graduate students. In the 2007 Academic Year, The University awarded 499
master’s degrees, 67 doctoral degrees, and
2 specialist diplomas. The University
of North Dakota is committed to increasing its
graduate program offerings and its research base
in accordance with its strategic plan. The University
currently acquires over $40 million annually for
sponsored research projects.
The oldest institution of higher education in
the Dakotas, Montana, Wyoming, and Western Minnesota,
UND has been educating generations of students
for more than one hundred years. An established
regional and national leader, it offers students
a stimulating university environment, the state's
largest library, the resources of its medical
and law schools and research center, and a wide
range of cultural and recreational opportunities.
At UND, we combine that diversity with a tradition
of caring and what has been called "a remarkable
sense of family."
UND's campus includes 238 buildings, and is situated
on 570 wooded and landscaped acres, bisected by
a meandering brook, or English Coulee as it is
known here. In these surroundings, graduate faculty
teach, engage in creative activity, and conduct
research.
In 1889, the same year North Dakota gained statehood,
UND initiated its first postgraduate research
program, looking for ways to better utilize the
region's mineral resources. UND granted its first
master's degree in 1895 and its first doctoral
degree in 1914. Now an internationally recognized
institution, UND has graduated more than 99,000
students, of which 17,006 have been graduate students. |