University of Peradeniya
පේරාදෙණිය විශ්වවිද්යාලය பேராதனைப் பல்கலைக்கழகம் | ||
Vice-Chancellor MD. Lamawansa | | |
Academic staff | 731 | |
---|---|---|
Administrative staff | 2,973 | |
Students | 11,065 [a] | |
Undergraduates | 9,605 [b] | |
Postgraduates | 1,440 [c] | |
Location | , Sri Lanka | |
Campus | Suburban, 700 ha (1,700 acres) | |
Publication(s) | Ceylon Journal of Science Sri Lanka Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences | |
Colours | Gold & maroon | |
Website | pdn.ac.lk | |
The University of Peradeniya (
The University of Peradeniya hosts nine faculties, four postgraduate institutes (including the newly added Postgraduate Institute of Medical Sciences), 20 centres and units, 73 departments, and teaches about 12,000 students in the fields of Medicine, Agriculture, Arts, Science, Engineering, Dental Sciences, Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science, Management, and Allied Health Science.[3] It claims to have the largest government endowment by a higher education institution in Sri Lanka, based on its large staff and faculties/departments.[1]
Location
The University of Peradeniya site touches the natural environment of the lower slopes of the
The university spans nearly 700 ha (1,700 acres) in the Mahaweli flood plain. Most of the area remains afforested. The climate around the university is mild, and the temperature fluctuates between 18 and 30 °C (64 and 86 °F).
The main entrance to the university is through Galaha road. The Faculty of Engineering is on one side of the Mahaweli River and all other faculties are on the other side. The Akbar bridge links the two banks of the river. Considered as a marvel of civil engineering, it was designed by A. Thurairajah (Dean of the Faculty of Engineering, 1975–77 and 1982–85), and built by the first batch of the faculty, in the year of its inception.
The Sarasavi Uyana railway station is on campus. Another bridge known as Yaka Paalama links the railway to the other bank. Daily shuttle bus services operate from Kandy to Galaha junction and Kandy to the university.
A separate sub-campus was established in 1968 at Mahailuppallama, North Central province for the Faculty of Agriculture.[4] Separate residential facilities are provided to this sub-campus.
History
Beginnings
The proposal for the establishment of University of Ceylon, the first university of Sri Lanka (the predecessor of the University of Peradeniya) goes back to 1899.[3] But no progress was seen until the formation of the Ceylon University Association in 1906 under the guidance of Sir Ponnambalam Arunachalam, Sir James Peiris and Sir Marcus Fernando. Its request for a European-style university in Sri Lanka was partially granted by the British rulers with the formation of Ceylon University College on 1 January 1921.
The
In 1938 the government acquired the plot and developed an area about 150 ha (370 acres) (out of 700 ha (1,700 acres)) to create the University Park.[6]
Although the site was acquired, no plans were made to establish the university until 1941. With the arrival of Sir Ivor Jennings, as the second principal of the Ceylon University College, establishment plans were put into effect. He stressed the urgent need to move the university to Peradeniya to the Minister of Education C. W. W. Kannangara and took the initiative in the process. Thus he is considered the forefather of the University of Peradeniya.[7]
1942 to 1952
In 1942, the University of Ceylon was created as the first unitary, residential and autonomous university in Sri Lanka with its seat in Peradeniya, amalgamating Ceylon University College and the Medical College into a single unit with 55 academic staff members, 904 students in four faculties.[8][9] But due to World War II, the construction of buildings started in 1946. Until then, the lectures and laboratory classes were conducted in the buildings obtained from the Ceylon University College and the Ceylon Medical College in Colombo.
Consultants Sir Patrick Abercrombie and Clifford Holliday did the planning and layout of the university complex. The first phase of work constituted only the development of the left bank. The building of a bridge across the Mahaweli River, later known as the 'Akbar bridge', was planned by Prof. A Thurairajah. Transfer of the first batch of students, students from the Departments of Law and Agriculture and the third and fourth-year students of the Department of Veterinary Science, from Colombo to Peradeniya took place in 1949. Another major move took place in 1952, with the transfer of staff and students of the Faculties of Arts and Oriental Studies, together with the Main Library and the University Administration. This movement on 6 October 1952 marks the official establishment of the University of Ceylon, Peradeniya. In the initial stages, vice chancellor Jennings wanted to model British universities but met with resistance from students who opposed the changes.[10]
1952 to 1972
Although the buildings at Peradeniya were established in 1952, the official ceremony for its inception was held on 20 April 1954, with the participation of
You have remarked Mr. Chancellor, that it is not easy to open a university, because once established it is always open. However, like the shopkeepers of London during the bombing, I can declare this place to be "more open than usual..."
Sections of the University of Ceylon functioned in Colombo and Peradeniya acted as campuses of the same university until 1967. In 1967, these campuses were split into two. The section in Peradeniya was known as the University of Ceylon, Peradeniya, while the section in Colombo was known as the University of Ceylon, Colombo.
1972 to 1978
By the University Act No. 1 of 1972, four[
1978 to the present
Under the Universities Act No. 16, 1978, the University of Sri Lanka was split into six independent, autonomous institutions as the University of Peradeniya, University of Colombo, University of Sri Jayewardenepura, University of Kelaniya, University of Moratuwa and University of Jaffna.[11] This Act brought back some of the central features of the Ceylon University Ordinance of 1942 such as the senates, the councils and courts.
Governance and administration
The University of Peradeniya operates under the provisions of the Universities Act No. 16 of 1978 and the Universities (Amendment) Act No. 7 of 1985. It is a
Officers
The chancellor is the head of the university and is responsible for awarding all the
The vice chancellor is the de facto principal academic and administrative officer of the university, responsible for management tasks. This appointment is also done by the President of Sri Lanka. The current vice chancellor is Prof. M.D. Lamawansa, who is also the Professor of Surgery.
The deputy vice-chancellor is Prof. W.M. Terrance Madhujith, Professor of Food Science.
Deans are the heads of the faculties. They are responsible for the management and the tasks carried out by the faculty. Deans are appointed by the chancellor for three years.
List of chancellors and vice chancellors
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Faculties and institutions
Founding of the Faculties of the University of Peradeniya | ||
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Faculty | Year founded | |
Faculty of Arts | 1942 | |
Faculty of Medicine | 1962 | |
Faculty of Science | 1961 | |
Faculty of Dental Sciences | 1943 | |
Faculty of Agriculture | 1947 | |
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science | 1947 | |
Faculty of Engineering | 1950 | |
Faculty of Allied Health Sciences | 2005 | |
Faculty of Management | 2015 |
The university has eight academic faculties of study. These faculties contain 72 departments. In addition, the university has two postgraduate institutions and six affiliated centres. The first Faculty to be estbalished was the Faculty of Arts. The Departments of Law and Oriental Studies functioned separately but have since come under the Faculty of Arts. Since then, eight other faculties have been added. The latest addition is the Faculty of Management, established in 2015.
The Postgraduate Institute of Agriculture (PGIA) and Postgraduate Institute of Humanities and Social Sciences (PGIHS) and Postgraduate Institute of Medical Science (PGIMS) and Postgraduate Institute of Science (PGIS) are the institutions established in the university. PGIS is a national institute established by the Ministry of Higher Education, Sri Lanka in 1996. PGIA was established in 1975 and offers three postgraduate degrees. PGIA offers postgraduate-level courses in Agricultural disciplines. In addition to these institutions, Senerath Paranavitana Teaching and Research Museum functions affiliated with the Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Arts.[12] It was established in 1960.
Ranking
In 2023, Times Higher Education World University Rankings placed the University of Peradeniya first in Sri Lanka and 301–400 band in the world university ranking. This is the highest world ranking that any university in Sri Lanka has reached in recent history. The University of Peradeniya has also been ranked first in Sri Lanka under other popular university rankings schemes such as Times Higher Education world university rankings, QS world university rankings and U.S. News & World Report global university ranking in 2022. In 2019–2020, according to the University Ranking by Academic Performance (URAP), the University of Peradeniya ranked first in Sri Lanka and 1123rd in the world. The University of Peradeniya was ranked No. 1 in Sri Lanka based on total ResearchGate scores.
Ranking Methods | Ranking |
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THE[13] | 301-400 |
QS[14] | 1001-1200 |
U.S. News & World Report[15] | 901 |
Ranking Methods | Ranking |
---|---|
THE[13] | 1 |
QS[16] | 1 |
U.S. News & World Report[17] | 1 |
Ranking Methods | Ranking |
---|---|
THE- Asia University Rankings[18] | 93 |
QS- Asia University Rankings[19] | 351-400 |
THE- Emerging Economies[18] | 113 |
U.S. News & World Report- Asia[15] | 240 |
Library network
The library is a centrally administered network of libraries. It is considered the oldest academic library in Sri Lanka.[d] Containing over 430,000 items, it is one of the largest libraries serving the country. Seven branches are in faculties in the main campus at Peradeniya and one other branch is in the Mahailuppallama sub-campus.
University of Peradeniya library contains a legal deposit collection of 300,000 items, a special collection of 15,000+ items acquired from various individuals, palm-leaf manuscript collection of approximately 5,000 (second largest in Sri Lanka) and a microfilm collection of 17,000. Furthermore, it owns the largest historical map collection in Sri Lanka.[20]
Student life
Student organizations
Students at the University of Peradeniya run over 100 clubs and organizations. These include cultural and religious groups, academic clubs, and common-interest organizations. The Peradeniya Students' Union (PSU) is considered the highest body which represents all internal students.[21] Separate student unions operate in each faculty. These student societies include:
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Sports
Sports activities are conducted by the Department of Physical Education. The University of Peradeniya has 30 athletics teams to date. Facilities include a well-equipped gymnasium, one of the largest multi-purpose outstation stadiums in Sri Lanka, a 50m swimming pool and separate stadiums for cricket, rugby, football, hockey, tennis, track and field, and elle.
Residential facilities
The University of Peradeniya is the only residential university in Sri Lanka. It provides residential facilities to most of its undergraduate students, all its academic staff members and guests. Three guest houses — Gal Bangalawa, Upper Hantana Guest House and Lady Hill a tourist hotel – come under university administration. Residential halls for undergraduate students:
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International collaborations
The university has developed international relationships since its earliest days. Student exchange programs (Erasmus and International Credit Mobility Programme with SLU, Sweden), collaborative research, split postgraduate programs, international seminars, conferences and short courses are being carried out with these global partners by the Directorate of Research and International Affairs. This was established as a separate institution in 2006.[22] UoP has initiated cooperation programs with foreign governments and institutions.
Academic networking
UoP is a member of the Association of Commonwealth Universities (ACU) academic network.
Research and academic partners
The university has signed Memorandums of Understanding for research and academic development with these international universities.[23]
- University of California, Davis Campus, United States
- National University of Singapore, Singapore
- University of Pennsylvania, United States (with Solomon ASCH Centre for the Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict)
- University of Ottawa, Canada (Governance and Institutional Strengthening Project)
- Carnegie Mellon University, United States
- University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom (with School of Biological Sciences)
- University of Göttingen, Germany (with Institut für Sportwissenschaften)
- University of Guelph, Canada (cooperation in Food and Science Technology)[24]
- University of Naples Federico II, Italy
- University of North Dakota, United States[25]
- Marche Polytechnic University, Italy
- North South University, Bangladesh (Public Policy and Governance)[26]
- Institute of Polytechnic de Grenoble, France (Educational and Scientific cooperation)
- Yamagata University, Japan
- Institute National Polytechnique de Lorraine, France (Higher Education on Disaster Mitigation)
- Veterinary Medicine)
- University for Foreigners Perugia, Italy
- Animal Science)
- Rajamangala University of Technology, Thailand
- Telemedicine)[27]
- Dongguk University, South Korea (Pali and Buddhist Studies)
- Niigata University, Japan
- University of Limerick, Ireland
- Lincoln University, New Zealand
- United Nations University, Japan
- Yonsei University, South Korea (academic exchange and cooperation)
- Asian Institute of Technology (AIT), Thailand (Asian Regional Research Programme on Environmental Technology Phase II)
- Universiti Sains, Malaysia
- Lund University, Sweden
- National Formosa University, Taiwan
Intercollegiate Sri Lanka Education program
The Intercollegiate Sri Lanka Education (ISLE) program provides facilities for undergraduate students from
- Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States
- Bates College, Maine, United States
- Bowdoin College, Maine, United States
- Carleton College, Minnesota, United States
- Colby University, Maine, United States
- Grinnell College, Iowa, United States
- College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, United States
- Macalester College, Minnesota, United States
- Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania, United States
- Whittier College, California, United States
Government partnerships
- Government of Sweden – research cooperation on SAREC project
- Government of Japan – capacity building training programme for Oral & Maxillafacial surgeons
- Government of Egypt – Arabic student exchange program and teaching Islamic civilization
- Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA)
- United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) – research cooperation
People
Students
Total Students | Percentage | |
---|---|---|
Sinhalese | 7849 | 81.72% |
Tamil
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1006 | 10.47% |
Muslim | 661 | 6.88% |
Burgher | 8 | 0.08% |
Indian Tamil | 42 | 0.44% |
Other/International | 39 | 0.41% |
Total | 9605 | 100% |
The total number of undergraduates in the university for the year 2009–2010 was 9,605. Student intake for that year remained at 2,620. In 2008, 1514 postgraduate students studied at the university, most of them affiliated with the two postgraduate institutions: Postgraduate Institute of Science (PGIS) and Postgraduate Institute of Agriculture (PGIA). Postgraduate output for the year was 358, including 15 doctorates. Faculties except Science and Agriculture conducted their own postgraduate courses.
Women constituted 53.15 percent of undergraduates. Women constituted remained over 45 percent in all faculties except Faculty of Engineering where it was 15.46 percent.[f] Courses in all faculties except Faculty of Arts are taught in English medium. In the Faculty of Arts, 69.85 percent of undergraduates are enrolled in Sinhala, 15.93 percent in Tamil and 14.22 percent in English.
Alumni
The University of Peradeniya has produced a large number of alumni. Among the best-known are Sri Lankans are
Faculty
Comparison of Academic Staff[43][g] | ||
---|---|---|
Category | Number engaged in the university system (2008) | Number engaged in University of Peradeniya (2008) |
Professors | 386 | 106 |
Associate Professors | 79 | 23 |
Senior Lecturers | 1929 | 336 |
Lecturers | 1556 | 216 |
Academic Support Staff | 326 | 50 |
The number of permanent academic staff at the University of Peradeniya is 731. It is the university in Sri Lanka that is served by the highest number of professors, associate professors and academic staff. Teacher to student ratio of the university was 1:13 by 2008.
Faculty include
Criticism
Ragging
The university has been criticized for its high level of
Popular culture
The University of Peradeniya holds a central position in classical university education, which has made it the setting for many dramas, films, songs, poems, novels and other cultural works in Sri Lanka.[51][52]
Songs like "Hanthanata paayana sanda..." by Amarasiri Peiris, "Hanthane kandu muduna sisara..." by W. D. Amaradeva, "Hanthana adaviye meduru kulunu sudu sandaluthalaa pisa..." by Nanda Malini, "Mé nagaraya maa oba munagasunu nagarayayi..." by Mervin Perera, "Hanthane raja dahane...", "Nethu saluna...", "Hantana Desin ena..." are only a few of them. Movies like Gamini Fonseka's Saagarayak Meda (In the middle of an ocean) and Sugathapala Senarath Yapa's Hanthane Kathawa (The story of Hanthana) are directly based on University of Peradeniya.
UoP is featured in novels: Siri Gunasinghe's Sevanella (The shadow) and Gunadasa Amarasekara's Ek Sathya Kathawak (One true story). Groundbreaking dramas like Prof. Ediriweera Sarachchandra's Maname (1957) and Sinhabahu (1960) were first directed and played there.[10][53] In Sarachchandra's novel Heta Echchara Kaluvara Nae (Tomorrow is not that dark), an entire chapter is dedicated to describing the beauty of the university.
Further reading
- De Silva, K. M. and Jayatilaka, Tissa (eds). Peradeniya: Memories of a University, International Centre for Ethnic Studies, Kandy (1997), ISBN 955-580-023-5
- Peiris, Ralph. Universities, politics and public opinion in Ceylon, Springer, Netherlands (Volume 2, Number 4 / June 1964). ISSN 1573-1871(Online). 435-454pp.
- Goonetileke H. A. I.Introduction to Jennings’s The Kandy Road (1993)
- ISBN 955-552-114-X
- Gooneratne, Yasmine. The Sweet and Simple Kind: A Poetic Account of a Nation's Troubled Awakening, Abacus Publishers (2006), ISBN 978-1-4087-0163-8(UK edition)
See also
Notes
- a. ^ Table 2.1.1: Total student enrolment by faculty (pp.24), University Hand Book 2009 published by the University of Peradeniya publications (2010).[54]
- b. ^ Table 2.1.1: Total student enrolment by faculty (pp.24), University Hand Book 2009.
- c. ^ Table 2.1.1: Postgraduate students by faculty (pp.24), University Hand Book 2009.
- d. ^ "The oldest academic library in Sri Lanka, founded in 1921 as the university College Library became the University of Ceylon Library in 1942 and was moved to Peradeniya in 1952. Currently, it has one of the largest collections in the country, numbering more than 500,000 in volume" – International dictionary of library histories, Volume 1.[55]
- e. ^ Table 2.1.15: Undergraduate enrolment by ethnicity (pp.39), University Hand Book 2008
- f. ^ Total number of students in Faculty of Engineering, 2008: 1468. Number female: 227. Table 2.1.4: Undergraduate enrolment by ethnicity (pp.22), University Hand Book 2008
- g. University Grants Commission of Sri Lanka
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