Texas Tech University is a public institution that was founded in
1923.
It
has a total undergraduate enrollment of 28,632,
its setting is urban,
and the campus size is 1,839 acres.
It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar.
Texas Tech University's ranking in the 2016 edition of Best Colleges
is National Universities,
168.
Its in-state tuition and fees are $9,567 (2015-16); out-of-state
tuition and fees are $21,267 (2015-16).
Texas Tech University is a large research institution in the college
town of Lubbock. Students are required to live on campus until they have
completed 30 hours of course work. The Texas Tech Red Raiders sports
teams compete in the NCAA Big 12 Conference and are particularly
competitive in football and basketball. Students can join more than 450
student organizations, including Texas Tech's large Greek community,
made up of about 50 fraternities and sororities. The university also
runs research centers and institutes, including the National Wind
Institute.
The school offers a wide variety of graduate programs, including degrees through the Jerry S. Rawls College of Business Administration, the Edward E. Whitacre Jr. College of Engineering and the School of Law.
Notable alumni of Texas Tech University include Ed Whitacre, former
chairman and CEO of both AT&T and General Motors and the namesake of
the engineering school; Grammy-nominated country singer Pat Green; and
actor Brad Leland, who appeared in both the feature film and television
series "Friday Night Lights."
A new era of excellence is dawning at Texas
Tech University as it stands on the cusp of being one of the nation's
premier research institutions.
Research
and enrollment numbers are at record levels, pushing the university
closer to the ultimate goal of attaining Tier One status. Texas Tech's
total research expenditures continue to rise. The largest student
enrollments occurred in the fall semesters of 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011 and
2010 respectively. Numbers like that cement Texas Tech's commitment to
attracting and retaining quality students.
Quality
students need a top-notch faculty. Texas Tech is home to a diverse,
highly revered pool of educators. In 2013, ten faculty members were
awarded grants from the Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program, the most in the
university's 90-year history. Through the Fulbright program, these
educators are bestowed the opportunity to work side-by-side with
researchers around the world promoting educational collaboration.
Texas
Tech also has three National Academy members on faculty at the Whitacre
College of Engineering. This honor is considered one of the highest
among professional engineers. One of the National Academy members was
also appointed as the new holder of the Jack Maddox Distinguished
Engineering Chair in Sustainable Energy.
Texas
Tech is constantly reaching necessary benchmarks to make it even more
of a national presence in research. In May of 2012, the university met
the criteria to receive a share of Texas's National Research University
Fund (NRUF). Inclusion to the fund moves Tech a step closer to
attaining Tier One status.
New research partnerships are creating unparalleled academic collaborations for the university to make strides in many areas.
Since
1970, Texas Tech has been a trailblazer in wind science. The
university created the National Wind Institute (NWI) to better support
the interdisciplinary research and educational opportunities in wind
science, engineering, and energy. The institute combines the former
Wind Science and Engineering research center (WISE) and the Texas Wind
Energy Institute. Texas Tech also houses newly commissioned turbines at
the Department of Energy/Sandia Scaled Wind Farm Technology (SWIFT)
Facility. The SWIFT facility is the only one of its kind in the world
and gives the U.S. a significant advantage in the reduction of wind
energy costs.
Texas Tech has one of the
largest petroleum engineering departments in the nation and, in 2014,
opened the Terry Fuller Petroleum Engineering Research Building. The $20
million project houses 40,000-square feet of formal teaching
environments with hands-on applications and modern research facilities.
University researchers have developed innovative ways to stimulate
natural gas and oil well production through hydraulic fracturing
(fracking.) The Office of Technology Commercialization at Texas Tech
has filed two patent applications to protect these methods and is
actively working with oil and gas companies to begin using these
improved rock fracturing techniques in the field.
Texas
Tech is a leader in community outreach and engagement. The university
and the Lubbock Independent School District, along with multiple
community partners, celebrated a $24 million Promise Neighborhood grant
from the U.S. Department of Education. There are only seven Promise
Neighborhood grantees across the nation, and East Lubbock Neighborhood
consortium will receive funding over five years.
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