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Université De Moncton Information

The Université de Moncton (abbr. U de M, transl. University of Moncton) is a French language university located in Moncton, New Brunswick serving the French Canadian community of Atlantic Canada. It is the only francophone university in New Brunswick and is one of only two such universities in the Maritimes, the other being the Université Sainte-Anne in Pointe-de-l'Église, Nova Scotia.

Contents

History

Main building

Founded on 19 June 1963, the modern Université de Moncton is the result of the merger of three colleges: Collège Saint-Joseph (Memramcook, 1864), Collège du Sacré-Coeur (Bathurst, 1999), and Collège Saint-Louis (Edmundston, 1946).[1] In 1989, the Université of Moncton founded undergraduate degrees in adult education. Alan Beddoe designed the university coats of arms.[2]

The National Film Board of Canada documentary Acadia Acadia ?!? (1971), co-directed by Michel Brault and Pierre Perrault, documents how student protests at the university in 1968-69 sparked an awakening of Acadian nationalism.[3]

Campuses

The university is divided into three campuses

Buildings

The Léopold-Taillon Building was built between 1945 and 1948, is on the Registry of Historic Places of Canada.[4]

Partnerships

The university is a member of L'Association des universités de la francophonie canadienne (en: Association of Universities of the Canadian Francophonie), a network of academic institutions of the Canadian Francophonie.[5]

Faculties

The main campus at Moncton has eight faculties:

Faculty of Law

The University of Moncton's Faculty of Law is one of only three French-language common law schools in Canada. (The University of Ottawa and McGill University also offer common law degrees in French.) The school was founded in 1978 in order to respond to the needs of francophone communities outside of Quebec. As Quebec practices civil law, there was a need to instruct francophone lawyers in common law to practice in other parts of Canada. The University of Ottawa law school teaches both common and civil law, as does McGill; thus the University of Moncton's Faculty of Law is the only exclusively French, exclusively common law school in Canada.[7]

U de M offers both the basic LLB and the graduate LLM. The school also offers joint degrees: the LLB-MBA (Masters of Business) and LLB-MEE (Masters of Environmental Studies). As well, students who already possess a civil law degree (an LL.L or a BCL) from a Canadian school can enroll at the University of Moncton for two semesters to complete an LLB.[8]

Faculty of Medicine

The University of Moncton's Faculty of Medicine is the first such francophone school in the Maritimes, outside the province of Quebec.

Libraries

There are six libraries and resource centers across the three campuses: Bibliothèque Champlain (Moncton), Bibliothèque Michel-Bastarache (Moncton), Centre d'études acadiennes (Moncton), Centre de ressources pédagogiques (Moncton), Bibliothèque Rhéa-Larose (Edmundston) and Bibliothèque Shippagan.[9] All records from these libraries are gathered into one catalogue: Catalogue Éloïze.[10]

Two of these libraries, Michel-Bastarache and Centre de ressources pédagogiques, are special libraries, catering to the Faculty of Law and the Faculty of Education, respectively. The Centre d'études acadiennes, found on the lower level of Bibliothèque Champlain, is a world-renown and primary resource and archive center for Acadian studies.[11]

Athletics

The university is represented in Canadian Interuniversity Sport by the Moncton Aigles Bleus. The Aigles Bleus have a male and female hockey team, a male and female soccer team, a male and female Athletics (track and field),a male and female Cross country running team and a female volleyball team.

Noted faculty and alumni / alumnae

See also

References

  1. ^ Clément Cormier. "Université de Moncton". Canadian Encyclopedia. http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0008236.
  2. ^ Alan Beddoe collection at Library and Archives Canada
  3. ^ Acadia Acadia ?!? (1971), NFB.ca
  4. ^ Léopold-Taillon Building Registry of Historic Places of Canada
  5. ^ AUFC
  6. ^ Canadian Engineering Memorial Foundation - University List
  7. ^ Université de Moncton, Campus de Moncton - Faculté de droit
  8. ^ http://www.umoncton.ca/droit/imgs_demande/02Conditionsetpolitiquesgeneralesdadmission.pdf
  9. ^ http://www.umoncton.ca/
  10. ^ http://www.eloize.umoncton.ca
  11. ^ http://www.umoncton.ca/etudeacadiennes/centre/hist.html

Further reading

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Université de Moncton
· · New Brunswick universities
Public chartered universities Moncton · Mount Allison · New Brunswick · St. Thomas
Private chartered universities Crandall · Bethany · St. Stephen's
Private universities recognized under the Degree Granting Act Fredericton · Yorkville
Public colleges NBCC · Maritime College of Forest Technology
Defunct St. Joseph's · New Brunswick Teachers' College · Lansbridge · Meritus University
· · Acadia
History Acadia (New France)EvangelineExpulsionGovernorsGrand-PréHistoryRoyal Proclamation of 2003
People and culture Acadian World CongressAcadians (list) • Ave Maris StellaFlagNational Acadian DayTintamarre
Language and education Acadian FrenchChiacUniversité de MonctonUniversité Sainte-Anne
Related Acadian PeninsulaCajunFrench CanadianFrench diaspora
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Coordinates: 46°06′18″N 64°46′55″W / 46.105°N 64.7819°W

Categories: Université de Moncton | Forestry education | French language universities and colleges in Canada outside Quebec

 

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