Nesna University College

Nesna University College
Høgskolen i Nesna

View of the old building
Former names
Nesna lærerhøgskole
Type University college
Established 1918/1994
Rector Sven Erik Forfang
Students 1,200
Location Nesna, Nordland, Norway
66°11′51″N 13°01′44″E / 66.197516°N 13.028877°E / 66.197516; 13.028877Coordinates: 66°11′51″N 13°01′44″E / 66.197516°N 13.028877°E / 66.197516; 13.028877
Website http://www.hinesna.no

Nesna University College (Norwegian: Høgskolen i Nesna or HiNe) is a university college, a Norwegian state institution of higher education. It is one of the 24 Norwegian state university colleges, and is located in the municipality of Nesna in Helgeland, Nordland county. It was established in 1918 as Nesna Teachers' College, and was reorganised as a state university college on 1 August 1994 following the university college reform. Today, the university college has approximately 1200 students and 130 employees. The original teachers' college was established in 1918 by the local priest, Ivar Hjellvik, making it the second oldest institution of higher education in Northern Norway. This university college has permanent satellite campuses in the neighboring towns of Mo i Rana and Sandnessjøen.[1] Nesna University College hosts the Nordic Women's University.

Organization

View of the facility

Nesna University College consists of three Institutes (division). Each institute is further divided into a set of Departments.[2]

Institute of teacher education

This institute y is led by Hanne Davidsen. It consists of the Departments of English, Norwegian, Arts and Handicrafts, Religion and Philosophy, Music, Mathematics, the Natural Sciences, and Social Science.[2]

Institute of nursing

This institute is led by Else Lid. It consists of the Nursing Department.[2]

Institute of ICT

This institute is led by Geir Tore Klæbo. It consists of the ICT Department.[2]

See also

References

  1. Store norske leksikon. "Høgskolen i Nesna" (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2012-01-23.
  2. 1 2 3 4 HiNe. "Avdelinger" (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2012-01-23.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.