Professors: Difference between revisions
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This section of the wiki is dedicated to profiling the many men and women employed as professors at UNB throughout its history. | This section of the wiki is dedicated to profiling the many men and women employed as professors at UNB throughout its history. | ||
[[Faculty of Arts Professors]]<br/>[[Faculty of Engineering Professors]]<br/>[[Faculty of Forestry Professors]]<br/>[[Faculty of Science Professors]] | [[Faculty of Administration Professors]]</br>[[Faculty of Arts Professors]]<br/>[[Faculty of Computer Science Professors]]</br>[[Faculty of Education Professors]]</br>[[Faculty of Engineering Professors]]<br/>[[Faculty of Forestry Professors]]<br/>[[Faculty of Kinesiology Professors]]</br>[[Faculty of Law Professors]]</br>[[Faculty of Science Professors]] | ||
[[UNB Faculty Club|Faculty Club]] | [[UNB Faculty Club|Faculty Club]] |
Revision as of 14:39, 4 February 2022
When King's College became the University of New Brunswick in 1859, five professors taught approximately thirty students throughout the entirety of the classical three-year course of study (a four-year course was not offered until 1887). In the ensuing years, as faculties have been established and divided into departments, this number of professors has grown tremendously.
This section of the wiki is dedicated to profiling the many men and women employed as professors at UNB throughout its history.
Faculty of Administration Professors
Faculty of Arts Professors
Faculty of Computer Science Professors
Faculty of Education Professors
Faculty of Engineering Professors
Faculty of Forestry Professors
Faculty of Kinesiology Professors
Faculty of Law Professors
Faculty of Science Professors
Sources:
- Montague, Susan. A Pictoral History of the University of New Brunswick. University of New Brunswick, 1992, p. 39.
- Harris, Robin S. A History of Higher Education in Canada, 1663-1960. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1976, p. 44.