University Of Karachi | Bachelors & Masters On-Line Admissions 2018 (Merit Basis)
Last Date : 13th December 2017
Spread over 1200 acres of land, University of Karachi was
established through the parliament as a Federal University in 1951. However,
through another act of the parliament in 1962 its status was redefined as
university of the province of Sindh. On 23rd October, 1950 the Karachi
University Act was passed and after an amendment in 1951, it was enacted and
Prof A. B. A Haleem was appointed as its first Vice Chancellor. For the first
two years, the University of Karachi remained as an examination University for
the affiliated colleges. In the year 1953, it started its teaching and research
activities at two Faculties of Arts and Science. Opened with an initial intake
of 50 students, the university is now a sprawling structure of 53 Departments
and 20 world class and highly reputable Research Centers and Institutes, under
eight faculties of Arts, Science, Islamic Studies, Pharmacy, Management and
Administrative Sciences, Law, Education and Medicine. At present, the enrolment
of regular students at the Campus is slightly over 24,000. There are over 800
teachers and more than 2500 supporting staff.
The University in the beginning was housed in small
buildings adjacent to the Civil Hospital. Meanwhile, due to rapid expansion, it
began to be felt that the space in which the university was functioning was not
enough for its needs. Moreover, the atmosphere of the congested and polluted
area was not conducive to higher education and research. Thus, a plot of 1279
acres of land was acquired on the Country Club Road (now University Road) and
on 18th January 1960 the university was shifted to the new campus. Thus began,
a new phase in the life of the university. The day is still commemorated by
various old students' Association and the University administration jointly.
Karachi University always proudly mentions the names of
renowned educationists and scholars associated with this institution of higher
learning like, Dr. I. H. Qureshi, Dr. Mahmud Hussain, Dr. Salemuzzaman
Siddiqui, Dr. Afzal Hussain Qadri, Dr. M. M. Ahmed, Dr Mujtaba Karim, Prof. M.
Ilyas, Prof. Q. Fareed, Dr. Ibadur Rehman Khan, Prof Muntakhib ul Haq, Prof.
Memony, Dr. S. M. Yousuf, Dr. M.A Wali and Dr. Karawala. The faculty was drawn
not only from Pakistan but also included eminent educationists from Europe and
America.
Karachi University today
The Karachi University today is the biggest university in
the country. It comprises eight faculties with which all the colleges of the
city are affiliated. B.S., M.S., M.Phil. and Ph.D. classes under five of these
faculties Arts, Science, Pharmacy, Management and Administrative Science and
Islamic Learning are conducted on the campus, while under the Faculties of
Medicine, law and Education it examines the students admitted to their
affiliated colleges. Research programmers leading to M.Phil and Ph.D Degree are
offered under all the faculties.
Science
The Science Faculty which consists of 23 departments and
five research Institutes can be said to be the biggest scientific centre in the
country. The Research Institutes include the HEJ Research Institute of
Chemistry, which is world renowned and has also been designated World Academy
of Science. It is the prime research institute of the country and has high
level research faculties for chemical science particularly Natural Product
Chemistry.
Other Institutes are Dr. Panjwani Centre for Molecular
Medicines and Drug Research, Khan Institute of Biotechnology and Genetic
Engineering, Dr Afzal Hussain Qadri Biological Research Centre, which is a
common research facility for all the biological science departments; the Marine
Resources Collection and Research Centre, which is the biggest repository of
marine life from the Arabian Sea. National Nematological Research Centre, which
undertakes research in plant pest control. Centre of Excellence in Marine
Biology, a federally founded centre for the study of marine fauna of the
Arabian Sea; the Institute of Environmental Studies, Institute of Molecular
Genetics and Umair Basha Institute of Information Technology which houses the department
of Computer Science.
It is noteworthy that the number of M.Phil/Ph.D in science
produced by the Karachi University far exceeds the number produced in any other
university of the country. So far, about 600 M.Phil, 300 Ph.D, 7 D.Sc and 7
D.Litt. degrees in Science have been awarded by the university. The University
teachers are also involved in various research projects and contribute
regularly to publications of home and abroad. Only in 2006 the number of
research papers published by the faculty of the university was 506.
Library
The library of the university is one of the largest library
in the country. Housed in spacious building, it has a collection of over
360,000 books, and over 110,000 copies of national and foreign journals and
periodicals. There is also a microfilm section which has copies of rare
manuscripts from the British museum, the India Office Library and the Bodleian
and Cambridge University libraries.
A highlight of the library is the Quaid-i-Azam's personal
collection of books, many of which carry his own signature. Copies of the All
India Muslim League papers are also available. Work is in progress for setting
up a resource centre, equipped with internet and scanner microfiche. Now, the
Central Library is being gradually digitalized and will be able to cater the
larger number of students. The LEJ National Science Centre is the most
significant addition to the Karachi University which is a recent development.
The centre not only houses one of the largest digital one
libraries of the mechanism and capacity to assist other campus library by
resources and provide leadership in the application of technology to help the
researchers, scientists, scholars and students of academic and R&D
institutions of Pakistan Facilities of video conferencing are available and
fully operative. Beside the central library, every department also has its own
seminar library equipped with the necessary books.
Evening Program
The University of Karachi introduced the Evening program in
1995 to provide an opportunity to the in service peoples and professionals to
pursue higher education in the evening initially at a few departments The
program started while gradually the number of departments offering degree
courses in the evening has increased.
Four Year Degree Program: The latest development this year
is the introduction of four year degree program at the University to bring the
university education at par with the International standards. In the revised
curricula of four years program a number of new subject have been added to
enable the passed out students to have wider opportunities in the job market.
New Era of Development
The University has now embraced upon a gigantic process of multifaceted
progress with emphasis on capacity building and quality enchantment. Ever since
its inception, it is in this era that constitutional and statutory bodies of
the university are holding their meeting with regular intervals, further
bolstering the process.
Regular holding of Selection Boards has enabled the
University to add more than two hundred new teachers to various faculties and
departments. Many departments in faculties of science and Arts where
strengthened by modernizing facilities recently to enhance their quality and
productivity.
These include Departments of Physics, Chemistry, Statistics
Food Science and Technology, Biotechnology, Computer Science and Mass
Communications. For common facilities for science in various scientific
disciplines a centralized science lab has been established. It has further
enhanced the capabilities for scientific research. Some noteworthy developments
which serve as land marks in the university include a highly sophisticated and
well equipped Herbarium for research in plant science.
Already completed Botanical Garden is first of its kind in
the country. The Garden adds plenty of beauty to the campus on the one hand
while on the other it serves as an open lab for the Plant scientists.
Construction of hostels for the visiting faculty and
research scholars and additional facilities for M.Phil/Ph.D scholars, have
further enhanced chances for quality and speedy research. The perennial
residential problems at the campus are also expected to solve partially with
the completion of new blocks of the staff apartments. All these and many other
successes were due to active encouragements the university received from the
Higher Education Commission and the Chancellor of the University.
A number of new development projects are on the anvil while
many others are at various stages of completion. The University is now moving
fast on the path of developments playing its due role in the national
development.
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