The university comprises nine colleges and schools, plus an honors college:
College of Arts and Sciences The College of Arts and Sciences, comprising 21 departments, forms the largest academic division at the university. Departments of the College of Arts and Sciences include
Africana Studies,
Anthropology,
Art and Art History, Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences,
Biological Sciences,
Chemistry,
Communication,
East Asian Studies,
Economics,
English,
Geography and
Planning,
History, Languages,
Literatures and
Cultures,
Latin American,
Caribbean and U.S. Latino Studies,
Mathematics and
Statistics,
Music and Theatre,
Philosophy,
Physics,
Psychology,
Sociology, and
Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies. Undergraduate education consists of 56 majors offered in these areas, along with their paired minors and 17 other minors as well as cooperative interdisciplinary programs that include the arts, humanistic studies, physical sciences and social sciences. Graduate programs in the College of Arts and Sciences in the humanities and fine arts, science and mathematics, social and behavioral studies, and college-based interdisciplinary majors lead to the following degrees and certificates: Master of Arts, Master of Science, Master of Regional Planning, Master of Fine Arts, Doctor of Philosophy, Certificate of
Advanced Standing, Certificate of Advanced Study and the Certificate (in selected fields).
College of Nanotechnology, Science, and Engineering The College of Nanotechnology, Science, and Engineering currently has four departments: • The Department of Computer Science • The Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering • The Department of Environmental & Sustainable Engineering • The Department of Nanoscale Science & Engineering Undergraduate and graduate (MS and PhD) programs are offered by all four departments. The BS program in Computer Science and BS Program in Electrical & Computer Engineering received ABET accreditation in 2022. In December 2022, it was announced that the College and UAlbany would be reunifying with the College of Nanoscale Science & Engineering, which had been affiliated since 2014 with
SUNY Polytechnic Institute. In August 2023, the reunification was completed and the name of the college was changed from the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences to the College of Nanotechnology, Science, and Engineering. Founded in 1962, the School's bachelor's, master's and certificate programs enroll full-time and part-time students from all over the world. The Digital Forensics B.S. curriculum and research done at the school's Department of Information Security and Digital Forensics was used to receive dual designation as a NSA Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber Defense Education and Research. Since 2011, the school has also offered a Graduate Certificate in Information Security, which is a 15-credit program. The Financial Market Regulation program works with the Institute for Financial Market Regulation, a cooperative project of professionals involved in financial market regulation and supervision from UAlbany and
Albany Law School who develop interdisciplinary research and education in the field. The program concentrates upon four fields: Business, Technology, Law, and Public Policy. The Massry Center for Business building was unveiled on August 19, 2013. It was structurally engineered by Leslie E. Robertson Associates.
School of Criminal Justice UAlbany's School of Criminal Justice offers programs in
criminal justice on the bachelor's, master's and doctoral levels. The school was founded in 1966, and spurred what came to be called "the Albany model" for other Ph.D. programs in major universities across the nation and the world. The school concentrates on
crime and societal reactions to crime, including the political, economic and cultural patterns that influence policy choices on the response to crime. A focus of study is the social and personal forces that lead to criminal conduct and the analysis of the organization and operation of crime control systems. Particular emphasis is placed on the interactions among the many agencies which comprise criminal justice systems. In 2020, the SCJ was integrated into the Rockefeller College of Public Policy, in order to build stronger interdisciplinary connections between the faculty and students in criminal justice, political science, and public policy & administration.
School of Education The university was founded as the New York Normal School of Teachers in 1844 with
David Perkins Page as its first principal. It expanded to become the New York State College for Teachers in 1914, and then, in 1962, the State University of New York at Albany. The School of Education was created that year as part of a multidisciplinary university center and remained the home of the original teacher training programs and faculty, including, from 1845 until its closing in 1977, the
Milne School, the university's campus laboratory school where prospective teachers carried out their practice teaching. The school is home to 1,500 graduate students in more than 30 master's, certificate, and doctoral programs housed within four departments: Educational Policy & Leadership, Educational and Counseling Psychology, Educational Theory and Practice, and Literacy Teaching and Learning. The school is also home to 15 centers and institutes which aid Capital Region schools and research educational issues. These include the school's outreach arm, the Capital Area School Development Association, which provides services to 120 school districts; the Center for the Elimination of Minority Health Disparities, which was funded in 2006 by a three-year $1.24 million grant from the
National Institutes of Health; the Center for Urban Youth and Technology; and the National Research Center on English Learning & Achievement, which since 1987 has been funded by the
U.S. Department of Education to conduct research dedicated to improving students’ English and
literacy achievement.
College of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security and Cybersecurity The College of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security and Cybersecurity (CEHC), created in 2015, offers interdisciplinary academic programs for undergraduate and graduate students in fields designed to protect against, respond to, and recover from a growing array of natural and man-made risks and threats in New York State and around the world. Research will be conducted by CEHC faculty and also through faculty-student collaborations and cross-disciplinary research groups. Training programs will be offered to current homeland security and emergency preparedness professionals. In 2017, the college participated in the New York Excelsior Challenge, a three-and-a half day training event. The Excelsior Challenge consists of training exercises designed to help first responders improve their response capabilities.
College of Integrated Health Science In 2024, the university established the College of Integrated Health Sciences (CIHS), bringing together the former School of Public Health and School of Social Welfare under one college. CIHS has six units, the School of Social Welfare, and the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Department of Health Policy, Management and Behavior and Department of Nursing. The School of Public Health, created in 1985 as a partnership between the University at Albany, State University of New York and the New York State Department of Health. Its mission is to provide education, research, service and leadership to improve public health and eliminate health disparities. Accredited by the
Council on Education for Public Health, the school offers MPH, MS, DrPH and PhD degrees in each of four academic departments: Biomedical Sciences; Environmental Health Sciences; Epidemiology & Biostatistics; and Health Policy, Management & Behavior. Research interests of the more than 200 doctoral-level faculty include
AIDS,
GIS, maternal and child health, hospital
epidemiology,
infectious diseases, environmental and
occupational health,
eldercare, minority health and health disparities. Both research faculty and students benefit from additional affiliations with
Albany Medical Center and Bassett Healthcare.
Rankings The
U.S. News & World Report 2025 edition of "Best Colleges" ranked the university tied for 121st among national universities and tied for 61st among public universities. In its 2022 rankings,
Times Higher Education World University Rankings and
The Wall Street Journal ranked the university 188th among national universities and 351st-400th among international universities. The 2022
Forbes "America's Best Colleges" ranking placed Albany at 281st overall among 500 universities, at the 56th percentile of schools that were ranked. This represents a drop of 94 spots from its 2021 ranking at 187. ==Research==