At Unicamp, academic studies are usually divided into four
main areas: exact sciences (which includes
formal and
physical sciences), human sciences (roughly equivalent to
social science, including
Arts), biological sciences (roughly equivalent to
life sciences) and technologies (including engineering and technical studies). This division reflects on how the university are structured how the campuses was designed. The
academic year is aligned with the
calendar year, with classes usually starting in late February, and ending in early December, the beginning of
summer in Brazil. The year is divided into two
semester terms, and all
courses are a semester long. While there is a suggested
curriculum for each program, students are free to choose any classes to attend during a specific semester, and class attribution is done in the basis of
grade average, with higher-graded students having priority when choosing classes. Students are admitted to a single program and are expected to take all the classes required to complete that program in the number of semesters prescribed, although they can take 50% longer before facing administrative measures. While each program is usually managed by a single school or institute (exceptions apply, such as
Computer Engineering, co-managed by the Institute of Computing and the
School of Electrical and Computer Engineering), classes are usually ministered across different institutes or schools. Program
class sizes usually range between 30 and 60 students per year for each program, but some programs can have over 100 students per year, and are named by the year of admission: the class of 2015 is composed of all students entering in the year of 2015, regardless of the program length or expected graduation. There is no campus-wide
graduation ceremony, with each school or institute conducting its own. during his graduate studies on the
Pirahã language at Unicamp
Graduate programs Unicamp offers 153 postgraduate programs, with about half of those being masters, serving almost 16 thousand students, one third of which come from outside the State of São Paulo, and around 5% are international students. Just as with undergraduate studies, students pay no tuition fees. The programs are mainly coordinated by the Pro-Rectorate for Extension and Outreach (
Pró-Reitoria de Extensão e Assuntos Comunitários, PREAC). PREAC aims to promote actions of extension and culture through integration with society, disseminating and acquiring knowledge through the academic community. Specialization programs are either offered by Unicamp's extension school, Extecamp, or directly by the schools and institutes. In the past 25 years, over 100,000 students have been reached and in 2014, Unicamp joined
Coursera and currently eight
online courses are being offered, two of them are between the most popular Coursera courses in Brazil. Outreach actions take a variety of forms, including events, publications, technological, educational, cultural and social products and services. The Department for Cultural Development hosts several events, usually open for the surrounding community. Events are also held at the
Casa do Lago Cultural Space and at the Cultural Center for Social Inclusion and Integration. Every year, Unicamp also hosts an
open doors event (
Unicamp de Portas Abertas, UPA), in which the main campus is visited by over 50 thousand high school students from across the country. The event provides presentations and discussions on the role of the university in the society, as well as career presentations and tours, with the students visiting several areas of the university and gaining a better understanding of the different areas of study.
Faculty Unicamp employs close to 1,800 professors, nearly all with at least a
doctoral degree. The faculty career is structured in three major tiers: •
Doctor Professor (
Professor Doutor, equivalent to
assistant professor): candidates must have a
doctoral or equivalent degree •
Associate Professor (
Professor Associado): candidates must have a
Livre Docente title, similar to the German
Habilitation •
Tenured Professor (
Professor Titular) – MS-6 (top rank, only MS-6 professors are allowed to hold positions such as Dean of a Faculty/School or Rector of the university) Hiring is done through a
civil service examination, including a written test, a teaching examination, academic history analysis and other additional criteria. The same process is required for professors changing tiers: an associate professor pursuing a tenure position must go through the same examination process compete with other external candidates for the position. The two initial tiers also include sub levels, and professors are promoted between them for merit. Uniquely among public universities in Brazil, Unicamp has a career focused on full-time research. Currently there are approximately 100 full-time researchers at the university. Central Library
Library system The university's library system (
Sistema de Bibliotecas da Unicamp; SBU) comprises a large central library named in honor of César Lattes, and 27 other satellite libraries, located in the individual institutions, housing over 1 million volumes, in addition to hundreds of thousands of
ebooks and
academic journals. The system was officially created in 1983, aggregating the several independent libraries that operated across the university. The large central library was inaugurated six years later, in 1989. The library system is automated and its collections may be accessed and searched on the Internet. Its Digital Library section supports a database with more than 25,000 dissertations presented in the university, as well access to the largest electronic libraries of academic journals in the world. It also includes several historical libraries and media archives focused on specific authors and topics, such as the
Edgard Leuenroth Archive and collections honoring César Lattes,
Sérgio Buarque de Holanda,
Monteiro Lobato and others. == Admissions ==