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Discusión:Universidad Brigham Young - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

Discusión:Universidad Brigham Young

De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

Abajo está el código del artículo en íngles con las porciones ya traducidas en español. Están bienvenidos todos a traducir lo que quiera del texto al español. When you translate something, make sure and add it to the main page.69.6.157.6 20:51 25 abr, 2005 (CEST)

Brigham Young University
Imagen:BYU logo.png
Nombre

Brigham Young University

Ciudad

Provo, UT 84602

Establecida

Octubre 16 1875

Comunidad

Urbano

Tipo

Privada con estudiantes de ambos sexos

Clasificación

Parroquial

Religión

Pertenece a la Iglesia de Jesucristo de los Santos de los Últimos Días

Cantidad de estudiantes

32,400

Facultad

2,100

Presidente

Cecil O. Samuelson

Apodo

Cougars

Mascota

Cougar

Colores de la Escuela

Azul oscuro y beige

Lema

"Entrar para aprender, salir para servir"

Periódico

Daily Universe

Sitio de web

Link

Dirección de correo electrónico

Link

Brigham Young University (Universidad de Brigham Young o BYU) comenzó como Brigham Young Academy (Academia de Brigham Young) en 1875 por la Iglesia de Jesucristo de los Santos de los Últimos Días.

En la actualidad es la universidad privada más grande de Estados Unidos y es una de las universidades dependientes de una iglesia más grande del mundo, con aproximadamente 32.400 estudiantes al comienzo de 2003. BYU se ubica en Provo (Utah). Hay escuelas en Lā'ie, Hawai'i (Brigham Young University-Hawaii) y Rexburg, Idaho (Brigham Young University-Idaho), a las que asiste otros 12.000 estudiantes. El campus principal ocupa aproximadamente 600 acres (2,4 km²) al base de las Montañas Wasatch e incluye 333 edificios.

Tabla de contenidos

[editar] Demográficos

Asisten a BYU estudiantes de todos los estados de Estados Unidos y también de muchos otros países (en 2001, había 1.600 estudiantes de 110 distintos países). No es necesario ser mormón, pero el 98% de los estudiantes son miembros de la iglesia.

[editar] Academics

BYU offers bachelor’s degrees in 198 academic programs, master’s degrees in 69, doctorates in 27 and juris doctorates in one. The university is organized into 11 colleges.

BYU's Harold B. Lee Library, which in 2004 the Princeton Review ranked as the #1 "Great College Library", has more than 6 million items in its collections, contains 98 miles of shelving, and can seat 4,600 people.

[editar] Código de honor

Todo estudiante y miembro de la facultad tiene que cumplir el estricto código de honor. Este código gobierna la conducta académica, la moralidad, y la manera de vestir y de arreglarse, con el propósito de proveer en ambiente que va de acuerdo con los principios de la iglesia. Los estudiantes se comprometen a: ser honrados, castos, y virtuosos; abstenerse de las drogas ilícitas, el alcohol, el tabaco, el café, y el té (estas substancias se prohíben en la iglesia); y obedecer las reglas que conciernen el modo de vestirse, arreglarse, y al sexo opuesto. Por ejemplo, las faldas y los pantalones cortos deben llegar a la rodilla y las camisas deben tener mangas. Los hombres no pueden tener barba sin permiso, que se les da a los hombres con condiciones que se agravan al afeitarse o a los hombres cuyas creencias religiosas, como el Islam, requieren la barba. Este código de honor siempre es un tema de discutir entre los estudiantes.

[editar] Subsidization and religious education

LDS tithing funds subsidize roughly 80% of the cost of education at BYU, allowing affordable tuition for its students regardless of their membership in the LDS church, although tuition for students who are not Mormon is fifty percent above usual rates. In addition to fulfilling general-education requirements, students must complete 14 semester hours of specialized religious education which include some mandatory classes on LDS scripture.


[editar] Reputation

BYU consistently receives national recognition for its strong undergraduate and graduate programs. U.S. News & World Report ranks BYU's Marriott School of Management and the J. Reuben Clark Law School in the top 40 in the country. In 2004 the Princeton Review named BYU's Harold B. Lee Library the best in the nation.

In the July 2002 edition of the Chronicle of Higher Education, BYU was recognized as the best in the nation at turning research dollars into inventions and new companies. Some notable inventions originating at BYU include a drug for treating a rare form of leukemia, water modeling software, and the modern word-processor. Philo T. Farnsworth developed some of his ideas for the creation of the television while attending BYU. Harvey Fletcher, a BYU alumnus, went on to carry out the now famous oil-drop experiment with Robert Millikan, and was later Founding Dean of the BYU College of Engineering.

BYU is on the list of censured administrations of the American Association of University Professors due to past violations of the generally recognized principles of academic freedom and tenure as recognized by the AAUP. BYU has been on this list since 1998. The AAUP report states that "the climate for academic freedom at Brigham Young University is distressingly poor". The president of BYU at the time of the investigation and censure left office in 2003; the AAUP has subsequently sent the new president a description of the steps needed to have the censure removed.

[editar] Study abroad program

BYU runs the largest study-abroad program in the United States, with satellite centers in London, Jerusalem, and Paris, as well as more than 20 other sites. The Institute of International Education ranks BYU as the number one university in the US to offer students study abroad opportunities; nearly 2,000 students take advantage of these programs yearly. BYU's motto is "The World is Our Campus".

(The BYU Jerusalem Center closed indefinitely in 2002 due to safety concerns related to the Second Intifada.)

[editar] Programa de lenguas

El 75% de los hombres y el 12% de las mujeres han servido como misioneros para la Iglesia de Jesucristo de los Santos de los Últimos Días. La mitad de éstos sirvieron en lugares donde el inglés no era el idioma principal. El setenta y dos por ciento de los estudiantes hablan una segunda lengua, y una gran parte de la facultad habla con fluidez un idioma aparte del inglés americano. Durante cualquier semestre, casi veinte cinco por ciento de los estudiantes están alistados en cursos de lenguas$mdash;lo cual es tres veces más que el promedio nacional. BYU es reconocida por su entrenamiento en idiomas extranjeros y en lingüisticas y ofrece cursos en 74 idiomas (según el Presidente Bateman, otoño de 2002). Eso incluye muchos idiomas raros que se enseñan a un nivel avancado. Los estudiantes multilingües fueron un recurso valioso durante las Olimpiadas del Invierno de 2002.

[editar] Foreign film program

BYU's International Cinema is the largest and longest-running foreign film program in the country, showing 20 screenings per week to roughly 1,000 people. Its main purpose is to supplement the curriculum of the College of Humanities and the Honors Program with culturally and linguistically diverse films.

[editar] Independent study program

BYU's Department of Independent Study is accredited by the Northwest Association of Accredited Schools (NAAS), the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities (NWCCU), and the Commission on International and Transregional Accreditation (CITA). The department offers courses to nearly 500,000 students every year, many to students in countries outside the United States.

[editar] Ballroom dance team

The BYU Ballroom Dance Company is known as one of the best formation ballroom dance teams in the world. The NDCA National Dancesport championships have been held at BYU for many years, and BYU holds dozens of ballroom dance classes each semester, totalling thousands of students per semester, making it by far the largest ballroom dance program in the US.

[editar] Athletics

From the early 1980s until the mid-1990s, BYU had an outstanding football program. In 1984, BYU's football team went undefeated to become the NCAA Division I-A national football champions. This was the first and only time that BYU won the football national championship. They became champs by beating Michigan in the Holiday Bowl in San Diego, marking the first time that a number-one ranked college football team did not play in a New Year's Day bowl game. Some like NBC's Bryant Gumbel and Oklahoma coach Barry Switzer criticized BYU for having a weak schedule in 1984. It didn't matter however, since BYU was undefeated and they had attained the number one ranking in the AP, UPI, and other polls.

In 1990, quarterback Ty Detmer won college football's most prestigious individual award, the Heisman Trophy. Detmer is the only BYU football player ever to win the award. During the 1990 season, BYU defeated the number-one ranked Miami Hurricanes in Provo. Detmer passed for 5,188 yards and 41 touchdowns during this season.

The head football coach during BYU's football glory years was LaVell Edwards. Edwards is a legend among college football coaches, winning 257 games over a span of 29 years. Only five other head coaches have won more games. He was twice awarded with coach of the year awards (in 1979 and in 1984). Edwards' last season as head coach was in 2000. (Sources:http://www.byucougars.com/football/history/honors.html; http://web.ksl.com/TV/byufb/01year.htm).

During BYU's football glory days, the school colors were bright royal blue and white. At the beginning of the 1999 season, the school colors got a makeover, switching to dark blue and beige.

The BYU women's cross-country team won the NCAA National Championship in 1997, 1999, 2001, and 2002. BYU has also won NCAA National Championships in golf, track, and men's volleyball (3 times: in 1999, 2001, and 2004). The school colors are blue, white and tan and its mascot is Cosmo the Cougar and its primary conference is the Mountain West Conference. Its men's volleyball team plays in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation. BYU's men's soccer club participates as a university-owned franchise in the United Soccer Leagues' Premier Developmental League.

BYU also has a strong intramural sports program, offering more than 30 sports and involving more than 10,000 participants each year.

[editar] Ambiente cultural

El ambiente social y cultural de BYU es único y está a menudo en conflicto. Debido a que la mayoría de estudiantes también son miembros de la Iglesia resulta que las normas de la Iglesia se amplian grandemente.

What makes BYU most unique is probably that most of its students abstain from all forms of alcohol, tobacco, and drugs. The majority of the students likewise avoid premarital sex. This surely sets the university apart from other American universities. They avoid these things because of their LDS (Mormon) beliefs.

The confluence of students from predominantly Mormon communities from Utah and other parts of the Western United States with that of students from regions where Mormonism is much less prevalent results in intrareligious conflicts that are played out on a campus-wide stage.

One of the characteristics of BYU most often noted (and derided) is its reputation for emphasizing a "marriage culture". LDS Church members highly value marriage and family, as well as marriage within the faith. Consequently, the enormous population of LDS single adults in and around Provo makes it a mecca for singles in the church, irrespective of their affiliation with BYU. (Nearby Utah Valley State College, in Orem, is notorious within the LDS Church for attracting marginal students whose primary motivation for attending the school is to marry a BYU student.) BYU's "meat market" reputation is well known both within and without the BYU community, and is encouraged to some extent by the school's administrators and ecclesiastical leaders, who publicly highlight "successful" marriage statistics.

The perception of BYU as a glorified Mormon dating service, combined with the high esteem in which most Mormons hold stay-at-home mothers and breadwinner/homemaker marriages, has resulted in stereotype of the female BYU student more interested in marriage than education—in a popular phrase, "Pursuing her MRS." (MRS. aspirants traditionally major in Child Development or Marriage & Family Home Development [MFHD], programs regarded by most within the LDS church as a "vocational homemaker's major"). Derogatory nicknames for the school include "B-Y-Woo", "Bring'em Young University" and "Breed'em Young University".

Most BYU students are acutely aware of the marriage stereotype, and many female students who attend the school go out of their way to defy it (earning the unflattering nickname of "Mormon nuns"), even as others contribute by dropping out before graduation due to marriage and subsequent pregnancy. The reality is slightly more nuanced, as statistical analysis bears out. 56.3% of the men and 42.4% of the women in BYU's class of 2004 were married (the average age at graduation being 24.3). Marriage statistics for the state of Utah as a whole indicate that BYU's marriage rate falls well within that of the state in general, with the median age at marriage in Utah being 23 for men, and 21 for women. It should be noted, however, that the percentage of married students at BYU is much higher than at most other universities, and the median age of marriage in Utah is significantly lower than in the United States as a whole. In regards to marriage, BYU is thus best described as a reflection of the cultural practices of the Mormon population as a whole (and particularly that of the Mountain West, which is significantly more culturally conservative than Mormon populations elsewhere within the United States), rather than as an outlier.

BYU's large body of students who have served as missionaries for the LDS Church significantly shapes the institution's culture. Young men are strongly encouraged to serve full two-year missions for the LDS (Mormon) church at age 19. Consequently, most men attend BYU for their freshman year and then take a two year break from school to serve the mission. The average male sophomore at BYU is thus 21 years old. Although LDS girls can also serve missions, the church does not encourage or discourage them to do so. Additionally, missions for LDS females are only 18 months in duration, and females are not permitted to serve missions until reaching 21 years of age.

[editar] Perceptions

Although BYU is held in high regard by many employers, there is a good deal of antagonism toward BYU both from inside and outside of the Mormon community. The LDS Church's racial policies attracted a great deal of protest in the 1960s, with African-American athletes frequently boycotting athletic events at which BYU competed. (The most notable examples of this were a football game forfeited by the heavily black University of Wyoming team in 1969, and the refusal of Texas El-Paso long jumper Bob Beamon--who set a world record in the long jump at the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City--to participate in a track meet against BYU in the spring of that year.) While the LDS church's 1978 renunciation of its previous doctrines on race eliminated most of this hostility, traces of lingering resentment against the school remain in many African-American communities.

Some of the most vitriolic opinions about BYU are held by LDS students at colleges and universities elsewhere in the US, proud to be in "the real world" instead of immersed in BYU's "bubble" of shallowness, focus on appearances, and casualness toward marriage. (The fiercely secular University of Utah, in particular, is perceived as the nearly complete opposite of BYU, and is renowned as an outpost of leftism in the nation's most conservative state.) BYU students and alumni often contribute (with varying levels of knowingness) to this perception, displaying chauvinistic attitudes toward even the most elite secular universities such as the Ivy League schools, and often adopting the much-despised Utah practice of referring to areas outside of the mountain West as "the mission field". The nonchalance of many BYU students toward the weekly (and sometimes even more frequent) visits by the LDS Church's General Authorities is also a source of frustration for students in places where such visits occur once or twice a year, if at all.

On the other hand, many visitors to BYU, and the Utah Valley as a whole, report being surprised at the genuinely wholesome environment. Very few BYU students consume alcohol, tobacco, and illegal substances; crime is low, with violent crime being virtually nonexistent. (Provo and Orem are, however, major centers of methamphetamine manufacturing and distribution, perhaps owing to the drug's popularity among Utah teenagers and the proximity of Interstate 80 and Interstate 15.) The Princeton Review has rated BYU the "#1 stone cold sober school" for several years running, an honor on which LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley has often commented with pride. The school's straight-laced reputation is a major selling point in athletic recruiting: as non-LDS players (particularly African-Americans from inner cities) have become ever more important to the school's teams, BYU's wholesomeness is often attractive for parents who have raised their children in conservative environments.

[editar] Notable alumni

  • Danny Ainge, professional baseball and basketball player
  • Ezra Taft Benson, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
  • Brian Billick, Baltimore Ravens Head Coach
  • Clayton M. Christensen, Academic, coined the term "disruptive technology"
  • James C. Christensen, noted artist
  • Todd Christensen, former NFL tight end for the Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders
  • Mike Crapo, US Senator (Idaho)
  • Ty Detmer, professional fooball quarterback
  • Richard Dutcher, film director, producer and actor
  • Aaron Eckhart, actor
  • Harvey Fletcher, US physicist
  • Orrin Hatch, US Senator (Utah)
  • Jon Heder, actor
  • Ken Hunt, former MLB pitcher
  • Ken Jennings, Jeopardy! champion
  • Neil LaBute, film director, screenwriter, and playwright
  • Rex E. Lee, Constitutional lawyer, BYU President
  • Jim McMahon, professional football quarterback
  • Frank Moss, US Senator (Utah)
  • Scott Nielsen N.Y. Yankees, Chicago White Sox pitcher
  • Carmen Rasmusen, American Idol finalist, currently attending
  • Andy Reid, Philadelphia Eagles Head Coach
  • Kevin B. Rollins, President and CEO of Dell
  • Cory Snyder, former MLB player
  • Julie Stoffer, The Real World housemate
  • Olene S. Walker, 15th Utah governor
  • Mike Weir, professional golfer
  • Steve Young, professional football quarterback
  • Wally Joyner, MLB baseball player

[editar] Related articles

  • BYU 100 Hour Board
  • BYU Jerusalem Center
  • BYU Testing Center

[editar] Enlaces externos


en:Brigham Young University fr:Brigham Young University

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