Association of American Universities
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Association of American Universities


Formation 1900
Headquarters Washington, D.C.
Location Flag of the United States United States
Flag of Canada Canada
Membership 62
President Robert M. Berdahl
Website aau.edu

The Association of American Universities (AAU) is an organization of leading research universities devoted to maintaining a strong system of academic research and education. It consists of sixty universities in the United States (both public and private) and two universities in Canada.

Contents

Organization

AAU was founded in 1900 by a group of fourteen Ph.D.-granting universities in the United States to strengthen and standardize American doctoral programs. Today, the primary purpose of the AAU is to provide a forum for the development and implementation of institutional and national policies, in order to promote strong programs in academic research and scholarship and undergraduate, graduate, and professional education. The AAU holds two annual meetings. The fall meeting is conducted on a member campus while the spring meeting is held in the headquarters city of Washington, D.C.

Presidents

Executive Term
Thomas A. Bartlett 1977 – 1982
Robert M. Rosenzweig 1983 – 1993
Cornelius J. Pings 1993 – 1998
Nils Hasselmo July 1, 1998 – April, 2006
Robert M. Berdahl May, 2006 – present

Statistics

As of 2004, AAU members accounted for 58% (over $15.9 billion: NIH: $9.1 billion, 60% of total academic research funding. Research Funding: National Science Foundation: $2.0 billion, 63% of total academic research funding Department of Defense: $1.2 billion, 56% of total academic research funding Department of Energy: $505.2 million, 63% of total academic research funding NASA: $673.2 million, 57% of total academic research funding Department of Agriculture: $271.9 million, 41% of total academic research funding.) of US University's research grants and contract income, 52% of all doctorates awarded in the United States. Since 1999, 43% of all Nobel Prize winners and 74% of winners at U.S. institutions were affiliated with an AAU university. Approximately two-thirds of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 2006 Class of Fellows are affiliated with an AAU university. The faculties at AAU universities include 2,993 members of the National Academies (82% of all members): the National Academy of Science, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine (2004).

• Undergraduate students: 1,044,759; 7% nationally
• Undergraduate degrees awarded: 235,328; 17% nationally
• Graduate students: 418,066; 20% nationally
• Master’s awarded: 106,971; 19% nationally
• Professional Degrees: 20,859; 25% nationally
• Doctorates awarded: 22,747; 52% nationally
• Postdoctoral Fellows: 30,430; 67% nationally
• Students Studying Abroad: 57,205
• National Merit/Achievement Scholars (2004): 5,434; 63% nationally
• Faculty: approximately 72,000

Membership

Admission

AAU membership is by invitation only, which requires an affirmative vote of three-fourths of current members. Invitations are considered every three years, and are only extended to those universities who are deemed by the AAU to have exceptional quality in their research and graduate education programs. Year of admission is shown in parentheses with founding members bolded.

Public universities

Private universities

Canadian universities

Former members

A founding member that departed due to "institutional emphases and energies" [1] that differed from the other AAU members.
Another founding member that departed due to its change of focus from research to undergraduate education.

External links

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