Company description
Wireless Sensor Networks for building energy efficiency
More details
- Mission
- The University of Hawai`i at Manoa's special distinction is found in our Hawaiian, Asian, and Pacific orientation and our unique location in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. The setting and the diversity of our students and faculty foster unique advantages in the study of Asian and Pacific cultures, foreign languages, tropical agriculture, tropical medicine, ocean and marine sciences, astronomy, volcanology, and international business. Our unique geographical, cultural, and historical heritage suggests that the University of Hawai`i at Manoa values and the responsibilities inherent in embracing those values include the following: A focus on developing an awareness of and sensitivity to diversity and commonality. The Manoa campus is culturally rich and complex, providing a perfect social setting for frequent interactions with persons from cultures other than one's own. At Manoa we incorporate and celebrate intercultural experiences and understanding into our social and educational environments in a comprehensive fashion. Manoa is also a place where historic political, economic and social conflicts between Native Hawaiian people, settlers and working immigrants have contributed to the diverse perspectives, beliefs, values and even conceptual frameworks of our islands' people. Growing out of the core Hawaiian value of aloha, an essential component of the Manoa Experience, are insights that both bond us and simultaneously express the variations that collectively enrich us. A focus on global awareness and local responsibility. These values are consistent with a uniquely Hawaiian place of learning. Hawai`i is a place where the strength of identity is important to Native Hawaiian people struggling to maintain traditional connections while establishing new global relationships. Their struggle for cultural distinction forms a significant part of the story of human history and change. Hawai`i is also a place where the peoples from Asia, Europe, and the Pacific regions gathered, formed communities, and built lives together. The pluri-cultural children of Hawai`i are global citizens, a true pan-ethnic population. Hence, we attempt to infuse our pedagogical, social, and cultural environments with a global perspective and with questions and issues of global significance. Moreover, engaging and acting upon local questions and issues during their educational experience at Manoa engenders in students a sense of responsibility toward future generations. A focus on sustainability and renewability. These values are also a reflection of our unique Hawaiian cultural history, as voiced in the Hawaiian core value of malama i ka aina, malama i ke kai (caring for the land and sea that sustain us). The Hawaiian culture teaches us to see Manoa as part of an ahupua`a extending from mountaintop to ocean, emphasizing an ecosystem understanding of our home. Hawai`i's unique geographical status as the most isolated, populated land mass on the planet makes it incumbent upon us to develop research, technologies, economy, and a way of life based on sustainability and renewability, as Polynesians did over thousands of years of voyaging, discovery and settlement. Fostering a pedagogical, social, and cultural environment that reflects these values and the knowledge developed by Native Hawaiians over the millennia is central to our efforts. Cultivating, practicing, and communicating these values are our University's gifts and obligation to the rest of the world.
- General Information
- Highly Selective, Large School, Public School, Urban/Major City, Co-Ed, Graduate Students - High, Total Minority - High, Asian Students - High, Low Cost, Reader Service for the Blind, Handicapped Student Services, Note taking Services, Study Abroad, Advanced Placement/CLEP, Cooperative Work Experience, Reserve Officers - Training Corps (ROTC), Campus Publications, Dormitories, Foreign Student Organizations, Honor Student Organizations, Minority Student Organizations, Radio/TV Station, Religious Organizations, Social Fraternities and Sororities, Student Government, Student/Faculty Ratio - Low
- Other Admission Requirements
- GED accepted, TOEFL test ONLY required, Financial statement NOT required, Advance deposit NOT required, Pre-application form NOT required
- Costs
- 2010-2011 In-state tuition and fees: $8,095; Out-of-state tuition and fees: $21,535
- Campus Description
- 300-acre, urban campus in Honolulu
- Campus Setting
- Located within a major urban area
- Highest Degree Offered
- Doctoral and first-professional
- Email
- [email protected]
- School Type
- Public, 4-year or above
- Features
- continuing education
- Entrance Difficulty
- Moderately difficult
- Type
- College/University
- Level
- Four Year School
- Coed Status
- Men and Women
- Technology
- 802.11b Wi-Fi
- Highest Offering
- Doctorates
- City Type
- Large City
- Wi-fi Hotspot
- Available
- Campus Size
- 300 acres
- Selectivity
- selective
- Academic Calendar
- Semester
- Control
- Public
- Institutional Control
- Public
- Instate Tuition Fees For Grad 1 Yr
- $7896
- Setting
- urban
- Graduate Out Of State Tuition
- 11088
- Undergraduate Enrollment
- 17471
- Application Deadline
- 1-May
- Instate Tuition For Undergrad For 1 Yr
- $5952
- On Campus Room And Board Charges
- $7564
- Percentage Of Students Admitted
- 68.94
- Room Charge For 1 Yr On Sharing With 1 Person
- $4232
- Year Founded
- 1907
- Accredited
- true
- Books Cost (estimate)
- 1017
- Graduate Enrollment
- 5699
- Graduate In State Tuition
- 4800
- Graduate Number Of Females
- 3412
- Graduate Number Of Males
- 2287
- Typical Board Cost
- 2481
- Typical Room Cost
- 3335
- Undergraduate In State Tuition
- 3504
- Undergraduate Number Of Females
- 9899
- Undergraduate Number Of Males
- 7572
- Undergraduate Out Of State Tuition
- 9984
- Founded In
- 1907
- Instate Per Credit Hr For Pt Grad
- $329
- Instate Per Credit Hr For Pt Undergrad
- $248
- Total Number Of Admissions
- 4312
- Total Number Of Applicants
- 6255
- Paytype
- free
- Additional Fees
- 192
- Graduate Application Fee
- $50
- International Application Fee
- $40
- Undergraduate Application Fee
- $50
- Application Fee
- $50
- Percent Asian
- 62
- Percent Out Of State Students
- 20
- Percent African American
- 1
- Percent Hispanic
- 2
- Percent Native American
- 1
- Mailing Address Available Only
- N
- Web Site
- http://www.uhm.hawaii.edu/