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University of Nebraska system

Public university system of Nebraska


Public university system of Nebraska

FieldValue
nameUniversity of Nebraska system
imageSeal of the University of Nebraska.svg
image_upright0.8
latin_nameUniversitas Nebraskensis
mottoLiteris Dedicata et Omnibus Artibus
mottoengDedicated to Letters and All the Arts
established
typePublic university system
budget$2.65 billion (FY 2019)
presidentJeffrey P. Gold
students51,835
cityLincoln, Nebraska
countryU.S.
campus3 Universities
1 Medical School
1 Agricultural College
1 High School
colorsRed and gold
website
logo[[File:University of Nebraska logo.png250px]]

1 Medical School 1 Agricultural College 1 High School

The University of Nebraska system is the public university system of the U.S. state of Nebraska. The system was formed in 1968 from the merger of the University of Nebraska and the University of Omaha. The system has since expanded to include the University of Nebraska at Kearney, Nebraska College of Technical Agriculture, University of Nebraska Medical Center, and an online high school. Its flagship campus is the University of NebraskaLincoln.

History

The University of Nebraska system was formed in 1968 from the merger of the University of Nebraska and the University of Omaha. Upon the merger's completion, the system originally included the University of NebraskaLincoln, the University of Nebraska at Omaha, and the University of Nebraska Medical Center, which the University of NebraskaLincoln had previously acquired in 1902. The system later added the University of Nebraska at Kearney in 1990, and the Nebraska College of Technical Agriculture in 1994.

Schools

NameFormedLocationJoinedTypeRef.
University of Nebraska–Lincoln1869Lincoln1968Research university
University of Nebraska at Kearney1905Kearney1990date=1990-05-18title=Court Lets Kearney Join the N.U. Systemurl=https://www.newspapers.com/article/omaha-world-herald-court-lets-kearney-jo/183769902/access-date=2025-10-27work=Omaha World-Heraldpages=14}}
University of Nebraska Omaha1908Omaha1968
University of Nebraska Medical Center18801968Medical schooldate=1902-04-10title=Omaha Medical College Becomes Connected With State University.url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/omaha-daily-bee-omaha-medical-college-be/183968499/access-date=2025-10-30work=Omaha Daily Beepages=1}}
Nebraska College of Technical Agriculture1965Curtis1994Technical collegedate=1994-03-06title=NCTA is on an upswingurl=https://www.newspapers.com/article/telegraph-ncta-is-on-an-upswing/180652130/access-date=2025-09-08work=Telegraphpages=1}}
University of Nebraska High School1929Online2013Online high schooltitle=About UNHSurl=https://highschool.nebraska.edu/aboutaccess-date=14 July 2025website=University of Nebraska High School}}

Nebraska Institutes

The University of Nebraska has four interdisciplinary, University-wide institutes operating across the University of Nebraska system.

  • Buffett Early Childhood Institute - Samuel J. Meisels, founding executive director
  • National Strategic Research Institute - Robert Hinson, USAF Lt. General (ret.), founding executive director
  • Robert B. Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute - Peter G. McCornick, executive director
  • Rural Futures Institute - Chuck Schroeder, founding executive director

Two of NU's campuses also partner in the Peter Kiewit Institute, a facility in Omaha, Nebraska that houses academic programs from both the University of Nebraska-Lincoln's College of Engineering and the University of Nebraska at Omaha's College of Information Science and Technology.

NU Online Education

Online Worldwide is the virtual connection point to more than 100 online degrees, certificates, endorsements, and minors offered by the four campuses of the University of Nebraska system. University of Nebraska High School is an accredited, university-based online high school. The online college preparatory curriculum allows students to earn high school credit or a diploma from anywhere around the world.

Governance

Board of Regents

The University of Nebraska system is governed by the board of regents, a twelve-member panel consisting of eight voting members and a non-voting student body president from each campus. Voting members are elected by district to six-year terms; elections are held in even-numbered years. The board of regents meets at Varner Hall on East Campus and supervises the operation, expenditures, and tuition rates of each university in the system.

The Board of Regents was established as a constitutional office in the 1875 Nebraska State Constitution. At the time, the regents were elected in partisan statewide elections to six-year terms. In 1917, the legislature made the regental elections nonpartisan, and in 1920, voters ratified a constitutional amendment that provided for the election of the regents by district. The regents were elected from the state's congressional districts from 1923 to 1949, and from the Nebraska Supreme Court districts from 1949 to 1971. Beginning in 1971, the regents were elected in separate districts drawn by the state legislature, which are redrawn after each census. In 1974, voters approved a constitutional amendment that added student members to the board of regents as nonvoting members.

DistrictNameElectedSeat up
District 1Timothy Clare20202026
District 2Jack Stark20202026
District 3Jim Scheer20242030
District 4Elizabeth O'Connor20242030
District 5Robert Schafer, Chair20242030
District 6Paul Kenney, Vice Chair20222028
District 7Kathy Wilmot20222028
District 8Barbara Weitz20242030
University of Nebraska at KearneySam SchroederN/AN/A
University of Nebraska–LincolnElizabeth HerbinN/AN/A
University of Nebraska Medical CenterPranita DevarajuN/AN/A
University of Nebraska at OmahaIshani AdidamN/AN/A

President

Main article: President of the University of Nebraska

The president of the University of Nebraska system is appointed by and reports to the board of regents. The position was created in 1968 when the Municipal University of Omaha and the University of Nebraska Medical Center were absorbed into the University of Nebraska to create a state-wide system. Clifford M. Hardin was the first president and Ronald Roskens was the longest-tenured. Jeffrey P. Gold has been serving as Nebraska's president since July 1, 2024.

References

References

  1. "Search".
  2. "University of Nebraska : 2019 Budget".
  3. "UN System Student Enrollment 2015 - Factbook". University of Nebraska system.
  4. (August 18, 2015). "University of Nebraska Style Guide".
  5. (1968-07-02). "'University of Nebraska At Omaha' Officially Launched In Ceremonies". Telegraph.
  6. (1990-05-18). "Court Lets Kearney Join the N.U. System". Omaha World-Herald.
  7. (1968-07-01). "NU Grows By 8,000 As OU Officially Merged". Lincoln Evening Journal.
  8. (1902-04-10). "Omaha Medical College Becomes Connected With State University.". Omaha Daily Bee.
  9. (1994-03-06). "NCTA is on an upswing". Telegraph.
  10. "About UNHS".
  11. "Online Degree Programs | University of Nebraska Online".
  12. "University of Nebraska High School".
  13. {{cite constitution. (1875). link
  14. (2011). "The Nebraska State Constitution". Oxford University Press.
  15. Yeargain, Quinn. (2023). "Shadow Districts". Cardozo Law Review.
  16. "Board Members & Districts".
  17. "A Welcome from President Gold".
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