Statement of Institutional Purpose
The University of Toronto was founded as King's College in
1827 and has evolved into a large and complex institution. It now occupies
three campuses: Scarborough and Erindale and the historic St. George campus. It
has federated with three smaller universities which are on the St. George
campus, and is affiliated with several colleges and institutes. There are ten
fully affiliated teaching hospitals in metropolitan Toronto. Faculty conduct
research in many places in Canada and around the world.
The University is Canada's most important research
institution and has gained an international reputation for its research. It
enrols more students, employs more faculty, and offers a greater range of
courses than any other Canadian university.
A liberal arts education is the heart of the undergraduate
curriculum at Toronto, and the Faculty of Arts and Science has more students
than any other faculty. The education of students for the professions has
always been an important part of the University's role, and the University
accordingly maintains a wide range of professional faculties. The University's
insistence on the importance of research in all disciplines has made it the
major centre for graduate education in Canada. In many fields it produces a
majority of the nation's doctoral candidates. The quality and range of the
programs -- undergraduate, graduate and professional -- attract students from
all parts of the province, from around the country and from abroad.
To support its work of teaching and research, the University
has collected a library that is the largest in Canada and among the best in the
world. The University maintains many laboratories and specialized aids to
research. The Library and many of these research facilities are available for
use by members of other universities. The University of Toronto Press Inc. is
the chief institution of its kind in Canada and one of the most important
scholarly publishers in North America.
MISSION
The University of Toronto is committed to being an internationally
significant research university, with undergraduate, graduate and professional
programs of excellent quality.
The University of Toronto is dedicated to fostering an
academic community in which the learning and scholarship of every member may
flourish, with vigilant protection for individual human rights, and a resolute
commitment to the principles of equal opportunity, equity and justice.
Within the unique university context, the most crucial of
all human rights are the rights of freedom of speech, academic freedom, and
freedom of research. And we affirm that these rights are meaningless unless
they entail the right to raise deeply disturbing questions and provocative
challenges to the cherished beliefs of society at large and of the university
itself.
It is this human right to radical, critical teaching and
research with which the University has a duty above all to be concerned; for
there is no one else, no other institution and no other office, in our modern
liberal democracy, which is the custodian of this most precious and vulnerable
right of the liberated human spirit.
The University of Toronto is determined to build on its past
achievements and so enhance its research and teaching. The University
anticipates that it will remain a large university. It will continue to exploit
the advantages of size by encouraging scholarship in a wide range of
disciplines in the humanities, social sciences, sciences and the professions.
It will continue to value its inheritance of colleges and federated
universities that give many students an institutional home within the large
University. It will strive to make its campuses attractive settings for
scholarly activity.
The University will continue to promote high quality
research. The University is committed to:
1. Providing an environment conducive to research;
2. Emphasizing research, publication and related
professional contributions in defining the career expectations of professorial
staff;
3. Ensuring that faculties and schools engaged in
undergraduate teaching also engage in graduate teaching and research;
4. Maintaining a capacity to respond selectively to new
fields of research as they emerge;
5. Requiring national and international peer assessment of
the quality of its programs;
6. Collaborating with other universities, industry,
business, the professions, public sector institutions and governments, where
appropriate to research objectives;
7. Providing information, library and research services of
the highest international standards.
The University will strive to ensure that its graduates are
educated in the broadest sense of the term, with the ability to think clearly,
judge objectively, and contribute constructively to society.
The University wishes to increase its ability to attract
students from elsewhere in Canada and abroad, in the belief that while these
students gain an education their presence will enrich the experience of
students from the local community. In all its teaching programs, the University
is committed to:
1. Achieving the highest academic standards;
2. Attracting students whose abilities and aspirations
match the programs available;
3. Responding to the needs of a diverse student
population;
4. Providing the best possible facilities, libraries and
teaching aids;
5. Insisting on the importance of teaching in the career
expectations of the professorial staff, recognizing excellence in teaching and
providing opportunities to improve teaching;
6. Ensuring that professorial staff normally teach both
graduate and undergraduate students;
7. Continuing to attract students from other provinces of Canada and from abroad;
8. Enriching the experience of students by cooperating
with and assisting them in the realization of their educational goals
especially as these involve their life-long learning and career development,
their physical and emotional growth and well-being, their needs, including
special or temporary ones, and their cultural and recreational activities.
Undergraduates are taught in the Faculty of Arts and Science
and in a number of professional faculties. Students in Arts and Science are
registered in a college. They can take classes in their college and use college
libraries; some students live in their college; for many their college is the
locus of social and sporting activities. For many years there were four
colleges on the St. George campus; University College and those of the
federated universities, Victoria, St. Michael's and Trinity. In the 1960s, the
University reaffirmed its commitment to the college system on the St. George
campus by founding Innis, New and Woodsworth colleges to accommodate the
increased number of students. At the same time, it founded Scarborough and Erindale
colleges. The University continues to regard college life as an important part
of undergraduate education.
College life is experienced most fully when students live in
residence. The University would like to make it possible for more
undergraduates, in Arts and Science, and from the professional faculties, to
live in residence.
The University is committed to:
1. Ensuring that the teaching and counselling of
undergraduates is a normal obligation of every member of the faculty;
2. Ensuring that professorial staff draw on their research
to enrich their teaching;
3. Continuing to welcome, and serve the needs of,
qualified students, both full and part-time, from Metropolitan Toronto and the Province of Ontario and elsewhere;
4. Providing for breadth and depth in all undergraduate
programs.
The quality of graduate education and the quality of
research are closely linked in this as in any university. The University of Toronto's determination to remain a major research institution is therefore in
itself a commitment to high quality graduate teaching.
Additionally, the University is committed to:
1. Ensuring the provision of a broad range of graduate
programs;
2. Ensuring that high standards of scholarship are
maintained in all graduate programs by submitting them regularly to
international peer review, and strengthening or discontinuing any found
wanting;
3. Increasing its ability to provide adequate financial
support for graduate students.
The University wishes to encourage learning as a life-long
activity, and is committed to:
1. Providing to persons in professional practice and to
members of the community at large opportunities to study and to use its
facilities;
2. Helping other institutions, professional organizations
and learned societies through the provision of facilities and expertise.
The University of Toronto believes that it best serves Canada and the wider world by pursuing to the limit of its abilities its fundamental
mandates of research and teaching in the spirit of academic freedom. In seeking
to achieve the above objectives, the University of Toronto is committed to four
principles:
1. Respect for intellectual integrity, freedom of enquiry
and rational discussion;
2. Promotion of equity and justice within the University
and recognition of the diversity of the University community;
3. A collegial form of governance;
4. Fiscal responsibility and accountability.
The University values its graduates as life-long members of
the University community who make significant contributions to its on-going
life and reputation.
The University recognizes that in the foreseeable future the
majority of its funding will come from public sources, and thanks the people of
Ontario and of Canada for this support. The University also recognizes that
the fulfillment of its mission requires an increase in the level of funding,
public and private, and will work to bring this about.