UA System Information

Map of the UA system

With three independently accredited universities, community colleges, rural campuses and outreach centers stretching nearly 1,200 miles from Ketchikan to Kotzebue, the University of Ƶsystem serves more than 20,000 students from diverse backgrounds in a place of awe-inspiring geography and immense distances. The university system’s broad charge encompasses everything from the community college mission to research-intensive, post-doctoral study.


 

University of Alaska

The University of Ƶ(UA) is one legal entity established in the ƵState Constitution to provide public higher education in Alaska. The University of Alaska is the formal and legal name. 

 Use of Brand Name:

Use University of Ƶin formal titles to reference services, departments, roles or functions, such as University of ƵBoard of Regents, University of Alaska President, University of ƵFoundation, University of ƵHuman Resources.

University of Ƶis also appropriate when referring to budget or legal documents, when referring to UA as a single employer or UA employees, or visually such as in logos or brand marks. 

Abbreviation UA is acceptable on the second reference when referring to the legal entity.

 


University of Ƶsystem

The preferred reference to Alaska’s public university system, and should be written as University of Ƶsystem. The University of Ƶsystem includes three separately accredited universities, and a coordinating System Office responsible for administration and services not duplicated at any of the three universities. 

Users should avoid the use of University of Ƶas a singular description of the system’s universities. A better description of the UA system: “The University of Alaska system comprises three separately accredited universities and a coordinating System Office.” Second reference should be UA system.  [e.g. the University of Ƶsystem is the state’s largest provider of post-secondary education…. The UA system offers more than 400 degree and certificate programs.]


Ƶ Office

The UA System Office comprises the president, federal and state relations, IT infrastructure, internal/external audit, financial oversight and services, [tax reporting, debt, treasury, payroll, claims/risk management], general counsel, institutional research/reporting, university relations/public affairs, academics/research, human resource functions and land management. 

The Ƶ Office is the formal name to reference the central administration unit. It replaces the term “Statewide.”  On second reference, use UA System Office or just System Office.  [e.g. Ƶ Office will hold an annual administrative meeting…. ] Abbreviated as SO.

University of ƵStatewide – DO NOT USE

Use Ƶ Office in reference to the central administration unit. Former abbreviations of SW should be changed to UASO or SO.


University of ƵFoundation

The University of ƵFoundation is a private nonprofit corporation that operates as a public foundation. It was established in 1974 to solicit, manage, and invest donations for the University of Alaska’s exclusive benefit. The UA Foundation is separate and distinct from the University of Ƶsystem and is governed by a board that comprises the president of the University of Ƶsystem, chancellors from each university (UAA/UAF/UAS), two members of UA Board of Regents, and community volunteers.

The mission of the UA Foundation - The University of ƵFoundation seeks, secures, and stewards philanthropic support in partnership with the University of Ƶsystem to help shape Alaska’s future.

Can be abbreviated as UA Foundation or foundation on second reference.


UA Land Management

The UA Land Management office is responsible for UA’s property and land assets, and works to generate revenue through responsible development of the university’s real property. This includes everything from commercial leasing and resource development to residential land sales and more. Revenues are invested in an endowment fund that supports the UA Scholars Program scholarships and other educational and research programs. Use of the abbreviation UA is part of the formal title for the UA Land Management office.


UA Scholars Award | UA Scholars Program

The University of Ƶsystem established the UA Scholars Program (Award) in 1999 to encourage Ƶstudents to attend and graduate from college in their home state. The UA Scholars Award is a $12,000 scholarship awarded to students in the top ten percent of their Ƶhigh school class at the end of the junior year. The Award may be used toward the cost of attendance at any location within the University of Ƶsystem. UA Scholars Awards are funded by the University of ƵLand Grant Trust Fund. The endowment receives revenue from property sales and resource development conducted on Trust lands. 

Use of the abbreviation UA is part of the formal title of the UA Scholars Program and Award. 

 


University of Ƶsystem: university, college and campus descriptions

The three separately accredited universities are the University of ƵAnchorage (UAA), the University of ƵFairbanks (UAF), and the University of ƵSoutheast (UAS).


UAA locations include:

UAA’s largest campus is located in Anchorage, with four community campuses and extension sites throughout Southcentral Alaska.

Matanuska-Susitna (Mat-Su) College - Mat-Su is an extended college of the University of ƵAnchorage (UAA). The main campus is located on a 950 acre site on Trunk Road, about halfway between Palmer and Wasilla. The college began in 1958 as Palmer Community College, changing its name in 1963 to correspond to the Matanuska-Susitna Borough where it is located. It is commonly called Mat-Su College. 

Kenai Peninsula College (KPC) - KPC is a community campus system within the University of ƵAnchorage. Students have the choice to study at one of KPC’s three locations as well as take courses through KPC’s expanding virtual college. Locations include the Kenai River Campus (KRC) in Soldotna, the Kachemak Bay Campus (KBC) in Ƶr, and the Resurrection Bay Extension Site (RBES) in Seward 

Kodiak College - Kodiak College is part of the University of Ƶstatewide system of public higher education. In 1987 it changed from its previous designation as a community college to an extended college of the University of ƵAnchorage. Kodiak College offers numerous academic credit courses that lead to occupational endorsement and undergraduate certificates and associate degrees and may be transferred to other colleges. In addition to traditional campus courses, there are a variety of alternative course formats including web-based, self-paced, and synchronous elearning courses. 

Prince William Sound College (PWSC)-  PWSC comprises one main campus in Valdez and extension campuses in Glennallen and Cordova. The college is part of the University of ƵAnchorage. In 2014 the Board of Regents requested the college drop its separate accreditation by the Northwest Commission of Colleges and Universities and come under UAA’s accreditation. The commission approved the change in July, 2015. At the same time the college began the process of dropping “Community” from its name.  


UAF locations include:

The UAF main campus is referred to as the Troth Yeddha’ campus. The ridge that is the site of the University of ƵFairbanks campus was called Troth Yeddha’ (sometimes spelled Troth Yetth) by the Lower Tanana Dene (or Athabascans). Troth is the plant (Hedysarum alpinum) known in English as “Indian potato,” “wild potato,” and “wild carrot.” The word yeddha’ means “its ridge, its hill.”  

Bristol Bay Campus (Dillingham, AK) - The campus is located in Dillingham, Alaska, and serves the many remote communities of Bristol Bay, ƵPeninsula, Pribilof Islands, and the Aleutian regions of southwest Alaska.

Chukchi Campus (Kotzebue, AK) - Located in the hub village of Kotzebue in the Northwest Arctic Borough, Chukchi Campus primarily serves Kotzebue as well as the eleven village communities and the Red Dog Mine site within a service area of more than 36,000 square miles. Chukchi Campus is a two-year public institution, with ƵNative Serving Institution status. 

Community & Technical College (Fairbanks, AK) - The UAF Community and Technical College, formerly Tanana Valley Campus is located in Fairbanks, Alaska. CTC is a major academic division of the University of Alaska Fairbanks, offering classes and curriculum normally associated with community colleges. CTC is primarily focused on career and technical education.

Interior ƵCampus -  IAC is part of a consortium of campuses within the College of Rural and Community Development (CRCD). IAC is designated as an ƵServing Institution. IAC is broken into several rural service districts: McGrath/GASH Region, Nenana Region, Tok Region, Yukon Flats Region, and Yukon-Koyukuk Region. This is the largest service area within the UA system and it is largely roadless; the majority of the communities IAC serves are primarily reached by small aircraft and/or boats.

Kuskokwim Campus (Bethel, AK) - The Kuskokwim Campus is located in an extended community of more than 46 Alaska Native villages. They are primarily Yup’ik/Cup’ik Eskimo villages with 56 tribes in a 57,000 square mile roadless area. The Kuskokwim Campus offers academic, vocational and community interest courses, as well as courses leading to associate, baccalaureate and master’s degrees. Kuskokwim Campus is the largest rural campus in the University of ƵFairbanks system. The campus is physically located in Bethel, a regional hub community situated in Alaska’s Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta.

Northwest Campus (Nome, AK) - Northwest Campus is located in Nome, a community of 3,500 that is the service hub for the 15 villages of the Bering Strait region. The Northwest Campus serves a total population of nearly 10,000.


UAS locations include:

The University of ƵSoutheast is a public university with its main campus in Juneau, Ƶand extended campuses in Sitka and Ketchikan. 

The UAS Juneau Campus offers on-campus housing and classrooms, online classes, and specialized facilities for marine biology, environmental science, nursing, health science, construction, power technology, welding, mining, and fisheries.

The UAS Ketchikan Campus offers all UAS online degree programs, selected classes on-campus and specialized facilities for biology, construction, welding, power technology, marine oiler training, and ship navigation.

The UAS Sitka Campus offers all UAS online degree programs, selected classes on-campus and specialized facilities for nursing, health science, construction, welding, biology, and fisheries.