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IT University of Copenhagen
The IT University of Copenhagen (ITU; Danish: IT-Universitetet i København) is a public university and research institution in Copenhagen, Denmark. It is specialized in the multidisciplinary study of information technology within computer science, business IT and digital design.
There are approximately 200 faculty members, 70 PhD students, and more than 3000 students. Among all admitted Bachelor and Master students at the IT University of Copenhagen in 2024, 40 percent were female.
The IT University of Copenhagen was established in 1999, which makes it Denmark's youngest university. At that time, it was—in Danish—called "IT-højskolen". When a new Danish university law was passed in 2003, the college officially became a university and changed its name accordingly.
In 2004, the university moved to its own new building in Ørestad, a newly developed area in Copenhagen on the island of Amager. The new building was designed by Danish architect Henning Larsen. The university is located right between the University of Copenhagen's new South Campus and the headquarters of the Danish Broadcasting Corporation (DR), and close to the DR Byen metro station. In 2020, the university extended its campus, taking over facilities in the neighboring DR complex.
The IT University is governed by a board consisting of 9 members: 5 members recruited from outside of the university form the majority of the board, 1 member is appointed by the scientific staff, 1 member is appointed by the administrative staff, and 2 members are appointed by the university students. The Vice Chancellor is appointed by the university board. The Vice Chancellor in turn appoints deans and deans appoint heads of secions. There is no faculty senate and faculty is not involved in the appointment of Vice Chancellor, deans, or section heads.
After a restructuring in early 2025, the university has eight sections, which replace the prior three departments.
The university originally only accepted students with a Bachelor's degree to its offered Master programs, but started its first Bachelor of Science program in Software Development in August 2007. As of 2025, the IT University offers four Bachelor programs (two of which are internationally oriented and taught in English), six Master study programs (four of which are internationally oriented and are taught in English), professional Master's study programs, and approximately 100 courses each semester.
The IT University takes a multidisciplinary approach to the study of information technology, drawing from a variety of academic perspectives. These include the natural sciences (traditional computer science), software engineering, data science, information economics, information systems, computational social science, science and technology studies (STS), CSCW, computer games studies, and the cultural and aesthetic aspects of IT.
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IT University of Copenhagen
The IT University of Copenhagen (ITU; Danish: IT-Universitetet i København) is a public university and research institution in Copenhagen, Denmark. It is specialized in the multidisciplinary study of information technology within computer science, business IT and digital design.
There are approximately 200 faculty members, 70 PhD students, and more than 3000 students. Among all admitted Bachelor and Master students at the IT University of Copenhagen in 2024, 40 percent were female.
The IT University of Copenhagen was established in 1999, which makes it Denmark's youngest university. At that time, it was—in Danish—called "IT-højskolen". When a new Danish university law was passed in 2003, the college officially became a university and changed its name accordingly.
In 2004, the university moved to its own new building in Ørestad, a newly developed area in Copenhagen on the island of Amager. The new building was designed by Danish architect Henning Larsen. The university is located right between the University of Copenhagen's new South Campus and the headquarters of the Danish Broadcasting Corporation (DR), and close to the DR Byen metro station. In 2020, the university extended its campus, taking over facilities in the neighboring DR complex.
The IT University is governed by a board consisting of 9 members: 5 members recruited from outside of the university form the majority of the board, 1 member is appointed by the scientific staff, 1 member is appointed by the administrative staff, and 2 members are appointed by the university students. The Vice Chancellor is appointed by the university board. The Vice Chancellor in turn appoints deans and deans appoint heads of secions. There is no faculty senate and faculty is not involved in the appointment of Vice Chancellor, deans, or section heads.
After a restructuring in early 2025, the university has eight sections, which replace the prior three departments.
The university originally only accepted students with a Bachelor's degree to its offered Master programs, but started its first Bachelor of Science program in Software Development in August 2007. As of 2025, the IT University offers four Bachelor programs (two of which are internationally oriented and taught in English), six Master study programs (four of which are internationally oriented and are taught in English), professional Master's study programs, and approximately 100 courses each semester.
The IT University takes a multidisciplinary approach to the study of information technology, drawing from a variety of academic perspectives. These include the natural sciences (traditional computer science), software engineering, data science, information economics, information systems, computational social science, science and technology studies (STS), CSCW, computer games studies, and the cultural and aesthetic aspects of IT.