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  1. Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary is a young institution with a long tradition. The university was established in its present form in 1993 however its legal predecessors date back to 1839 and 1855. It is founded on the traditions of Reformed education, yet the university is open to professional innovation. Our nearly 8000 students can conduct their studies at four faculties which are the following: Faculty of Law, Faculty of Humanities, Faculty of Theology and Faculty of Teacher Training. The legal predecessor of our University was the Reformed Theological Academy of Budapest, founded in 1855 and granted University status by the Hungarian Parliament in 1990. In 1993 the General Assembly of the Reformed Church in Hungary took the decision to establish a university spanning a wide range of faculties, and this decision was approved later in the year on 21st September by the Parliament of the Republic of Hungary. Through the creation of Károli Gáspár University, the Reformed Church in Hungary has fulfilled the aims of its forefathers. Our University, in the spirit of the universitas scientiarum, aims to raise the status of not solely the Church, but also the nation, through its educational, teaching and academic work. ‘Without knowledge, my people will perish!’ – such was the cry of the Old Testament prophets and the Reformers in their sermons. It is impossible to imagine the effect that the legions of wandering university scholars with reformed beliefs, who made their way to Switzerland, the Netherlands, Germany, Scotland and later North America, have had on the Reformed Church and also on Hungarian culture. The spirit of Hungarian Protestantism is embodied in such individuals as Gáspár Károli, Gáspár Heltai, Albert Szenczi Molnar, Bálint Kocsi Csergő, János Apáczai Csere, Sándor Kőrösi Csoma, the Bolyais, and more recently, László Ravasz, István Bibó, Sándor Joo, and Endre Gyökössy, amongst others. Protestant schools and universities have, through the ages, paved the way for Reformed and Hungarian culture. They will continue to do so in the future. The commitment of Károli Gáspár University is to carry on the distinguished traditions of the Reformed Colleges of Sárospatak, Pápa, Debrecen, Kolozsvár and Nagyenyed. In addition to the education of ministers of religion, for the purposes of academic research, training for the position of lecturer and for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, and the awarding of degrees, its aims and objectives are to provide university – and college – level basic education in several fields and branches of scholarship, and to be capable of carrying out academic research, in accordance with the aforementioned traditions and in the spirit of the Reformation. In the spirit of the Biblical Word, the mission of the University is to educate young people consciously claiming the morals and spiritual values of Christianity, and to train professionals with up-to-date knowledge for the good of the nation, to serve Hungarians living in Hungary and outside our borders alike, first of all the reformed system of institutions and the reformed communities. Furthermore, the mission of the University is to encourage the academic and social cooperation of the protestant communities in Europe through the help of a centre in Hungary, and to increase the participation of the members of the Hungarian Reformed community in the intellectual and academic life. Through all this, the University contributes to the fulfilment of the Christian social mission of the Hungarian Reformed Church. Our university is a young and dynamic institution with rapidly developing international relations. It is a strategic aim of Károli University to further deepen and widen our network of international cooperation. Today, the university maintains bilateral contacts and cooperation agreements with almost 130 institutions of higher education from 35 countries in the world. Our partners are mostly European but we also have cooperation agreements with universities in Colombia, Japan, Korea and the USA. Cooperation agreements cover student and teacher exchange schemes, joint research and publication, as well as organising and providing courses for students. Within Europe, the Erasmus+ Programme of the European Union plays a significant role in the cross-border cooperation while the university is also a member of the regional CEEPUS mobility programme. It also joined the new International Credit Mobility programme of the European Union, receiving exchange students from overseas universities. Furthermore, in the framework of the Stipendium Hungaricum programme launched by the Government of Hungary, thousands of students from all around the world can apply to Hungarian higher education institutions, including Károli Gáspár University as well. As a Christian university, Károli University actively seeks contact and cooperation with other Christian institutions of higher education. As a result, we have joined the IAPCHE (International Association for the Promotion of Christian Higher Education) and the CCCU (Council for Christian Colleges and Universities) as an international affiliate. We are also a member of the Refo500 international network that prepares for the 500th anniversary of the Reformation. On the 18th of September Rector Prof. Dr. Péter Balla – among representatives of other universities – in the framework of a signing ceremony has formally signed the Magna Charta Universitatum in Bologna. Thus Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary has joined the international higher-educational organisation, counting almost 800 members in more than 80 countries.
  2. Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary is a young institution with a long tradition. The university was established in its present form in 1993 however its legal predecessors date back to 1839 and 1855. It is founded on the traditions of Reformed education, yet the university is open to professional innovation. Our nearly 8000 students can conduct their studies at four faculties which are the following: Faculty of Law, Faculty of Humanities, Faculty of Theology and Faculty of Teacher Training. The legal predecessor of our University was the Reformed Theological Academy of Budapest, founded in 1855 and granted University status by the Hungarian Parliament in 1990. In 1993 the General Assembly of the Reformed Church in Hungary took the decision to establish a university spanning a wide range of faculties, and this decision was approved later in the year on 21st September by the Parliament of the Republic of Hungary. Through the creation of Károli Gáspár University, the Reformed Church in Hungary has fulfilled the aims of its forefathers. Our University, in the spirit of the universitas scientiarum, aims to raise the status of not solely the Church, but also the nation, through its educational, teaching and academic work. ‘Without knowledge, my people will perish!’ – such was the cry of the Old Testament prophets and the Reformers in their sermons. It is impossible to imagine the effect that the legions of wandering university scholars with reformed beliefs, who made their way to Switzerland, the Netherlands, Germany, Scotland and later North America, have had on the Reformed Church and also on Hungarian culture. The spirit of Hungarian Protestantism is embodied in such individuals as Gáspár Károli, Gáspár Heltai, Albert Szenczi Molnar, Bálint Kocsi Csergő, János Apáczai Csere, Sándor Kőrösi Csoma, the Bolyais, and more recently, László Ravasz, István Bibó, Sándor Joo, and Endre Gyökössy, amongst others. Protestant schools and universities have, through the ages, paved the way for Reformed and Hungarian culture. They will continue to do so in the future. The commitment of Károli Gáspár University is to carry on the distinguished traditions of the Reformed Colleges of Sárospatak, Pápa, Debrecen, Kolozsvár and Nagyenyed. In addition to the education of ministers of religion, for the purposes of academic research, training for the position of lecturer and for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, and the awarding of degrees, its aims and objectives are to provide university – and college – level basic education in several fields and branches of scholarship, and to be capable of carrying out academic research, in accordance with the aforementioned traditions and in the spirit of the Reformation. In the spirit of the Biblical Word, the mission of the University is to educate young people consciously claiming the morals and spiritual values of Christianity, and to train professionals with up-to-date knowledge for the good of the nation, to serve Hungarians living in Hungary and outside our borders alike, first of all the reformed system of institutions and the reformed communities. Furthermore, the mission of the University is to encourage the academic and social cooperation of the protestant communities in Europe through the help of a centre in Hungary, and to increase the participation of the members of the Hungarian Reformed community in the intellectual and academic life. Through all this, the University contributes to the fulfilment of the Christian social mission of the Hungarian Reformed Church. Our university is a young and dynamic institution with rapidly developing international relations. It is a strategic aim of Károli University to further deepen and widen our network of international cooperation. Today, the university maintains bilateral contacts and cooperation agreements with almost 130 institutions of higher education from 35 countries in the world. Our partners are mostly European but we also have cooperation agreements with universities in Colombia, Japan, Korea and the USA. Cooperation agreements cover student and teacher exchange schemes, joint research and publication, as well as organising and providing courses for students. Within Europe, the Erasmus+ Programme of the European Union plays a significant role in the cross-border cooperation while the university is also a member of the regional CEEPUS mobility programme. It also joined the new International Credit Mobility programme of the European Union, receiving exchange students from overseas universities. Furthermore, in the framework of the Stipendium Hungaricum programme launched by the Government of Hungary, thousands of students from all around the world can apply to Hungarian higher education institutions, including Károli Gáspár University as well. As a Christian university, Károli University actively seeks contact and cooperation with other Christian institutions of higher education. As a result, we have joined the IAPCHE (International Association for the Promotion of Christian Higher Education) and the CCCU (Council for Christian Colleges and Universities) as an international affiliate. We are also a member of the Refo500 international network that prepares for the 500th anniversary of the Reformation. On the 18th of September Rector Prof. Dr. Péter Balla – among representatives of other universities – in the framework of a signing ceremony has formally signed the Magna Charta Universitatum in Bologna. Thus Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary has joined the international higher-educational organisation, counting almost 800 members in more than 80 countries. View full university
  3. The history of the Karol Lipiński Academy of Music goes back to November 1948, when Wrocław received a State University School of Music. At the time it was the fifth university in the city and the seventh university school of music in Poland. Initially, it exclusively had the Teaching Department in 1949 the Vocal Department was set up, and in 1950 – the Instrumental Department and the Department of Theory of Music and Conducting, and was extended shortly afterward with the Section for Composition. The four-department structure has survived with only minor modifications throughout the history of the school, with the number of fields of study offered to students being gradually increased. 1972 saw the establishment of the Section for General and Applied Music Therapy – the first research institution of its kind in Poland – and the initial enrollment of students who wanted to study the subject. In 2001 the Academy set up the Section for Jazz Music, and so became the second center in Poland (after Katowice) to train professional jazz musicians. In 2002 the Instrumental Department began accepting students who desired to specialize in playing Baroque/period instruments. In 1981 the name of the institution as a whole was changed from the State University School of Music to the Academy of Music. At the same time, it was named after Karol Lipiński (1790-1861), an outstanding violin virtuoso, who in 19th-century Europe was regarded as an equal to Niccolò Paganini. A major fact in the later history of the school was the change of its location in 1993, which ensured the integration of the academic community that had previously been spread among several buildings. In 1998, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of its establishment, the Academy granted its first honoris causa doctorate it was given to conductor Tadeusz Strugała, one of its most eminent graduates. In the following years, the honorary title of doctor was conferred on other outstanding artists and personalities of the world of culture, including some world-famous figures, such as conductors Kurt Masur (1999) and Stanisław Skrowaczewski (2004), and singers Maria Fołtyn (2000) and Teresa Żylis-Gara (2003).
  4. The Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music in Katowice was founded in 1929. Located in a beautiful neo-Gothic building the Academy holds a variety of artistic events such as concerts, master classes, workshops, competitions, and conferences both on national and international levels, combined with didactic activities. The Academy offers full-time as well as part-time BA, MA, post-graduate and doctoral studies adjusted to European Credit Transfer System (ECTS). The organizational structure of the Academy consists of two departments: Composition, Interpretation, Education and Jazz Department, and Vocal-Instrumental Department. Studies are offered in many fields: composition, conducting, music theory, eurhythmics, music education, music therapy, jazz interpretation, instrumental and vocal performance. The school prides on its spectacular Concert Hall for 480 people which meets the latest spatial and acoustic requirements. The building is also the seat of one of the largest music libraries in Poland.Being a member of AEC (Association Européenne des Conservatoire, Académies de Musique et Musikhochschulen) and other music organizations The Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music in Katowice is very active on national and international arena. This includes co-operation with numerous music schools all over the world including more than 30 partner institutions within LLP-Erasmus Programme. Since the academic year 2011/2012, the Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music in Katowice has been offering paid studies in given specialties in the English language. Bachelor’s degree programs in the field of instrumental performance last six semesters after the completion of which the bachelor’s degree is awarded. It enables access to master’s programs. Master’s degree programs in the field of instrumental performance last 4 semesters after the completion of which the master’s degree is awarded. It enables access to the third-cycle studies. If you want to spend a part of your studies in the Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music in Katowice as an exchange student, you should apply through the international coordinator at your home institution. You should contact your international coordinator well in advance as it may take some time to prepare your application. The deadline for applications for both semesters in our school is 30 April of the previous academic year. Until then your local international coordinator should have forwarded your application to us. The application along with the recording is forwarded to the Academy Selection Committee / Head of Department who evaluate it. They decide if the applicant has the sufficient level to be admitted. The result of your application is sent to your international coordinator. Please be aware that even though you have spoken with a teacher here at the Academy and he/she has expressed interest in accepting you in his/her class it is not certain that we can offer you a study place. It is only when you have an official letter from our Erasmus coordinator offering you a study place that you have been accepted. European Credit Transfer System has been designed by the European Commission to prepare procedures to guarantee recognition of periods of study abroad. This system allows higher education institutions to recognize students’ achievements by using clear “measures”- credits. ECTS credits are allocated to course units based on the workload students need to achieve expected learning outcomes. They reflect the workload each course unit requires in comparison with the entire workload a student needs to complete an academic year in a given institution which includes: lectures, practical work, seminars, exams, and other forms of assessment. ECTS credits are a relative, not an absolute measure of the workload required from a student. Within ECTS 60 ECTS credits are attached to the workload of a full-time year of formal learning (academic year) and usually 30 credits – to the workload of a semester. ECTS credits are allocated to course units, and they are granted to students who have met the requirements to complete them. According to the Regulations of the Academy, it is necessary to obtain 30 credits to complete a semester. The Academy of Music's building where the Concert hall, the Library, and the patio are situated, is completely adjusted to the needs of the physically handicapped. To benefit from the free health care service, foreign citizens studying in Poland have to be insured from illness and accidents or to hold a valid European Health Insurance Card or to be insured in the NFZ (Narodowy Fundusz Zdrowia - National Fund for Health). Because of the differences in health insurance regulations in the countries of the EU and outside, future students are advised to check those regulations in their homeland, before coming to Poland. Students of the Academy of Music have the possibility of using practice rooms. Students wishing to do that are supposed to pay a Music Fund charge at the Information Desk (from Monday to Friday) or in the dormitory. The Main Library of the Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music is the oldest and the largest music library in Upper Silesia. Nowadays, the Library has 140 000 books, scores, magazines, periodicals, discs, and other documents. The Karol Szymanowski Music Academy in Katowice cooperates with many foreign universities and academies of music. The school is a member of the AEC (Association Européenne des Conservatoirea, Académies de Musique et Musikhochschulen).The Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music cooperates with the School of Polish Language and Culture University of Silesia in Katowice. Within this cooperation, the school offers regular language courses with a discount for our Erasmus students. To learn about details contact our Erasmus coordinator.
  5. The Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music in Katowice was founded in 1929. Located in a beautiful neo-Gothic building the Academy holds a variety of artistic events such as concerts, master classes, workshops, competitions, and conferences both on national and international levels, combined with didactic activities. The Academy offers full-time as well as part-time BA, MA, post-graduate and doctoral studies adjusted to European Credit Transfer System (ECTS). The organizational structure of the Academy consists of two departments: Composition, Interpretation, Education and Jazz Department, and Vocal-Instrumental Department. Studies are offered in many fields: composition, conducting, music theory, eurhythmics, music education, music therapy, jazz interpretation, instrumental and vocal performance. The school prides on its spectacular Concert Hall for 480 people which meets the latest spatial and acoustic requirements. The building is also the seat of one of the largest music libraries in Poland.Being a member of AEC (Association Européenne des Conservatoire, Académies de Musique et Musikhochschulen) and other music organizations The Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music in Katowice is very active on national and international arena. This includes co-operation with numerous music schools all over the world including more than 30 partner institutions within LLP-Erasmus Programme. Since the academic year 2011/2012, the Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music in Katowice has been offering paid studies in given specialties in the English language. Bachelor’s degree programs in the field of instrumental performance last six semesters after the completion of which the bachelor’s degree is awarded. It enables access to master’s programs. Master’s degree programs in the field of instrumental performance last 4 semesters after the completion of which the master’s degree is awarded. It enables access to the third-cycle studies. If you want to spend a part of your studies in the Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music in Katowice as an exchange student, you should apply through the international coordinator at your home institution. You should contact your international coordinator well in advance as it may take some time to prepare your application. The deadline for applications for both semesters in our school is 30 April of the previous academic year. Until then your local international coordinator should have forwarded your application to us. The application along with the recording is forwarded to the Academy Selection Committee / Head of Department who evaluate it. They decide if the applicant has the sufficient level to be admitted. The result of your application is sent to your international coordinator. Please be aware that even though you have spoken with a teacher here at the Academy and he/she has expressed interest in accepting you in his/her class it is not certain that we can offer you a study place. It is only when you have an official letter from our Erasmus coordinator offering you a study place that you have been accepted. European Credit Transfer System has been designed by the European Commission to prepare procedures to guarantee recognition of periods of study abroad. This system allows higher education institutions to recognize students’ achievements by using clear “measures”- credits. ECTS credits are allocated to course units based on the workload students need to achieve expected learning outcomes. They reflect the workload each course unit requires in comparison with the entire workload a student needs to complete an academic year in a given institution which includes: lectures, practical work, seminars, exams, and other forms of assessment. ECTS credits are a relative, not an absolute measure of the workload required from a student. Within ECTS 60 ECTS credits are attached to the workload of a full-time year of formal learning (academic year) and usually 30 credits – to the workload of a semester. ECTS credits are allocated to course units, and they are granted to students who have met the requirements to complete them. According to the Regulations of the Academy, it is necessary to obtain 30 credits to complete a semester. The Academy of Music's building where the Concert hall, the Library, and the patio are situated, is completely adjusted to the needs of the physically handicapped. To benefit from the free health care service, foreign citizens studying in Poland have to be insured from illness and accidents or to hold a valid European Health Insurance Card or to be insured in the NFZ (Narodowy Fundusz Zdrowia - National Fund for Health). Because of the differences in health insurance regulations in the countries of the EU and outside, future students are advised to check those regulations in their homeland, before coming to Poland. Students of the Academy of Music have the possibility of using practice rooms. Students wishing to do that are supposed to pay a Music Fund charge at the Information Desk (from Monday to Friday) or in the dormitory. The Main Library of the Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music is the oldest and the largest music library in Upper Silesia. Nowadays, the Library has 140 000 books, scores, magazines, periodicals, discs, and other documents. The Karol Szymanowski Music Academy in Katowice cooperates with many foreign universities and academies of music. The school is a member of the AEC (Association Européenne des Conservatoirea, Académies de Musique et Musikhochschulen).The Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music cooperates with the School of Polish Language and Culture University of Silesia in Katowice. Within this cooperation, the school offers regular language courses with a discount for our Erasmus students. To learn about details contact our Erasmus coordinator. View full university
  6. The history of the Karol Lipiński Academy of Music goes back to November 1948, when Wrocław received a State University School of Music. At the time it was the fifth university in the city and the seventh university school of music in Poland. Initially, it exclusively had the Teaching Department in 1949 the Vocal Department was set up, and in 1950 – the Instrumental Department and the Department of Theory of Music and Conducting, and was extended shortly afterward with the Section for Composition. The four-department structure has survived with only minor modifications throughout the history of the school, with the number of fields of study offered to students being gradually increased. 1972 saw the establishment of the Section for General and Applied Music Therapy – the first research institution of its kind in Poland – and the initial enrollment of students who wanted to study the subject. In 2001 the Academy set up the Section for Jazz Music, and so became the second center in Poland (after Katowice) to train professional jazz musicians. In 2002 the Instrumental Department began accepting students who desired to specialize in playing Baroque/period instruments. In 1981 the name of the institution as a whole was changed from the State University School of Music to the Academy of Music. At the same time, it was named after Karol Lipiński (1790-1861), an outstanding violin virtuoso, who in 19th-century Europe was regarded as an equal to Niccolò Paganini. A major fact in the later history of the school was the change of its location in 1993, which ensured the integration of the academic community that had previously been spread among several buildings. In 1998, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of its establishment, the Academy granted its first honoris causa doctorate it was given to conductor Tadeusz Strugała, one of its most eminent graduates. In the following years, the honorary title of doctor was conferred on other outstanding artists and personalities of the world of culture, including some world-famous figures, such as conductors Kurt Masur (1999) and Stanisław Skrowaczewski (2004), and singers Maria Fołtyn (2000) and Teresa Żylis-Gara (2003). View full university
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