Locations
Academic Programs Offered
(Academic Year 2024-25)
|
Unique Programs |
Programs & Tracks |
Certificates |
97 |
157 |
Associate |
15 |
26 |
Baccalaureate |
104 |
213 |
Master's |
61 |
151 |
Doctoral |
15 |
24 |
Law |
4 |
23 |
* Unique programs are based on CIP codes (Classification of Instructional Programs) and program level.
- Main Campus RU/H: Research Universities (high research activity)
- Wayne College Assoc/Pub2in4: Associate's -- Public 2-yr colleges under 4-yr universities
Fall 2024 Enrollment
|
Count |
Percent |
Undergraduate Students |
12,641 |
85.34% |
Graduate Students |
1,746 |
11.79% |
Professional Students |
426 |
2.88% |
Full-time students |
9,943 |
67.12% |
Part-time students |
4,870 |
32.88% |
Total |
14,813 |
100.0% |
Fall 2024 Enrollment by Degree Type
|
Count |
Percent |
Certificate |
119 |
0.80% |
Associate |
344 |
2.32% |
Baccalaureate |
9,085 |
61.33% |
Master's |
1,105 |
7.46% |
Doctoral |
520 |
3.51% |
Law |
426 |
2.88% |
Non degree-seeking |
3,214 |
21.70% |
Total |
14,813 |
100.0% |
Fall 2024 Enrollment by Ethnicity
|
Count |
Percent |
African American |
1,515 |
10.23% |
Asian |
577 |
3.90% |
Hispanic |
593 |
4.00% |
Native Hawaiian |
8 |
0.05% |
Native American |
24 |
0.16% |
Non Resident Alien |
548 |
3.70% |
Two or More Races |
629 |
4.25% |
White |
10,019 |
67.64% |
Unknown |
900 |
6.08% |
Total |
14,813 |
100.0% |
Percentage of Enrolled Full-time Students
Fall 2024 and Fall 2023, Undergraduates
|
Fall 2024 |
Fall 2023 |
Ethnicity |
Native Amer |
0.16% |
0.16% |
Hispanic |
4.23% |
3.95% |
Asian |
4.20% |
3.93% |
African Amer |
12.48% |
11.94% |
NR Alien |
2.51% |
2.14% |
White |
66.57% |
70.88% |
Two or More Races |
4.83% |
5.04% |
Native Haw/Othr Pacific |
0.05% |
0.07% |
Unknown |
4.98% |
1.89% |
Gender |
Female |
47.25% |
47.98% |
Male |
52.28% |
52.02% |
Unknown |
0.47% |
0.00% |
Pell and First-gen |
Pell-eligible |
35.36% |
38.38% |
First-gen |
28.06% |
26.63% |
Fall 2024 FTE Students
Undergraduate FTE |
10,267 |
Graduate FTE |
1,263 |
Professional FTE |
342 |
In-State FTE |
10,392 |
Out-of-State FTE |
1,479 |
Total Full-time Equivalent Students: |
11,872 |
Fall 2024 Freshmen Admission Info
Applicantions |
18,408 |
Admits |
11,101 |
Enrollees |
2,108 |
Accept Ratio |
60.31% |
Yield Ratio |
18.99% |
* Accept Ratio is admits divided by applications |
* Yield Ratio is enrollees divided by admits |
Note: Internally reported applicant count includes in-progress applications. |
Fall 2019 Student Characteristics
Freshmen ACT Composite (As of Fall'19) |
Overall Gender Breakdown |
25th Percentile Score |
19 |
Male |
50.6% |
75th Percentile Score |
25 |
Female |
49.4% |
FTFT Akron Campus Bachelor's Degree Seeking Cohorts |
Average Age Full-time Students |
First Year Retention Rate - 2018 Cohort |
71.6% |
First-time first year students |
18 |
Six Year Graduation Rate - 2012 Cohort |
43% |
Undergraduate students |
21 |
|
|
Graduate students |
27 |
Pct In-State Undergrad Students |
93% |
Overall ¹ú²ú¾«Æ· Full-time students |
21 |
84% (Includes disbursed Loans, Grants, Scholarships and/or Federal Work Study)
- 1870: The institution now known as The University of Akron was founded as Buchtel College by the Ohio Universalist Convention
- 1872: Buchtel College opened its doors to 46 collegiate students, 171 preparatory students and seven faculty members
- 1873: Buchtel College produces the first graduate
- 1880: The first master's degree was awarded
- 1913: Trustees transfer Buchtel College's assets to the city of Akron, creating the Municipal University of Akron
- 1926: Trustees change the institution's name to The University of Akron
- 1959: The University's first doctoral degree was awarded, in polymer science. In so doing, Akron became the fifth Ohio university to offer doctoral work, following Ohio State, Western Reserve, Case and Cincinnati
- 1967: On July 1, The University of Akron became one of the Ohio's state universities
- 1999: The New Landscape for Learning campus development initiative was launched
- 2004: First phase of the New Landscape for Learning campus enhancement program was completed, resulting in 9 new buildings, 14 major renovations and 30 acres of fresh green space
- 2005: Honors College was created
- Zips football team won its first Mid-American Conference Championship in school history and got its first Division IA bowl bid
- 2007: New Landscape for Learning building program continues with addition of 15th residence hall and announcement that ¹ú²ú¾«Æ· would build its first on-campus football stadium
- On April 4, the official groundbreaking celebration was held for InfoCision Stadium-Summa Field
- 2009: ¹ú²ú¾«Æ· opens InfoCision Stadium-Summa Field to a sellout crowd. The Zips win, besting Morgan State 41-0.
- Fall enrollment increases 7.6 percent. Between 2005-09, ¹ú²ú¾«Æ· enrollment increased 23 percent. To accommodate graduates, a fourth Commencement ceremony is added in the spring.
- 2010: ¹ú²ú¾«Æ· is named an Ohio Center of Excellence in two areas: (1) biomedicine and health care, and (2) enabling technologies: advanced materials and sensors.
- 2011: The University and The Timken Company announce a novel open-innovation agreement Aug 25 to accelerate technology development by combining their expertise in materials and surface engineering in new laboratories in the College of Engineering.
- 2011: The University breaks ground for a $14.8 million research facility that will house the National Center for Education and Research in Corrosion and Materials Performance. Joining in the effort are the U.S. Departments of Defense and Energy, Ohio companies and foundations.
- 2016: named in February, in recognition of $3 million bequest to Honors College. The Williams, who are alumni, have made lifetime bequests to the University exceeding $10 million.
- 2016: Business student Clayton Murphy wins the bronze medal at the Olympic Games in Rio.
- 2020: The University celebrates the 150th anniversary of its founding. On Oct. 10, thousands of ¹ú²ú¾«Æ· alumni and friends around the world joined for a celebration held virtually due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
- 2022: The University was named No. 1 in the world for polymer science and plastics engineering, according to the global ranking site EduRank. The ranking methodology factored in research performance, non-academic prominence, including backlinks to a university from other sites, and an alumni score.
- 2024: ¹ú²ú¾«Æ· swimmer Grace Nuhfer, a business data analytics major, wins silver medal for the U.S. at the Paralympic Games
See a more complete history of the University.
Still more facts about ¹ú²ú¾«Æ·