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Nelson Marlborough Institute of Technology (NMIT) is a public tertiary education institution at the top of the South Island in New Zealand. NMIT's main campus is in Nelson with other campuses in Blenheim, Marlborough, Woodbourne and Richmond. It has been providing tertiary education in the Nelson-Marlborough region since 1904. [2]
This is a list of the universities in New Zealand, of which there are eight. As of 2024, all universities are public . All of the universities, with the exception of AUT , are descended from the former University of New Zealand , a collegiate university that existed from 1870 to 1961.
In 2005 the International Agency for Research on Cancer found New Zealand men and women to have the third highest cancer rates in the world. [8] [9] In 2012, New Zealand had the 12th highest rate of cancer out of the 34 OECD countries.
Rank Region 2022 HDI [1] Very High Human Development 1 Wellington: 0.969 2 Auckland: 0.968 3 Canterbury: 0.943 4 Taranaki: 0.941 – New Zealand (average HDI) 0.939 5 Marlborough: 0.938 6 Otago: 0.936 7 Tasman-Nelson: 0.933 8 Waikato: 0.932 9 Southland: 0.932 10 Bay of Plenty: 0.931 11 West Coast: 0.922 12 Hawke's Bay: 0.921 13 Manawatū ...
NMIT may refer to: Nelson Marlborough Institute of Technology situated in Blenheim, Richmond and Nelson, New Zealand Northern Melbourne Institute of TAFE , a technical and further education institute with six campuses in the northern suburbs of Melbourne, Australia
The institute has two campuses around Taranaki; the main campus is situated in New Plymouth, and the other is located in Hawera. WITT is accredited by the New Zealand Qualifications Authority. [citation needed] WITT also has a campus in Hamilton which is part of the New Zealand Institute Highway Technology, WITT's wholly owned subsidiary.
Te Pūkenga – New Zealand Institute of Skills and Technology is the largest vocational education provider in New Zealand. [2] In February 2019, the Government announced that the country's sixteen Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics (ITPs) would merge to form the new organisation; the merger was effective on 1 April 2020. [ 3 ]
New Zealand universities generally award letter grades (i.e. A to D) to students, with +/- variations. These letter grades correspond to percentage mark bands, though these vary between universities (common cut-offs for A+ include 90% and 85%, and even within a university, an A+ from one department may vary from an A+ from another, with the ...