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Chechen State University official. Chechen State University

Chechen State University
(CSU)
Former names

Grozny Teachers' Institute
Grozny State pedagogical institute
Chechen-Ingush State Pedagogical Institute
Chechen-Ingush State University named after Leo Tolstoy

Year of foundation
Location
Website

Chechen State University(Chech. Nokhchiin Mehkan University) is a classical university in the city of Grozny. Founded in 1938.

Story

The university traces its history back to February 7, 1938, when in Grozny, on the initiative of the regional party committee and the Council of People's Commissars of the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, the Grozny Teachers' Institute was opened with a two-year term of study. The contingent of students was 120 people. On September 1, 1938, the teacher's institute was transformed into the Chechen-Ingush State Pedagogical Institute with a four-year term of study. The Institute had philological, historical and physics and mathematics faculties.

After the start of the Great Patriotic War the equipment of the institute was evacuated, but already in the middle of 1943 the restoration of the educational institution began.

In 1955, a large educational building of the institute was built, in 1957 - workshops for physical and mathematical faculty. In 1956, the Institute opened the Faculty of Physical Education, in 1958 - the Faculty of Pedagogy and Methods primary education, in 1960 - the Faculty of Natural Geography, in 1962 - the Faculty foreign languages. For several years, the Faculty of History and Philology were merged into the Faculty of History and Philology.

In 1960, the institute was given a new name - the Chechen-Ingush State Pedagogical Institute.

In the 1960s, the material and technical base of the institute was strengthened: a dormitory for 632 people was built, new classrooms and laboratories were created, scientific equipment was significantly increased and improved.

On March 9, 1971, the institute was transformed into the Chechen-Ingush State University. educational institution named after Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy. By the mid-1980s, there were already 8 faculties at the university - historical, philological, Romano-Germanic philology, economics, physics, mathematics, geography, biology and chemistry. In 1990, the Faculty of Medicine was opened, in 1993 - the Faculty of Law and Finance and Economics.

In January 1995, during the hostilities, the university buildings were significantly damaged. Educational buildings were turned into ruins, the library was destroyed, Botanical Garden, unique scientific laboratories, educational and production bases, a computer center, a printing house. Nevertheless, classes continued in the few surviving premises.

On February 28, 1995, the Chechen-Ingush State University named after Leo Tolstoy was renamed the Chechen State University.

After the end of the First Chechen war and the proclamation of the independence of Chechnya, the university was subordinated to the new authorities, in fact, was withdrawn from educational space Russia, deprived of financial support. Nevertheless, the university continued to work in the destroyed and looted premises.

In 1997, the agrotechnological faculty was opened. In November 1997, a correspondence department of the Chechen State University was opened in Urus-Martan. Similar faculties were supposed to be opened in the Shali and Shelkovsk regions of the republic.

In 1997, restoration work began at the university. By the beginning of 1998, the construction team repaired the premises for training sessions in the dormitory and two academic buildings of the CSU, an autonomous heating system was created. During 1998, the third academic building was being restored, as well as the building of the former boarding school, which was transferred to the university.

In July 1998 the Cabinet of Ministers Chechen Republic Ichkeria decided to close the Chechen Pedagogical Institute, which, according to the authorities, “duplicated” the Chechen State University. The entire material base and the staff of the Pedagogical Institute were transferred to the university. Reduced five faculties and 36 departments. Nevertheless, the teachers of the Pedagogical Institute defended their institution, and the closure of the institute was not carried out.

In 1999, during the next hostilities, the university was again destroyed and suspended work. In April 2000, after the establishment of a pro-Russian administration in the city, the university resumed its work. On May 6, 2003, the university was included in the unified state register of legal entities under the name State educational institution higher vocational education"Chechen State University".

The main building of the CSU under construction. Grozny, Struggle Square, Leo Tolstoy Square, 2012

In the early 2000s, the restoration of the material and technical base began. In 2003, 2500 were restored square meters training areas, in 2004 a canteen, training workshops, and two reading rooms were put into operation. In March 2005, an educational building for the Faculty of Economics and the administration was put into operation, in 2006 another 6 educational buildings were repaired. In October 2006, the academic building of the Faculty of Medicine was opened. In 2009, a major overhaul of the 3rd educational building was carried out. In March 2007, the construction of the main building of the university began on the site of the destroyed one (Aslanbek Sheripov Street, Struggle Square, Leo Tolstoy Square).

In the early 2000s, the structure of the university included 13 faculties - history, mathematics and computer technology, physics and information and communication technologies, biological and chemical, medical, legal, economic, financial and economic, geography and geoecology, agrotechnological, foreign languages, philological (in 2007 it was transformed into the Institute of Chechen and General Philology), government controlled(since 2005). In 2003, the Center for Additional Professional Education was established to provide professional retraining of specialists. In 2006, it was transformed into the Faculty of Additional Professional Education and Advanced Training.

The university has a botanical garden, a zoological museum, a local history museum, a library with 5 service departments, subscriptions and reading rooms, and a public catering plant.

On July 25, 2011, the university was transformed into a federal state budgetary educational institution of higher professional education "Chechen State University"

Structure

There are 814 teachers working at ChGU, including 55 doctors of sciences, professors, 236 candidates of sciences. The university has 72 departments.

13 faculties that produce specialists in 40 specialties. The total number of full-time and part-time students is almost 15 thousand.

Since 2003, a joint partnership project on journalism has been implemented with the Danish School of Journalism.

Faculties:

  • Faculty of additional professional education and advanced training
  • Faculty of Geography and Geoecology
  • Mathematics and CT
  • Faculty of Physics and Information and Communication Technologies
  • Agrotechnological Faculty
  • Faculty of Biology and Chemistry
  • Faculty of Foreign Languages
  • Faculty of Public Administration
  • Faculty of Finance and Economics
  • Faculty of Economics
  • Faculty of Law
  • Faculty of Medicine
  • History department
  • Institute of Chechen and General Philology

Links

Chechen State University (Russian). - Official site of the Chechen State University. Retrieved February 5, 2009.

Notes


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010 .

Chechen State University
(CSU)
Former names

Grozny Teachers' Institute
Grozny State Pedagogical Institute
Chechen-Ingush State Pedagogical Institute
Chechen-Ingush State University named after Leo Tolstoy

Year of foundation
Location
Website

Chechen State University(Chech. Nokhchiin Mehkan University) is a classical university in the city of Grozny. Founded in 1938.

Story

The university traces its history back to February 7, 1938, when in Grozny, on the initiative of the regional party committee and the Council of People's Commissars of the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, the Grozny Teachers' Institute was opened with a two-year term of study. The contingent of students was 120 people. On September 1, 1938, the teacher's institute was transformed into the Chechen-Ingush State Pedagogical Institute with a four-year term of study. The Institute had philological, historical and physics and mathematics faculties.

After the beginning of the Great Patriotic War, the equipment of the institute was evacuated, but already in the middle of 1943, the restoration of the educational institution began.

In 1955 a large academic building of the institute was built, in 1957 workshops for the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics were built. In 1956, the Institute opened the Faculty of Physical Education, in 1958 - the Faculty of Pedagogy and Methods of Primary Education, in 1960 - the Faculty of Natural Geography, in 1962 - the Faculty of Foreign Languages. For several years, the Faculty of History and Philology were merged into the Faculty of History and Philology.

In 1960, the institute was given a new name - the Chechen-Ingush State Pedagogical Institute.

In the 1960s, the material and technical base of the institute was strengthened: a dormitory for 632 people was built, new classrooms and laboratories were created, scientific equipment was significantly increased and improved.

On March 9, 1971, the institute was transformed into the Chechen-Ingush State University. The educational institution was named after Leo Tolstoy. By the mid-1980s, there were already 8 faculties at the university - historical, philological, Romano-Germanic philology, economics, physics, mathematics, geography, biology and chemistry. In 1990, the Faculty of Medicine was opened, in 1993 - the Faculty of Law and Finance and Economics.

In January 1995, during the hostilities, the university buildings were significantly damaged. Educational buildings were turned into ruins, a library, a botanical garden, unique scientific laboratories, educational and production bases, a computer center, and a printing house were destroyed. Nevertheless, classes continued in the few surviving premises.

On February 28, 1995, the Chechen-Ingush State University named after Leo Tolstoy was renamed the Chechen State University.

After the end of the First Chechen War and the declaration of independence of Chechnya, the university was subordinated to the new authorities, was actually withdrawn from the educational space of Russia, deprived of financial support. Nevertheless, the university continued to work in the destroyed and looted premises.

In 1997, the agrotechnological faculty was opened. In November 1997, a correspondence department of the Chechen State University was opened in Urus-Martan. Similar faculties were supposed to be opened in the Shali and Shelkovsk regions of the republic.

In 1997, restoration work began at the university. By the beginning of 1998, the construction team repaired the premises for training sessions in the dormitory and two academic buildings of the Chechen State University, and an autonomous heating system was created. During 1998, the third academic building was being restored, as well as the building of the former boarding school, which was transferred to the university.

In July 1998, the Cabinet of Ministers of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria decided to close the Chechen Pedagogical Institute, which, according to the authorities, "duplicated" the Chechen State University. The entire material base and the staff of the Pedagogical Institute were transferred to the university. Reduced five faculties and 36 departments. Nevertheless, the teachers of the Pedagogical Institute defended their institution, and the closure of the institute was not carried out.

In 1999, during the next hostilities, the university was again destroyed and suspended work. In April 2000, after the establishment of a pro-Russian administration in the city, the university resumed its work. On May 6, 2003, the university was included in the unified state register of legal entities under the name of the State Educational Institution of Higher Professional Education "Chechen State University".

The main building of the CSU under construction. Grozny, Struggle Square, Leo Tolstoy Square, 2012

In the early 2000s, the restoration of the material and technical base began. In 2003, 2,500 square meters of study space were restored; in 2004, a canteen, training workshops, and two reading rooms were put into operation. In March 2005, an educational building for the Faculty of Economics and the administration was put into operation, in 2006 another 6 educational buildings were repaired. In October 2006, the academic building of the Faculty of Medicine was opened. In 2009, a major overhaul of the 3rd educational building was carried out. In March 2007, the construction of the main building of the university began on the site of the destroyed one (Aslanbek Sheripov Street, Struggle Square, Leo Tolstoy Square).

In the early 2000s, the structure of the university included 13 faculties - history, mathematics and computer technology, physics and information and communication technologies, biological and chemical, medical, legal, economic, financial and economic, geography and geoecology, agrotechnological, foreign languages, philological (in 2007 it was transformed into the Institute of Chechen and General Philology), public administration (since 2005). In 2003, the Center for Additional Professional Education was established to provide professional retraining of specialists. In 2006, it was transformed into the Faculty of Additional Professional Education and Advanced Training.

The university has a botanical garden, a zoological museum, a local history museum, a library with 5 service departments, subscriptions and reading rooms, and a public catering plant.

On July 25, 2011, the university was transformed into a federal state budgetary educational institution of higher professional education "Chechen State University"

Structure

There are 814 teachers working at ChGU, including 55 doctors of sciences, professors, 236 candidates of sciences. The university has 72 departments.

13 faculties that produce specialists in 40 specialties. The total number of full-time and part-time students is almost 15 thousand.

Since 2003, a joint partnership project on journalism has been implemented with the Danish School of Journalism.

Faculties:

  • Faculty of additional professional education and advanced training
  • Faculty of Geography and Geoecology
  • Mathematics and CT
  • Faculty of Physics and Information and Communication Technologies
  • Agrotechnological Faculty
  • Faculty of Biology and Chemistry
  • Faculty of Foreign Languages
  • Faculty of Public Administration
  • Faculty of Finance and Economics
  • Faculty of Economics
  • Faculty of Law
  • Faculty of Medicine
  • History department
  • Institute of Chechen and General Philology

Links

Chechen State University (Russian). - Official site of the Chechen State University. Retrieved February 5, 2009.

Notes


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010 .

Host - Timur Uzhakhov

In a studio:

Mahmud Magomedovich Kerimov - Professor of CSU Minazova Venera Magomedovna, Associate Professor of the Department of Pedagogy and Psychology

Vahid Ustarkhanov, student of Chechen State University Timur Uzhakhov: Today we will tell you about the Chechen State University.

REFERENCE: The University was founded in 1938 as the Chechen-Ingush State Pedagogical Institute, which initially had two faculties in its structure - philological and historical. On March 9, 1971, the Institute was transformed into the Chechen-Ingush State University. The educational institution was named after Leo Tolstoy. By the mid-1980s, there were already 8 faculties at the university - historical, philological, Romano-Germanic philology, economics, physics, mathematics, geography, biology and chemistry. In 1990, the Faculty of Medicine was opened, in 1993 - the Faculty of Law and Finance and Economics.

In January 1995, during the hostilities, the university buildings were significantly damaged. Educational buildings were turned into ruins, a library, a botanical garden, unique scientific laboratories, educational and production bases, a computer center, and a printing house were destroyed. Nevertheless, classes continued in the few surviving premises.

On February 28, 1995, the Chechen-Ingush State University named after Leo Tolstoy was renamed the Chechen State University. With the coming to power in the republic of Akhmat-hadji Kadyrov, the university began to be restored. To date, the total area of ​​​​the infrastructure of the university is more than 26 thousand square meters. m and includes, in addition to classrooms, laboratories and a large sports complex with a swimming pool. The university includes two educational institutes, 11 faculties and 86 departments.

Timur Uzhakhov: Makhmud Magomedovich, you represent the Chechen State University. As a person who has been working within these walls for many years, what can you say about your university, about its history, about the recovery period that the university has gone through in recent years?

Mahmud Kerimov: I have been associated with our native Chechen State University for almost a quarter of a century. Chechen State University has historically been calling card, the face of not only our republic, but also our entire multinational Chechen people. Almost all of our republican elite, the intelligentsia, left the walls of our university. Of course, the events that took place in our republic passed like millstones through our university, through our lives. We have lost our university, which was famous not only in Russia, not only in the Soviet Union, but also in the world. And so in 1994-2000. we have lost absolutely everything. After the first Chechen campaign, when we arrived in the city of Grozny, we saw that there was no our university, everything was in ruins, everything was destroyed, we were given the territory of the dilapidated building of boarding school No. 2 in Grozny. This is where we started gathering people. We lost many of our colleagues, famous scientists - Chechens, Russians, Armenians, Ingush, but nevertheless, the remaining people gathered. We could not imagine either our people or our republic without our university. And this is how they began to assemble the university themselves, to assemble students, their own staff. One of the first days when we came here in April 1995, we were looking for one table and one chair for three days to seat at least the rector. Holes were covered with film, gas was extended and the rector was imprisoned. That's how we started. But nevertheless, so much has been done in 10-12 years that when delegations from neighboring regions come to us, they do not believe that this luxury, order, comfort have been created during this time, educational buildings, material and technical support, professorships have been restored. -Teaching Staff. In 2000 we had only 8 Doctors of Science, today I have more than 80 Doctors of Science. People write dissertations. In the long term, we are building a university campus. We rebuilt our main building on the historical site where the main building of the Chechen-Ingush State University stood. Slowly, the building began to move in. Within a month, the university management will move to a new building, the Faculty of Economics and Finance will start working there. Opposite the second building of the university - these are the buildings that the whole republic knew. They are a floor above, they are more beautiful, better. I think our team and the university have a good future. The Chechen State University will become an interuniversity center.

Timur Uzhakhov: I would like to ask a question about a little more early history. How was the formation of the university in the Soviet years?

Mahmud Kerimov: It was the Chechen-Ingush State Pedagogical Institute, which was founded in 1938, in 1972 it was transformed into a classical university. It all started with two faculties - the Faculty of Philology, then the Faculty of History spun off from it. Today we have 13 faculties, more than 80 specialties, postgraduate, doctoral studies.

Timur Uzhakhov: How many students are there?

Mahmud Kerimov: As of January 1, 2013, we have about 20 thousand students in all forms of education.

Timur Uzhakhov: In context common processes integration of interuniversity space North Caucasus what is the position of your university?

Mahmud Kerimov: We cooperate very closely with the former Rostov, now the Southern Federal State University. We have common scientific projects. Almost 30% of our scientists defended themselves there. A year ago, the North Caucasian federal university in Pyatigorsk. Good scientific and personal ties with scientists of the Dagestan State University, with the Kabardino-Balkarian State University.

REFERENCE: Kerimov Makhmud Magomedovich - was born in 1959 in the village of Orekhovo, Achkhoy-Martanovsky district of the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Islamologist, Doctor of Philosophical Sciences, Professor, Graduate of the Faculty of Philosophy of the Leningrad State University. Since 1989 he taught at the Chechen-Ingush State University, at the same time he was engaged in scientific work. AT different years worked as vice-rector of the Chechen State University, and since 2010 he has been the head of the Institute of Chechen and General Philology at the Chechen State University. Published a large number of works of Kerimov on the problems of culture, Islam and philosophy.

Timur Uzhakhov: Associate Professor of the Department of Pedagogy and Psychology Minazova Venera Magomedovna told us about how the teaching community of the university lives.

Venera Minazova: When I went to work at the university, it was called the Chechen-Ingush State University, I have been working for 26 years and have experienced all the hardships and joys. There was such a gap when we worked without wages when we worked in very difficult conditions, and there was an opportunity to go to another region, to another country, which some colleagues did, but I do not regret that I stayed. This is my homeland, this is my native university.

Vahid Ustarkhanov: For me, the first impression is, of course, my faculty. Of course, something new always has to be probed, a different system of education. I was pleasantly surprised, I lived most of my life in Siberia and when I returned home, I had my own stereotypes, but when I came to the university, I realized that you can get a very good education, although many people think that this is not so. A very good teaching staff, a very good dean of our faculty, the rector's office - these are people who root for the students.

Full version available in audio format

Date of registration of the operator in the register: 01.06.2010

Grounds for entering the operator in the register (order number): 348

Operator location address: 364093, Chechen Republic, Grozny, 32, st. A. Sheripova

Start date of personal data processing: 03.07.2002

Subjects of the Russian Federation on the territory of which the processing of personal data takes place: Chechen Republic

Purpose of personal data processing: Personnel and accounting, internal document flow of a legal entity, processing of written requests from individuals, acceptance of applicants' documents, archive maintenance. Provision of services in the field higher education, internal use, international student exchange.

Description of the measures provided for by Art. 18.1 and 19 of the Law: When processing personal data, organizational and technical measures are applied: compliance with the provisions of the Labor Code of the Russian Federation, Federal Law "on personal data" dated July 27, 2006 No. 152-FZ. Technical measures: assignment of personal passwords for each workplace, anti-virus protection of Kaspersky Endpoint Security installed. Security class set information system 3. Control over the security of personal data, ensuring the availability of personal data, protecting the information system, its means, communication and data transmission systems, identifying incidents that may lead to failures or disruption of the information system and the emergence of threats to the security of personal data, and responding to them , information system configuration management and personal data protection system. There is a video surveillance system and round-the-clock security posts for storing personal files of employees and personal data of individuals, lockable metal cabinets are installed.

Categories of personal data: surname, name, patronymic, year of birth, month of birth, date of birth, place of birth, address, marital status, social status, property status, education, profession, income, Profession, income, state of health, as well as: gender, citizenship, knowledge of a foreign language advanced training or the availability of special knowledge, general length of service, information on admissions, transfers and dismissals at previous jobs, wages, marital status, family composition, place of work or study of family members, passport series, date and place of issue, address of residence, date of registration at the place of residence, telephone number, TIN, number of insurance certificate of state pension insurance, information included in the work book, information on military registration, photo.

Categories of subjects whose personal data are processed: Teachers, students, employees, housekeeping services and security, temporarily hired employees, relatives of employees, dismissed.

List of actions with personal data: Collection, recording, systematization, accumulation, storage, clarification, use, depersonalization, deletion, destruction.

Processing of personal data: mixed, with transmission over the internal network of a legal entity, with transmission over the Internet

Legal basis for the processing of personal data: Art. 23, 24 of the Constitution Russian Federation, Art. 85-90 of the Labor Code of the Russian Federation, Art. Art. 2, 5, 6, 7, 9, 18-22 of the Federal Law "On Personal Data" dated July 27, 2006 No. 152-FZ, Charter of the Chechen State University (approved on May 21, 2016), Regulations on the processing and protection of personal data at Chechen State University, license No. 1398 issued by the Federal Service for Supervision in Education and Science.

Availability of cross-border transmission: No

Database location details: Russia

On February 7, 1938, on the basis of small preparatory pedagogical courses, the Chechen-Ingush Teachers' Institute was opened with a two-year training period, and from September 1, 1938, the Chechen-Ingush State Pedagogical Institute with a four-year training period. The Institute had three faculties: philological, historical and physical and mathematical. A little later, the Faculty of Natural Geography was added to them. The first graduation of specialists from the young university was 79 people.

In 1940, the structure of ChIGPI already included 8 departments (physics, mathematics, pedagogy and psychology, languages, literature, Marxism and Leninism, world history, history of the peoples of the USSR), 6 classrooms, other auxiliary institutions: classrooms for school hygiene, military training, a gym, a physical laboratory, a library.

Along with the solution of the main task - the training of highly qualified pedagogical personnel - scientific and scientific-methodical work was started at the departments of the institute. At its origins were A.I. Boyarchuk, T.T. Malsagova, F.G. Petrash, S.K. Shenets and other university professors.

The pre-war period in the activities of ChIGPI was characterized by organizational development. Its structure was improved and developed, the material base was strengthened, the enrollment of students increased, and scientific work. Conducted joint research with the Republican Research Institute of History, Sociology and Philology.

In 1958, the Faculty of Pedagogy and Methods of Primary Education was opened at the Institute, in 1960 - the Faculty of Natural Geography, in 1962 - the Faculty of Foreign Languages. Teachers were trained at all faculties high school in 19 specialties, including teachers mother tongue and literature. The contingent of students constantly increased. In 1956 there were a little over 1000 students, in 1962 - 3218. In 1963 the number of students increased to 4750

Evgeniy Fyodorovich Bykov was the first to start the difficult path to science and education at the head of the Grozny Teachers' Institute. In 1938, Evgeny Fedorovich was appointed director of the Grozny Pedagogical Institute. E.F. Bykov led it until 1945. Subsequently, in different periods, the university was headed by:

1945-1951 - Alexander Petrovich Efleev.

1951-1959 - Ph.D. Khabech Aslancherievich Pchentleshev

1960 -1963 - P.M. Stepanov.

1963-1966 - Doctor of History Nikolai Pavlovich Gritsenko.

1966-1970 Viktor Isaakovich Sinelnikov.

1970-1986 - Doctor of Economics Mikhail Pavlovich Pavlov

1986-1991 - Ph.D. Viktor Abramovich Kan-Kalik

1992-1994 - Doctor of Physics and Mathematics n. Mukhadi Shahidovich Israilov.

1995,2000-2006 - Doctor of Physical and Mathematical Sciences Adnan Daguevich Khamzaev.

1996 Ph.D. Ibragim Uzumkhadzhievich Israilov.

1996-1999 - Doctor of Physics and Mathematics District Committee Khasimkhanovich Dadashev.

2006-2008 - Ph.D. Anzor Akhmedovich Muzaev.

2008-present Ph.D. Zaurbek Aslanbekovich Saidov.

In 1972, the Chechen-Ingush State Pedagogical Institute was transformed into the Chechen-Ingush State University (CIGU), becoming the fifty-sixth university in the USSR.

The research sector coordinated the extensive and diverse connections of CHGU with enterprises and organizations of Chechen-Ingushetia, other republics, territories and regions of the country. A number of educational and scientific divisions of the university had long-term agreements on creative collaboration with the labor collectives of plants and factories.

Developing and strengthening our own base for research work, the university actively influenced the formation of scientific personnel in various fields of the national economy, science and culture of the Republic. Suffice it to say that during the existence of CHGU more than three hundred specialists received within its walls degrees and titles.

In any school, vocational school of the Chechen Republic, you can meet university graduates. They continue to educate and educate the younger generation.

From the day of its foundation, our university has been and remains the most important center of the socio-political life of the Republic, a forge of specialists with good professional knowledge, skills of organizational and educational work.

Since the formation of CHIGU in 1972, new faculties and departments have been opened at the university, new educational buildings, student dormitories have been built.

In the second half of the 80s of the last century, such specialties in demand in the republic as physical electronics, medicine, jurisprudence, acting, journalism, microbiology were opened.

In the period from 1994 to 2000, as a result of two military campaigns in Chechnya, the state university suffered significant damage. Educational buildings, dormitories were turned into ruins, libraries, a botanical garden, unique scientific laboratories, educational and production bases, a computer center, and a printing house were destroyed. However, having resumed its activities in April 2000, the staff of the Chechen State University not only restored the pre-war level material base, but also reached new frontiers.

A Center for Collective Use equipped with modern scientific equipment has been created. The "technopark" is functioning. The construction of a student campus that meets all international standards is underway. The total area allocated for construction is 100 hectares.

Great attention is paid to personnel training. Graduates of leading universities in Germany and Great Britain, sent there under the program of the Head and Government of the Chechen Republic for training young specialists abroad, return to the university and work in various positions.

Today, the university has 81 departments that fully provide educational process. About 1100 teachers work. The structure of the university includes 10 faculties and 3 institutes, where about 17 thousand students study. There is also an institute of additional professional education.