<p>What if the university has multiple campuses? Do you only consider the most populated campus or the university as a whole?</p>
<p>I read somewhere that China Central Radio and Television University has 850k undergrads...</p>
<p>What if the university has multiple campuses? Do you only consider the most populated campus or the university as a whole?</p>
<p>I read somewhere that China Central Radio and Television University has 850k undergrads...</p>
<p>I do know that the largest (the last time I read it) was the University of South Africa at Johannesburg, which had over 200k undergraduates.
What city is CCRTU located?</p>
<p>The National Autonomous University of Mexico, according to 1999-2000 figures from the January-March 2004 issue of Mexico's Journal of Higher Education, had about 255,000 students in the system, which includes high schools. The central campus itself, University City, has about 160,000 bachelor's/master's/doctorate students (according to Wikipedia, which pushes up the 1999-2000 total about what you would expect over a six year period of increased demand). </p>
<p>Wikipedia has a listing from 1996 of the largest universities in the world, but I don't think these are for single campuses, these are entire systems...here's the link: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mega_university%5B/url%5D">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mega_university</a>.</p>
<p>University of Toronto.....just about 60,000 undergraduates ALONE.</p>
<p>Damn, these schools make UCB/UCLA look like LACs...</p>
<p>when you read things like that university in mexico having 200,000 students, you have to realize its the same as saying the university of california has 150,000 undergrads. every satellite campus is part of the same university.</p>
<p>guhhhh.... Please stop using Wades Glides. It gave me such a headache I couldn't go through with reading the rest of the posts. It's out dated and YOU FAIL in terms of keeping with the wishes of the Chinese gov't and citizens to write their language properly. Thank you for your compliance.</p>
<p><strong><em>takes 5 bottles of ibuprofen</em></strong>*
Good thing I just ate lunch.</p>
<p>Anadolu University in Turkey has a layout similar to Rutgers (4 campuses in the same town) with a total enrollment of over 600,000 students.
Wade-Giles is unfortunately the main system of romanization used in Taiwan, and to make matters worse Pinyin is also common; there is no standard in publications, so maps can have five different names for the same road. It is a very confusing and illogical system (T'ai vs Tai, who could see that in a hurry) and does not accurately represent the Chinese sounds. Yale is not much better.</p>
<p>Pinyin all the way.</p>