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Where will your journey take the world?

Here at ÐÔÓûÉç, you'll master your fields of study, make lifelong friends, explore an environment like no other and contribute to research that will change lives everywhere.

Welcome to life at the top.

 

Apply for admission online.
We'll guide you through it, step by step.

Admissions counselors can answer
many of your questions about ÐÔÓûÉç.

Schedule a campus visit or
take a virtual tour.

From accounting to Yup’ik language and culture.

There’s a program for you here, and myriad minors, majors, degrees and certificates for you to earn. Perform research alongside academic powerhouses. Find and explore your voice in the arts. Make even more of your military service. Here’s where your intellectual journey gets good:

A ÐÔÓûÉç research assistant professor collecting snow samples.
A group of ÐÔÓûÉç students pose outside the Wood Center

A place to find yourself.

As you meet unique people across this landscape, you’ll learn to see everything differently.

Include everyone in the journey.

Not everyone’s support system looks the same. Yours may be family or friends. It may not look anything like your classmate’s support system either, and that’s OK. That’s why ÐÔÓûÉç provides students — and their support systems — with what’s needed for success.

ÐÔÓûÉç Students gather at a picnic table outside the Wood Center on the Fairbanks Troth Yeddha' campus

What — and who — we’re made of

Where you'll learn.

Wilderness surrounds Fairbanks, yet highways, airlines, fiber and satellites firmly connect it to the world. So you can attend and earn your degree online from anywhere.

In Fairbanks, you’ll find the Troth Yeddha’ Campus, the ÐÔÓûÉç Community and Technical College and the Interior Alaska Campus. Beyond, regional campuses serve Kotzebue, Bethel, Nome and Dillingham. Research sites can take you to Kodiak in the south, Juneau in the east and Toolik Lake above the Arctic Circle.

Static graphic map of Alaska showing ÐÔÓûÉç campus locations

 

News and events

Aurora magazine
  • Kendall Kramer

    Aurora magazine: Summer 2025

    Read about champion skier and runner Kendall Kramer, alumni award recipients Alan Straub and Wayne Donaldson, another successful Giving Day, ÐÔÓûÉç's high-achieving students, and more.

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News
  • Two heavily clothed people kneel on wet tundra with instruments and notepads.

    Rainfall, melting permafrost change Interior Alaska stream systems

    June 13, 2025

    The aquatic chemistry and flow rates in Interior Alaska's streams are shifting in response to thawing permafrost and increased rainfall, a new study reports. The study authors found that groundwater makes up a greater portion of streamflow in areas with less permafrost.

  • Two photos are stacked. The top photo is in color and shows two men standing in front of grain that is about 2 feet tall. The lower black and white photo shows a group of men in a field with a measuring stick showing shoulder-height grain.

    Grain at the Fairbanks Experiment Farm shrank over the past century

    June 13, 2025

    Grain grown on ÐÔÓûÉç' experiment farm was much taller in 1916 than 2024. Jakir Hasan has a simple explanation. "People were a bit shorter," he joked. Hasan, a research assistant professor of plant genetics at ÐÔÓûÉç's Institute of Agriculture, Natural Resources and Extension, said the shift to shorter grain actually resulted from breeding efforts that began in the mid-20th century.

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Land acknowledgment

We acknowledge the Alaska Native nations on whose ancestral lands our campuses reside.
In Fairbanks, our Troth Yeddha’ campus is located on the ancestral lands
of the Dena people of the lower Tanana River.