City University London
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This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2011) |
| City University London | |
|---|---|
| Motto | To serve mankind |
| Established | 1966 – gained University Status by Royal Charter 1894 – Northampton |
| Endowment | £40.1 million[1] |
| Chancellor | The Lord Mayor of the City of London ex officio |
| Vice-Chancellor | Professor Paul Curran |
| Students | 21,410[2] |
| Undergraduates | 14,530[2] |
| Postgraduates | 6,880[2] |
| Location | London, United Kingdom Coordinates: 51°31′38″N 0°06′09″W / 51.527264°N 0.10247°W |
| Colours | Red and White |
| Affiliations | Association of MBAs EQUIS Universities UK |
| Website | www.city.ac.uk |
City University London (informally City University or City) is a public research university located in London, United Kingdom. It was founded in 1894 as the Northampton Institute and became a university in 1966, when it adopted its present name.
City University has its main campus in the Islington area of Central London, with additional campuses in the City of London and the Holborn, Smithfield and Whitechapel areas of London. It is organised into seven Schools, within which there are around 40 academic departments and centres.[3]
City University has over 100 years of research experience and has been consistently highly ranked for its graduate employability and graduate salaries.[4] City's mission, as outlined in its Strategy, is to "lead London in education, research and knowledge transfer for businesses and the professions".[5] It had a total income of £178.5 million in 2009/10, of which £8 million was from research grants and contracts.[6] It is ranked 356th in the world in the 2011 QS World University Rankings.[6][7]
City University is a member of the Association of MBAs, EQUIS and Universities UK.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Origins
City University traces its origin to the Northampton Institute, established in 1894, and named after the Marquess of Northampton, who donated the land on which the Institute was built, between Northampton Square and St John Street in Islington. The Institute was established to provide for the education and welfare of the local population. It was constituted under the City of London Parochial Charities Act (1883), with the objective of "the promotion of the industrial skill, general knowledge, health and well-being of young men and women belonging to the poorer classes".[8]
Originally there were six departments at the Institute:
- Applied Physics and Electrical Engineering
- Artistic Crafts
- Domestic Economy and Women's Trades
- Electro-Chemistry
- Horology (the science of time and art of clock-making)
- Mechanical Engineering and Metal Trades
[edit] 20th century
In 1903–04 a separate Technical Optics department was established. In 1909 the first students qualified for University of London BSc degrees in Engineering as internal students.[8] Since 1909 the Institute had been involved in aeronautics education, and in 2009 the School of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences celebrated the centenary of aeronautics at City.[9] In 1908 the Institute was used for the Olympic games.[8] Boxing took place at the Institute.[10]
The Institute was designated a "College of Advanced Technology" in 1957.[8]
In 1961 the Institute's involvement in Information Science began with the introduction of a course on "Collecting and Communicating Scientific Knowledge". In 1966 City received its Royal Charter, becoming The City University to reflect the institution's close links with the City of London.[11] In 1971 the Apollo 15 astronauts visited City University and presented the Vice-Chancellor, Professor Tait, with a piece of heat shield from the Apollo 15 rocket.[12]
In October 1995 it was announced that City University would merge with both the St Bartholomew School of Nursing & Midwifery and the Charterhouse College of Radiography, doubling the number of students in City's Institute of Health Sciences to around 2,500.[13]
[edit] 21st century
City University formed a strategic alliance with Queen Mary, University of London in April 2001.[14] In May 2001, a major fire in the College Building gutted the fourth floor offices and roof.[15] In August 2001 City University and the Inns of Court School of Law agreed to merge.[16] Following a donation from Sir John Cass's Foundation, a multi-million pound building was built at 106 Bunhill Row for the Cass Business School.[17] A new Research Centre for Energy and the Environment was completed in 2001/02. Construction of the Fight for Sight Optometry Clinic – a new £5m facility dedicated to optometry teaching, clinical practice and research.
A £23m landmark building to house the School of Social Sciences and the Department of Language and Communication Science opened in 2004. In January 2006, City University announced that the Cass Business School would be opening a new campus in Canary Wharf's One Canada Square, specialised in courses designed for senior managers.[18] The reconstruction and redevelopment of the University's Grade II listed College Building (following the fire in 2001) was completed in July 2006. It houses a new high-tech Human Computer Interaction Design lab, supported by The Vodafone UK Foundation. In 2006, the Department of Radiography gained a brand-new purpose-built clinical skills suite.
In 2007 the School of Arts received a £10m building refurbishment. The project ran until autumn 2008 and saw the complete redevelopment of parts of the College Building. A new Students' Union venue opened in October 2008 called TEN squared. It provides a hub to socialise in during the day between lectures and hosts a wide range of evening entertainment including club nights, society events and quiz nights. In September 2007 many classrooms were installed with cutting edge classroom technology including touch-screen control, video conferencing software and high-quality audio to increase the focus of student generated input.
In January 2010, a premises was shared with UEA London, following City University's partnership with INTO. Since then City University has resumed its own International Foundation Program to prepare students for their pre-university year. In April 2011, it was announced that the current Resident Halls and Saddler's Sports Centre will be closed and demolished for rebuilding in June 2011. It is proposed that the new Resident Halls and Sports Centre will be re-opened in September 2013. In 2011, the University published a Vision for 2016 after consultation with its staff, students, alumni and Council. Its vision for 2016 is to be a “leading global University committed to academic excellence, focused on business and the professions and located in the heart of London. We are proud of the quality of our education, research and enterprise and are ranked within the top 2% of universities in the world.” A strategic plan to deliver the vision is currently in development.
[edit] Campus
City University has sites throughout London,[19] with the main campus located at Northampton Square in Islington.
Other academic sites are:
- Holborn - City Law School (incorporating Inns of Court School of Law)
- City of London - Sir John Cass Business School
- Middlesex Street, London - INTO City
The School of Health Sciences, is geographically the largest school with sites in:
- Northampton Square
- Old Street area - Fight for Sight Optometry Clinic
- Goswell Road - Radiography
- Smithfield and Whitechapel - Nursing and Midwifery
[edit] Organisation and administration
The Chancellor of City University is the Lord Mayor of the City of London ex officio. The day-to-day running of the university is the responsibility of the Vice-Chancellor. The current Vice-Chancellor is Professor Paul Curran.
[edit] Schools
City University is organised into seven schools:
- City Law School, incorporating Inns of Court School of Law
- School of Community and Health Sciences, incorporating St Bartholomew School of Nursing & Midwifery
- School of Arts, including the Department of Journalism
- School of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences
- Sir John Cass Business School
- School of Informatics
- School of Social Sciences
[edit] Finances
In the financial year ended 31 July 2010, City University had a total income (including share of joint ventures) of £178.5 million (2008/09 – £174.4 million) and total expenditure of £177.27 million (2008/09 – £178.82 million).[20] Key sources of income included £42.51 million from Funding Council grants (2008/09 – £39.52 million), £112.43 million from tuition fees and education contracts (2008/09 – £104.39 million), £8.0 million from research grants and contracts (2008/09 – £9.29 million), £514,000 from endowment and investment income (2008/09 – £1.83 million) and £15.34 million from other income (2008/09 – £19.37 million).[20] During the 2009/10 financial year City University had a capital expenditure of £16.55 million (2008/09 – £16.13 million).[20]
At year end City University had reserves and endowments of £112.89 million (2008/09 – £110.05 million) and total net assets of £152.84 million (2008/09 – £147.27 million).[20]
[edit] Academics
[edit] Courses
City University offers Bachelor's, Master's, and Doctoral degrees as well as certificates and diplomas at both undergraduate and postgraduate level. More than two thirds of City's programmes are recognised by the appropriate professional bodies such as the BCS, BPS, CILIP, ICE, RICS, HPC etc. in recognition of the high standards of relevance to the professions. The University also has an online careers network where over 2,000 former students offer practical help to current students.[21]
The City Law School offers courses for undergraduates, postgraduates and professional courses leading to qualification as a solicitor or barrister, as well as continuing professional development. Its Legal Practice Course has the highest quality rating from the Solicitors Regulation Authority.[22]
Since 1976 City has been home to a centre for the education of journalists, the highly-regarded Department of Journalism.[23] It has the UK's first chair in reporting, the Anthony Sampson professorship.
The Department of Radiography (part of the School of Community and Health Sciences) offers two radiography degrees, the BSc (Hons) Radiography (Diagnostic Imaging) and BSc (Hons) Radiography (Radiotherapy and Oncology), both of which are recognised by the Health Professions Council (HPC).
[edit] Rankings
In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE), City University rose to 45th place, up 14 since the previous RAE in 2001 when it was ranked at 59, according to Times Higher Education analysis of HEFCE's (Higher Education Funding Council for England) RAE data, from 159 universities or colleges.[24]
| 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Times Good University Guide | 47th | 49th[25] | 49th[26] | 50th | 40th=[27] | 53rd[28] | 56th | 55th[29] |
| Guardian University Guide | 22nd[30] | 24th[31] | 21st[32] | 26th[33] | 28th[34] | 22nd | 21st | |
| The Complete University Guide | 41st[35] | 47th[36] | 44th[37] | 46th[38] | 48th[39] | |||
| The Daily Telegraph | 48th | |||||||
| Sunday Times University Guide | 45th | 46th | 51st[25] | 47th[25] | 50th[40] | 48th[40] | 50th[41] |
| 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Times Good University Guide | 10th[26] | 13th | 5 th[27] | ||
| Guardian University Guide | 10th[31] | 11th[32] | 11th[33] | 6 th[34] | |
| The Complete University Guide | 10th[37] | 13th[38] | 5 th[39] |
| 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| QS World University Rankings | 356[42] | 481[43] | |
| Times Higher Education World University Rankings | 332[44] |
[edit] Partnerships and collaborations
[edit] CETL
Queen Mary, University of London and City University were jointly awarded Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning (CETL) status by the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) in recognition of their work in skills training for 3,000 students across six healthcare professions.[45]
[edit] City of London
City University has excellent links with businesses in the City of London.[46] City University has also joined forces with other universities such as Queen Mary and the Institute of Education (both part of the University of London) with which it jointly delivers several leading degree programmes.
[edit] Hanover Research
In 2008, City University became the first UK member of Hanover Research, a strategic research firm based in Washington DC that serves more than 17 industries and hundreds of American higher education institutions.
[edit] LCACE
London Centre for Arts and Cultural Exchange is a consortium of nine universities. It was established in 2004 to foster collaboration and to promote and support the exchange of knowledge between the consortium’s partners and London’s arts and cultural sectors. The nine institutions involved are: University of the Arts London; Birkbeck, University of London; City University London; The Courtauld Institute of Art; Goldsmiths, University of London; Guildhall School of Music & Drama; King’s College London; Queen Mary, University of London and Royal Holloway, University of London.
[edit] Simfonec
Simfonec is a collaborative Science Enterprise Centre (SEC) for the exploitation and transfer of knowledge, ideas and resources among three key sectors – academic, financial and Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs). Simfonec encourages the development of an entrepreneurial outlook amongst researchers in science and technology and orchestrates the delivery of science ideas to the commercial marketplace. It is a partnership between four of London universities (Royal Veterinary College, King's College London, Queen Mary, University of London and City University). It was launched in March 2003 by the Department of Trade and Industry.
[edit] Willis Research Network
In September 2006, City University joined the Willis Research Network (WRN), a major, long-term partnership between leading international scientific institutions (including the universities of Bristol, Cambridge, Durham and Imperial College London) and the global insurance broker, Willis Group Holdings. The purpose of the network is to evaluate the frequency, severity and impact of catastrophes such as hurricanes, earthquakes, floods and terrorism.
[edit] WC2 University Network
City University is a founding member of the WC2 University Network, a network of universities developed with the goal of bringing together leading universities located in the heart of major world cities in order to address cultural, environmental and political issues of common interest to world cities and their universities.[47] In addition to City University, the founding members of WC2 members are: City University of New York, Technische Universitat Berlin, Universidade de São Paulo, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Saint Petersburg State Polytechnical University, Politecnico di Milano, Seoul National University, University of Delhi, Northeastern University Boston and Tongji University.
[edit] UCL Partners
City University has joined the executive group of UCL Partners, one of five accredited academic health science groups in the UK. City was invited to join the partnership in recognition of its expertise in nursing, allied health, health services research and evaluation and health management.[48]
[edit] Spin-out companies
[edit] City Technology plc
City University is the birthplace of City Technology plc, which is the world's leading manufacturer of fuel-cell gas sensors used in worker safety, automotive, medical and emissions monitoring applications. City Technology plc was previously listed on the London Stock Exchange but was acquired by Honeywell in March 2006.
[edit] Student life
[edit] Students' Union
The City University Students' Union is run primarily by students through elected Sabbatical Officers, an Executive Committee and a Union Council, with oversight by a Trustee Board.[49] The Students' Union runs Ten², a venue in Northampton Square which includes a cafe, bar and events spaces.[50]
[edit] Other
For a number of years, City University students have taken part in the annual Lord Mayor's Show, representing the university in one of the country's largest and liveliest parades.
[edit] Notable people
[edit] Notable alumni
[edit] Arts, science and academia
- L. Bruce Archer – British mechanical engineer and Professor of Design Research at the Royal College of Art
- John Brignell – former professor of Industrial Instrumentation, science author
- Andrea Christofidou – senior lecturer in philosophy, University of Oxford
- George Daniels – Horologist, regarded as the greatest watchmaker of modern times and inventor of co-axial escapement
- Jerry Fishenden – technologist, currently National Technology Officer for the UK
- Julia Gomelskaya – Ukrainian contemporary music composer, professor of Odessa State Music Academy in Ukraine
- David Hirsh – Academic and sociologist
- Muhammad Iqbal – Muslim poet, philosopher, and politician
- John Loder – sound engineer, record producer and founder of Southern Studios, as well as a former member of EXIT
- Sharon Maguire – director of Bridget Jones's Diary
- Rhodri Marsden – Journalist, musician and blogger; columnist for The Independent
- Robin Milner – Computer Scientist and recipient of the 1991 ACM Turing Award
- Ebrahim Moosa – Associate Professor of Islamic Studies and Director of the Center for Study of Muslim Networks at Duke University
- John Palmer – instrumental and electroacustic music composer
- Ziauddin Sardar – Academic and scholar of Islamic issues, Commissioner of the Equality and Human Rights Commission
[edit] Government, politics and society
- Clement Attlee – Labour Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1945 to 1951
- Herbert Henry Asquith – Liberal Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1908 to 1916
- Roderic Bowen – Welsh Liberal Party politician
- Ali Dizaei – Metropolitan Police
- Sir James Dutton – Royal Marine general and former deputy commander of the International Security Assistance Force
- Jody Dunn – Liberal Democrat politician, and a barrister specialising in family law
- Chloe Fox – Australian politician, Labor MP for the South Australian electoral district of Bright
- James Hart – Commissioner of the City of London Police
- David Heath – Politician and Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament for Somerton and Frome
- Muhammad Ali Jinnah – founder of Pakistan, first Governor-General of Pakistan
- Syed Kamall – Conservative Party politician and Member of the European Parliament for the London European Parliament constituency
- David Lammy – Labour MP for Tottenham
- Liu Mingkang – Chinese Politician and Businessman, current Chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, former Vice-Governor of the China Development Bank
- Jawaharlal Nehru – First Prime Minister of the Republic of India
- Aris Spiliotopoulos – Minister of Greek Tourism
- Ivy Williams – First woman to be called to the English bar
[edit] Business and finance
- Brendan Barber[citation needed] – General Secretary of the Trades Union Congress
- Jonathan Breeze[citation needed] – Founder and CEO of Jet Republic, private jet airline company in Europe
- William Castell[citation needed] – Chairman of the Wellcome Trust and a Director of General Electric and BP, former CEO of Amersham plc
- Rod Clarke – Former Chief Engineer, Pickering Nuclear Generating Station, Ontario, Canada; Writer and engineering historian
- Peter Cullum – British entrepreneur
- David Essex – Chairman of Bemrose Group
- James J. Greco – CEO of Bruegger's Enterprises Inc.
- Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou – Founder of easyGroup
- Bob Kelly – CEO of Bank of New York Mellon, former CFO of Mellon Financial Corporation and Wachovia Corporation
- Muhtar Kent – CEO of The Coca-Cola Company. Formerly, President and COO of Coca-Cola International and Executive Vice President of The Coca-Cola Company
- Dick Olver – Chairman of BAE Systems, member of the Board of Directors at Reuters
- Syed Ali Raza – President and Chairman of the National Bank of Pakistan
- Durmuş Yılmaz – Governor of the Central Bank of Turkey
- Brian Wynter[citation needed] – Governor of the Bank of Jamaica
- David Woodward[citation needed] – CEO, Aabar Petroleum Investments Company (Aabar), former President of BP Azerbaijan
- Kiran Rao[citation needed] – Executive Vice-President, marketing and contracts, for European plane-maker Airbus SAS
[edit] Media and entertainment
- Joanna Blythman[citation needed] – Non-fiction writer, Britain's leading investigative food journalist
- Ellie Crisell[citation needed] – BBC Presenter
- Imogen Edwards-Jones[citation needed] – Novelist
- Michael Fish – BBC weatherman
- Adam Fleming – CBBC reporter
- Alex Graham – Chairman of PACT
- Gillian Joseph – Sky News Presenter
- Kirsty Lang – BBC Presenter and journalist
- Ellie Levenson – Freelance Journalist and Author
- William Lewis – Journalist and editor of the Daily Telegraph
- Donal MacIntyre – Investigative journalist
- Sharon Maguire – Writer and Director, directed Bridget Jones's Diary
- Rhodri Marsden – Journalist, musician and blogger; columnist for The Independent
- Sharon Mascall – Journalist, broadcaster and writer; lecturer at the University of South Australia
- Dermot Murnaghan – Presenter on Sky News
- Tiff Needell – Grand Prix driver, Presenter of Fifth Gear on Five
- Raj Persaud – British consultant psychiatrist, broadcaster, and author on psychiatry
- Linda Papadopoulos – Psychologist, appearing occasionally on TV
- Richard Preston – Novelist
- Sophie Raworth – Newsreader, presenter on BBC One O'Clock News
- Joel Rubin[citation needed] – World-renown klezmer clarinetist
- Ian Saville[citation needed] – British magician
- Barbara Serra[citation needed] – News presenter for Al Jazeera from London
- Sarah Walker, BBC Radio 3 presenter
[edit] Notable faculty and staff
- Jamal Nazrul Islam – Eminent, Physicist, Mathematician, Cosmologist, Astronomer
- Roy Greenslade – Journalist
- Steven Haberman – professor of Actuarial science at City University
- David Leigh – Journalist
- Penny Marshall (UK journalist) – Journalist
- David Marks – Psychologist
- Stewart Purvis – Broadcaster
- Denis Smalley – Composer
- Kevin Smith – Chartered Engineer; Notable leader in the regeneration of the Great Eastern Hotel, London
- Bill Thompson (technology writer) – Journalist
- David Willets – Conservative Member of Parliament for Havant; Shadow Secretary of State for Education and Skills
[edit] Vice-Chancellors
- 1966–1974: Sir James Sharp Tait
- 1974–1978: Edward W. Parkes
- 1978–1998: Professor Raoul N. Franklin
- 1998–2007: Professor David Rhind
- 2007–2009: Professor Malcolm Gillies
- 2009–2010: Professor Julius Weinberg (acting)
- 2010–present: Professor Paul Curran
[edit] References
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This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (August 2007) |
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- ^ 1908 Summer Olympics official report. p 33.
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- ^ a b "Complete University Guide 2010". The Independent. UK. http://www.thecompleteuniversityguide.co.uk/single.htm?ipg=8726. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
- ^ a b "Complete University Guide 2009". The Independent. UK. http://www.thecompleteuniversityguide.co.uk/single.htm?ipg=6524. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
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- ^ http://www.topuniversities.com/university-rankings
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- ^ http://www.city.ac.uk/news/2010/oct/city-achieves-global-recognition-in-the-world-university-rankings
- ^ "CETL – Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning". Queen Mary University of London. http://www.cetl.org.uk/cetl_background.php. Retrieved 2009-02-25.
- ^ "Links with businesses". QAA. 2005-05-24. http://www.qaa.ac.uk/reviews/reports/subjectlevel/q96_94_textonly.htm. Retrieved 2007-12-21.
- ^ wc2-university-network
- ^ http://www.city.ac.uk/news/2011/august/city-university-london-joins-leading-health-research-partnership
- ^ "About The Students' Union". City University London. http://www.city.ac.uk/studentcentre/studentsunion/about_the_su.html. Retrieved 24 March 2011.
- ^ "The Venue – Ten²". City University London. http://www.city.ac.uk/studentcentre/studentsunion/ten-squared.html. Retrieved 24 March 2011.
[edit] External links
- City University London
- City University London Students Union
- Lists of Northampton Polytechnic Institute students
- List of Northampton Polytechnic Institute military personnel,1914–1918
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