Puneet Varma (Editor)

University of Cumbria

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Type
  
Public

Vice-Chancellor
  
Julie Mennell

Total enrollment
  
13,105 (2008)

Phone
  
+44 1228 616234

Affiliation
  
Cathedrals Group

Established
  
1 August 2007

Students
  
8,790 (2015/16)

Undergraduate tuition and fees
  
9,250 GBP (2017)

Founded
  
1 August 2007

Former names
  
Charlotte Mason College, St Martin's College, Cumbria Institute of the Arts

Chancellor
  
The Rt Hon John Sentamu, Archbishop of York

Address
  
Fusehill St, Carlisle CA1 2HH, UK

Subsidiaries
  
University of Cumbria, Brampton Road

Notable alumni
  
Helen Skelton, Keith Tyson, Sheila Fell, Margaret Harrison, Charlie Hunnam

Similar
  
University of Cumbria - Brampton, York St John University, University of Central Lancashire, University of Chester, Edge Hill University

Profiles

The University of Cumbria is a public university in Cumbria. Its headquarters are in Carlisle. Other major campuses are at Lancaster, Ambleside, and London. It was established in 2007, following the merger of St Martin's College, the Cumbria Institute of the Arts and the Cumbrian campuses of the University of Central Lancashire. Its roots extend back to the "Society for the Encouragement of Fine Arts" established in 1822 and Charlotte Mason teacher training college in the 1890s.

Contents

The university is continuing to grow, geographically as well as in academic scope.

History

The University of Cumbria was formed by the merger of St Martin's College, Lancaster, the Cumbria Institute of the Arts (formerly Cumbria College of Art & Design), and the Cumbrian campuses of the University of Central Lancashire on 1 August 2007. These institutions formerly ran degree programmes accredited by Lancaster University and the University of Central Lancashire. In order to facilitate the change, St Martin's College applied for independent degree-awarding powers in March 2005 and was successful in July 2006 after nine months of scrutiny by the Quality Assurance Agency. In January 2007 official university status was granted by the Privy Council.

Campuses

The university is based upon the findings of a report by Sir Martin Harris. This plan envisaged a university based upon a "distributed learning network", so that teaching will take place both at the University's main campuses, and at colleges of further education around the county. This solved a problem for remote areas that did not previously have direct access to higher education.

The headquarters of the university are in Carlisle. Its other major campuses are at Ambleside, Lancaster (formerly St Martin's College) and it has classrooms and open workspace in the "Energus" facility in Blackwood Road, Lillyhall, Workington. The university previously also had sites in Penrith (formerly University of Central Lancashire in Cumbria and before that Newton Rigg Agricultural College) and London. Newton Rigg has since been transferred to Askham Bryan College and the Tower Hamlets provision has moved to East India Dock Road. Furness College in Barrow-in-Furness has developed close links with the university and they share some facilities.

Carlisle campus, Fusehill Street

The site started its life as The Carlisle Union Workhouse in 1863. During the First World War, from October 1917 to June 1919, the buildings were used as a military hospital, in which time nearly 10,000 soldiers were treated. In 1938, it was converted into a municipal hospital, then a military hospital once more during the Second World War, after which it became City General Hospital until it closed in 1999.

Carlisle campus, Brampton Road

The Brampton Road campus was formerly the Cumbria Institute of the Arts, founded in October 1822 as the "Society for the Encouragement of the Arts", later Carlisle Art College and College of Art and Design.

The Brampton Road campus is now home to the university's Institute of the Arts, with over 1000 full-time arts students.

Lancaster campus, Bowerham Road

The site was formerly Bowerham Barracks, the depot of the King's Own Royal Regiment (Lancaster). In 1962 it became a teaching college.

From the start, the college planned to teach degrees as well as Certificates of Education and pioneered the four year BA Hons with qualified teacher status. By 1966 the college was teaching PGCE students.

The college then developed courses in nursing and later radiography, occupational health, social work and continuing professional development courses for health professionals. Strong relationships were forged with NHS trust training departments.

The college developed further courses in humanities, arts and sport, and a mini building boom ensued in the late 1990s with the development of the Sports Centre, Humanities building, Hugh Pollard Lecture Theatre, as well as student accommodation.

Ambleside

On 1 December 2009 it was announced that the Ambleside campus would be "mothballed" at the end of July 2010, and would no longer take new undergraduate students. A protest was held on 1 December 2009 by the student body. This was in spite of support pledged from Tim Farron MP for the campus and its students. The timing of the closure had led many to believe that the decision had been made some time ago.

In July 2011, the university announced a plan to reopen the campus and increase student numbers at the Ambleside campus and this began in 2014. Ambleside continues to host courses in outdoor studies, business, leadership and sustainability.

Penrith

Degree programmes including Forestry, Conservation, Outdoor Studies, Outdoor Leadership and Applied Sciences were taught from the Penrith campus based at Newton Rigg. The National School of Forestry was set up here in the 1960s and has a long history of educating forest managers, which continues to the present day. Programmes moved to their new home in Ambleside in 2013 (Outdoors programmes) and 2014 (Forestry, Conservation, and Applied Sciences).

Further education provision and assets of the Newton Rigg campus were transferred to Askham Bryan College in March 2011, but the university continued to run higher education courses there for three years.

Workington

The university has space at the "Energus" facility in Blackwood Road, Lillyhall, Workington. The facility opened in June 2009 and was the university’s first presence in West Cumbria.

Organisation and structure

Previous vice-chancellors have included;

  • Chris Carr (Jan 2007-Apr 2009),
  • Peter McCaffery (July 2009-May 2010) and
  • Graham Upton (May 2010-Jul 2011)
  • Peter Strike (Aug 2011-Jul 2016)
  • The current vice-chancellor is Julie Mennell, formerly deputy vice-chancellor (development) of University of Sunderland.

    At one stage the university had debts totalling £13,000,000 and in March 2010, it received a cash advance from HEFCE to enable it to pay staff. It has since pulled itself out of debt and is profitable.

    Academic profile

    The university has seven specialist departmental areas that offer a range of flexible, multidisciplinary courses:

  • Business, Law, Policing and Social Sciences
  • Health, Psychology and Social Studies
  • Institute of the Arts
  • Institute of Education
  • Medical and Sport Sciences
  • Nursing, Health and Professional Practice
  • Science, Natural Resources and Outdoor Studies
  • The University of Cumbria provides education in Medical Imaging, Sports Development, Arts, Law, Education, Leadership and Economic Development, Conservation, Forestry, and the Uplands, and Mental Health and Wellbeing, among other subject areas.

    Student life

    The majority of University of Cumbria campuses have sports teams which represent them in the British Universities and Colleges Sport leagues. Teams include: Cricket, Netball, Football, Hockey, Rugby League, Rugby Union, Badminton and Pool. All teams play their home games on Wednesdays afternoons at various University's sport venues.

    Notable alumni

  • Keith Tyson
  • Helen Skelton
  • Margaret Harrison
  • Sheila Fell
  • References

    University of Cumbria Wikipedia