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University of Suffolk

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Established
  
1 August 2007

Postgraduates
  
390 (2015/16)

Phone
  
+44 1473 338000

Founded
  
1 August 2007

Undergraduates
  
4,640 (2015/16)

Location
  
Suffolk, England

Number of students
  
5,060 (2014–2015)

University of Suffolk

Campus
  
Ipswich, Bury St Edmunds, Great Yarmouth, Lowestoft

Affiliations
  
University of East Anglia, University of Essex, West Suffolk College, Great Yarmouth College, Lowestoft College, Ipswich Borough Council, Suffolk County Council

Address
  
University of Suffolk, Waterfront Building, 19 Neptune Quay, Ipswich IP4 1QJ, UK

Undergraduate tuition and fees
  
8,000 GBP (2012), International tuition: 10,500 GBP (2012)

Profiles

University of suffolk campus tour


The University of Suffolk is an educational institution located in the English county of Suffolk which was, prior to August 2016, formerly known as University Campus Suffolk (UCS). The University of Suffolk was granted Taught Degree Awarding Powers by the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education in November 2015, and in May 2016 it was awarded University status by the Privy Council. As a consequence of this, UCS was renamed The University of Suffolk on 1 August 2016.

Contents

Up until it became independent it was a collaboration between the University of Essex and the University of East Anglia which sponsored its formation and validated its degrees. UOS accepted its first students in September 2007. Until then Suffolk was one of only four counties in England which did not have a University campus.

The University operates at five sites with its central hub in Ipswich. Others include Lowestoft, Bury St. Edmunds, and Great Yarmouth in Norfolk. The University operates two academic faculties and in 2015/16 had 5,030 students. Some 30% of the student body are classed as mature students and 68% of University students are female.

University of suffolk student life


History

In 2003, Suffolk County Council established a "stakeholder group" made up of representatives from the University of East Anglia, the University of Essex, Suffolk College, the East of England Development Agency, the Higher Education Funding Council for England, Suffolk Learning and Skills Council, Suffolk County Council, Ipswich Borough Council, Suffolk Chief Executive's Group and the Suffolk Development Agency. The aim of the group was to investigate the possibility of establishing a university in the county. Following funding pledges from Ipswich Borough Council and Suffolk County Council in 2004, the University of Suffolk was backed by the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) with £15m worth of funding in 2005 and attracted a £12.5m grant from the East of England Development Agency in 2006 UOS was officially launched on 1 August 2007 and welcomed its first students in September of the same year.

The University was granted taught degree awarding powers by the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education in November 2015, and in May 2016 it was awarded University status by the Privy Council. As a consequence of this, UCS was renamed The University of Suffolk in August 2016.

Faculties

The University's teaching is split into two faculties: Arts, Business and Applied Social Sciences; and Health and Science.

University of Suffolk, Ipswich

The University Campus is based on the Ipswich waterfront. The Waterfront building, designed by RMJM Architects, is the centre of the hub, opened in September 2008 and cost £35 million. It has three lecture theatres, and 34 smaller teaching rooms. The six-storey James Hehir Building was officially opened in March 2011 at a cost of £21 million It is named after the former chief executive of Ipswich Borough Council and includes Cult Cafe. Campus North houses the library or "Learning Resource Centre". Onsite student accommodation is provided in the 600-place Athena Hall, located adjacent to the James Hehir building.

A range of undergraduate and postgraduate courses are offered at Ipswich, including Art and Design, Business Management, Computing, Education, Film, Health, Nursing and Midwifery, Humanities, Social Sciences and Initial Teacher Training.

University of Suffolk at Suffolk New College

Suffolk New College is located next to the Ipswich campus and was developed from the Further Education centre of Suffolk College. It is a centre for civil engineering degrees and initial teacher training.

University of Suffolk at West Suffolk College

The Bury St Edmunds Centre is located at the site of West Suffolk College. A range of foundation degrees in subjects including Art, Engineering and Logistics and Transport and Management are taught at the site as well as degrees in Business Management, Education, English and History, CIOB accredited Construction Management and initial teacher training. Over 700 students follow degree and foundation degree courses at the site. The site, which was remodelled in 2011, has an industry-standard recording studio.

University of Suffolk at Lowestoft College

The Lowestoft Centre is located at the site of Lowestoft College. Lowestoft offers degrees in Children's Care, Learning and Development, Design, Inclusive Practice and Integrated Working, Operations Engineering, Supporting Inclusive Learning and Practice, and Social Science.

University of Suffolk at Great Yarmouth College

The Great Yarmouth centre is located at the Southtown site of Great Yarmouth College in neighbouring Norfolk. Subjects such as Computing, Counselling, Engineering, Fashion, Music, and Photography are available at the centre, which has a modern recording studio.

Accommodation

The on-campus halls of residence, Athena Hall, is located on the Ipswich Waterfront and houses up to 590 students. Athena Hall offers a mixture of cluster flats and studio rooms. There is currently no accredited accommodation for the partner colleges in Bury St Edmunds, Great Yarmouth and Lowestoft.

Sustainability

The University operates as a "Centre for Applied Sustainability". An example of its work with sustainability is the Phase 1 campus development which was assessed as BREEAM Excellent. This signifies that the development is setting the "best practice in sustainable development".

The University is also actively engaged in the New Anglia Local Enterprise Partnership Green Economy Pathfinder.

Union

The Union was formed on 1 August 2007, the same day the University was officially launched. It provides support for its students and looks after their well-being during their studies.

The union is the representative of the student body at the management level of the university and as such its positions are manned by paid and unpaid students who are based at the Union office in the heart of the campus' East building. The Union also looks after the university social calendar, with multiple events run during the academic weeks and special Freshers weeks at the beginning of each academic year.

The President and Vice-President of the Union are, subject to a sufficient number of votes, elected every March, and take office for 12 months from July - July overseeing the totality of one academic year. The candidates come from the student body and must compete in the election campaigns in March/April. There is a current two-year maximum term for the positions. The current President is Rachel Gilbey and the Vice-President is Johnathan Dotchin, both newly elected for 2016.

References

University of Suffolk Wikipedia