University of Sunderland

University of Sunderland
Former names
Sunderland Technical College (1901–1969), Sunderland Polytechnic (1969–1992)
Motto Scientiam Dulce Hauriens
Motto in English
Sweetly absorbing knowledge
Type Public
Established 1992 – University of Sunderland (gained University status)
1969 – Sunderland Polytechnic
1901 – Sunderland Technical College
Chancellor Steve Cram[1]
Vice-Chancellor Sir David Bell
Students 13,020 (2016/17)[2]
Undergraduates 10,725 (2016/17)[2]
Postgraduates 2,300 (2016/17)[2]
Location Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, United Kingdom
Campus Sunderland, London and Hong Kong
Colours Nasturtium & Dark Blue
         [3]
Affiliations Association of Commonwealth Universities,EQUIS,Universities UK,Coalition of Modern Universities,Million+
Website sunderland.ac.uk

The University of Sunderland is a university located in Sunderland in the North East of England. Its predecessor, Sunderland Technical College, was established as a municipal training college in 1901. It gained university status in 1992. It now has campuses in Sunderland, London and Hong Kong. The university has 13,020 students and was one of six universities to be short-listed for 'University of the Year' in the Times Higher Education Supplement Awards 2012.[4]

History

Sunderland has been an important centre for education since 674 AD, when Benedict Biscop built St Peter's Church and monastery. St Peter's Church was the site of the greatest scriptorium north of the Alps. The oldest existing Latin version of the Bible – the Codex Amiatinus – was written at St Peter's Church. This area has been developed as the Sir Tom Cowie Campus at St Peter's of the University of Sunderland. The University's £9m state-of-the-art Media Centre, launched in 2004, is near St Peter's Church.

Sunderland Technical College

St Peter's Campus

The university's modern roots can be traced back to 1901, when Sunderland Technical College was established as a municipal training college. It was the first to offer sandwich courses. Pharmacy and naval architecture departments were established in 1921 and 1922 respectively. The Pharmacy Department began as a single bench in the Chemistry Department, but soon grew to become the largest in the country. From 1930, some students in the Faculty of Applied Science read for degrees of the University of Durham. In 1930, a Mining Department was established and pharmacy students could read for the Bachelor of Pharmacy degree of the University of London.[5] Sunderland was also recognised by London University as a centre for its BEng (Bachelor of Engineering) degree in 1934.

During the Second World War, Sunderland ran special courses for the armed forces and the Ministry of Labour.

In the 1960s, a PDP-8 hybrid computer was installed at the Chester Road site. There was also an Elliot Brothers 803B digital computer.

A new complex of buildings, including a new Students' union and Hall of Residence facilities, on nearby Chester Road was opened by the Duke of Edinburgh in 1964.

Sunderland Polytechnic

Sunderland Polytechnic was established on 26 January 1969, incorporating the Technical College, the School of Art (which was also established in 1901) and the Sunderland Teacher Training College (established in 1908). Sunderland was among the first of 30 Polytechnics, like polytechnics or technological universities in other countries their aim was to teach both purely academic and professional vocational subjects. Their focus was applied education for work and their roots concentrated on engineering and applied science, they also created departments concerned with the humanities.

As a polytechnic, Sunderland created the first part-time, in-service BEd (Bachelor of Education) programme in the country.

University status

Lord Puttnam on 10 July 2006 at the School of Computing and Technology Awards Ceremony.

After the passage of the Further and Higher Education Act 1992, the polytechnic gained university status.[6]

Lord Puttnam became the university's first Chancellor in 1998. The Sunderland Empire Theatre was the regular venue for the graduation ceremonies, although they have been hosted at the Stadium of Light since 2004. In July 2007, he stepped down to become the Chancellor of the Open University.[7][8]

On 23 May 2008 the University announced that former Olympic athlete Steve Cram had been appointed as Chancellor and would be officially installed at a ceremony on 27 June 2008.[1]

In 2018 it was announced that Sunderland was to host one of five new medical schools established under a UK government initiative to increase the number of training places for doctors. The school of medicine is expected to take its first students in September 2019.[9][10]

Campuses

View of St Peter's campus
Tree sculpture at the campus entrance
Sculpture outside the university library

There are two campuses in Sunderland, one in Hong Kong and one in London. The Sunderland campuses are City Campus and the Sir Tom Cowie Campus at St Peter's. St Peter's opened during the 1990s on the north bank of the River Wear, the site of St. Peter's Church and monastery built by Benedict Biscop in 674AD.

In September 2002, the campus was renamed "The Sir Tom Cowie Campus at St. Peter's", after the local businessman who was one of the university's primary supporters. The Sunderland Business School is similarly named "The Reg Vardy Centre", and another building, primarily used by the School of Computing and Technology, is "The David Goldman Informatics Centre".

St Peter's Campus includes the following: North Shore (formerly Campus and Manor Quay), Wearbank House, Reg Vardy Centre, St Peter's Library, David Goldman Informatics Centre, Prospect Building (including Sir Tom Cowie Lecture Theatre), David Puttnam Media Centre, North Sands Business Centre and National Glass Centre (which houses the Glass and Ceramics department and the Institute for International Research in Glass). The David Puttnam Media Centre houses television and radio production facilities for the School of Arts, Design and Media, student led community radio station (Spark Sunderland), and Made in Tyne & Wear, and opened in 2003. The campus was officially opened in March 2004 by Estelle Morris, former Education Secretary and Pro Vice-Chancellor from 2005 to 2009.

In 2006, the Chester Road Campus was renamed City Campus, and work started on refurbishment of the Edinburgh Building administrative centre, the creation of the Gateway one-stop-shop for student support, and the redevelopment of Murray Library, and the Design Centre. The £12M CitySpace gym and leisure development opened in 2009, and in February 2011 the £8.5M Sciences Complex opened.[11]

London Campus

On 26 April 2012, the University of Sunderland announced the opening of a new campus at Canary Wharf in London.[12][13] In 2012/13 the student population of the University of Sunderland London Campus was 2,277.

Courses are offered in nursing, business, tourism and hospitality, as well as accounting and financial management.

Hong Kong Campus

On 2 March 2017, the University of Sunderland announced the opening of a new campus at Hong Kong,.[14][13]

Design Centre

This vibrant community of designers, housed on the City Campus, has 370 masters and undergraduate students studying Animation, Advertising, Graphic Communication, Illustration and Fashion Product and Promotion. A substantial community of design research active staff with interests in science communication, contemporary calligraphy, data visualisation and computational design have national and international recognition. A recent graduate from Animation and Design won his second BAFTA for his film for CITV.

Halls of residence

The University of Sunderland has five halls of residence: Scotia Quay, Panns Bank, Clanny House, The Precinct and The Forge U-Student Village.[15]

Clanny House is the largest halls of residence and is located on Hylton Road across the road from the Sunderland Royal Hospital.

The Precinct is located on Chester Road and is a short walk from the City Campus.

Scotia Quay and Panns Bank are based across the River Wear from St Peter's Campus, across the road from The Bonded Warehouse. The location of these halls used to be one of the many locations on the river that were used by the former ship building industry.

Previous halls of residence include Ashbrooke, All Saints, Clifton, Westfield, Park and Williamson Halls.

Organisation

The Northern Centre of Photography

The University has four academic faculties, responsible for teaching and learning, academic development and research, and working with partners in business and industry.

The Faculties are supported by a number of service departments responsible for a wide range of activity such as student welfare and accommodation and includes teams with responsibility for managing the University estate, financial matters, and human resources.

  • Arts, Design, Media: Creative and Performing Arts, Design, Dance, Drama, Music, Journalism, PR, Film, Media, Cultural Studies, Fine Art, Glass, Ceramics, Photography, Radio, TV, Video, New Media
  • Business & Law: Accounting, Business, Management, Law, Tourism
  • Education and Society : Education, English, Health Studies, History, Social Sciences, Combined Subjects
  • Applied Science: Computing, Engineering, Psychology, Nursing, Environment, Pharmacy, Clinical Sciences, Sport and Exercise Sciences

The North East England Mining Archive and Resource Centre (NEEMARC) is a major archive for mining related data and includes health and safety information, legal records, technical reports and trade union records. NEEMARC is situated within the Special Collections Room of the Murray Library.[16][17]

Academic profile

Rankings
Global rankings
Complete[18]
(2019)
99
The Guardian[19]
(2019)
74
Times / Sunday Times[20]
(2019)
96
British Government assessment
Teaching Excellence Framework[21] Silver

According to The Complete University Guide League Tables 2019, the University of Sunderland was ranked 99th out of 131, an improvement on the previous year in which the university was ranked 102nd out of 129.[18]

The university was recognised by The Guardian as England's best new university in 2001. In 2005 it was named by The Times Higher Education Supplement as the top university in England for providing the best student experience. It was one of six universities to be short-listed for 'University of the Year' in the Times Higher Education Supplement Awards 2012.[4]

Research

The University of Sunderland entered 13 "units of assessment" (subject areas) into the latest Research Excellence Framework (REF 2014). In 10 of these, some of the research was classified as "world leading" (4*). All 13 areas had research graded "internationally excellent" (3*). The subjects, and the fraction of research graded 4* and 3* were: Pharmacy (7%, 44%); Computer Science (0%, 14%); Engineering (2%, 22%); Business (2%, 2%); Law (0%, 5%); Social Work (3%, 27%); Education (5%, 11%); Sports and Exercise Sciences, Leisure and Tourism (3%, 16%); English (7%, 25%); History (6%, 28%); Art and Design (5%, 36%); Music, Dance, and Performing Arts (0%, 32%); and Media (25%, 38%).[22]

Overall, 6% of research was classified as "world leading" and 26% as "internationally excellent", with the university having an overall GPA of 2.12. Sunderland ranked 115th in the Times Higher Education REF 2014 table (down from 104th in 2008), ranked by GPA.[23] The university ranked 103rd in The Guardian/Research Fortnight REF 2014 power table (down from 84th in 2008).[24]

Sunderland Students' Union

Little Boots performing at the university

The University of Sunderland Students' Union is an independent education charity, led by three sabbatical officers who run the Union and are elected into the roles by their peers for a period of one year. The sabbatical officer positions are made up of: President:Education, President: Wellbeing and President: Activities. They are joined by five lay Trustees to make up the Trustee Board.

The Students' Union is responsible for offering support and advice to students, leading campaigns and being the voice of the student body. The Students' Union's mission is to make all its members' University experience valuable for life. The three main objectives of the Students' Union are:

  • YOUR Voice
  • YOUR Course and You
  • YOUR Place

All students enrolled on a course at Sunderland University are automatically members of the Students' Union.

Spark Sunderland

Student/community centred radio station Spark Sunderland, part of the wider mediaHUB, operates from the David Puttnam Media Centre on campus but is not exclusively operated as a student concern.

Sport

The University's Institute of Sport organises training events, courses and other sporting activities for students, staff and the local community.

There are over 45 clubs and societies, with over 2500 members in 2011/12. Users have access to the £12m CitySpace building on the City Campus, which features a climbing wall, fitness suite, physiotherapy and injury centre, sports hall, multi-purpose suite and spectator seating.

SportsByte

Launched in September 2011, SportsByte is a journalism, news, and multimedia publication dedicated to covering a wide range of sports at all levels of competition across the City of Sunderland, the North East, and Globally. With a press team of over 150 student and community reporters, SportsByte is the largest sports-dedicated news and media publication in the North East of England, and is among the biggest in the UK. Within six months the website had spread its coverage to over thirty different sports and activities, and published three digital magazines. In spring 2012 SportsByte gained national praise, making the final shortlist for the National Union of Students National Student Journalism Awards 'Best Student Media' award.

The University of Sunderland's Institute of Sport launched SportsByte in 2011 after months of planning and development with the Faculty of Art, Design, and Media's lead academic Journalism staff. From their work at the forefront of Sport in Sunderland, the Institute were passionate about improving the knowledge and awareness of teams, clubs, programmes, and issues that are typically crowded out by other news stories and features in local and regional press. The two primary objectives of providing first rate journalism and coverage for sport within the area, as well as real-life and professional experience for students studying Journalism, are a perfect match.

Spark Sunderland

Spark Sunderland is a student-led community radio station. The station was awarded a full Community Radio licence in 2008 from Ofcom. The station launched in October 2009 and broadcasts 24/7 from its base, The David Puttnam Media Centre, located at the St. Peter's University campus. It has a long heritage, through student programming on Wear FM and then temporary licences under the Utopia FM name between 1997 and 2008. The station is operated by a team of student and community volunteers.

Spark has been successful in regional, national and international radio awards. The station itself has now won 3 awards as Best Student Radio Station in the New York Radio Awards where students have also gained awards for Radio Drama, Radio Documentary and Entertainment. Former volunteers are now working for BBC Radio 1, Capital FM and other BBC and Commercial Broadcasters.

Notable alumni

See also

  • Category:Alumni of the University of Sunderland
  • Category:Academics of the University of Sunderland

References

  1. 1 2 "Steve Cram named new Chancellor" (Press release). University of Sunderland. 23 May 2008. Retrieved 16 June 2008. Steve has a strong relationship with the university, going back 25 years, so he was an obvious choice for Chancellor. In 1983 Cram received his sports studies degree from Sunderland. Three years later the former 1500m world record holder was back at the university to receive an Honorary Fellowship for his outstanding contribution to sport. In 1994 he became Honorary President of the University of Sunderland Alumni Association.
  2. 1 2 3 "2016/17 Students by HE provider, level, mode and domicile" (CSV). Higher Education Statistics Agency. Retrieved 25 March 2018.
  3. Academic Colours Sunderland University Academic Dress
  4. 1 2 "THE Awards 2012 shortlist". Times Higher Education. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  5. Sunderland Technical College Education Prospectus for 1967–1968
  6. "Our History". University of Sunderland. Retrieved 16 June 2008.
  7. Hale, Dean (2 November 2006). "Lord Puttnam to step down as Chancellor". AblogUS – University of Sunderland blog. University of Sunderland. Archived from the original on 19 September 2008. Retrieved 16 June 2008. Lord Puttnam has been appointed to the post of Chancellor at the Open University, and will step down from his role of Chancellor at the University of Sunderland following the July 2007 awards ceremonies. When Lord Puttnam presides over his final degree ceremony in July 2007, it will mark ten years since his appointment as the University of Sunderland's first Chancellor.
  8. "Lord Puttnam is appointed Chancellor of The Open University" (Press release). Open University. 3 October 2006. Retrieved 8 October 2006. Speaking about the appointment, Lord Puttnam said: "Having enjoyed an incredibly fruitful decade as Chancellor of the University of Sunderland, I'm delighted to have been offered the chance to make a similar contribution to the institution that most clearly mirrors my own academic journey."
  9. "Under-doctored areas to get new medical schools". BBC News. 20 March 2018.
  10. "Our School of Medicine". University of Sunderland. Retrieved 31 August 2018.
  11. "Sunderland University's new £8.5m science complex opens". BBC News. 16 February 2011.
  12. "Canary Wharf campus for Sunderland University". journallive. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  13. 1 2 http://www.sunderland.ac.uk/londoncampus/ Archived 21 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine. University of Sunderland London Campus
  14. "University of Sunderland in Hong Kong". University of Sunderland in Hong Kong.
  15. "Accommodation". Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  16. "The NEEMARC Collection – University Library Services". Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  17. "Mining for Family History and NEEMARC University Library Services". Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  18. 1 2 "University League Table 2019". The Complete University Guide. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
  19. "University league tables 2019". The Guardian. 29 May 2018. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  20. "The Times and Sunday Times University Good University Guide 2019". Times Newspapers. Retrieved 23 September 2018.
  21. "Teaching Excellence Framework outcomes". Higher Education Funding Council for England. Retrieved 11 June 2018.
  22. "REF 2014 results". REF 2014. 31 August 2018.
  23. "REF 2014 results: table of excellence" (PDF). 18 December 2014. Retrieved 31 August 2018.
  24. "University Research Excellence Framework 2014 – the full rankings". The Guardian. 17 December 2014. Retrieved 31 August 2018.
  25. "Andy Ogle UFC Profile". Retrieved 1 July 2014.
  26. "Robin Storey". discogs.

General references

Coordinates: 54°54′18″N 1°23′29″W / 54.9051°N 1.3914°W / 54.9051; -1.3914

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