fbpx
Wikipedia

Newcastle University Students' Union

54°58′44″N 1°36′54″W / 54.97889°N 1.61500°W / 54.97889; -1.61500

Newcastle University Students' Union
InstitutionNewcastle University
LocationUnion building, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom
Established1881 as the Junior Union Society
Sabbatical officers
  • President: Shah Yaseen Ali
  • Education Officer: Lulu Chen
  • Welfare and Equality Officer: Lucy Leeds
  • Activities Officer: Alex Theodosia
  • Athletic Union Officer: Kimiko Cheng
  • Postgraduate Officer: Chirag Kumar
  • Student Media Officer: Gabbi de Boar
[1]
Trustees
  • Ian Kitchen, David Miller, Adrian Alexander Drewett, Fridey Cordingley, Sarah Winship (external trustees)
  • Rao Muhammad Karam, Ali Zuhad (student trustees)
[2]
AffiliationsNational Union of Students
WebsiteOfficial website

Newcastle University Students' Union (NUSU) is the students' union of Newcastle University in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. It is an organisation with the intention of representing and providing services and welfare for the students of University of Newcastle upon Tyne. It was originally set up as the Union Society and changed to its present name in 2011. In 2022, it voted to rejoin the National Union of Students (NUS).[3]

The Students' Union is run by seven sabbatical officers and nine voluntary unpaid liberation and chair positions. It also employs around 300 people in ancillary roles including bar staff and Freshers' Week organisers.

Students' Union Building edit

 
The Students' Union Building

Unlike the majority of other students' unions in the United Kingdom, Newcastle University Students' Union owns the building where it is housed. The Union building was built in 1924 with a gift from an anonymous donor, who is believed to have been Sir Cecil Cochrane, a major benefactor to the university.[4] It is built in the neo-Jacobean style and was designed by the local architect Robert Burns Dick whose firm designed the Laing Art Gallery, the towers of the Tyne Bridge and The Spanish City in Whitley Bay. It was opened on 22 October 1925 by the Rt. Hon. Lord Eustace Percy, who later served as Rector of King's College from 1937 to 1952. In 1987 the Students' Union was made a Grade II listed building.[5]

The building was originally split in two with one union for men and one for women. In the 1960s the university funded a significant extension, known as the 'flying wing'. This was given to the union for a 99-year lease with a peppercorn rent. The modernist copper-clad extension, which is part of the Hadrian Building, was designed by Sir William Whitfield who also designed the Northern Stage.[6][7] A debating chamber which hung over Kings Road was also built, though it was demolished in 2003.[8]

In 2010 the university donated £8 million towards a redevelopment project for the Union Building.[9] This work won the Education Interior Design category of the National Mixology Interior Design Awards 2011.[10]

The building houses Luther's – the student union bar, the Student Advice Centre (SAC) and food outlets including Subway and Domino's, along with a number of offices and rooms for its members. In the basement is Venue, a nightclub and event space, with space for 1,400 people.[11] Artists that have performed at Students' Union include Maxïmo Park,[12] Snow Patrol, Coldplay,[13] George Ezra and The 1975. The union building also houses a printers and a branch of Santander.

History edit

 
Union society building (left) in 1950

NUSU is made from a merger of several earlier student organisations. The oldest of these was the Junior Union Society, founded in 1881, which arranged debates and dances for the Durham colleges in Newcastle. From 1914 to 1925 Newcastle Union Society and the Durham Union Society collaborated with a shared president and vice-president selected alternatively from the two divisions.[14] The previous Union Society dealt almost solely with student societies and entertainment and was governed by a Union Management Committee. The committee was composed of the President (in the Chair), the Lady President, two Vice Presidents (one male, one female), the Secretary, and various members of staff from King's College (including the Bursar and the Society Steward). This structure remained in varying forms until the 1950s.[citation needed]

The Students’ Representative Council (SRC) of Armstrong College was formed in 1900 to represent all students, in matters of policy, to the Board of Professors. It remained a separate entity from the Union Society. In 1937 it became the SRC of King's College, and subsequently for Newcastle University when it disaffiliated from Durham University in 1963.[7] The management of the Union building was run by a board of trustees appointed by the University Council.

In 1985, the SRC was merged into the Union Society. This put the student council and its elected student representatives in full control of the union. In 1990 the union also went through significant restructuring after a period of poor management and high debts.[7]

The Union Society became a limited company, with a board of trustees, in 2009.[15] In 2011 it also became an independent charity after completing the legal requirements and registering with the Charity Commission. This coincided with a name change to Newcastle University Students’ Union (NUSU).[16]

In 2017, the Students' Union voted to rename the student bar from Mensbar to Luther's, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the honorary doctorate awarded to Martin Luther King Jr. by the university in 1967. The previous name came from the fact it was initially male-only, originally Men's bar, and from the motto - ‘Mens Agitat Molem’ – of the Armstrong College.[17][7]

National Union of Students edit

In May 2016, NUSU held a referendum on their membership of the NUS. A 67 per cent majority of students voted to end the affiliation. The then NUSU president Dominic Fearon said students felt the NUS “no longer represents their views, does not prioritise correctly, and is not effective at achieving change.”[18] A second referendum was held in December 2018 with the result being to not re-affiliate with 52% of the vote, and a turnout of only 4%.[19]

Clubs and societies edit

Newcastle Students' Union has over 160 registered student societies in many different areas from the 20 Minute Society to Zumba.[20] There are also 65 sports clubs run through the Athletic Union (AU).[21] Students are able to set up their own societies. For a society to become ratified it must have 15 members as well as an executive committee which consists of a president, secretary and treasurer. Any student is eligible to become a member of a society and the typical membership fee is £5.

Elected Officers edit

Newcastle University Students' Union is run by seven full-time Sabbatical Officers, seven unpaid part-time Liberation Officers, and two unpaid part-time Chairs. The sabbatical officers work as full-time employees of the Students' Union whilst the part-time officers complete the role alongside their studies. In September 2019, the Students' Union introduced the seventh sabbatical officer position, the Postgraduate Officer. They are responsible for representing students studying, both taught and research, postgraduate courses such as master's degrees and PhD's. The role is only open to students who have previously studied at postgraduate level.

Officers are elected usually in March via a cross-campus vote typically preceded by a four-day campaign period. All Newcastle University students are eligible to vote in elections via the Student Union website. Officers officially begin their roles in July of the year in which they are elected. The election period typically sees candidates canvassing around campus and student accommodation sites as well as participate in debates facilitated by the Students' Union and in more recent years, The Courier, NSR and NUTV. The results of the elections are typically announced on the Friday of elections week often in a live-show format held within the Students' Union. Newcastle University Students' Union currently uses a transferable voting system which allows students to vote for candidates for each position in order of preference as well as vote to re-open nominations (RON) if the student does not feel any candidates are appropriate for the role.

Student media edit

The Courier is a weekly free student newspaper. Established in 1948, the current weekly readership is around 12,000, most of whom are students at the university. It is published every Monday during term time.[22] The Courier has won The Guardian's Student Newspaper of the Year award in 1994, 2012 and 2013.[23] The Courier is edited by a number of section sub-editors who are all Newcastle University students.[24] The Courier also has a head editor - the Student Media Officer - who works full-time editing the newspaper. The role is a sabbatical officer role and is therefore elected by Newcastle University students for a one-year term. The current editor is Gabbi de Boer.[25]

Newcastle Student Radio (NSR) is a student radio station based in the university, which broadcasts 24 hours a day. It hosts music alongside news, sport and talk programs.[26] The station aims to cater for a wide range of musical tastes, from Metal and Punk to R&B and swing music.

NUTV, known as TCTV from 2010–17, is a student television channel first established in 2007. NUTV's output is on-demand on its YouTube channel and through live broadcasts. It covers events such as student council and sports as well as student-made dramas, cookery programmes and fashion shows. It is affiliated with The National Student Television Association (NaSTA) and has links to the Royal Television Society.[27]

Notable former officers edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Your Voice". NUSU. Newcastle University Students' Union. Retrieved 19 February 2018.
  2. ^ "Charity Commission - Trustees". Charity Commission. Charity Commission. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
  3. ^ Students vote to re-affiliate with NUS - 14 March 2022
  4. ^ Bettenson, E (1971). The University of Newcastle upon Tyne: a historical introduction, 1834–1971. University of Newcastle upon Tyne. ISBN 0-900565-32-2.
  5. ^ Historic England. "Students' Union (1355263)". National Heritage List for England.
  6. ^ "Sir William Whitfield obituary". The Guardian. 3 April 2019.
  7. ^ a b c d . Newcastle.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 19 July 1997.
  8. ^ . Newcastle University SINE Project. 2004. Archived from the original on 5 March 2012.
  9. ^ "Newcastle University building revamp starts". BBC News. 7 November 2010.
  10. ^ NUSU. 22 November 2011. Archived from the original on 2 December 2011.
  11. ^ "The Venue". NUSU.
  12. ^ "Six Appeal".
  13. ^ "The 10 best #Newcastle music venues for students @UniofNewcastle @NorthumbriaUni". 11 September 2015.
  14. ^ "Catalogue of Durham University Records Associations and Societies Date range of material: 1846 - 2012". Durham University Library. January 2014. p. 158.
  15. ^ "Newcastle University Students' Union". Companies House.
  16. ^ "Newcastle University Senate" (PDF). Newcastle University. 12 April 2011.
  17. ^ "New name for Newcastle University's Student Union Mensbar revealed". www.chroniclelive.co.uk. Evening Chronicle. 11 March 2017.
  18. ^ "Newcastle University Students' Union becomes second to disaffiliate from the NUS in a week". The Independent. 12 May 2016. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022.
  19. ^ "NUSU to remain out of NUS". NUSU. 7 December 2018.
  20. ^ NUSU - Societies List
  21. ^ NUSU - Sports clubs
  22. ^ . The Courier. Archived from the original on 12 March 2010.
  23. ^ "Newcastle University's the Courier wins student publication of the year". The Guardian. 28 November 2013. Retrieved 10 January 2018.
  24. ^ "Sub-Editor – The Courier Online". Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  25. ^ "Sabbatical Officers & Voluntary Roles". www.nusu.co.uk. Retrieved 1 May 2022.
  26. ^ "NSR – Newcastle Student Radio. About Us". Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  27. ^ "NUTV". Newcastle University Students' Union. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  28. ^ Louise Hall (4 March 2019). "ITV, The Beatles and changing the face of broadcast journalism: In conversation with Stuart Prebble". the Courier.
  29. ^ "Meet the alumni who have made an impact in student media over the past 7 decades". Newcastle University. 13 April 2023.
  30. ^ "24 things you didn't know about Tim Farron". The Daily Telegraph. 16 July 2015.

newcastle, university, students, union, confused, with, newcastle, university, students, association, australia, 97889, 61500, 97889, 61500, institutionnewcastle, universitylocationunion, building, newcastle, upon, tyne, united, kingdomestablished1881, junior,. Not to be confused with Newcastle University Students Association in Australia 54 58 44 N 1 36 54 W 54 97889 N 1 61500 W 54 97889 1 61500 Newcastle University Students UnionInstitutionNewcastle UniversityLocationUnion building Newcastle upon Tyne United KingdomEstablished1881 as the Junior Union SocietySabbatical officersPresident Shah Yaseen AliEducation Officer Lulu ChenWelfare and Equality Officer Lucy LeedsActivities Officer Alex TheodosiaAthletic Union Officer Kimiko ChengPostgraduate Officer Chirag KumarStudent Media Officer Gabbi de Boar 1 TrusteesIan Kitchen David Miller Adrian Alexander Drewett Fridey Cordingley Sarah Winship external trustees Rao Muhammad Karam Ali Zuhad student trustees 2 AffiliationsNational Union of StudentsWebsiteOfficial website Newcastle University Students Union NUSU is the students union of Newcastle University in Newcastle upon Tyne England It is an organisation with the intention of representing and providing services and welfare for the students of University of Newcastle upon Tyne It was originally set up as the Union Society and changed to its present name in 2011 In 2022 it voted to rejoin the National Union of Students NUS 3 The Students Union is run by seven sabbatical officers and nine voluntary unpaid liberation and chair positions It also employs around 300 people in ancillary roles including bar staff and Freshers Week organisers Contents 1 Students Union Building 2 History 2 1 National Union of Students 3 Clubs and societies 4 Elected Officers 5 Student media 6 Notable former officers 7 See also 8 ReferencesStudents Union Building edit nbsp The Students Union Building Unlike the majority of other students unions in the United Kingdom Newcastle University Students Union owns the building where it is housed The Union building was built in 1924 with a gift from an anonymous donor who is believed to have been Sir Cecil Cochrane a major benefactor to the university 4 It is built in the neo Jacobean style and was designed by the local architect Robert Burns Dick whose firm designed the Laing Art Gallery the towers of the Tyne Bridge and The Spanish City in Whitley Bay It was opened on 22 October 1925 by the Rt Hon Lord Eustace Percy who later served as Rector of King s College from 1937 to 1952 In 1987 the Students Union was made a Grade II listed building 5 The building was originally split in two with one union for men and one for women In the 1960s the university funded a significant extension known as the flying wing This was given to the union for a 99 year lease with a peppercorn rent The modernist copper clad extension which is part of the Hadrian Building was designed by Sir William Whitfield who also designed the Northern Stage 6 7 A debating chamber which hung over Kings Road was also built though it was demolished in 2003 8 In 2010 the university donated 8 million towards a redevelopment project for the Union Building 9 This work won the Education Interior Design category of the National Mixology Interior Design Awards 2011 10 The building houses Luther s the student union bar the Student Advice Centre SAC and food outlets including Subway and Domino s along with a number of offices and rooms for its members In the basement is Venue a nightclub and event space with space for 1 400 people 11 Artists that have performed at Students Union include Maximo Park 12 Snow Patrol Coldplay 13 George Ezra and The 1975 The union building also houses a printers and a branch of Santander History edit nbsp Union society building left in 1950 NUSU is made from a merger of several earlier student organisations The oldest of these was the Junior Union Society founded in 1881 which arranged debates and dances for the Durham colleges in Newcastle From 1914 to 1925 Newcastle Union Society and the Durham Union Society collaborated with a shared president and vice president selected alternatively from the two divisions 14 The previous Union Society dealt almost solely with student societies and entertainment and was governed by a Union Management Committee The committee was composed of the President in the Chair the Lady President two Vice Presidents one male one female the Secretary and various members of staff from King s College including the Bursar and the Society Steward This structure remained in varying forms until the 1950s citation needed The Students Representative Council SRC of Armstrong College was formed in 1900 to represent all students in matters of policy to the Board of Professors It remained a separate entity from the Union Society In 1937 it became the SRC of King s College and subsequently for Newcastle University when it disaffiliated from Durham University in 1963 7 The management of the Union building was run by a board of trustees appointed by the University Council In 1985 the SRC was merged into the Union Society This put the student council and its elected student representatives in full control of the union In 1990 the union also went through significant restructuring after a period of poor management and high debts 7 The Union Society became a limited company with a board of trustees in 2009 15 In 2011 it also became an independent charity after completing the legal requirements and registering with the Charity Commission This coincided with a name change to Newcastle University Students Union NUSU 16 In 2017 the Students Union voted to rename the student bar from Mensbar to Luther s to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the honorary doctorate awarded to Martin Luther King Jr by the university in 1967 The previous name came from the fact it was initially male only originally Men s bar and from the motto Mens Agitat Molem of the Armstrong College 17 7 National Union of Students edit In May 2016 NUSU held a referendum on their membership of the NUS A 67 per cent majority of students voted to end the affiliation The then NUSU president Dominic Fearon said students felt the NUS no longer represents their views does not prioritise correctly and is not effective at achieving change 18 A second referendum was held in December 2018 with the result being to not re affiliate with 52 of the vote and a turnout of only 4 19 Clubs and societies editNewcastle Students Union has over 160 registered student societies in many different areas from the 20 Minute Society to Zumba 20 There are also 65 sports clubs run through the Athletic Union AU 21 Students are able to set up their own societies For a society to become ratified it must have 15 members as well as an executive committee which consists of a president secretary and treasurer Any student is eligible to become a member of a society and the typical membership fee is 5 Elected Officers editNewcastle University Students Union is run by seven full time Sabbatical Officers seven unpaid part time Liberation Officers and two unpaid part time Chairs The sabbatical officers work as full time employees of the Students Union whilst the part time officers complete the role alongside their studies In September 2019 the Students Union introduced the seventh sabbatical officer position the Postgraduate Officer They are responsible for representing students studying both taught and research postgraduate courses such as master s degrees and PhD s The role is only open to students who have previously studied at postgraduate level Officers are elected usually in March via a cross campus vote typically preceded by a four day campaign period All Newcastle University students are eligible to vote in elections via the Student Union website Officers officially begin their roles in July of the year in which they are elected The election period typically sees candidates canvassing around campus and student accommodation sites as well as participate in debates facilitated by the Students Union and in more recent years The Courier NSR and NUTV The results of the elections are typically announced on the Friday of elections week often in a live show format held within the Students Union Newcastle University Students Union currently uses a transferable voting system which allows students to vote for candidates for each position in order of preference as well as vote to re open nominations RON if the student does not feel any candidates are appropriate for the role Student media editThe Courier is a weekly free student newspaper Established in 1948 the current weekly readership is around 12 000 most of whom are students at the university It is published every Monday during term time 22 The Courier has won The Guardian s Student Newspaper of the Year award in 1994 2012 and 2013 23 The Courier is edited by a number of section sub editors who are all Newcastle University students 24 The Courier also has a head editor the Student Media Officer who works full time editing the newspaper The role is a sabbatical officer role and is therefore elected by Newcastle University students for a one year term The current editor is Gabbi de Boer 25 Newcastle Student Radio NSR is a student radio station based in the university which broadcasts 24 hours a day It hosts music alongside news sport and talk programs 26 The station aims to cater for a wide range of musical tastes from Metal and Punk to R amp B and swing music NUTV known as TCTV from 2010 17 is a student television channel first established in 2007 NUTV s output is on demand on its YouTube channel and through live broadcasts It covers events such as student council and sports as well as student made dramas cookery programmes and fashion shows It is affiliated with The National Student Television Association NaSTA and has links to the Royal Television Society 27 Notable former officers editHenry Miller secretary 1935 6 and president 1936 7 Stuart Prebble president 1972 3 28 Dianne Nelmes president 1973 4 29 Brian Thomson deputy president 1986 7 Tim Farron president 1991 2 30 See also editList of students unions in the United Kingdom not affiliated with the NUS Durham Students UnionReferences edit Your Voice NUSU Newcastle University Students Union Retrieved 19 February 2018 Charity Commission Trustees Charity Commission Charity Commission Retrieved 22 August 2021 Students vote to re affiliate with NUS 14 March 2022 Bettenson E 1971 The University of Newcastle upon Tyne a historical introduction 1834 1971 University of Newcastle upon Tyne ISBN 0 900565 32 2 Historic England Students Union 1355263 National Heritage List for England Sir William Whitfield obituary The Guardian 3 April 2019 a b c d The History Of The Union Society Newcastle ac uk Archived from the original on 19 July 1997 Union Debating Chamber Newcastle University SINE Project 2004 Archived from the original on 5 March 2012 Newcastle University building revamp starts BBC News 7 November 2010 Union wins Interior Design Award NUSU 22 November 2011 Archived from the original on 2 December 2011 The Venue NUSU Six Appeal The 10 best Newcastle music venues for students UniofNewcastle NorthumbriaUni 11 September 2015 Catalogue of Durham University Records Associations and Societies Date range of material 1846 2012 Durham University Library January 2014 p 158 Newcastle University Students Union Companies House Newcastle University Senate PDF Newcastle University 12 April 2011 New name for Newcastle University s Student Union Mensbar revealed www chroniclelive co uk Evening Chronicle 11 March 2017 Newcastle University Students Union becomes second to disaffiliate from the NUS in a week The Independent 12 May 2016 Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 NUSU to remain out of NUS NUSU 7 December 2018 NUSU Societies List NUSU Sports clubs Contact us The Courier Archived from the original on 12 March 2010 Newcastle University s the Courier wins student publication of the year The Guardian 28 November 2013 Retrieved 10 January 2018 Sub Editor The Courier Online Retrieved 31 March 2019 Sabbatical Officers amp Voluntary Roles www nusu co uk Retrieved 1 May 2022 NSR Newcastle Student Radio About Us Retrieved 19 February 2019 NUTV Newcastle University Students Union Retrieved 19 February 2019 Louise Hall 4 March 2019 ITV The Beatles and changing the face of broadcast journalism In conversation with Stuart Prebble the Courier Meet the alumni who have made an impact in student media over the past 7 decades Newcastle University 13 April 2023 24 things you didn t know about Tim Farron The Daily Telegraph 16 July 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Newcastle University Students 27 Union amp oldid 1213366394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.