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Wikipedia

University College London

University College London, which operates as UCL,[8][9][10] is a public research university in London, England. It is a member institution of the federal University of London, and is the second-largest university in the United Kingdom by total enrolment[11] and the largest by postgraduate enrolment.

University College London
Latin: Collegium Universitatis Londinensis[1]
Other name
UCL
Former names
London University (1826–1836)
University College, London (1836–1907)
University of London, University College (1907–1976)
University College London (1977–2005; remains legal name)
MottoLatin: Cuncti adsint meritaeque expectent praemia palmae
Motto in English
Let all come who by merit deserve the most reward
TypePublic research university
Established1826; 198 years ago (1826)
(University status 2023)
Endowment£156.8 million (2023)[2]
Budget£1.933 billion (2022/23)[2]
ChairVictor L. L. Chu[3]
VisitorSir Geoffrey Vos
(as Master of the Rolls ex officio)[4]
ChancellorAnne, Princess Royal
(as Chancellor of the University of London)
President and ProvostMichael Spence
Academic staff
9,585 (2021/22)[5]
Administrative staff
6,075 (2021/22)[5]
Students46,830 (2021/22)[6]
Undergraduates23,800 (2021/22)[6]
Postgraduates23,030 (2021/22)[6]
Other students
895 (studying wholly overseas; 2021/22)
Location
London, England

51°31′29″N 00°08′01″W / 51.52472°N 0.13361°W / 51.52472; -0.13361
CampusUrban
ColoursPurple and blue celeste[7]
Affiliations
Websiteucl.ac.uk

Established in 1826 as London University (though without university degree-awarding powers) by founders inspired by the radical ideas of Jeremy Bentham, UCL was the first university institution to be established in London, and the first in England to be entirely secular and to admit students regardless of their religion.[12][13] It was also among the first university colleges to admit women alongside men in 1878, two years after University College, Bristol.[14] Intended by its founders to be England's third university, politics forced it to accept the status of a college in 1836, when it received a royal charter and became one of the two founding colleges of the University of London, although it achieved de facto recognition as a university in the 1990s and formal university status in 2023. It has grown through mergers, including with the Institute of Ophthalmology (in 1995), the Institute of Neurology (in 1997), the Royal Free Hospital Medical School (in 1998), the Eastman Dental Institute (in 1999), the School of Slavonic and East European Studies (in 1999), the School of Pharmacy (in 2012) and the Institute of Education (in 2014).

UCL has its main campus in the Bloomsbury area of central London, with a number of institutes and teaching hospitals elsewhere in central London and has a second campus, UCL East, at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford, East London. UCL is organised into 11 constituent faculties, within which there are over 100 departments, institutes and research centres. UCL operates several museums and collections in a wide range of fields, including the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology and the Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy, and administers the annual Orwell Prize in political writing. In 2022/23, UCL had a total income of £1.93 billion, of which £527 million was from research grants and contracts.[2] The university generates around £10 billion annually for the UK economy, primarily through the spread of its research and knowledge (£4 billion) and the impact of its own spending (£3 billion).[15]

UCL is a member of numerous academic organisations, including the Russell Group and the League of European Research Universities, and is part of UCL Partners, the world's largest academic health science centre.[16] It is considered part of the "golden triangle" of research-intensive universities in southeast England.[17] UCL has publishing and commercial activities including UCL Press, UCL Business and UCL Consultants.

UCL has many notable alumni, including the founder of Mauritius, the first Prime Minister of Japan, one of the co-discoverers of the structure of DNA, and Coldplay members. UCL academics discovered five of the naturally occurring noble gases, discovered hormones, invented the vacuum tube, and made several foundational advances in modern statistics. As of 2022, 30 Nobel Prize winners[18] and three Fields medallists[19] have been affiliated with UCL as alumni or academic staff.

History edit

1826 to 1836 – London University edit

 
Share no. 1105 in the University of London, issued 3 February 1829
 
The London University (now the UCL Main Building) as imagined by Thomas Hosmer Shepherd in 1827–28, when construction was in progress. The portico and dome were completed in 1829, but lack of funds meant it would be many years before reality matched the picture.

UCL was founded on 11 February 1826 as an alternative to the Anglican universities of Oxford and Cambridge.[20] It took the form of a joint stock company, with shares sold for £100 (equivalent to £8,900 in 2021) to proprietors, under the name of London University, although without legal recognition as a university or the associated right to award degrees.[21][22][23] London University's first warden was Leonard Horner, who was the first scientist to head a British university.[24]

 
Henry Tonks' 1923 mural The Four Founders of UCL

Despite the commonly held belief that the philosopher Jeremy Bentham was the founder of UCL, his direct involvement was limited to the purchase of share No. 633, at a cost of £100 paid in nine instalments between December 1826 and January 1830. In 1828, he did nominate a friend to sit on the council, and in 1827, attempted to have his disciple John Bowring appointed as the first professor of English or History, but on both occasions his candidates were unsuccessful.[25] However, Bentham is commonly regarded as the "spiritual father" of UCL, as his ideas on education and society were influential with the institution's founders, particularly James Mill (1773–1836) and Henry Brougham (1778–1868).[26]

In 1828, the chair of political economy at London University was created, with John Ramsay McCulloch as the first incumbent.[27] In 1829, the university appointed the first professor of English in England, although the course concentrated on linguistics and the modern teaching of English – studying English literature – was introduced by King's College London in 1831.[28] In 1830, London University founded the London University School, which would later become University College School.[29] In 1833, the university appointed Alexander Maconochie, secretary to the Royal Geographical Society, as the first professor of geography in Britain.[30][31] Classes in medicine began at the opening of the college in 1828, and in 1834 University College Hospital (originally North London Hospital) opened as a teaching hospital for these classes, which were organised into a faculty of medicine in 1836.[32]

1836 to 1900 – University College, London edit

After almost a decade of attempting to win recognition as a university and the right to award degrees, including an Address to the Crown from the House of Commons, the proprietors of London University accepted the government's proposal to establish the University of London as an independent examining body, accepting the status of a college for their institution.[33] As a result, the proprietors of London University were incorporated by royal charter under the name University College, London on 28 November 1836. On the same day, the University of London was created by royal charter as a degree-awarding examining board for students from affiliated schools and colleges, with University College and King's College, London being named in the charter as the first two affiliates.[33][34] The first students from UCL and King's matriculated as undergraduates in 1838 and the first degrees were awarded to students of the two colleges in 1839.[35]

There had been an intention to establish a course in engineering at the college's opening but no professor was appointed until 1840 or 1841, after engineering courses had started at Durham University (1837) and King's College London (1838).[36][37] The Slade School of Fine Art was founded as part of University College in 1871, following a bequest from Felix Slade.[38]

In 1878, the University of London gained a supplemental charter making it the first British university to be allowed to award degrees to women. The same year, UCL admitted women to the faculties of Arts and Law and of Science, although women remained barred from the faculties of Engineering and of Medicine (with the exception of courses on public health and hygiene).[39][40] UCL's admission of women in 1878 came almost three decades after Bedford College became the first institution to offer university-level education for women in Britain, and the establishment of the University of London's General Examination for Women in 1868.[41][42]

The Ladies' Educational Association held classes for women from 1868, taught by professors from UCL but independently of the college. From 1871 to 1872 these were held inside the college building, although still independently of the college. From 1872, some professors, particularly Edward Poynter of the Slade, started to admit women to their classes.[43] The full opening on the faculties of arts, science and law in 1878 came two years after the admission of women alongside men at the University of Bristol from its foundation (as University College Bristol) in 1876.[44] The first woman to officially enrol in architecture at UCL was Gertrude Leverkus in 1915,[45] although Ethel and Bessie Charles had been allowed to audit classes in the 1890s.[46] Women were finally admitted to medical studies during the First World War in 1917, although limitations were placed on their numbers after the war ended.[47]

A new royal charter granted to the University of London in 1858 effectively removed the affiliation of colleges to the university. Dissatisfaction from the colleges and the desire for a "teaching university" in London led to royal commissions that reported in 1888 and 1892 and the reconstitution of the university under the University of London Act 1898.[33]

1900 to 1976 – University of London, University College edit

University College London (Transfer) Act 1905
Act of Parliament
 
Citation5 Edw. 7. c. xci
Dates
Royal assent11 July 1905
Text of statute as originally enacted

Following the University of London's reconstitution in 1909, transforming it from an examining board to a federal university with constituent "schools", UCL, became a school of the University of London. While most of the colleges that became schools of the university retained their autonomy, UCL chose to be merged into the university in 1907 under the University College London (Transfer) Act 1905 (5 Edw. 7. c. xci) and surrendered its legal independence in return for gaining a greater say in the running of the university.[33] Its formal name became University of London, University College, although for most informal and external purposes the name "University College, London" (or the initialism UCL) was still used. As of 2022, it remains listed as "University of London: University College" on US Federal Student Aid applications.[48]

 
The Cruciform Building, seen from inside the quadrangle of the UCL Main Building

1900 also saw the decision to appoint a salaried head of the college. The first incumbent was Carey Foster, who served as Principal (as the post was originally titled) from 1900 to 1904. He was succeeded by Gregory Foster (no relation), and in 1906 the title was changed to Provost to avoid confusion with the principal of the University of London. Gregory Foster remained in post until 1929.[49][50][51] In 1906, the Cruciform Building was opened as the new home for University College Hospital.[52] UCL opened the first department and chair of chemical engineering in the UK, funded by the Ramsay Memorial Fund, in 1923.[53]

In 1904, Francis Galton donated £1,000 to the University of London for a eugenics laboratory; this transferred to UCL in 1907 with Karl Pearson as its director.[54] UCL apologised for its "fundamental role in the development, propagation and legitimisation of eugenics" in 2021.[55]

In 1911, UCL received an anonymous donation of £30,000 (equivalent to £3,250,000 in 2021) for a building for its school of architecture. In 1919 the donor consented to being named as Herbert Bartlett and the school was renamed in his honour.[56]

UCL sustained considerable bomb damage during the Second World War, including the complete destruction of the Great Hall, the Carey Foster Physics Laboratory and the Ramsay Laboratory. Fires gutted the library and destroyed much of the main building, including the dome; it was not until 1954 that the main building was fully restored. The departments were dispersed across the country to Aberystwyth, Bangor, Gwynedd, Cambridge, Oxford, Rothamsted near Harpenden, Hertfordshire and Sheffield, with the administration at Stanstead Bury near Ware, Hertfordshire.[57] The first UCL student newspaper, Pi, was founded in 1946.[58] The Institute of Jewish Studies relocated from Manchester to UCL in 1959.[59]

The Mullard Space Science Laboratory was established in 1967.[60] In 1973, Peter Kirstein's research group at UCL became one of two international nodes on the ARPANET.[61][62] UCL's interconnection between the ARPANET and early British academic networks was the first international heterogeneous resource sharing network.[63] UCL adopted TCP/IP in 1982, a year ahead of ARPANET, and played a significant role in the very earliest experimental Internet work.[64][65]

The college's senior common room, the Housman Room, remained men-only until 1969. After two unsuccessful attempts, a motion was passed that ended segregation by sex at UCL. This was achieved by Brian Woledge (Fielden Professor of French at UCL from 1939 to 1971) and David Colquhoun, at that time a young lecturer in pharmacology.[66]

1976 to 2005 – University College London edit

 
The Wilkins Building in 1956
 
2014

In 1976, a new charter restored UCL's legal independence, although still without the power to award its own degrees.[67][68] Under this charter the college became formally known as University College London. This name abandoned the comma used in its earlier name of "University College, London".

In 1993, a reorganisation of the University of London meant that UCL and other colleges gained direct access to government funding and the right to confer University of London degrees themselves. This led to UCL being regarded as a de facto university in its own right.[69][70]

Mergers were a major feature of this period of UCL's history. In 1986, the college merged with the Institute of Archaeology.[71] In 1988, UCL merged with the Institute of Laryngology & Otology, the Institute of Orthopaedics, the Institute of Urology & Nephrology and Middlesex Hospital Medical School.[71] Middlesex and University College hospitals, together with the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital and the Hospital for Tropical Diseases, formed the University College London Hospitals NHS Trust in 1994.[72]

Mergers continued in the 1990s, with the Institute of Child Health joining in 1995, the School of Podiatry in 1996[73] and the Institute of Neurology in 1997.[71][74] In 1998, UCL merged with the Royal Free Hospital Medical School to create the Royal Free and University College Medical School (renamed the UCL Medical School in October 2008). In 1999, UCL merged with the School of Slavonic and East European Studies[75][76] and the Eastman Dental Institute.[71]

Proposals for a merger between UCL and Imperial College London were announced in 2002.[77] The proposal provoked strong opposition from UCL teaching staff and students and the AUT union, which criticised "the indecent haste and lack of consultation", leading to its abandonment by UCL provost Sir Derek Roberts.[78][79]

From 2005 edit

 
The UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies building, which was opened in 2005

UCL was granted its own taught and research degree awarding powers in 2005,[80] and all UCL students registered from 2007/08 qualified with UCL degrees.[81] The same year, UCL adopted a new corporate branding under which the name University College London was replaced by the initialism UCL in all external communications.[82]

UCL established the UCL School of Energy & Resources (later UCL Australia) in Adelaide, Australia, in 2008 as the first campus of a British university in the country.[83] The school was based in the historic Torrens Building in Victoria Square.[84] In 2011, the mining company BHP Billiton agreed to donate AU$10 million to UCL to fund the establishment of two energy institutes – the Energy Policy Institute, based in Adelaide, and the Institute for Sustainable Resources, based in London.[85] UCL Australia closed in December 2017, with academic staff and student transferring to the University of South Australia.[86] Since 2018, UCL and the University of South Australia have offered joint master's degrees in data science and in energy systems with study in Adelaide and London.[87]

In 2011, UCL announced plans for a £500 million investment in its main Bloomsbury campus over 10 years, as well as the establishment of a new campus, UCL East, next to the Olympic Park in Stratford in the East End of London.[88] In 2018, UCL opened UCL at Here East, at the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, offering courses jointly between the Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment and the Faculty of Engineering Sciences.[89][90] The first undergraduate students, on a new Engineering and Architectural Design MEng, started in September 2018.[91] One Pool Street, the first building on the UCL East campus, opened in November 2022. UCL East was officially opened, along with the Marshgate building that completed phase 1 of the development, in September 2023 by Olympic gold medalist and UCL alumna Christine Ohuruogu.[92][93]

UCL continued to grow through mergers with smaller colleges in the University of London. On 1 January 2012 the School of Pharmacy, University of London merged with UCL, becoming the UCL School of Pharmacy within the Faculty of Life Sciences.[94][95] UCL and the Institute of Education formed a strategic alliance in October 2012,[96] followed by a full merger in December 2014.[97][98][99][100]

 
New Student Centre on Gordon Street

UCL paid tens of thousands of pounds to settle ten sexual harassment claims against staff in the 2017/18 academic year, a rise from four cases the year before. Following pressure from victims, and after physicist Emma Chapman won the legal right to speak freely about her abuse at the university, UCL announced in 2018 that it would abandon non-disclosure settlements in settlements.[101][102] In 2020, UCL became the first Russell Group university to ban romantic and sexual relationships between lecturers and their students.[103]

It was discovered in 2018 that an annual eugenics conference, the London Conference on Intelligence, had been held at UCL, as an external paid event, between 2014 and 2017.[104] An enquiry found that the organiser, an honorary lecturer, did not correctly follow the room booking procedure, including claiming that no controversial topics would be discussed, leaving the university unaware of the nature of the conference.[105] Following the revelation, UCL announced in 2018 that it would launch an enquiry into the university's historical links with eugenics.[106] This reported in 2020,[107] but covered only historical eugenics and did not address the 2014–17 conferences, leading to a majority of the authors refusing to sign the final report.[108] The Galton Lecture Theatre, Pearson Lecture Theatre and Pearson Building were all renamed in 2020,[108] and in 2021 UCL apologised for its part in promoting eugenics during the first half of the 20th century.[55][109] UCL was criticised (along with Oxford, Imperial and other London universities) in 2021 for accepting money from the Alexander Mosley Charitable Trust, established to hold the fortune left to Max Mosley by his father, British fascist leader Oswald Mosley. UCL received £500,000 to establish a forensic evidence interpretation laboratory.[110][111][112]

Following the passing of the University of London Act 2018, which allowed member institutions to become universities in their own right while remaining part of the University of London, UCL applied for university status in 2019.[113] The application was approved by the Office for Students in 2022 and a supplemental charter was sealed on 17 April 2023, granting UCL university status.[114]

Campus and locations edit

 
 
Bloomsbury
 
UCL East
 
UCL Observatory
 
UCL School of Management
 
UCL Sports Ground
class=notpageimage|
UCL campuses (red) and other facilities (blue) within London

Bloomsbury edit

UCL is primarily based in the Bloomsbury area of the London Borough of Camden, in Central London. The main campus is located around Gower Street, with many other departments close by in Bloomsbury.[115] Many health institutes are located close to associated hospitals, including the UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology and the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery in Queen Square,[116] the UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health and Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children,[115] and the UCL Eastman Dental Institute and Eastman Dental Hospital.[117]

Historic UCL buildings in Bloomsbury include the grade I listed UCL Main Building, including the original Wilkins building designed by William Wilkins,[118] and, directly opposite on Gower Street, the early 20th century grade II listed Cruciform Building, the last major building designed by Alfred Waterhouse.[119][120] Nearby are the grade II listed Kathleen Lonsdale Building, UCL's first purpose-built chemistry laboratory,[121] and the grade II listed Rockefeller Building.[122] Elsewhere in Bloomsbury is the 1970s grade II* Institute of Education building by Denys Lasdun and Partners.[123] Much of the estate falls within the Bloomsbury Conservation Area, designated in 1968.[124] Important contemporary buildings include the School of Slavonic and East European Studies building (RIBA Award winner 2006)[125] and the Sainsbury Wellcome Centre for Neural Circuits and Behaviour building (LEAF Award for best façade design and engineering and overall winner 2016).[126]

 
View of UCL East from the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, March 2022. One Pool Street is on the left-hand side of the river and Marshgate is on the right-hand side.

UCL East edit

UCL has a second campus, UCL East, at the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford, east London. The first building, with three floors of teaching and research space as well as accommodation for 500 students in two towers, opened in 2022, and the second, with eight floors of teaching and research space, opened in 2023.[92][127] A further four buildings are planned for construction in the 2030s.[128] UCL also operates a campus within Here East, the former Olympic park media centre.[89]

Other sites edit

 
The UCL Observatory in Mill Hill

Elsewhere in Central London are the UCL Institute of Ophthalmology adjacent to Moorfields Eye Hospital in Clerkenwell,[129] the Royal Free Hospital and the Whittington Hospital campuses of the UCL Medical School, and a number of other associated teaching hospitals. The UCL School of Management is on levels 38 and 50 (penthouse) of One Canada Square in the financial district of Canary Wharf.[130] The UCL Observatory is in Mill Hill[131] and the Mullard Space Science Laboratory is based in Holmbury St Mary, Surrey.[132] The UCL Athletics Ground is in Shenley, Hertfordshire.[133]

Student housing edit

 
The retained historic facade of New Hall with the student residences one metre behind, many of their windows looking at the brick wall.

UCL owns 26 halls of residence with around 7,000 student beds.[134] The university guarantees accommodation to single full-time first-year undergraduate students who have not previously lived in London while studying at a university, and who make a firm acceptance of a place and apply for accommodation by 10 June each year, and to single overseas first-year postgraduates at UCL who have not previously lived in London while studying at a university, and who make a firm acceptance of a place and apply for accommodation by 30 June each year. Accommodation is also guaranteed for students who are under 18 at the start of the academic year and for students who are care-leavers.[135] There is only limited accommodation available in university halls for returning students and others who do not meet the criteria for a guaranteed place.[136] UCL students are also eligible, as students of a member institution of the University of London, to apply for places in the University of London intercollegiate halls of residence.[137]

In 2013, UCL's newly built New Hall student accommodation building on Caledonian Road, designed by Stephen George and Partners, was awarded the Carbuncle Cup and named the country's worst new building by Building Design magazine, with the comment "this is a building that the jury struggled to see as remotely fit for human occupation". Islington Council had originally turned down planning permission for the building, but this had been overturned on appeal. As it is classified as a hotel or guest house, it was exempt from many of the standards that cover residential buildings, such as having daylight in the rooms.[138][139]

The UCL East development includes 532 student rooms in One Pool Street, which opened in 2022.[140] Further accommodation will be available in the Marshgate building, expected to open in 2023, and at the second Pool Street site.[141]

Environmental initiatives edit

UCL's new Student Centre, which opened in 2019, was designed to be environmentally friendly and was one of only 320 buildings worldwide (at the time) to be certified outstanding by BREEAM.[142] This certification requires innovation throughout the design, engineering and construction process, and places the Student Centre among the top 1% of non-domestic buildings in the UK for sustainability.[143] The UCL Student Centre was a finalist at the Green Gown Awards in 2019.[144]

Also in 2019, UCL launched a Strategy for Sustainable UCL 2019–24, including three initiatives to promote sustainability. The Positive Climate initiative saw UCL pledge to have a 40% reduction in energy usage, all energy to come from renewables, and all UCL buildings to be carbon neutral by 2024, along with achieving net zero carbon emissions for UCL by 2030.[142] The Positive Climate initiative was the winner in the "2030 Climate Action" category at the 2020 Green Gown Awards.[145][146]

A second initiative, The Loop, promotes circular economy. UCL set a target of reducing waste per person by 20% between 2019 and 2024, while aiming for an 85% recycling rate and the elimination of single-use plastics on campus. The third initiative, Wild Bloomsbury, promotes biodiversity. UCL set a target of creating 10,000 m2 (1.0 ha; 2.5 acres) of biodiverse green space on campus by 2024.[142] The Strategy for a Sustainable UCL was a finalist in the "Sustainable Institution of the Year" category at the 2022 Green Gown Awards.[147]

Organisation and administration edit

Governance edit

The two main bodies in UCL's governance structure are the council and the academic board, both of which are established by the royal charter and with powers defined by the statutes.[148] There is also a University Management Committee, which is the executive committee responsible for the day-to-day operations of the institution. This comprises the President and Provost, the vice-presidents, the vice-provosts, the pro-provost of UCL East, the deans of the faculties, the chief financial officer, chief information officer, and chief people officer, the chief of staff, the general consul, the executive director of media and marketing, and the director of media relations.[149]

The senior leadership team at UCL includes the visitor, a position in English charity law that overseas the operation of the institution.[150] That there shall be a visitor of the college is specified by the royal charter, as is that the position is to be held by the Master of the Rolls, the second most senior judge in England and Wales.[148]

UCL's council comprises 20 members, of whom 11 are members external to UCL; seven are UCL academic staff, including the provost, three UCL professors and three non-professorial staff; and two are UCL students. The chair is appointed by council for a term not normally exceeding five years. The chair is ex officio chair of the honorary degrees and fellowships committee, nominations committee and remuneration and strategy committee.[151] As of April 2023, the chair of the council is international businessman and UCL alumnus Victor Chu.[3]

The academic board plays a role similar to the senate in other institutions. It is the senior academic body responsible for advising council on academic matters and also elects academic members to council. It is, however, a much larger body than the senates at many other universities, including all professors as well as elected representatives of other academic and non-academic staff.[148][152]

UCL's principal academic and administrative officer is the President and Provost, who is also UCL's designated accountable officer for reporting to the Office for Students on behalf of UCL.[153] The provost is appointed by Council after consultation with the academic board, and is ex officio a member of council and chair of the academic board.[154] As of April 2023, Michael Spence has been president and provost since January 2021, when he succeeded Michael Arthur.[155][156]

Vice-provosts are appointed by council on the recommendation of the provost or the academic board, to assist and advise the provost as required. The vice-provosts are members of the provost's senior management team. There are four vice-provosts (for education and student experience; health; research, innovation and global engagement; and faculties).[148][157] There are also four vice-presidents, who are also members of the senior management team but whose role and manner of appointment is not specified in the statutes, for strategy, external engagement, advancement and operations.[148][157]

The deans of UCL's faculties are appointed by the council and are members of the provost's senior management team. The deans' principal duties include advising the provost and vice-provosts on academic strategy, staffing matters and resources for academic departments within their faculty; overseeing curricula and programme management at faculty level; liaising with faculty tutors on undergraduate admissions and student academic matters; overseeing examination matters at faculty level; and co-ordinating faculty views on matters relating to education and information support.[151]

Faculties and departments edit

 
Drayton House, which houses the Department of Economics
 
The UCL School of Pharmacy building
 
The Institute of Education building, home to the UCL Institute of Education and the Departments of Geography, Psychology and Language

UCL's research and teaching is organised into eleven faculties, each of which contains a number of schools, departments and institutes.[158] The establishment of faculties and academic departments is formally the responsibility of UCL's council, with advice from the academic board.[159]

Faculty statistics 2023[160]
Faculty[158] Staff Undergraduate students Taught postgraduate students Research postgraduate students
Arts and Humanities 620 2,684 943 226
Bartlett (Built Environment) 1,272 925 2,836 411
Brain Sciences 1,725 929 1,961 1,034
Engineering Sciences 667 4,373 2,791 1,122
IOE (Education and Society) 1,318 1,515 3,988 684
Laws 175 844 450 49
Life Sciences 964 2,632 1,084 592
Mathematical and Physical Sciences 1,135 3,927 929 680
Medical Sciences 1,321 2,356 1,287 430
Population Health Sciences 1,578 247 1,365 447
Social and Historical Sciences 1,101 4,130 2,054 488

There are also two academic units outside the faculty structure:[159]

There are additional staff employed outside the faculty structure in the university administration.[160]

Finances edit

In the financial year ended 31 July 2020, UCL had a total income (excluding share of joint ventures) of £1.54 billion (2018/19 – £1.49 billion) and a total expenditure of £1.34 billion (2018/19 – £1.67 billion).[2] Key sources of income included £467.7 million from research grants and contracts (2018/19 – £481.1 million), £613.7 million from tuition fees and education contracts (2018/19 – £564.9 million), £227.9 million from funding body grants (2018/19 – £213.5 million) and £26.6 million from donations and endowments (2018/19 – £40.5 million).[2] At year end UCL had endowments of £143.2 million (31 July 2019 – £138.7 million) and total net assets of £1.49 billion (31 July 2019 – £1.29 million).[2]

A report by London Economics in 2022 found that UCL generates around £10 billion annually for the UK economy. The largest contributor to this is through the spread of its research and knowledge, which is worth £4 billion, with another £3 billion being added by the impact of UCL's own spending. Other contributions come from encouraging graduates to create jobs and investment, and from nurturing company spin-offs and start-ups. The report found that in 2018–19, UCL had supported 234 graduate start-ups and 83 spinout companies, with a total turnover of £110 million and employing almost 3,000 people. The report also found that UCL's spending supported 19,000 jobs across the UK, with over 7,000 of these being outside London.[15]

Terms edit

The UCL academic year is divided into three terms. For most departments, First Term runs from late September to mid December, Second Term from mid January to late March, and Third Term from late April to mid June, with reading weeks in early November and mid February. Certain courses at the medical school, the faculty of education and society, and the school of pharmacy operate on different terms.[162]

Logo and colours edit

 
The old UCL logo, used prior to August 2005

While many universities use their logo for most communications and branding and a coat of arms only for specific ceremonial and official use,[163] UCL exclusively uses a logo and has no coat of arms. The present logo was adopted as part of a rebranding exercise in August 2005.[82] Prior to that date, a different logo was used, in which the letters UCL were incorporated into a stylised representation of the Wilkins Building portico.[164]

A pseudo-heraldic "UCL crest" – a purple shield depicting a raised bent arm dressed in armour between two gold laurel branches holding a green upturned open wreath, with the college motto on a blue celeste ribbon beneath the laurel branches – can be found on the internet. A version of this badge (not on a shield) appears to have been used by UCL Union from shortly after its foundation in 1893.[165] However, the badge has never been the subject of an official grant of arms, and departs from several of the rules and conventions of heraldry. It is not an official logo, although modified forms are used by some by sports teams and societies.[166] The official Team UCL logo, used (with variants) by many sports teams, uses a shield divided into the colours of purple (lower) and blue celeste (upper), but none of the other elements (laurels, wreaths, armoured arm, motto) are present; the only graphic is a depiction of the UCL portico. Students' Union UCL requests teams not to modify this logo, but this is widely ignored.[167][168]

UCL's motto, "Cuncti adsint meritaeque expectent praemia palmae" is a quotation from Virgil's Aeneid, and translates into English as "Let all come who by merit deserve the most reward".[169][170]

UCL's traditional sporting and academic colours are purple and blue celeste.[7] UCL uses a palette of 25 colours (including the two traditional colours) in its visual identity; the logo can be used in many different combinations of these colours.[7]

Memberships, affiliations and partnerships edit

 
The main building of University College Hospital

UCL is a member institution of the federal University of London and was one of the two colleges affiliated from the university's founding in 1836 (the other being King's College London).[171] UCL was a founding member of the Russell Group, an association of 24 British research universities established in 1994,[172] and is regarded as forming part of the 'golden triangle', an unofficial term for the research-intensive universities located in the southern English cities of Cambridge, London and Oxford[173][174][175]

UCL has been a member of the League of European Research Universities since January 2006.[176][177] UCL is also a member of the Association of Commonwealth Universities,[178] the European University Association,[179] the global U7+ Alliance[180] and the US Universities Research Association,[181] and has a major collaboration with Yale University, the Yale UCL Collaborative.[182] It also has partnerships with universities in Australia,[note 1] Canada,[note 2] China,[note 3] India,[note 4] Japan,[note 5] Singapore[note 6] and Thailand.[note 7][183][184][185][186]

UCL formed the Science and Engineering South engineering and physical sciences research alliance with the universities of Cambridge, Oxford, Southampton and Imperial College London in May 2013.[187] It was also one of the founding members of the Alan Turing Institute, the UK's national institute for data sciences and artificial intelligence, in 2015, with the universities of Cambridge, Edinburgh, Oxford and Warwick.[188]

 
The Francis Crick Institute building

UCL is a partner in UCLPartners, an academic health science centre, along with multiple NHS trusts, integrated care systems, research and innovation partners, and other universities.[189] UCL is a partner with the National Institute for Health Research, the University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and UCLPartners in the UCLH Biomedical Research Centre.[190] UCL is also a university partner of the Francis Crick Institute, a major biomedical research centre in London.[191]

UCL offers dual degrees and joint degrees with other universities and institutions, including the University of Cologne,[192] Columbia University,[193] the University of Hong Kong,[194] Imperial College London (ending 2023)[195] and New York University.[196]

UCL is the sponsor of the UCL Academy, a secondary school in the London Borough of Camden. The school opened in September 2012 and was the first in the UK to have a university as sole sponsor.[197] UCL also has a strategic partnership with Newham Collegiate Sixth Form Centre.[198]

Academic profile edit

Research edit

 
John O'Keefe, UCL neuroscientist and 2014 Nobel laureate for his discovery of place cells

In 2021/22, UCL had an income from research grants and contracts of £524.9 million, making up 30% of all revenue. The largest sources of research income were research council grants (£170.4 million) and British charities (£154.4 million). A further £159.3 million of recurrent research funding was allocated to UCL by Research England, making up 9% of income.[2]

UCL submitted 3,432 staff (3,177 FTEs) across 32 units of assessment (areas of research) to the 2021 Research Excellence Framework (REF) assessment. 58% of submitted research was rated 4* ('world leading'), the sixth highest in the REF, and a further 34% as 3* ('internationally excellent'). Overall, UCL was ranked second for both research power and market share by both Times Higher Education and Research Professional News, and sixth on research quality (GPA) by Times Higher Education. UCL submitted more units of assessment to the 2021 REF than any other university. However, UCL's market share (based on the funding formula) declined from 6.23% following the 2014 REF to 5.34%, despite the overall improvement, reflecting increases in research quality across the sector.[199][200][201][202]

Research centres edit

UCL operates a large number of disciplinary-specific research centres in partnership with other research institutions and private enterprises. Notable examples include:

Publishing and commercialisation edit

In 2020/21, UCL had an income of £7.3 million from intellectual property and £25.2 million from the sale of shares in spin-off companies. As of 2020/21, UCL had the second largest patent portfolio of any UK university (after Oxford) with 2,391 patents. It granted the third largest number of intellectual property licences (after Oxford and the University of East Anglia), with 2,235.[209]

UCL Business is a technology transfer company which is wholly owned by UCL. It has three main activities: licensing technologies, creating spin-out companies, and project management.[210] UCL Business supports spin-out companies in areas including discovery disclosure, commercialisation, business plan development, contractual advice, incubation support, recruitment of management teams and identification of investors.[210] In the area of licensing technoloiges, the company provides commercial, legal and administrative advice to help companies broker licensing agreements.[210] UCL Business also provides UCL departments and institutes with project management services for single or multi-party collaborative industry projects.[210] The company transferred £4.8 million of royalty income to UCL in 2021/22.[2]

Launched in 2015, UCL Press is a new university press[211] wholly owned by UCL.[212] It was the first fully open access university press in the UK, and publishes monographs, textbooks and other academic books in a wide range of academic areas which are available to download for free, in addition to a number of journals.[213] As of October 2022, UCL Press had had more than 6.5 million downloads of its open access books in 247 countries and territories worldwide.[214] UCL Consultants is an academic consultancy services company which is wholly owned by UCL, which provides four main service offerings: Academic Consultancy, Bespoke Short Courses, Testing & Analysis and Expert Witness.[215][216]

Libraries edit

 
The Donaldson Reading Room, part of UCL's Main Library
 
The UCL Institute of Education's Newsam Library, the largest education library in Europe

The UCL library system comprises 18 libraries located across the Bloomsbury and UCL East campuses.[217] The libraries contain a total of over 2 million books.[218] The largest library is the UCL Main Library, which is located in the UCL Main Building and contains collections relating to the arts and humanities, economics, history, law and public policy.[217] The second largest library is the UCL Science Library, which is located in the DMS Watson Building on Malet Place and contains collections relating to anthropology, engineering, geography, life sciences, management and the mathematical and physical sciences.[217] The Cruciform Hub contains books and periodicals in the subjects of clinical medicine and medical science.[219] It holds the combined collections of the former Boldero and Clinical Sciences libraries which developed within the Middlesex Hospital, University College Hospital and Royal Free & University College Medical Schools up until their merger in 2005.[220]

Other libraries include the UCL Bartlett Library (architecture and town planning), the UCL Eastman Dental Institute Library (oral health sciences), the UCL Institute of Archaeology Library (archaeology and egyptology), the UCL Institute of Education's Newsam Library (education and related areas of social science), the UCL Institute of Neurology Rockefeller Medical Library (neurosurgery and neuroscience), the Joint Moorfields Eye Hospital & the UCL Institute of Ophthalmology Library (biomedicine, medicine, nursing, ophthalmology and visual science), the UCL Language & Speech Science Library (audiology, communication disorders, linguistics & phonetics, special education, speech & language therapy and voice) and the UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies Library (the economics, geography, history, languages, literature and politics of Eastern Europe).[217] The newest library is the UCL East Library, currently located in the Learning Hub on the first floor of One Pool Street. Uniquely among UCL libraries, it offers a 'click and collect' service allowing books from any UCL library to be delivered to UCL East rather than having to be picked up from the library that holds them. It is expected to relocate to the new Marshgate building when that opens in September 2023.[221]

UCL staff and students have full access to the main libraries of the University of London – the Senate House Library and the libraries of the institutes of the School of Advanced Study – which are located close to the main UCL campus in Bloomsbury.[222] These libraries contain over 3.7 million books and focus on the arts, humanities and social sciences.[218] The British Library, which contains around 14 million books, is also located close to the main UCL campus and all UCL students and staff can apply for reference access.[223]

UCL's open access institutional repository, UCL Discovery, and UCL Press, UCL's open access academic press are managed by UCL Library Services.[224]

Special collections edit

UCL's Special Collections contains UCL's collection of historical or culturally significant works. It holds over 150,000 rare books, including 179 incunabula, as well as over 600 collections of archives and manuscripts. The incunabula include a 1477 edition of Dante's Divine Comedy, and a 1493 edition of the Nuremberg Chronicle donated by Jeremy Bentham.[225][226]

UCL's most significant works are housed in three strong rooms. The special collection includes first editions of Isaac Newton's Principia, Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species and James Joyce's Ulysses.[227]

Museums edit

 
The Flaxman Gallery

UCL is responsible for several museums and collections in a wide range of fields across the arts and sciences, including:[228]

  • Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology: Founded in 1892 by a donation from Amelia Edwards of several hundred Egyptian items, the museum now contains around 80,000 items and covers the history of the Nile valley from prehistoric times through to the Islamic period. It is named after William Flinders Petrie, the first Edwards Professor at UCL, who excavated dozens of sites in his career and sold his collection to the college in 1913.[229] The Petrie Museum is a designated collection under the Arts Council England Designation Scheme for "pre-eminent collections held in museums, libraries and archives across England".[230]
  • UCL Art Museum: the art collection originated as a teaching and research collection for the Slade, and contains works by women artists dating back to the 1890s. A series of plaster casts of full-size details of sculptures by John Flaxman is located inside the library under the dome of the UCL Main Building.[231]
  • Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy: Established in 1827 by Robert Edmund Grant, UCL's first professor of comparative anatomy and zoology, for teaching purposes. Grant bequeathed his collection of 10,000 specimens to UCL upon his death. With other additions, the museum now contains around 68,000 specimens, including dodo bones and a rare quagga skeleton.[232]

Reputation and rankings edit

 
University College London's national league table performance over the past ten years
National

UCL is ranked as one of the top ten universities in all three of the main UK university league tables.[233][234][235] These place more emphasis on teaching and student experience than global rankings, using criteria such as teaching quality and learning resources, entry standards, employment prospects, research quality and dropout rates.[239] It went through a dip in rankings in recent years, particularly in The Guardian University Guide, but returned to the top ten in 2022, when its ninth position was its best result in that table since 2014.[240]

In the 2023 Complete University Guide subject tables, UCL was ranked in the top ten in 34 subjects out of 42 offered (81%). It was ranked top for American studies, linguistics, speech and language therapy, and building.[241]

In the 2023 Guardian University Guide subject tables, UCL is ranked top in construction, surveying and planning. It was ranked in the top ten for 21 of 31 subjects offered (68%).[234]

UCL is ranked top in the 2023 Times/Sunday Times Good University Guide for American studies, building, information systems and management, liberal arts, and town and country planning. It is ranked in the top ten for 31 of 44 subjects offered (70%). The 2023 Good University Guide also ranked UCL 98th in their social inclusion ranking (covering England and Wales). UCL was named University of the Year in the Times/Sunday Times Good University Guide for 2024.[235]

Analysis by the Department for Education in 2018, found that UCL had an impact on earnings of graduates five years after graduation of +15.5% for women (7th highest impact) and +16.2% for men (10th highest impact) compared to average graduates with similar background characteristics (prior attainment, socio-economic status, etc.) and subject choice.[242]

Global

UCL has been consistently ranked in the top 25 of the three major global rankings published over 2013 to 2022, including being in the top ten of the QS World University Rankings over the whole of that period.[243][244][245]

In the 2022 Academic Ranking of World Universities, UCL was ranked 18th in the world,[236] having been placed between 15th and 21st in the rankings from 2013 to 2022.[243]

In the 2023 QS World University Rankings (published 2022), UCL was ranked 8th in the world.[237] It has ranked between 4th and 10th in the 2014 to 2024 league tables.[244]

In the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2023 (published 2022), UCL was ranked 22nd in the world,[238] having ranked between 14th and 22nd in the 2014 to 2023 tables.[245] In the Times Higher Education World Reputation Rankings 2022, UCL was ranked 25th, while in the Times Higher Education Impact Rankings 2022 it was ranked 101–200.[245]

In the 2022–2023 USNWR's Best Global Universities, UCL was ranked 12th in the world.

Admissions edit

UCAS admission statistics (2022)
Main scheme applications[246]
Applications 74,775
Accepted applicants 7,420
Applications/accepted ratio 10.08
UK applicants, June deadline[247]
Applications 31,285
Offer rate (%) 29.5
Offers 9,700
Placed applicants 3,175
Placed applicants/offers (%) 32.7
Summary statistics
Total accepted applicants[246] 7,530
Average Entry Tariff (2020)[248] 189
 
Bentham House, the main building of the UCL Faculty of Laws

Admission to UCL is highly selective with an average entry tariff for 2020–21 of 189 UCAS points (approximately equivalent to AAAB at A-level), the 9th highest in the country.[248] According to a Freedom of Information request response, UCL's offer rate for 2021 admission was 36.1% at undergraduate level and 23.5% at postgraduate level across all applicants.[249][note 8]

International students have made up the majority of main-scheme applicants to UCL since 2015 and the majority of acceptances since 2017. The ratio of main-scheme applicants to acceptances in 2022 was 10.3 for UK applicants and 9.9 for international applicants.[246] Within the UK, UCL is a local recruiter,[250] with 47.4% of 2022 UK admissions coming from the London region and a further 28.1% from the adjacent East of England and South East regions.[246]

Of UCL's young UK domiciled undergraduates, 32.7% were privately educated in 2019–20, the eighth highest proportion amongst mainstream British universities.[251]

Undergraduate law applicants are required to take the National Admissions Test for Law[252] and undergraduate medical applicants are required to take the BioMedical Admissions Test.[252] Applicants for European Social and Political Studies are required to take the Thinking Skills Assessment (TSA) should they be selected for an assessment day.[252] Medicine, pharmacy and English also interview undergraduate applicants prior to making an offer of admission.[252]

Widening access edit

Undergraduate admissions (2020/21): widening participation indicators[253]
Independent school 32.4% 32.4
 
Benchmark 25.5% 25.5
 
Low participation areas 4.3% 4.3
 
Benchmark 4.0% 4
 

UCL runs a contextual offer scheme called Access UCL, whereby eligible applicants can receive conditional offers for courses at UCL that have lower requirements than the standard conditional offers for those courses. Eligibility for Access UCL can be through an applicant living in a deprived areas or an area with low participation in higher education, through having spent time in care, though being a young adult carer, or through being estranged from their family. Except for applicants that have spent time in care, the scheme requires applicants to have attended a state school. Mature applicants are assessed on the same criteria, and are additionally not eligible if they have completed or are on the final year of an undergraduate degree. While the scheme enables applicants from disadvantaged backgrounds to receive contextual offers, it does not guarantee that an offer will be made.[254] Contextual offers vary by course. For example, a contextual offer for the law LLB reduces the requirement from A*AA to BBB at A level,[255] but for the physics MSci from A*AA to AAB.[256]

UCL also runs week-long UCL Summer Schools for high-achieving students from disadvantaged backgrounds in partnership with the Sutton Trust. These give participants the opportunity to explore London, to develop skills in their chosen subject, to improve their university applications through personal statement workshops and talks by admissions tutors, and to take part in social activities.[257]

From the 2023/24 academic year, UCL will be launching an engineering foundation year based at UCL East for students who do not meet the standard entry requirements, who attended UK state schools for A levels or equivalent (unless refugees), and who live in an area with high levels of at least one axis of deprivation.[258]

For international students who do not meet the requirements for admission to the college, it runs intensive one-year foundation courses, called Undergraduate Preparatory Certificates, in either sciences or humanities.[259]

For UK domiciled young full-time undergraduate entrants in 2020/21, 67.6% came from state schools, significantly below the location-adjusted benchmark of 74.5%, and 4.3% came from low participation neighbourhoods, not significantly different from the location-adjusted benchmark of 4.0%.[253] For UK-domiciled undergraduate entrants in 2022/23, UCAS data shows no significant difference in offer rate with ethnicity or gender.[247] Applicants from the 20% of neighbourhoods with the lowest rates of participation in higher education receive offers at a rate 4.9% higher than would be expected based on their subject choice and predicted grades alone, a statistically significant difference, accounting for 6.3% of all offers. The offer rate for applicants from the 20% of neighbourhoods with the lowest rates of participation in higher education is not significantly different from that expected, with applicants from those neighbourhoods accounting for 48.9% of all offers.[247]

Student life edit

Students' union edit

 
Students' union building on Gordon Street

Founded in 1893, Students' Union UCL, formerly the UCL Union, is one of the oldest students' unions in England, although postdating the Liverpool Guild of Students which formed a student representative council in 1892.[67][260] Students' Union UCL operates both as the representative voice for UCL students, and as a provider of a wide range of services. It is democratically controlled through General Meetings and referendums, and is run by elected student officers. The union also supports a range of services, including numerous clubs and societies, sports facilities, an advice service, and a number of bars, cafes and shops.[261]

As of 2021, there are over 250 clubs and societies under the umbrella of the UCL Union.[262] These include: UCL Snowsports (one of the largest sports society at UCL, responsible for organising the annual UCL ski trip),[263] Pi Media (responsible for Pi Magazine and Pi Newspaper, UCL's official student publications),[264] the Debating Society (established 1829),[265] and the UCL Union Film Society, with past members including Christopher Nolan.[266]

Faith edit

From its foundation the college has been deliberately secular; the initial justification for this was that it would enable students of different Christian traditions (specifically Roman Catholics, Anglicans and Nonconformists) to study alongside each other without conflict.[267] In order to cater to people of all faiths, UCL opened a prayer room (with attached ablution facilities) and a silent meditation room in the student centre in February 2019, and there is a quiet contemplation room behind 16–26 Gordon Square. There is also a Christian chaplain (who also serves as interfaith advisor) and there are student societies for most major religions.[268][269]

Sport edit

The union runs over 70 sports clubs,[270] including the UCL Cricket Club (Men's and Women's), UCL Boat Club (Men's and Women's clubs), UCL Running, Athletics and Cross Country Club, and UCL Rugby Club (Men's and Women's), as well as RUMS sports clubs for medical students (from Royal Free, University College and Middlesex, the three medical schools that merged into UCL).[168][271]

UCL clubs compete in inter-university fixtures in the British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS) competition in a range of sports, including athletics, basketball, cricket, fencing, football, hockey, netball, rugby union and tennis. In the 2021/22 season, UCL finished in 16th position in the final BUCS rankings.[272]

UCL sports facilities include a fitness centre at the main UCL campus in Bloomsbury and a 90-acre (36 ha) athletics ground in Shenley, Hertfordshire,[273] part of which is used as the Watford Football Club Training Ground.[274] It also exercises effective control over Somers Town Community Sports Centre, with the power to appoint five of the nine trustees.[2] The sports centre includes a six-court sports hall,[275] as well as an activity/dance studio and an all-weather outdoor multi-use games area.[276][277][278]

Mascot edit

 
Pencil signed etching of Phineas Maclino

The UCL mascot was Phineas MacLino, or Phineas, a wooden tobacconist's sign of a kilted Jacobite Highlander stolen from outside a shop in Tottenham Court Road during the celebrations of the relief of Ladysmith, part of the Second Boer War, in March 1900.[279] In 1922, Phineas was stolen by students from King's, marking the start of 'mascotry', leading to an hour-long battle and the eventual return of Phineas.[280] In 1993, the students' union's centenary year, Phineas was placed in the third floor bar of 25 Gordon Street and the bar named after him.[281] In 2019, the students' union voted to remove the mascot from the bar due to its links to imperialism and British colonialism.[282][283]

Rivalry with King's College London edit

 
A UCL player attacks in his team's 2014 Varsity victory. UCL's traditional rivalry with King's College is nowadays most noticeable at the annual varsity rugby game

UCL has a long-running, mostly friendly rivalry with King's College London, but there were frequent clashes in the interwar period which have historically been known as "rags".[284] UCL students have been referred to by students from King's as the "Godless Scum of Gower Street", in reference to a comment made at the founding of King's, which was based on Christian principles. UCL students in turn referred to King's as "Strand Polytechnic".[285][286]

In 1922 Phineas, the UCL mascot was kidnapped by King's students, leading to a pitched battle in the King's College quad as UCL students recovered their mascot.[287][288] Shortly after this, King's adopted their own mascot – initially a large papier-mâché beer bottle, soon replaced by Reggie the Lion.[280] During the 1927 rag, Reggie was captured by UCL students and his body filled with rotten apples. During the same year, an attempt by King's students to capture Phineas led to the "Battle of Gower Street", caught on camera by British Pathé.[289] On another occasion, Reggie was castrated by UCL students.[290]

King's students stole the embalmed head of Jeremy Bentham in October 1975, only returning it after UCL paid a ransom to charity. The head is now kept in the UCL vaults.[291]

Student campaigns edit

In 1956, UCL students organised a silent march progressing against the Soviet oppression of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. Around 1,300 students from across institutions in London matches from the Royal Albert Hall to the Soviet Embassy. There were active Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and anti-apartheid students groups at UCL in the 1960s and a pioneering GaySoc group that helped drive the National Union of Students gay rights campaign in the 1970s. 1977 saw a student occupation of administrative offices and the Slade School in protest against government cuts to higher education.[66]

In 2010, protests by students and staff led UCL to promise to pay a living wage to all UCL staff.[292] As part of the protests against the UK government's plans to increase student fees, around 200 students occupied the Jeremy Bentham Room and part of the Slade School of Fine Art for over two weeks during November and December 2010.[293][294] The university successfully obtained a court order to evict the students but stated that it did not intend to enforce the order if possible.[294]

The late 2010s saw student campaigns around the cost of university-run accommodation. In 2016, over 1000 students took part in a rent strike in protest against high rents and poor conditions. Organisers said they had won over £1 million in rent cuts, freezes and grants from UCL in the settlement that ended the strike.[295] Another rent strike in 2017 lead to UCL pledging around £1.4 million in bursaries and rent freezes, mostly in the form of accommodation bursaries for less well-off students totalling £600,000 per year for the 2017/18 and 2018/19 academic years.[296] Another rent strike was held at two halls of residence in the third term of the 2017/18 academic year due to complaints over conditions at those halls.[297]

Student body edit

UCL student body 2021/22

  UK undergrad (23.5%)
  Int undergrad (27.3%)
  UK taught postgrad (17.4%)
  Int taught postgrad (18.7%)
  UK research postgrad (7.5%)
  Int research postgrad (5.6%)
Student body composition (2021/22)[298][299][300]
Domicile and ethnicity[note 9]
British – white 25.6% 25.6
 
British – Asian 12.8% 12.8
 
British – Black 3.1% 3.1
 
British – mixed heritage 3.7% 3.7
 
British – other/unknown 3.2% 3.2
 
International – European Union 9.4% 9.4
 
International – China 23.0% 23
 
International – rest of Asia 10.7% 10.7
 
International – rest of the world 8.4% 8.4
 
Gender
Female 60.8% 60.8
 
Male 39.1% 39.1
 
Other 0.1% 0.1
 
Age
30 and over 12.1% 12.1
 
25–29 13.8% 13.8
 
21–24 34.8% 34.8
 
20 and under 39.3% 39.3
 

In the 2021/22 academic year, UCL had a total of 46,830 students, of whom 23,800 were undergraduates (11,000 UK, 12,800 international), 16,910 were taught postgraduates (8,160 UK, 8,745 international) and 6,120 were research postgraduates (3,520 UK, 2,600 international).[298] In that year, UCL had the second-largest total number of students of any university in the United Kingdom (after the Open University) and the largest number of postgraduate students; however, in terms of UK undergraduates it was 68th by size.[298] It had been the UK university with the highest number of international students every year since 2014/15.[301]

In 2021/22, 87% of UCL's students were full-time and 13% part-time,[298] although among undergraduates only 3% were part-time. The student body was split 60.8% female, 39.1% male and 0.1% other gender identity.[298] 24,145 UCL students (52%) were from outside the UK, of whom 15,795 were from Asia, 4,400 from the European Union, 1,440 from North America, 890 from elsewhere in Europe, 790 from the Middle East, 370 from Africa, 310 from South America, and 155 from Australasia; 45% of overseas students at UCL – 10,785 – came from China.[299] Additionally, UCL had 895 students studying wholly overseas in 2021/22 (10 undergraduate, 785 taught postgraduate and 80 research postgraduate) that are not included in the count of the student population.[302]

For UK domiciled students, UCL's student body in 2021/22 was 52.9% white, 26.4% Asian, 7.6% mixed, 6.4% black and 4.6% other, compared to an average across London institutions of 47.8% white, 22.2% Asian, 6.7% mixed, 15.5% black and 4.9% other. Over the whole student body, 12.5% had a known disability, compared to 15.8% across all institutions.[300]

Diversity edit

UCL holds an institutional silver Athena SWAN award. It gained its first institutional award (bronze) in 2006 and was promoted to silver in 2015. As of November 2021, 21 departments across UCL hold bronze awards, 17 hold silver awards and three hold gold awards.[303] UCL also holds an institutional bronze Race Equality Charter award, which it first gained in 2015.[304]

UCL was formerly a member of Stonewall Diversity Champions scheme, promoting LGBT+ equality. It left in February 2020 as a cost-cutting measure and then controversially decided in late 2021 not to rejoin, against the advice of its equality diversity and inclusion committee, following a vote of the academic board that expressed fears that membership of the scheme could inhibit academic freedom. The decision not to rejoin was strongly opposed by staff and student LGBT+ groups at UCL and by the students' union.[305][306]

Notable people edit

UCL alumni include Francis Crick (co-discoverer of the structure of DNA),[307] Lord Herschell (Lord Chancellor of Great Britain),[308] William Stanley Jevons (an early pioneer of modern economics),[309] Charles K. Kao ("Godfather of broadband"),[310] Jomo Kenyatta (considered the "Founding Father" of Kenya)[311] and Joseph Lister (pioneer in the use of antiseptics in surgery).[312] Notable former staff include Hugh Gaitskell (leader of the Labour Party 1955–63),[313] Otto Hahn (pioneer of nuclear chemistry, discoverer of nuclear fusion and Nobel laureate),[18] Peter Higgs (proposer of the Higgs mechanism, which predicted the existence of the Higgs boson, and Nobel laureate),[18] A. E. Housman (classical scholar and poet, who wrote A Shropshire Lad while a professor at UCL),[314] Sir William Ramsay (discoverer of all of the naturally occurring noble gases)[315] and Klaus Roth (mathematician and Field's Medal winner).[316]

Nobel Prizes have been awarded to 30 UCL academics (including visiting academics) and alumni (16 in Physiology or Medicine, seven in Chemistry, five in Physics and one each in Literature and Economic Sciences) as well as three Fields Medals in Mathematics.[18][19]

In the 19th century UCL operated as a college, with many students taking individual lecture courses rather than studying for degrees.[317] These included well-known alumni such as Mahatma Gandhi, who took English classes with Henry Morley in 1888–89,[318] and John Stuart Mill, who attended lectures on jurisprudence by John Austin.[319]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Address from University College London". Record of the Celebration of the Quatercentenary of the University of Aberdeen. University of Aberdeen. 1907. p. 537.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 31 July 2023" (PDF). University College London. Retrieved 21 December 2023.
  3. ^ a b "UCL Council". University College London. August 2022. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  4. ^ . University College London. Archived from the original on 3 February 2013. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  5. ^ a b "Who's working in HE?". www.hesa.ac.uk.
  6. ^ a b c "Where do HE students study? | HESA". www.hesa.ac.uk.
  7. ^ a b c (PDF). UCL. p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 December 2019. Retrieved 23 December 2022. Mid Purple and Blue Celeste are UCL's traditional colours
  8. ^ (PDF). UCL. 2005. p. 44. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 April 2015. Retrieved 28 October 2018. UCL should always be referred to as 'UCL'. "University College London" can only be used as part of the postal address.
  9. ^ Sutherland, John (29 July 2005). "What's in a name?". The Guardian.
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university, college, london, which, operates, public, research, university, london, england, member, institution, federal, university, london, second, largest, university, united, kingdom, total, enrolment, largest, postgraduate, enrolment, latin, collegium, u. University College London which operates as UCL 8 9 10 is a public research university in London England It is a member institution of the federal University of London and is the second largest university in the United Kingdom by total enrolment 11 and the largest by postgraduate enrolment University College LondonLatin Collegium Universitatis Londinensis 1 Other nameUCLFormer namesLondon University 1826 1836 University College London 1836 1907 University of London University College 1907 1976 University College London 1977 2005 remains legal name MottoLatin Cuncti adsint meritaeque expectent praemia palmaeMotto in EnglishLet all come who by merit deserve the most rewardTypePublic research universityEstablished1826 198 years ago 1826 University status 2023 Endowment 156 8 million 2023 2 Budget 1 933 billion 2022 23 2 ChairVictor L L Chu 3 VisitorSir Geoffrey Vos as Master of the Rolls ex officio 4 ChancellorAnne Princess Royal as Chancellor of the University of London President and ProvostMichael SpenceAcademic staff9 585 2021 22 5 Administrative staff6 075 2021 22 5 Students46 830 2021 22 6 Undergraduates23 800 2021 22 6 Postgraduates23 030 2021 22 6 Other students895 studying wholly overseas 2021 22 LocationLondon England51 31 29 N 00 08 01 W 51 52472 N 0 13361 W 51 52472 0 13361CampusUrbanColoursPurple and blue celeste 7 AffiliationsACU EUA LERU Russell Group SES University of London Universities UKWebsiteucl ac ukEstablished in 1826 as London University though without university degree awarding powers by founders inspired by the radical ideas of Jeremy Bentham UCL was the first university institution to be established in London and the first in England to be entirely secular and to admit students regardless of their religion 12 13 It was also among the first university colleges to admit women alongside men in 1878 two years after University College Bristol 14 Intended by its founders to be England s third university politics forced it to accept the status of a college in 1836 when it received a royal charter and became one of the two founding colleges of the University of London although it achieved de facto recognition as a university in the 1990s and formal university status in 2023 It has grown through mergers including with the Institute of Ophthalmology in 1995 the Institute of Neurology in 1997 the Royal Free Hospital Medical School in 1998 the Eastman Dental Institute in 1999 the School of Slavonic and East European Studies in 1999 the School of Pharmacy in 2012 and the Institute of Education in 2014 UCL has its main campus in the Bloomsbury area of central London with a number of institutes and teaching hospitals elsewhere in central London and has a second campus UCL East at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford East London UCL is organised into 11 constituent faculties within which there are over 100 departments institutes and research centres UCL operates several museums and collections in a wide range of fields including the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology and the Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy and administers the annual Orwell Prize in political writing In 2022 23 UCL had a total income of 1 93 billion of which 527 million was from research grants and contracts 2 The university generates around 10 billion annually for the UK economy primarily through the spread of its research and knowledge 4 billion and the impact of its own spending 3 billion 15 UCL is a member of numerous academic organisations including the Russell Group and the League of European Research Universities and is part of UCL Partners the world s largest academic health science centre 16 It is considered part of the golden triangle of research intensive universities in southeast England 17 UCL has publishing and commercial activities including UCL Press UCL Business and UCL Consultants UCL has many notable alumni including the founder of Mauritius the first Prime Minister of Japan one of the co discoverers of the structure of DNA and Coldplay members UCL academics discovered five of the naturally occurring noble gases discovered hormones invented the vacuum tube and made several foundational advances in modern statistics As of 2022 update 30 Nobel Prize winners 18 and three Fields medallists 19 have been affiliated with UCL as alumni or academic staff Contents 1 History 1 1 1826 to 1836 London University 1 2 1836 to 1900 University College London 1 3 1900 to 1976 University of London University College 1 4 1976 to 2005 University College London 1 5 From 2005 2 Campus and locations 2 1 Bloomsbury 2 2 UCL East 2 3 Other sites 2 4 Student housing 2 5 Environmental initiatives 3 Organisation and administration 3 1 Governance 3 2 Faculties and departments 3 3 Finances 3 4 Terms 3 5 Logo and colours 3 6 Memberships affiliations and partnerships 4 Academic profile 4 1 Research 4 1 1 Research centres 4 1 2 Publishing and commercialisation 4 2 Libraries 4 2 1 Special collections 4 3 Museums 4 4 Reputation and rankings 5 Admissions 5 1 Widening access 6 Student life 6 1 Students union 6 2 Faith 6 3 Sport 6 4 Mascot 6 5 Rivalry with King s College London 6 6 Student campaigns 7 Student body 7 1 Diversity 8 Notable people 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editMain article History of University College London 1826 to 1836 London University edit nbsp Share no 1105 in the University of London issued 3 February 1829 nbsp The London University now the UCL Main Building as imagined by Thomas Hosmer Shepherd in 1827 28 when construction was in progress The portico and dome were completed in 1829 but lack of funds meant it would be many years before reality matched the picture UCL was founded on 11 February 1826 as an alternative to the Anglican universities of Oxford and Cambridge 20 It took the form of a joint stock company with shares sold for 100 equivalent to 8 900 in 2021 to proprietors under the name of London University although without legal recognition as a university or the associated right to award degrees 21 22 23 London University s first warden was Leonard Horner who was the first scientist to head a British university 24 nbsp Henry Tonks 1923 mural The Four Founders of UCLDespite the commonly held belief that the philosopher Jeremy Bentham was the founder of UCL his direct involvement was limited to the purchase of share No 633 at a cost of 100 paid in nine instalments between December 1826 and January 1830 In 1828 he did nominate a friend to sit on the council and in 1827 attempted to have his disciple John Bowring appointed as the first professor of English or History but on both occasions his candidates were unsuccessful 25 However Bentham is commonly regarded as the spiritual father of UCL as his ideas on education and society were influential with the institution s founders particularly James Mill 1773 1836 and Henry Brougham 1778 1868 26 In 1828 the chair of political economy at London University was created with John Ramsay McCulloch as the first incumbent 27 In 1829 the university appointed the first professor of English in England although the course concentrated on linguistics and the modern teaching of English studying English literature was introduced by King s College London in 1831 28 In 1830 London University founded the London University School which would later become University College School 29 In 1833 the university appointed Alexander Maconochie secretary to the Royal Geographical Society as the first professor of geography in Britain 30 31 Classes in medicine began at the opening of the college in 1828 and in 1834 University College Hospital originally North London Hospital opened as a teaching hospital for these classes which were organised into a faculty of medicine in 1836 32 1836 to 1900 University College London edit After almost a decade of attempting to win recognition as a university and the right to award degrees including an Address to the Crown from the House of Commons the proprietors of London University accepted the government s proposal to establish the University of London as an independent examining body accepting the status of a college for their institution 33 As a result the proprietors of London University were incorporated by royal charter under the name University College London on 28 November 1836 On the same day the University of London was created by royal charter as a degree awarding examining board for students from affiliated schools and colleges with University College and King s College London being named in the charter as the first two affiliates 33 34 The first students from UCL and King s matriculated as undergraduates in 1838 and the first degrees were awarded to students of the two colleges in 1839 35 There had been an intention to establish a course in engineering at the college s opening but no professor was appointed until 1840 or 1841 after engineering courses had started at Durham University 1837 and King s College London 1838 36 37 The Slade School of Fine Art was founded as part of University College in 1871 following a bequest from Felix Slade 38 In 1878 the University of London gained a supplemental charter making it the first British university to be allowed to award degrees to women The same year UCL admitted women to the faculties of Arts and Law and of Science although women remained barred from the faculties of Engineering and of Medicine with the exception of courses on public health and hygiene 39 40 UCL s admission of women in 1878 came almost three decades after Bedford College became the first institution to offer university level education for women in Britain and the establishment of the University of London s General Examination for Women in 1868 41 42 The Ladies Educational Association held classes for women from 1868 taught by professors from UCL but independently of the college From 1871 to 1872 these were held inside the college building although still independently of the college From 1872 some professors particularly Edward Poynter of the Slade started to admit women to their classes 43 The full opening on the faculties of arts science and law in 1878 came two years after the admission of women alongside men at the University of Bristol from its foundation as University College Bristol in 1876 44 The first woman to officially enrol in architecture at UCL was Gertrude Leverkus in 1915 45 although Ethel and Bessie Charles had been allowed to audit classes in the 1890s 46 Women were finally admitted to medical studies during the First World War in 1917 although limitations were placed on their numbers after the war ended 47 A new royal charter granted to the University of London in 1858 effectively removed the affiliation of colleges to the university Dissatisfaction from the colleges and the desire for a teaching university in London led to royal commissions that reported in 1888 and 1892 and the reconstitution of the university under the University of London Act 1898 33 1900 to 1976 University of London University College edit University College London Transfer Act 1905Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of the United KingdomCitation5 Edw 7 c xciDatesRoyal assent11 July 1905Text of statute as originally enactedFollowing the University of London s reconstitution in 1909 transforming it from an examining board to a federal university with constituent schools UCL became a school of the University of London While most of the colleges that became schools of the university retained their autonomy UCL chose to be merged into the university in 1907 under the University College London Transfer Act 1905 5 Edw 7 c xci and surrendered its legal independence in return for gaining a greater say in the running of the university 33 Its formal name became University of London University College although for most informal and external purposes the name University College London or the initialism UCL was still used As of 2022 update it remains listed as University of London University College on US Federal Student Aid applications 48 nbsp The Cruciform Building seen from inside the quadrangle of the UCL Main Building1900 also saw the decision to appoint a salaried head of the college The first incumbent was Carey Foster who served as Principal as the post was originally titled from 1900 to 1904 He was succeeded by Gregory Foster no relation and in 1906 the title was changed to Provost to avoid confusion with the principal of the University of London Gregory Foster remained in post until 1929 49 50 51 In 1906 the Cruciform Building was opened as the new home for University College Hospital 52 UCL opened the first department and chair of chemical engineering in the UK funded by the Ramsay Memorial Fund in 1923 53 In 1904 Francis Galton donated 1 000 to the University of London for a eugenics laboratory this transferred to UCL in 1907 with Karl Pearson as its director 54 UCL apologised for its fundamental role in the development propagation and legitimisation of eugenics in 2021 55 In 1911 UCL received an anonymous donation of 30 000 equivalent to 3 250 000 in 2021 for a building for its school of architecture In 1919 the donor consented to being named as Herbert Bartlett and the school was renamed in his honour 56 UCL sustained considerable bomb damage during the Second World War including the complete destruction of the Great Hall the Carey Foster Physics Laboratory and the Ramsay Laboratory Fires gutted the library and destroyed much of the main building including the dome it was not until 1954 that the main building was fully restored The departments were dispersed across the country to Aberystwyth Bangor Gwynedd Cambridge Oxford Rothamsted near Harpenden Hertfordshire and Sheffield with the administration at Stanstead Bury near Ware Hertfordshire 57 The first UCL student newspaper Pi was founded in 1946 58 The Institute of Jewish Studies relocated from Manchester to UCL in 1959 59 The Mullard Space Science Laboratory was established in 1967 60 In 1973 Peter Kirstein s research group at UCL became one of two international nodes on the ARPANET 61 62 UCL s interconnection between the ARPANET and early British academic networks was the first international heterogeneous resource sharing network 63 UCL adopted TCP IP in 1982 a year ahead of ARPANET and played a significant role in the very earliest experimental Internet work 64 65 The college s senior common room the Housman Room remained men only until 1969 After two unsuccessful attempts a motion was passed that ended segregation by sex at UCL This was achieved by Brian Woledge Fielden Professor of French at UCL from 1939 to 1971 and David Colquhoun at that time a young lecturer in pharmacology 66 1976 to 2005 University College London edit nbsp The Wilkins Building in 1956 nbsp 2014 In 1976 a new charter restored UCL s legal independence although still without the power to award its own degrees 67 68 Under this charter the college became formally known as University College London This name abandoned the comma used in its earlier name of University College London In 1993 a reorganisation of the University of London meant that UCL and other colleges gained direct access to government funding and the right to confer University of London degrees themselves This led to UCL being regarded as a de facto university in its own right 69 70 Mergers were a major feature of this period of UCL s history In 1986 the college merged with the Institute of Archaeology 71 In 1988 UCL merged with the Institute of Laryngology amp Otology the Institute of Orthopaedics the Institute of Urology amp Nephrology and Middlesex Hospital Medical School 71 Middlesex and University College hospitals together with the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital and the Hospital for Tropical Diseases formed the University College London Hospitals NHS Trust in 1994 72 Mergers continued in the 1990s with the Institute of Child Health joining in 1995 the School of Podiatry in 1996 73 and the Institute of Neurology in 1997 71 74 In 1998 UCL merged with the Royal Free Hospital Medical School to create the Royal Free and University College Medical School renamed the UCL Medical School in October 2008 In 1999 UCL merged with the School of Slavonic and East European Studies 75 76 and the Eastman Dental Institute 71 Proposals for a merger between UCL and Imperial College London were announced in 2002 77 The proposal provoked strong opposition from UCL teaching staff and students and the AUT union which criticised the indecent haste and lack of consultation leading to its abandonment by UCL provost Sir Derek Roberts 78 79 From 2005 edit nbsp The UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies building which was opened in 2005UCL was granted its own taught and research degree awarding powers in 2005 80 and all UCL students registered from 2007 08 qualified with UCL degrees 81 The same year UCL adopted a new corporate branding under which the name University College London was replaced by the initialism UCL in all external communications 82 UCL established the UCL School of Energy amp Resources later UCL Australia in Adelaide Australia in 2008 as the first campus of a British university in the country 83 The school was based in the historic Torrens Building in Victoria Square 84 In 2011 the mining company BHP Billiton agreed to donate AU 10 million to UCL to fund the establishment of two energy institutes the Energy Policy Institute based in Adelaide and the Institute for Sustainable Resources based in London 85 UCL Australia closed in December 2017 with academic staff and student transferring to the University of South Australia 86 Since 2018 UCL and the University of South Australia have offered joint master s degrees in data science and in energy systems with study in Adelaide and London 87 In 2011 UCL announced plans for a 500 million investment in its main Bloomsbury campus over 10 years as well as the establishment of a new campus UCL East next to the Olympic Park in Stratford in the East End of London 88 In 2018 UCL opened UCL at Here East at the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park offering courses jointly between the Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment and the Faculty of Engineering Sciences 89 90 The first undergraduate students on a new Engineering and Architectural Design MEng started in September 2018 91 One Pool Street the first building on the UCL East campus opened in November 2022 UCL East was officially opened along with the Marshgate building that completed phase 1 of the development in September 2023 by Olympic gold medalist and UCL alumna Christine Ohuruogu 92 93 UCL continued to grow through mergers with smaller colleges in the University of London On 1 January 2012 the School of Pharmacy University of London merged with UCL becoming the UCL School of Pharmacy within the Faculty of Life Sciences 94 95 UCL and the Institute of Education formed a strategic alliance in October 2012 96 followed by a full merger in December 2014 97 98 99 100 nbsp New Student Centre on Gordon StreetUCL paid tens of thousands of pounds to settle ten sexual harassment claims against staff in the 2017 18 academic year a rise from four cases the year before Following pressure from victims and after physicist Emma Chapman won the legal right to speak freely about her abuse at the university UCL announced in 2018 that it would abandon non disclosure settlements in settlements 101 102 In 2020 UCL became the first Russell Group university to ban romantic and sexual relationships between lecturers and their students 103 It was discovered in 2018 that an annual eugenics conference the London Conference on Intelligence had been held at UCL as an external paid event between 2014 and 2017 104 An enquiry found that the organiser an honorary lecturer did not correctly follow the room booking procedure including claiming that no controversial topics would be discussed leaving the university unaware of the nature of the conference 105 Following the revelation UCL announced in 2018 that it would launch an enquiry into the university s historical links with eugenics 106 This reported in 2020 107 but covered only historical eugenics and did not address the 2014 17 conferences leading to a majority of the authors refusing to sign the final report 108 The Galton Lecture Theatre Pearson Lecture Theatre and Pearson Building were all renamed in 2020 108 and in 2021 UCL apologised for its part in promoting eugenics during the first half of the 20th century 55 109 UCL was criticised along with Oxford Imperial and other London universities in 2021 for accepting money from the Alexander Mosley Charitable Trust established to hold the fortune left to Max Mosley by his father British fascist leader Oswald Mosley UCL received 500 000 to establish a forensic evidence interpretation laboratory 110 111 112 Following the passing of the University of London Act 2018 which allowed member institutions to become universities in their own right while remaining part of the University of London UCL applied for university status in 2019 113 The application was approved by the Office for Students in 2022 and a supplemental charter was sealed on 17 April 2023 granting UCL university status 114 Campus and locations edit nbsp nbsp Bloomsbury nbsp UCL East nbsp UCL Observatory nbsp UCL School of Management nbsp UCL Sports Groundclass notpageimage UCL campuses red and other facilities blue within London Bloomsbury edit See also Filming at University College London UCL is primarily based in the Bloomsbury area of the London Borough of Camden in Central London The main campus is located around Gower Street with many other departments close by in Bloomsbury 115 Many health institutes are located close to associated hospitals including the UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology and the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery in Queen Square 116 the UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health and Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children 115 and the UCL Eastman Dental Institute and Eastman Dental Hospital 117 Historic UCL buildings in Bloomsbury include the grade I listed UCL Main Building including the original Wilkins building designed by William Wilkins 118 and directly opposite on Gower Street the early 20th century grade II listed Cruciform Building the last major building designed by Alfred Waterhouse 119 120 Nearby are the grade II listed Kathleen Lonsdale Building UCL s first purpose built chemistry laboratory 121 and the grade II listed Rockefeller Building 122 Elsewhere in Bloomsbury is the 1970s grade II Institute of Education building by Denys Lasdun and Partners 123 Much of the estate falls within the Bloomsbury Conservation Area designated in 1968 124 Important contemporary buildings include the School of Slavonic and East European Studies building RIBA Award winner 2006 125 and the Sainsbury Wellcome Centre for Neural Circuits and Behaviour building LEAF Award for best facade design and engineering and overall winner 2016 126 UCL buildings in Bloomsbury nbsp Wilkins Building and Main Quad nbsp The Rockefeller Building on University Street one of UCL s largest premises nbsp The Kathleen Lonsdale Building on Gower Place home of UCL s department of earth sciences nbsp The Sainsbury Wellcome Centre for Neural Circuits and Behaviour building nbsp View of UCL East from the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park March 2022 One Pool Street is on the left hand side of the river and Marshgate is on the right hand side UCL East edit UCL has a second campus UCL East at the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford east London The first building with three floors of teaching and research space as well as accommodation for 500 students in two towers opened in 2022 and the second with eight floors of teaching and research space opened in 2023 92 127 A further four buildings are planned for construction in the 2030s 128 UCL also operates a campus within Here East the former Olympic park media centre 89 Other sites edit nbsp The UCL Observatory in Mill HillElsewhere in Central London are the UCL Institute of Ophthalmology adjacent to Moorfields Eye Hospital in Clerkenwell 129 the Royal Free Hospital and the Whittington Hospital campuses of the UCL Medical School and a number of other associated teaching hospitals The UCL School of Management is on levels 38 and 50 penthouse of One Canada Square in the financial district of Canary Wharf 130 The UCL Observatory is in Mill Hill 131 and the Mullard Space Science Laboratory is based in Holmbury St Mary Surrey 132 The UCL Athletics Ground is in Shenley Hertfordshire 133 Student housing edit Main article Halls of residence at University College London nbsp The retained historic facade of New Hall with the student residences one metre behind many of their windows looking at the brick wall UCL owns 26 halls of residence with around 7 000 student beds 134 The university guarantees accommodation to single full time first year undergraduate students who have not previously lived in London while studying at a university and who make a firm acceptance of a place and apply for accommodation by 10 June each year and to single overseas first year postgraduates at UCL who have not previously lived in London while studying at a university and who make a firm acceptance of a place and apply for accommodation by 30 June each year Accommodation is also guaranteed for students who are under 18 at the start of the academic year and for students who are care leavers 135 There is only limited accommodation available in university halls for returning students and others who do not meet the criteria for a guaranteed place 136 UCL students are also eligible as students of a member institution of the University of London to apply for places in the University of London intercollegiate halls of residence 137 In 2013 UCL s newly built New Hall student accommodation building on Caledonian Road designed by Stephen George and Partners was awarded the Carbuncle Cup and named the country s worst new building by Building Design magazine with the comment this is a building that the jury struggled to see as remotely fit for human occupation Islington Council had originally turned down planning permission for the building but this had been overturned on appeal As it is classified as a hotel or guest house it was exempt from many of the standards that cover residential buildings such as having daylight in the rooms 138 139 The UCL East development includes 532 student rooms in One Pool Street which opened in 2022 140 Further accommodation will be available in the Marshgate building expected to open in 2023 and at the second Pool Street site 141 Environmental initiatives edit UCL s new Student Centre which opened in 2019 was designed to be environmentally friendly and was one of only 320 buildings worldwide at the time to be certified outstanding by BREEAM 142 This certification requires innovation throughout the design engineering and construction process and places the Student Centre among the top 1 of non domestic buildings in the UK for sustainability 143 The UCL Student Centre was a finalist at the Green Gown Awards in 2019 144 Also in 2019 UCL launched a Strategy for Sustainable UCL 2019 24 including three initiatives to promote sustainability The Positive Climate initiative saw UCL pledge to have a 40 reduction in energy usage all energy to come from renewables and all UCL buildings to be carbon neutral by 2024 along with achieving net zero carbon emissions for UCL by 2030 142 The Positive Climate initiative was the winner in the 2030 Climate Action category at the 2020 Green Gown Awards 145 146 A second initiative The Loop promotes circular economy UCL set a target of reducing waste per person by 20 between 2019 and 2024 while aiming for an 85 recycling rate and the elimination of single use plastics on campus The third initiative Wild Bloomsbury promotes biodiversity UCL set a target of creating 10 000 m2 1 0 ha 2 5 acres of biodiverse green space on campus by 2024 142 The Strategy for a Sustainable UCL was a finalist in the Sustainable Institution of the Year category at the 2022 Green Gown Awards 147 Organisation and administration editGovernance edit The two main bodies in UCL s governance structure are the council and the academic board both of which are established by the royal charter and with powers defined by the statutes 148 There is also a University Management Committee which is the executive committee responsible for the day to day operations of the institution This comprises the President and Provost the vice presidents the vice provosts the pro provost of UCL East the deans of the faculties the chief financial officer chief information officer and chief people officer the chief of staff the general consul the executive director of media and marketing and the director of media relations 149 The senior leadership team at UCL includes the visitor a position in English charity law that overseas the operation of the institution 150 That there shall be a visitor of the college is specified by the royal charter as is that the position is to be held by the Master of the Rolls the second most senior judge in England and Wales 148 UCL s council comprises 20 members of whom 11 are members external to UCL seven are UCL academic staff including the provost three UCL professors and three non professorial staff and two are UCL students The chair is appointed by council for a term not normally exceeding five years The chair is ex officio chair of the honorary degrees and fellowships committee nominations committee and remuneration and strategy committee 151 As of April 2023 update the chair of the council is international businessman and UCL alumnus Victor Chu 3 The academic board plays a role similar to the senate in other institutions It is the senior academic body responsible for advising council on academic matters and also elects academic members to council It is however a much larger body than the senates at many other universities including all professors as well as elected representatives of other academic and non academic staff 148 152 UCL s principal academic and administrative officer is the President and Provost who is also UCL s designated accountable officer for reporting to the Office for Students on behalf of UCL 153 The provost is appointed by Council after consultation with the academic board and is ex officio a member of council and chair of the academic board 154 As of April 2023 update Michael Spence has been president and provost since January 2021 when he succeeded Michael Arthur 155 156 Vice provosts are appointed by council on the recommendation of the provost or the academic board to assist and advise the provost as required The vice provosts are members of the provost s senior management team There are four vice provosts for education and student experience health research innovation and global engagement and faculties 148 157 There are also four vice presidents who are also members of the senior management team but whose role and manner of appointment is not specified in the statutes for strategy external engagement advancement and operations 148 157 The deans of UCL s faculties are appointed by the council and are members of the provost s senior management team The deans principal duties include advising the provost and vice provosts on academic strategy staffing matters and resources for academic departments within their faculty overseeing curricula and programme management at faculty level liaising with faculty tutors on undergraduate admissions and student academic matters overseeing examination matters at faculty level and co ordinating faculty views on matters relating to education and information support 151 Faculties and departments edit nbsp Drayton House which houses the Department of Economics nbsp The UCL School of Pharmacy building nbsp The Institute of Education building home to the UCL Institute of Education and the Departments of Geography Psychology and LanguageSee also Category Departments of University College London UCL s research and teaching is organised into eleven faculties each of which contains a number of schools departments and institutes 158 The establishment of faculties and academic departments is formally the responsibility of UCL s council with advice from the academic board 159 Faculty statistics 2023 160 Faculty 158 Staff Undergraduate students Taught postgraduate students Research postgraduate studentsArts and Humanities 620 2 684 943 226Bartlett Built Environment 1 272 925 2 836 411Brain Sciences 1 725 929 1 961 1 034Engineering Sciences 667 4 373 2 791 1 122IOE Education and Society 1 318 1 515 3 988 684Laws 175 844 450 49Life Sciences 964 2 632 1 084 592Mathematical and Physical Sciences 1 135 3 927 929 680Medical Sciences 1 321 2 356 1 287 430Population Health Sciences 1 578 247 1 365 447Social and Historical Sciences 1 101 4 130 2 054 488There are also two academic units outside the faculty structure 159 Sainsbury Wellcome Centre for Neural Circuits and Behaviour School of Slavonic and East European Studies to join the Arts and Humanities faculty from 2023 161 193 staff 559 undergraduate students 57 taught postgraduate students 29 research postgraduate students 2022 23 160 There are additional staff employed outside the faculty structure in the university administration 160 Finances edit In the financial year ended 31 July 2020 UCL had a total income excluding share of joint ventures of 1 54 billion 2018 19 1 49 billion and a total expenditure of 1 34 billion 2018 19 1 67 billion 2 Key sources of income included 467 7 million from research grants and contracts 2018 19 481 1 million 613 7 million from tuition fees and education contracts 2018 19 564 9 million 227 9 million from funding body grants 2018 19 213 5 million and 26 6 million from donations and endowments 2018 19 40 5 million 2 At year end UCL had endowments of 143 2 million 31 July 2019 138 7 million and total net assets of 1 49 billion 31 July 2019 1 29 million 2 A report by London Economics in 2022 found that UCL generates around 10 billion annually for the UK economy The largest contributor to this is through the spread of its research and knowledge which is worth 4 billion with another 3 billion being added by the impact of UCL s own spending Other contributions come from encouraging graduates to create jobs and investment and from nurturing company spin offs and start ups The report found that in 2018 19 UCL had supported 234 graduate start ups and 83 spinout companies with a total turnover of 110 million and employing almost 3 000 people The report also found that UCL s spending supported 19 000 jobs across the UK with over 7 000 of these being outside London 15 Terms edit The UCL academic year is divided into three terms For most departments First Term runs from late September to mid December Second Term from mid January to late March and Third Term from late April to mid June with reading weeks in early November and mid February Certain courses at the medical school the faculty of education and society and the school of pharmacy operate on different terms 162 Logo and colours edit nbsp The old UCL logo used prior to August 2005While many universities use their logo for most communications and branding and a coat of arms only for specific ceremonial and official use 163 UCL exclusively uses a logo and has no coat of arms The present logo was adopted as part of a rebranding exercise in August 2005 82 Prior to that date a different logo was used in which the letters UCL were incorporated into a stylised representation of the Wilkins Building portico 164 A pseudo heraldic UCL crest a purple shield depicting a raised bent arm dressed in armour between two gold laurel branches holding a green upturned open wreath with the college motto on a blue celeste ribbon beneath the laurel branches can be found on the internet A version of this badge not on a shield appears to have been used by UCL Union from shortly after its foundation in 1893 165 However the badge has never been the subject of an official grant of arms and departs from several of the rules and conventions of heraldry It is not an official logo although modified forms are used by some by sports teams and societies 166 The official Team UCL logo used with variants by many sports teams uses a shield divided into the colours of purple lower and blue celeste upper but none of the other elements laurels wreaths armoured arm motto are present the only graphic is a depiction of the UCL portico Students Union UCL requests teams not to modify this logo but this is widely ignored 167 168 UCL s motto Cuncti adsint meritaeque expectent praemia palmae is a quotation from Virgil s Aeneid and translates into English as Let all come who by merit deserve the most reward 169 170 UCL s traditional sporting and academic colours are purple and blue celeste 7 UCL uses a palette of 25 colours including the two traditional colours in its visual identity the logo can be used in many different combinations of these colours 7 Memberships affiliations and partnerships edit nbsp The main building of University College HospitalUCL is a member institution of the federal University of London and was one of the two colleges affiliated from the university s founding in 1836 the other being King s College London 171 UCL was a founding member of the Russell Group an association of 24 British research universities established in 1994 172 and is regarded as forming part of the golden triangle an unofficial term for the research intensive universities located in the southern English cities of Cambridge London and Oxford 173 174 175 UCL has been a member of the League of European Research Universities since January 2006 176 177 UCL is also a member of the Association of Commonwealth Universities 178 the European University Association 179 the global U7 Alliance 180 and the US Universities Research Association 181 and has a major collaboration with Yale University the Yale UCL Collaborative 182 It also has partnerships with universities in Australia note 1 Canada note 2 China note 3 India note 4 Japan note 5 Singapore note 6 and Thailand note 7 183 184 185 186 UCL formed the Science and Engineering South engineering and physical sciences research alliance with the universities of Cambridge Oxford Southampton and Imperial College London in May 2013 187 It was also one of the founding members of the Alan Turing Institute the UK s national institute for data sciences and artificial intelligence in 2015 with the universities of Cambridge Edinburgh Oxford and Warwick 188 nbsp The Francis Crick Institute buildingUCL is a partner in UCLPartners an academic health science centre along with multiple NHS trusts integrated care systems research and innovation partners and other universities 189 UCL is a partner with the National Institute for Health Research the University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and UCLPartners in the UCLH Biomedical Research Centre 190 UCL is also a university partner of the Francis Crick Institute a major biomedical research centre in London 191 UCL offers dual degrees and joint degrees with other universities and institutions including the University of Cologne 192 Columbia University 193 the University of Hong Kong 194 Imperial College London ending 2023 195 and New York University 196 UCL is the sponsor of the UCL Academy a secondary school in the London Borough of Camden The school opened in September 2012 and was the first in the UK to have a university as sole sponsor 197 UCL also has a strategic partnership with Newham Collegiate Sixth Form Centre 198 Academic profile editResearch edit nbsp John O Keefe UCL neuroscientist and 2014 Nobel laureate for his discovery of place cellsIn 2021 22 UCL had an income from research grants and contracts of 524 9 million making up 30 of all revenue The largest sources of research income were research council grants 170 4 million and British charities 154 4 million A further 159 3 million of recurrent research funding was allocated to UCL by Research England making up 9 of income 2 UCL submitted 3 432 staff 3 177 FTEs across 32 units of assessment areas of research to the 2021 Research Excellence Framework REF assessment 58 of submitted research was rated 4 world leading the sixth highest in the REF and a further 34 as 3 internationally excellent Overall UCL was ranked second for both research power and market share by both Times Higher Education and Research Professional News and sixth on research quality GPA by Times Higher Education UCL submitted more units of assessment to the 2021 REF than any other university However UCL s market share based on the funding formula declined from 6 23 following the 2014 REF to 5 34 despite the overall improvement reflecting increases in research quality across the sector 199 200 201 202 Research centres edit UCL operates a large number of disciplinary specific research centres in partnership with other research institutions and private enterprises Notable examples include The London Centre for Nanotechnology LCN is a multidisciplinary research centre in physical and biomedical nanotechnology based at UCL s campus in Bloomsbury It is a partnership between UCL Imperial College London and King s College London 203 The LCN was established as a joint venture between UCL and Imperial College London in 2003 204 King s College London joined the LCN in 2018 205 The Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slave ownership was established at UCL with the support of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University It incorporates two earlier projects the Legacies of British Slave ownership project 2009 2012 and the Structure and significance of British Caribbean slave ownership 1763 1833 project 2013 2015 206 The Sainsbury Wellcome Centre for Neural Circuits and Behaviour SWC is a neuroscience research centre established at UCL with funding from the Gatsby Charitable Foundation and Wellcome Trust and opened in 2016 207 208 Publishing and commercialisation edit In 2020 21 UCL had an income of 7 3 million from intellectual property and 25 2 million from the sale of shares in spin off companies As of 2020 21 UCL had the second largest patent portfolio of any UK university after Oxford with 2 391 patents It granted the third largest number of intellectual property licences after Oxford and the University of East Anglia with 2 235 209 UCL Business is a technology transfer company which is wholly owned by UCL It has three main activities licensing technologies creating spin out companies and project management 210 UCL Business supports spin out companies in areas including discovery disclosure commercialisation business plan development contractual advice incubation support recruitment of management teams and identification of investors 210 In the area of licensing technoloiges the company provides commercial legal and administrative advice to help companies broker licensing agreements 210 UCL Business also provides UCL departments and institutes with project management services for single or multi party collaborative industry projects 210 The company transferred 4 8 million of royalty income to UCL in 2021 22 2 Launched in 2015 UCL Press is a new university press 211 wholly owned by UCL 212 It was the first fully open access university press in the UK and publishes monographs textbooks and other academic books in a wide range of academic areas which are available to download for free in addition to a number of journals 213 As of October 2022 UCL Press had had more than 6 5 million downloads of its open access books in 247 countries and territories worldwide 214 UCL Consultants is an academic consultancy services company which is wholly owned by UCL which provides four main service offerings Academic Consultancy Bespoke Short Courses Testing amp Analysis and Expert Witness 215 216 Libraries edit nbsp The Donaldson Reading Room part of UCL s Main Library nbsp The UCL Institute of Education s Newsam Library the largest education library in EuropeThe UCL library system comprises 18 libraries located across the Bloomsbury and UCL East campuses 217 The libraries contain a total of over 2 million books 218 The largest library is the UCL Main Library which is located in the UCL Main Building and contains collections relating to the arts and humanities economics history law and public policy 217 The second largest library is the UCL Science Library which is located in the DMS Watson Building on Malet Place and contains collections relating to anthropology engineering geography life sciences management and the mathematical and physical sciences 217 The Cruciform Hub contains books and periodicals in the subjects of clinical medicine and medical science 219 It holds the combined collections of the former Boldero and Clinical Sciences libraries which developed within the Middlesex Hospital University College Hospital and Royal Free amp University College Medical Schools up until their merger in 2005 220 Other libraries include the UCL Bartlett Library architecture and town planning the UCL Eastman Dental Institute Library oral health sciences the UCL Institute of Archaeology Library archaeology and egyptology the UCL Institute of Education s Newsam Library education and related areas of social science the UCL Institute of Neurology Rockefeller Medical Library neurosurgery and neuroscience the Joint Moorfields Eye Hospital amp the UCL Institute of Ophthalmology Library biomedicine medicine nursing ophthalmology and visual science the UCL Language amp Speech Science Library audiology communication disorders linguistics amp phonetics special education speech amp language therapy and voice and the UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies Library the economics geography history languages literature and politics of Eastern Europe 217 The newest library is the UCL East Library currently located in the Learning Hub on the first floor of One Pool Street Uniquely among UCL libraries it offers a click and collect service allowing books from any UCL library to be delivered to UCL East rather than having to be picked up from the library that holds them It is expected to relocate to the new Marshgate building when that opens in September 2023 221 UCL staff and students have full access to the main libraries of the University of London the Senate House Library and the libraries of the institutes of the School of Advanced Study which are located close to the main UCL campus in Bloomsbury 222 These libraries contain over 3 7 million books and focus on the arts humanities and social sciences 218 The British Library which contains around 14 million books is also located close to the main UCL campus and all UCL students and staff can apply for reference access 223 UCL s open access institutional repository UCL Discovery and UCL Press UCL s open access academic press are managed by UCL Library Services 224 Special collections edit UCL s Special Collections contains UCL s collection of historical or culturally significant works It holds over 150 000 rare books including 179 incunabula as well as over 600 collections of archives and manuscripts The incunabula include a 1477 edition of Dante s Divine Comedy and a 1493 edition of the Nuremberg Chronicle donated by Jeremy Bentham 225 226 UCL s most significant works are housed in three strong rooms The special collection includes first editions of Isaac Newton s Principia Charles Darwin s On the Origin of Species and James Joyce s Ulysses 227 Museums edit nbsp The Flaxman GalleryUCL is responsible for several museums and collections in a wide range of fields across the arts and sciences including 228 Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology Founded in 1892 by a donation from Amelia Edwards of several hundred Egyptian items the museum now contains around 80 000 items and covers the history of the Nile valley from prehistoric times through to the Islamic period It is named after William Flinders Petrie the first Edwards Professor at UCL who excavated dozens of sites in his career and sold his collection to the college in 1913 229 The Petrie Museum is a designated collection under the Arts Council England Designation Scheme for pre eminent collections held in museums libraries and archives across England 230 UCL Art Museum the art collection originated as a teaching and research collection for the Slade and contains works by women artists dating back to the 1890s A series of plaster casts of full size details of sculptures by John Flaxman is located inside the library under the dome of the UCL Main Building 231 Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy Established in 1827 by Robert Edmund Grant UCL s first professor of comparative anatomy and zoology for teaching purposes Grant bequeathed his collection of 10 000 specimens to UCL upon his death With other additions the museum now contains around 68 000 specimens including dodo bones and a rare quagga skeleton 232 Reputation and rankings edit RankingsNational rankingsComplete 2024 233 9Guardian 2024 234 8Times Sunday Times 2024 235 6Global rankingsARWU 2023 236 17QS 2024 237 9THE 2024 238 22 nbsp University College London s national league table performance over the past ten yearsNationalUCL is ranked as one of the top ten universities in all three of the main UK university league tables 233 234 235 These place more emphasis on teaching and student experience than global rankings using criteria such as teaching quality and learning resources entry standards employment prospects research quality and dropout rates 239 It went through a dip in rankings in recent years particularly in The Guardian University Guide but returned to the top ten in 2022 when its ninth position was its best result in that table since 2014 240 In the 2023 Complete University Guide subject tables UCL was ranked in the top ten in 34 subjects out of 42 offered 81 It was ranked top for American studies linguistics speech and language therapy and building 241 In the 2023 Guardian University Guide subject tables UCL is ranked top in construction surveying and planning It was ranked in the top ten for 21 of 31 subjects offered 68 234 UCL is ranked top in the 2023 Times Sunday Times Good University Guide for American studies building information systems and management liberal arts and town and country planning It is ranked in the top ten for 31 of 44 subjects offered 70 The 2023 Good University Guide also ranked UCL 98th in their social inclusion ranking covering England and Wales UCL was named University of the Year in the Times Sunday Times Good University Guide for 2024 235 Analysis by the Department for Education in 2018 found that UCL had an impact on earnings of graduates five years after graduation of 15 5 for women 7th highest impact and 16 2 for men 10th highest impact compared to average graduates with similar background characteristics prior attainment socio economic status etc and subject choice 242 GlobalUCL has been consistently ranked in the top 25 of the three major global rankings published over 2013 to 2022 including being in the top ten of the QS World University Rankings over the whole of that period 243 244 245 In the 2022 Academic Ranking of World Universities UCL was ranked 18th in the world 236 having been placed between 15th and 21st in the rankings from 2013 to 2022 243 In the 2023 QS World University Rankings published 2022 UCL was ranked 8th in the world 237 It has ranked between 4th and 10th in the 2014 to 2024 league tables 244 In the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2023 published 2022 UCL was ranked 22nd in the world 238 having ranked between 14th and 22nd in the 2014 to 2023 tables 245 In the Times Higher Education World Reputation Rankings 2022 UCL was ranked 25th while in the Times Higher Education Impact Rankings 2022 it was ranked 101 200 245 In the 2022 2023 USNWR s Best Global Universities UCL was ranked 12th in the world Admissions editUCAS admission statistics 2022 Main scheme applications 246 Applications 74 775Accepted applicants 7 420Applications accepted ratio 10 08UK applicants June deadline 247 Applications 31 285Offer rate 29 5Offers 9 700Placed applicants 3 175Placed applicants offers 32 7Summary statisticsTotal accepted applicants 246 7 530Average Entry Tariff 2020 248 189 nbsp Bentham House the main building of the UCL Faculty of LawsAdmission to UCL is highly selective with an average entry tariff for 2020 21 of 189 UCAS points approximately equivalent to AAAB at A level the 9th highest in the country 248 According to a Freedom of Information request response UCL s offer rate for 2021 admission was 36 1 at undergraduate level and 23 5 at postgraduate level across all applicants 249 note 8 International students have made up the majority of main scheme applicants to UCL since 2015 and the majority of acceptances since 2017 The ratio of main scheme applicants to acceptances in 2022 was 10 3 for UK applicants and 9 9 for international applicants 246 Within the UK UCL is a local recruiter 250 with 47 4 of 2022 UK admissions coming from the London region and a further 28 1 from the adjacent East of England and South East regions 246 Of UCL s young UK domiciled undergraduates 32 7 were privately educated in 2019 20 the eighth highest proportion amongst mainstream British universities 251 Undergraduate law applicants are required to take the National Admissions Test for Law 252 and undergraduate medical applicants are required to take the BioMedical Admissions Test 252 Applicants for European Social and Political Studies are required to take the Thinking Skills Assessment TSA should they be selected for an assessment day 252 Medicine pharmacy and English also interview undergraduate applicants prior to making an offer of admission 252 Widening access edit Undergraduate admissions 2020 21 widening participation indicators 253 Independent school 32 4 32 4 Benchmark 25 5 25 5 Low participation areas 4 3 4 3 Benchmark 4 0 4 UCL runs a contextual offer scheme called Access UCL whereby eligible applicants can receive conditional offers for courses at UCL that have lower requirements than the standard conditional offers for those courses Eligibility for Access UCL can be through an applicant living in a deprived areas or an area with low participation in higher education through having spent time in care though being a young adult carer or through being estranged from their family Except for applicants that have spent time in care the scheme requires applicants to have attended a state school Mature applicants are assessed on the same criteria and are additionally not eligible if they have completed or are on the final year of an undergraduate degree While the scheme enables applicants from disadvantaged backgrounds to receive contextual offers it does not guarantee that an offer will be made 254 Contextual offers vary by course For example a contextual offer for the law LLB reduces the requirement from A AA to BBB at A level 255 but for the physics MSci from A AA to AAB 256 UCL also runs week long UCL Summer Schools for high achieving students from disadvantaged backgrounds in partnership with the Sutton Trust These give participants the opportunity to explore London to develop skills in their chosen subject to improve their university applications through personal statement workshops and talks by admissions tutors and to take part in social activities 257 From the 2023 24 academic year UCL will be launching an engineering foundation year based at UCL East for students who do not meet the standard entry requirements who attended UK state schools for A levels or equivalent unless refugees and who live in an area with high levels of at least one axis of deprivation 258 For international students who do not meet the requirements for admission to the college it runs intensive one year foundation courses called Undergraduate Preparatory Certificates in either sciences or humanities 259 For UK domiciled young full time undergraduate entrants in 2020 21 67 6 came from state schools significantly below the location adjusted benchmark of 74 5 and 4 3 came from low participation neighbourhoods not significantly different from the location adjusted benchmark of 4 0 253 For UK domiciled undergraduate entrants in 2022 23 UCAS data shows no significant difference in offer rate with ethnicity or gender 247 Applicants from the 20 of neighbourhoods with the lowest rates of participation in higher education receive offers at a rate 4 9 higher than would be expected based on their subject choice and predicted grades alone a statistically significant difference accounting for 6 3 of all offers The offer rate for applicants from the 20 of neighbourhoods with the lowest rates of participation in higher education is not significantly different from that expected with applicants from those neighbourhoods accounting for 48 9 of all offers 247 Student life editStudents union edit nbsp Students union building on Gordon StreetMain article Students Union UCL Founded in 1893 Students Union UCL formerly the UCL Union is one of the oldest students unions in England although postdating the Liverpool Guild of Students which formed a student representative council in 1892 67 260 Students Union UCL operates both as the representative voice for UCL students and as a provider of a wide range of services It is democratically controlled through General Meetings and referendums and is run by elected student officers The union also supports a range of services including numerous clubs and societies sports facilities an advice service and a number of bars cafes and shops 261 As of 2021 update there are over 250 clubs and societies under the umbrella of the UCL Union 262 These include UCL Snowsports one of the largest sports society at UCL responsible for organising the annual UCL ski trip 263 Pi Media responsible for Pi Magazine and Pi Newspaper UCL s official student publications 264 the Debating Society established 1829 265 and the UCL Union Film Society with past members including Christopher Nolan 266 Faith edit From its foundation the college has been deliberately secular the initial justification for this was that it would enable students of different Christian traditions specifically Roman Catholics Anglicans and Nonconformists to study alongside each other without conflict 267 In order to cater to people of all faiths UCL opened a prayer room with attached ablution facilities and a silent meditation room in the student centre in February 2019 and there is a quiet contemplation room behind 16 26 Gordon Square There is also a Christian chaplain who also serves as interfaith advisor and there are student societies for most major religions 268 269 Sport edit The union runs over 70 sports clubs 270 including the UCL Cricket Club Men s and Women s UCL Boat Club Men s and Women s clubs UCL Running Athletics and Cross Country Club and UCL Rugby Club Men s and Women s as well as RUMS sports clubs for medical students from Royal Free University College and Middlesex the three medical schools that merged into UCL 168 271 UCL clubs compete in inter university fixtures in the British Universities and Colleges Sport BUCS competition in a range of sports including athletics basketball cricket fencing football hockey netball rugby union and tennis In the 2021 22 season UCL finished in 16th position in the final BUCS rankings 272 UCL sports facilities include a fitness centre at the main UCL campus in Bloomsbury and a 90 acre 36 ha athletics ground in Shenley Hertfordshire 273 part of which is used as the Watford Football Club Training Ground 274 It also exercises effective control over Somers Town Community Sports Centre with the power to appoint five of the nine trustees 2 The sports centre includes a six court sports hall 275 as well as an activity dance studio and an all weather outdoor multi use games area 276 277 278 Mascot edit nbsp Pencil signed etching of Phineas MaclinoThe UCL mascot was Phineas MacLino or Phineas a wooden tobacconist s sign of a kilted Jacobite Highlander stolen from outside a shop in Tottenham Court Road during the celebrations of the relief of Ladysmith part of the Second Boer War in March 1900 279 In 1922 Phineas was stolen by students from King s marking the start of mascotry leading to an hour long battle and the eventual return of Phineas 280 In 1993 the students union s centenary year Phineas was placed in the third floor bar of 25 Gordon Street and the bar named after him 281 In 2019 the students union voted to remove the mascot from the bar due to its links to imperialism and British colonialism 282 283 Rivalry with King s College London edit nbsp A UCL player attacks in his team s 2014 Varsity victory UCL s traditional rivalry with King s College is nowadays most noticeable at the annual varsity rugby gameMain article King s College London UCL rivalry UCL has a long running mostly friendly rivalry with King s College London but there were frequent clashes in the interwar period which have historically been known as rags 284 UCL students have been referred to by students from King s as the Godless Scum of Gower Street in reference to a comment made at the founding of King s which was based on Christian principles UCL students in turn referred to King s as Strand Polytechnic 285 286 In 1922 Phineas the UCL mascot was kidnapped by King s students leading to a pitched battle in the King s College quad as UCL students recovered their mascot 287 288 Shortly after this King s adopted their own mascot initially a large papier mache beer bottle soon replaced by Reggie the Lion 280 During the 1927 rag Reggie was captured by UCL students and his body filled with rotten apples During the same year an attempt by King s students to capture Phineas led to the Battle of Gower Street caught on camera by British Pathe 289 On another occasion Reggie was castrated by UCL students 290 King s students stole the embalmed head of Jeremy Bentham in October 1975 only returning it after UCL paid a ransom to charity The head is now kept in the UCL vaults 291 Student campaigns edit In 1956 UCL students organised a silent march progressing against the Soviet oppression of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 Around 1 300 students from across institutions in London matches from the Royal Albert Hall to the Soviet Embassy There were active Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and anti apartheid students groups at UCL in the 1960s and a pioneering GaySoc group that helped drive the National Union of Students gay rights campaign in the 1970s 1977 saw a student occupation of administrative offices and the Slade School in protest against government cuts to higher education 66 In 2010 protests by students and staff led UCL to promise to pay a living wage to all UCL staff 292 As part of the protests against the UK government s plans to increase student fees around 200 students occupied the Jeremy Bentham Room and part of the Slade School of Fine Art for over two weeks during November and December 2010 293 294 The university successfully obtained a court order to evict the students but stated that it did not intend to enforce the order if possible 294 The late 2010s saw student campaigns around the cost of university run accommodation In 2016 over 1000 students took part in a rent strike in protest against high rents and poor conditions Organisers said they had won over 1 million in rent cuts freezes and grants from UCL in the settlement that ended the strike 295 Another rent strike in 2017 lead to UCL pledging around 1 4 million in bursaries and rent freezes mostly in the form of accommodation bursaries for less well off students totalling 600 000 per year for the 2017 18 and 2018 19 academic years 296 Another rent strike was held at two halls of residence in the third term of the 2017 18 academic year due to complaints over conditions at those halls 297 Student body editUCL student body 2021 22 UK undergrad 23 5 Int undergrad 27 3 UK taught postgrad 17 4 Int taught postgrad 18 7 UK research postgrad 7 5 Int research postgrad 5 6 Student body composition 2021 22 298 299 300 Domicile and ethnicity note 9 British white 25 6 25 6 British Asian 12 8 12 8 British Black 3 1 3 1 British mixed heritage 3 7 3 7 British other unknown 3 2 3 2 International European Union 9 4 9 4 International China 23 0 23 International rest of Asia 10 7 10 7 International rest of the world 8 4 8 4 GenderFemale 60 8 60 8 Male 39 1 39 1 Other 0 1 0 1 Age30 and over 12 1 12 1 25 29 13 8 13 8 21 24 34 8 34 8 20 and under 39 3 39 3 In the 2021 22 academic year UCL had a total of 46 830 students of whom 23 800 were undergraduates 11 000 UK 12 800 international 16 910 were taught postgraduates 8 160 UK 8 745 international and 6 120 were research postgraduates 3 520 UK 2 600 international 298 In that year UCL had the second largest total number of students of any university in the United Kingdom after the Open University and the largest number of postgraduate students however in terms of UK undergraduates it was 68th by size 298 It had been the UK university with the highest number of international students every year since 2014 15 301 In 2021 22 87 of UCL s students were full time and 13 part time 298 although among undergraduates only 3 were part time The student body was split 60 8 female 39 1 male and 0 1 other gender identity 298 24 145 UCL students 52 were from outside the UK of whom 15 795 were from Asia 4 400 from the European Union 1 440 from North America 890 from elsewhere in Europe 790 from the Middle East 370 from Africa 310 from South America and 155 from Australasia 45 of overseas students at UCL 10 785 came from China 299 Additionally UCL had 895 students studying wholly overseas in 2021 22 10 undergraduate 785 taught postgraduate and 80 research postgraduate that are not included in the count of the student population 302 For UK domiciled students UCL s student body in 2021 22 was 52 9 white 26 4 Asian 7 6 mixed 6 4 black and 4 6 other compared to an average across London institutions of 47 8 white 22 2 Asian 6 7 mixed 15 5 black and 4 9 other Over the whole student body 12 5 had a known disability compared to 15 8 across all institutions 300 Diversity edit UCL holds an institutional silver Athena SWAN award It gained its first institutional award bronze in 2006 and was promoted to silver in 2015 As of November 2021 update 21 departments across UCL hold bronze awards 17 hold silver awards and three hold gold awards 303 UCL also holds an institutional bronze Race Equality Charter award which it first gained in 2015 304 UCL was formerly a member of Stonewall Diversity Champions scheme promoting LGBT equality It left in February 2020 as a cost cutting measure and then controversially decided in late 2021 not to rejoin against the advice of its equality diversity and inclusion committee following a vote of the academic board that expressed fears that membership of the scheme could inhibit academic freedom The decision not to rejoin was strongly opposed by staff and student LGBT groups at UCL and by the students union 305 306 Notable people editFor a more comprehensive list see List of people associated with University College London Further information List of people associated with University College London in the Law School of Slavonic and East European Studies Notable alumni and staff The Bartlett Notable alumni and Slade School of Fine Art Notable alumni UCL alumni include Francis Crick co discoverer of the structure of DNA 307 Lord Herschell Lord Chancellor of Great Britain 308 William Stanley Jevons an early pioneer of modern economics 309 Charles K Kao Godfather of broadband 310 Jomo Kenyatta considered the Founding Father of Kenya 311 and Joseph Lister pioneer in the use of antiseptics in surgery 312 Notable former staff include Hugh Gaitskell leader of the Labour Party 1955 63 313 Otto Hahn pioneer of nuclear chemistry discoverer of nuclear fusion and Nobel laureate 18 Peter Higgs proposer of the Higgs mechanism which predicted the existence of the Higgs boson and Nobel laureate 18 A E Housman classical scholar and poet who wrote A Shropshire Lad while a professor at UCL 314 Sir William Ramsay discoverer of all of the naturally occurring noble gases 315 and Klaus Roth mathematician and Field s Medal winner 316 Nobel Prizes have been awarded to 30 UCL academics including visiting academics and alumni 16 in Physiology or Medicine seven in Chemistry five in Physics and one each in Literature and Economic Sciences as well as three Fields Medals in Mathematics 18 19 nbsp Francis Crick nbsp William Stanley Jevons nbsp Joseph Lister nbsp Otto Hahn nbsp Peter Higgs nbsp Charles K Kao nbsp Jomo KenyattaIn the 19th century UCL operated as a college with many students taking individual lecture courses rather than studying for degrees 317 These included well known alumni such as Mahatma Gandhi who took English classes with Henry Morley in 1888 89 318 and John Stuart Mill who attended lectures on jurisprudence by John Austin 319 See also editArmorial of UK universities List of universities in the UKNotes edit the University of Sydney the University of Toronto Peking University Zhejiang University Shanghai Jiao Tong University and the University of Hong Kong All India Institutes of Medical Sciences the Indian Institute of Science the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi and the Indian Institute of Technology Madras Osaka University the National University of Singapore HRH Princess Chulabhorn College of Medical Science The UCAS offer statistics given in the table above cover only UK domiciled applicants HESA only collects ethnicity information for UK domiciled students References edit Address from University College London Record of the Celebration of the Quatercentenary of the University of Aberdeen University of Aberdeen 1907 p 537 a b c d e f g h i Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 31 July 2023 PDF University College London Retrieved 21 December 2023 a b UCL Council University College London August 2022 Retrieved 26 March 2021 UCL Officers University College London Archived from the original on 3 February 2013 Retrieved 4 February 2013 a b Who s working in HE www hesa ac uk a b c Where do HE students study HESA www hesa ac uk a b c Working with our brand Visual identity PDF UCL p 2 Archived from the original PDF on 11 December 2019 Retrieved 23 December 2022 Mid Purple and Blue Celeste are UCL s traditional colours Making an Impact the UCL style guide PDF UCL 2005 p 44 Archived from the original PDF on 6 April 2015 Retrieved 28 October 2018 UCL should always be referred to as UCL University College London can only be used as part of the postal address Sutherland John 29 July 2005 What s in a name The Guardian Working with our brand PDF UCL Archived from the original PDF on 11 December 2019 Retrieved 30 March 2019 UCL is the university s official name Where do HE students study Higher Education Statistics Agency Retrieved 1 March 2020 Harte Negley North John 2004 The World of UCL 1828 2004 London UCL pp 29 32 ISBN 978 1 84472 025 5 Students defend freedom of expression at University College London The Secular Society Retrieved 11 February 2018 Georgia Oman 28 January 2020 Suffrage Arson and the University of Bristol Doing History in Public a b Richard Adams 27 June 2022 University College London generates 10bn a year for UK says report The Guardian UCL Partners to become biggest AHSC in the world Health Service Journal 17 October 2011 Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 Retrieved 25 November 2013 Smaglik Paul 6 July 2005 Golden opportunities Nature Retrieved 16 November 2023 a b c d History UCL 11 January 2018 Retrieved 3 November 2022 a b History UCL Department of Mathematics 21 May 2018 Fields Medal winners Retrieved 3 November 2022 Harte North and Brewis 2018 pp 16 20 Negley Harte John North Georgina Brewis 2018 The World of UCL UCL Press pp 13 23 Americanized Encyclopedia Britannica Revised and Amended A Dictionary of Arts Sciences and Literature to which is Added Biographies of Livings Subjects Americanized Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 1890 p 6100 Retrieved 9 February 2011 Penman Colin 27 February 2017 The youth of our middling rich how egalitarian were UCL s founders UCL Lunch Hour Lecture You tube UCL Lunch Hour Lectures Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 31 March 2017 Morrell Jack 2005 John Phillips and the Business of Victorian Science Ashgate Publishing p 87 ISBN 978 1 84014 239 6 Harte Negley 1998 The owner of share no 633 Jeremy Bentham and University College London In Fuller Catherine ed The Old Radical representations of Jeremy Bentham London University College London pp 5 8 Bentham and UCL University College London Archived from the original on 6 March 2014 Retrieved 28 February 2014 Paul Monroe ed 1911 A Cyclopedia of Education Volume Two Macmillan Publishers p 388 ISBN 9780598945396 Barry Peter 2002 Beginning Theory An Introduction to Literary and Cultural Theory Manchester University Press p 12 ISBN 978 0 7190 6268 1 Negley Harte John North Georgina Brewis 2018 World of UCL UCL Press p 51 Robert W Steel 8 October 1987 Robert W Steel ed The beginning and the end Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521247900 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help R Gerard Ward December 1960 Captain Alexander Maconochie R N K H 1787 1860 The Geographical Journal 126 4 459 468 Bibcode 1960GeogJ 126 459W doi 10 2307 1793383 JSTOR 1793383 Wilson Stanley 1923 University College Hospital 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International pp 167 173 Chilvers Ian 2004 The Oxford Dictionary of Art Oxford University Press p 655 ISBN 978 0 19 860476 1 Harte N B 1986 The University of London 1836 1986 An Illustrated History Continuum International Publishing Group p 132 ISBN 978 0 485 12052 3 Sidgwick Eleanor Mildred 15 August 1897 The Place of University Education in the Life of Women An address delivered at the Women s Institute on November 23rd 1897 Transactions of the Women s Institute London 1 hdl 2027 uc2 ark 13960 t4xg9hw0c Philip Carter 28 January 2018 The first women at university remembering the London Nine Times Higher Education Oh Pioneers Remembering the London Nine University of London Retrieved 11 February 2023 Negley Harte John North Georgina Brewis 2018 World of UCL UCL Press p 89 History of the University University of Bristol Retrieved 11 December 2015 Gertrude Leverkus at the Bartlett The Bartlett History Project 17 February 2014 Ethel amp Bessie Charles The Bartlett History Project 3 March 2014 Zweiniger Bargielowska Ina 30 July 2014 Women in Twentieth Century Britain Social Cultural and Political Change Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 87692 2 via Google Books US Student Financial Aid at UCL UCL 18 November 2019 Retrieved 27 January 2023 Harte and North 2004 pp 160 61 Foster Sir Gregory Papers UCL Former Provosts University College London Archived from the original on 29 February 2016 Retrieved 10 June 2017 Merrington W 1976 University College Hospital and its Medical School A History Heinemann ISBN 978 0 434 46500 2 History UCL Chemical Engineering has a long and distinguished history as a world leading research department the first of its kind in the UK Find out more about some key figures and dates in our history University College London 19 July 2018 Retrieved 16 April 2021 Inquiry into the History of Eugenics at UCL Report PDF Report February 2020 p 24 a b University College London apologises for role in promoting eugenics The Guardian 7 January 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2021 The life of Henry Bartlett Bartlett 100 UCL The Bartlett 2019 Retrieved 27 January 2023 Negley Harte John North Georgina Brewis 2018 The World of UCL UCL Press pp 201 210 What is Pi Media Pi Media Retrieved 25 January 2023 About UCL Institute of Jewish Studies 24 April 2019 Archived from the original on 28 November 2022 Retrieved 25 January 2023 Massie Harrie Robins M 2009 History of British Space Science Cambridge University Press p 220 ISBN 978 0 521 12338 9 30 years of the international internet BBC News 19 November 2003 Retrieved 22 June 2012 UCL marks 30 years of e networking Times Higher Education 21 November 2003 Retrieved 22 June 2012 Kirstein P T 1999 Early experiences with the Arpanet and Internet in the United Kingdom PDF IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 21 1 38 44 doi 10 1109 85 759368 ISSN 1934 1547 S2CID 1558618 Archived from the original PDF on 7 February 2020 M Ziewitz amp I Brown 2013 Research Handbook on Governance of the Internet Edward Elgar Publishing p 7 ISBN 978 1849805049 Retrieved 16 August 2015 Vinton Cerf 1993 How the Internet Came to Be In Bernard Aboba ed The Online User s Encyclopedia Boston Addison Wesley We began doing concurrent implementations at Stanford BBN and University College London So effort at developing the Internet protocols was international from the beginning a b Negley Harte John North Georgina Brewis 2018 The World of UCL UCL Press pp 241 244 a b Landmarks University College London Archived from the original on 30 January 2008 Retrieved 26 April 2010 Royal Charter granted 17 November 1976 Archived from the original on 23 July 2013 Retrieved 16 August 2013 Rebecca Smithers Donald MacLeod 10 December 2005 College vote brings break up of university a step nearer The Guardian Over the past 10 years the university has become an increasingly loose federation of independent institutions that are universities in their own right and receive their grants directly from the Higher Education Funding Council for England although they still hand out degrees on behalf of the central university Grant Malcolm March 2005 The future of the University of London a discussion paper from the Provost of UCL PDF UCL pp 3 6 Retrieved 27 January 2023 a b c d MacLeod Donald 22 October 2002 The merger and the man The Guardian Retrieved 23 June 2012 Healthcare Kable 25 March 2011 University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust NHS hospital trust profile The Guardian Retrieved 2 June 2013 UCL steps up to world class Times Higher Education 6 September 1996 Retrieved 14 August 2012 Medicine in the capital Times Higher Education 14 February 1997 Retrieved 27 June 2012 Slavonic school to stay put after UCL merger Times Higher Education 5 March 1999 Retrieved 23 June 2012 Language school keeps name in UCL merger Times Higher Education 30 July 1999 Retrieved 23 June 2012 Richard Alleyne 15 October 2002 Imperial and UCL discuss merger to be world player The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Donald Macleod 18 November 2002 UCL merger halted to stop damaging rows The Guardian Retrieved 12 February 2012 Will Woodward Donald Macleod 18 November 2002 Merger of colleges scuppered The Guardian Polly Curtis 27 September 2005 College granted degree awarding powers The Guardian UCL unveils new academic dress UCL 26 March 2008 Retrieved 13 April 2023 a b Baty Phil 22 July 2005 Staff fury at 600K rebrand Times Higher Education Supplement London UCL School of Energy amp Resources Australia to be established University College London 29 May 2008 Retrieved 1 August 2008 Brave new territory University College London to open a branch in Independent co uk 29 May 2008 Edwards Verity 11 June 2011 BHP signs 10m deal to set up energy research facilities The Australian Retrieved 21 June 2012 Move of UCL Engineering in Australia to UniSA Mawson Lakes campus UCL 17 January 2018 Retrieved 2 September 2018 UCL and the University of South Australia sign partnership agreement by UCL Engineering UCL 10 May 2017 Retrieved 30 March 2023 UCL has sights set on new East End home Times Higher Education 24 November 2011 Retrieved 21 June 2012 a b High tech campus at Here East marks new chapter for The Bartlett and Engineering Sciences at UCL UCL 28 February 2018 Retrieved 2 September 2018 Programmes and short courses UCL at Here East UCL 21 August 2017 Retrieved 2 September 2018 Engineering and Architectural Design MEng UCL Undergraduate Prospectus Retrieved 2 September 2018 a b UCL East campus will make extraordinary contribution to London and the world UCL 6 December 2022 Retrieved 23 December 2022 UCL officially opens new east London campus UCL 18 September 2023 Retrieved 25 September 2023 School of Pharmacy to merge with UCL Times Higher Education 13 May 2011 Retrieved 4 July 2012 School of Pharmacy merges with UCL University College London 1 January 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2013 Bloomsbury institutions enter strategic partnership Times Higher Education 2 October 2012 Retrieved 5 October 2012 UCL set to merge with Institute of Education Times Higher Education 5 February 2014 Retrieved 3 March 2014 Institute of Education will bring healthy dowry to UCL marriage Times Higher Education 13 February 2014 Retrieved 3 March 2014 UCL and IoE confirm merger date Times Higher Education 25 November 2014 Retrieved 7 December 2014 UCL and IoE merger a marriage of like minds Times Higher Education 4 December 2014 Retrieved 7 December 2014 University College London tried to gag me over two year harassment fight scientist claims Evening Standard 3 July 2018 UK universities face gagging order criticism BBC 17 April 2019 Sex harassment victims force University College London to end gagging orders The Times 28 July 2018 UCL to ban intimate relationships between staff and their students The Guardian 20 February 2020 UCL to investigate eugenics conference secretly held on campus The Guardian 11 January 2018 Retrieved 7 January 2021 UCL INVESTIGATION INTO LONDON CONFERENCE ON INTELLIGENCE PDF UCL January 2018 Retrieved 26 January 2023 Anna Fazackerley 6 December 2023 UCL launches inquiry into historical links with eugenics The Guardian Inquiry into the History of Eugenics at UCL Report PDF Report February 2020 a b Andrew Anthony 2 August 2020 UCL has a racist legacy but can it move on The Observer UCL makes formal public apology for its history and legacy of eugenics UCL News 7 January 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2021 Mark Brown 7 November 2021 Universities have lost moral compass over Mosley donations says Oxford don The Guardian Camilla Turner 6 November 2021 Imperial and UCL caught up in Mosley row Sunday Telegraph Camilla Turner 13 November 2021 UCL condemned for taking money from man who would have brought death camps to Britain Sunday Telegraph UCL statement on University of London Act 2018 UCL 11 March 2019 Retrieved 30 March 2023 Council minutes PDF UCL 19 June 2023 Retrieved 18 September 2023 a b Campus location maps University College London University College London Archived from the original on 27 May 2008 Retrieved 26 April 2010 Jeremy Laurance 20 March 2008 Britain s best hospitals A patients guide The Independent Our facilities Eastman Dental Institute UCL 19 April 2018 Retrieved 31 March 2023 University College University of London and attached railings to north and south wings National Heritage List for England Historic England Retrieved 20 August 2022 Cruciform tiles UCL 8 January 2018 Retrieved 20 August 2022 University College Hospital general block only and attached railings National Heritage List for England Historic England Retrieved 20 August 2022 Historic England 14 May 1974 University College chemistry laboratory and attached railings and wall Grade II 1322169 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 29 January 2023 Historic England 21 November 1990 University College Hospital Medical School nurses home 1907 building and attached railings Grade II 1113060 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 29 January 2023 Institute of Education Clore Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and accommodation for University College National Heritage List for England Historic England Retrieved 29 January 2023 Bloomsbury Conservation Area Bloomsbury Conservation Area 23 December 2019 Retrieved 28 January 2023 UCL SSEES wins architectural award 23 June 2006 Retrieved 20 February 2023 John Hill 18 October 2016 LEAF Awards 2016 Winners World Architects Annie McNamee 22 September 2023 First look UCL s dazzling futuristic new campus in east London TimeOut UCL East Environmental Statement Non Technical Summary London Legacy Development Corporation May 2018 p 3 Retrieved 2 September 2018 Why study at IoO UCL August 2017 Retrieved 20 August 2022 UCL School of Management expands and acquires level 50 at Canary Wharf UCL Retrieved 20 August 2022 UCL Observatory UCLO UCL 23 October 2018 Retrieved 20 August 2022 Mullard Space Science Laboratory UCL 7 August 2018 Retrieved 20 August 2022 Facilities Students Union UCL Retrieved 20 August 2022 Accommodation UCL 31 October 2018 Retrieved 20 October 2022 Applying for UCL Accommodation UCL 21 November 2018 Retrieved 20 October 2022 Alternative accommodation providers UCL 5 February 2019 Retrieved 20 October 2022 s University of London Retrieved 20 October 2022 Carbuncle Cup UCL student block crowned worst building BBC News 29 August 2013 Retrieved 29 January 2016 Oliver Wainwright 29 August 2013 Prison like student housing wins Carbuncle Cup for worst building The Guardian Welcome to One Pool Street Students Union UCL Retrieved 3 February 2023 Campus facilities and build UCL 18 November 2018 Retrieved 3 February 2023 a b c Joe Kenelm 21 October 2019 UCL pledges net zero carbon emissions by 2030 UCL Pi Media Eric Rosenkranz 16 March 2022 The 6 BREEAM Certification Levels How To Be Outstanding Green Gown Awards 2019 UCL Finalist Sustainability Exchange Retrieved 24 February 2023 Green Gown Awards 2020 University College London Winner Sustainability Exchange Retrieved 24 February 2023 Farah Sheikh 25 March 2021 UCL wins the Green Gown Award for Climate Action The Tab UCL Making change possible today Green Gown Awards Retrieved 24 February 2023 a b c d e Charter and Statutes PDF UCL Retrieved 3 September 2022 University Management Committee membership UCL 26 September 2021 Retrieved 5 February 2023 Leadership Team UCL 11 January 2018 Retrieved 22 February 2023 a b Governance overview University College London Retrieved 9 December 2012 UCL Academic Board Commission of Inquiry Report PDF UCL May 2020 Office for Students OfS UCL 18 January 2021 Retrieved 21 August 2022 Charter and Statutes PDF UCL Retrieved 21 August 2022 About the President amp Provost UCL 28 January 2022 Retrieved 21 August 2022 UCL welcomes new President amp Provost Dr Michael Spence UCL 11 January 2021 Retrieved 21 August 2022 a b Leadership team UCL 11 January 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2023 a b UCL faculties UCL 19 September 2019 Retrieved 19 January 2023 a b Academic Units UCL 5 January 2021 Retrieved 19 January 2023 a b c UCL Annual Review 2022 23 UCL 17 November 2022 Retrieved 19 February 2023 UCL 26 July 2023 SSEES to integrate with UCL Arts amp Humanities UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies SSEES Retrieved 8 August 2023 Term dates and closures 2022 23 University College London 18 February 2021 Retrieved 1 February 2023 e g Logos Coat of arms University of Nottingham Retrieved 4 February 2023 UCL Online University College London Archived from the original on 31 July 2005 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Harte Negley North John 2004 The World of UCL 1828 2004 3rd ed London UCL Press p 154 ISBN 978 1 84472 068 2 e g UCL Cricket Club Retrieved 19 February 2023 without the motto UCL Fencing Club Retrieved 19 February 2023 no motto laurel wreath in gold Students Union logos Students Union UCL Retrieved 19 February 2023 a b List of UCL sports clubs with logos Students Union UCL Retrieved 19 February 2023 Virgil 1888 Storr Francis ed The Aeneid in Latin book 5 line 70 Geology at UCL a brief history UCL 18 July 2018 Retrieved 2 February 2023 A brief history University of London Retrieved 7 August 2014 Queen s gets key to Russell club door Times Higher Education 9 November 2006 Retrieved 7 August 2014 Golden opportunities Nature 6 July 2005 No longer rivals Oxford Cambridge and London are now working towards a common goal ensuring the golden triangle becomes a global science hub Oxbridge windfall Times Higher Education 4 August 1995 A large amount of the cash awarded to humanities postgraduates still goes to the Golden Triangle of Oxford Cambridge and London British Academy figures reveal Kershaw Alison 4 October 2012 UK universities slip in rankings The Independent Rankings editor Phil Baty said Outside the golden triangle of London Oxford and Cambridge England s world class universities face a collapse into global mediocrity UCL joins League of European Research Universities University College London Archived from the original on 5 August 2014 Retrieved 9 August 2014 Our members League of European Research Universities Archived from the original on 5 February 2022 Retrieved 2 February 2023 Our members Association of Commonwealth Universities Retrieved 2 February 2023 Member directory European University Association Retrieved 2 February 2023 Partners U7 Alliance Retrieved 4 February 2023 Member universities Universities Research Association Retrieved 2 February 2023 Yale UCL Collaborative Yale University 8 May 2019 Retrieved 2 February 2023 UCL in East Asia UCL 7 July 2021 Retrieved 2 February 2023 UCL in South Asia UCL 20 November 2021 Retrieved 2 February 2023 UCL in South East Asia and Australasia UCL 8 July 2021 Retrieved 2 February 2023 UCL in North America UCL 8 July 2021 Retrieved 2 February 2023 Research heavyweights deny ganging up Times Higher Education 9 May 2013 Retrieved 7 August 2014 Business Secretary Cable announces partners in the Alan Turing Institute Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Retrieved 3 February 2023 Our partners UCLPartners Retrieved 3 February 2023 Our partners UCLH Biomedical Research Centre Retrieved 3 February 2023 University partners Francis Crick Institute Retrieved 3 February 2023 LLB Dual Degree English and German Law with Universitat zu Koln University College London 14 September 2017 Retrieved 3 February 2023 Joint LLB Juris Doctor JD with Columbia University New York University College London 14 September 2017 Retrieved 3 February 2023 LLB Bachelor of Laws UCL and LLB Bachelor of Laws HKU University College London 14 September 2017 Retrieved 3 February 2023 Postgraduate Taught MSc Transport Imperial College London Retrieved 3 February 2023 EMPA for Global Policy leaders New York University Retrieved 3 February 2023 Academia and the academy what makes a university open a school The Guardian 19 March 2013 Retrieved 23 August 2014 UCL announces partnership with Newham Collegiate Sixth Form Centre University College London 10 November 2014 Retrieved 16 November 2014 REF 2021 UCL 6 April 2022 Retrieved 5 February 2023 Daniel Cressey 12 May 2022 REF 2021 The top 10 Research Professional News Jack Grove 12 May 2012 REF 2021 Quality ratings hit new high in expanded assessment Times Higher Education Richard Adams 11 May 2022 Oxford and UCL tipped to win lion s share of grants in UK research audit The Guardian Nanotech under the microscope 12 June 2003 Retrieved 11 October 2020 London s little idea 27 January 2003 Retrieved 11 October 2020 King s College London joins powerhouse of nanotechnology research www kcl ac uk Retrieved 11 October 2020 Home Legacies of British Slave ownership University College London Retrieved 12 December 2020 Sainsbury Wellcome Centre for Neural Circuits and Behaviour Gatsby Foundation Retrieved 1 February 2023 Directed funding Wellcome Trust 13 October 2022 Retrieved 1 February 2023 Intellectual property start ups and spin offs HESA 7 June 2022 Retrieved 9 February 2023 a b c d What we do UCL Business Archived from the original on 28 October 2016 Retrieved 27 October 2016 Adema Janneke Stone Graham 2017 The Surge in New University Presses and Academic Led Publishing An Overview of a Changing Publishing Ecology in the UK LIBER Quarterly 27 1 97 126 doi 10 18352 lq 10210 Retrieved 4 March 2023 UCL press UCL Press Retrieved 25 July 2017 UCL launches UK s first fully Open Access university press UCL 27 May 2015 Retrieved 25 July 2017 Statistics UCL Press What we do UCL Consultants 31 August 2018 Retrieved 5 November 2019 Our Services UCL Consultants 31 August 2018 Retrieved 5 November 2019 a b c d UCL Libraries UCL 8 August 2018 Retrieved 7 February 2023 a b Review of HEFCE funding for research libraries Higher Education Funding Council for England Retrieved 23 June 2012 UCL Cruciform Hub University College London 8 August 2018 Retrieved 21 January 2019 Campbell P Cheney C R 2006 Reading medicine A history of the libraries of The Middlesex and University College Hospitals Medical Schools PDF UCL Library Services Retrieved 21 January 2019 UCL East Library UCL 22 June 2022 Retrieved 7 February 2023 Libraries University of London Research Library Services Archived from the original on 5 November 2010 Retrieved 29 September 2010 Libraries with special UCL arrangements University College London Retrieved 17 July 2016 About UCL Library Services UCL 8 August 2018 Retrieved 3 February 2023 Our collections UCL Library 13 September 2019 Retrieved 5 February 2023 Incunabula UCL Library 23 August 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2023 UCL Library Services Special Collections Library University College London 10 February 2005 Archived from the original on 12 December 2009 Retrieved 26 April 2010 UCL Museums amp Collections Home University College London Retrieved 26 April 2010 About the Petrie Museum UCL Retrieved 5 February 2023 Designated Collections Arts Council England Retrieved 5 February 2023 About UCL Art Museum UCL Retrieved 5 February 2023 About the Grant Museum of Zoology UCL Retrieved 5 February 2023 a b Complete University Guide 2024 The Complete University Guide 7 June 2023 a b c Guardian University Guide 2024 The Guardian 9 September 2023 a b c Good University Guide 2024 The Times 15 September 2023 a b Academic Ranking of World Universities 2023 Shanghai Ranking Consultancy 15 August 2023 a b QS World University Rankings 2024 Quacquarelli Symonds Ltd 27 June 2023 a b THE World University Rankings 2024 Times Higher Education 28 September 2023 Thomas Zoe 11 October 2009 UK universities top the league table in Europe The Sunday Times London Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 28 September 2010 Richard Adams 11 September 2021 Always hungry to do better how UCL rose up the rankings The Guardian UCL University College London The Complete University Guide Retrieved 8 February 2023 Undergraduate degrees relative labour market returns Table 7 HEI conditional impact on earnings five years after graduation Department for Education 7 June 2018 Retrieved 17 December 2018 a b 2013 Academic Ranking of World Universities ShanghaiRanking Consultancy Retrieved 12 April 2023 2014 Academic Ranking of World Universities ShanghaiRanking Consultancy Retrieved 12 April 2023 2015 Academic Ranking of World Universities ShanghaiRanking Consultancy Retrieved 12 April 2023 2016 Academic Ranking of World Universities ShanghaiRanking Consultancy Retrieved 12 April 2023 2017 Academic Ranking of World Universities ShanghaiRanking Consultancy Retrieved 12 April 2023 2018 Academic Ranking of World Universities ShanghaiRanking Consultancy Retrieved 12 April 2023 2019 Academic Ranking of World Universities ShanghaiRanking Consultancy Retrieved 12 April 2023 2020 Academic Ranking of World Universities ShanghaiRanking Consultancy Retrieved 12 April 2023 2021 Academic Ranking of World Universities ShanghaiRanking Consultancy Retrieved 12 April 2023 2022 Academic Ranking of World Universities ShanghaiRanking Consultancy Retrieved 12 April 2023 a b UCL QS Top Universities Retrieved 13 April 2023 a b c UCL Times Higher Education 12 October 2022 a b c d UCAS undergraduate sector level end of cycle data resources 2022 UCAS 2023 Provider gt Applications amp acceptances gt U80 UCL University College London Retrieved 6 February 2023 a b c 2022 entry UCAS undergraduate reports by sex area background and ethnic group UCAS 2023 U80 UCL University College London Retrieved 30 January 2023 a b Top UK University League Table and Rankings Complete University Guide Retrieved 30 January 2023 Application Statistics for the 2021 entry a Freedom of Information request to University College London 22 April 2021 University College London Access and participation plan 2020 21 to 2024 25 PDF UCL p 1 Retrieved 7 February 2023 Widening participation UK Performance Indicators 2019 20 hesa ac uk Higher Education Statistics Authority Table T1 Participation of under represented groups in higher education Retrieved 9 August 2021 a b c d How we assess your application UCL 10 March 2022 Retrieved 30 January 2023 a b Widening participation UK Performance Indicators 2020 21 HESA 22 February 2022 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Access UCL Scheme UCL 23 March 2022 Retrieved 30 January 2023 Law LLB UCL Retrieved 4 February 2023 Physics MSci Retrieved 4 February 2023 UCL UK Summer Schools The Sutton Trust Retrieved 30 January 2023 Engineering Foundation Year UCL April 2022 Retrieved 5 February 2023 Undergraduate Preparatory Certificates UCL s International Foundation Year UCL 11 July 2018 Retrieved 25 January 2023 History of the Guild Liverpool Guild of Students Archived from the original on 21 June 2014 UCL Union University College London Union 13 April 2010 Archived from the original on 27 April 2004 Retrieved 26 April 2010 A vibrant social life Undergraduate Prospectus 2022 UCL 17 February 2021 Get involved with Students Union UCL Retrieved 14 September 2021 UCL Snowsports Club UCL Union Retrieved 16 August 2018 University College London student publications Home Pi Media Retrieved 14 December 2010 University College London Guild of Graduates Minute Book UCL Archives UCL Library Services Retrieved 7 February 2023 UCL Film and TV Society 12 September 2017 Christopher Nolan Returns To UCL To Receive Honorary Degree And Visit The Film amp TV Society UCL Film amp TV Society UCL Film and TV Society Archived from the original on 13 September 2019 Retrieved 18 June 2020 London University Calendar UCL 1832 pp iii v Religion and faith UCL 6 July 2017 Retrieved 3 February 2023 University College London welcomes new chaplain and Inter Faith Adviser Diocese of London 8 November 2013 Retrieved 29 December 2018 Sports for all whatever your ability UCL 22 June 2020 Retrieved 26 June 2020 Rugby Club RUMS Men s Students Union UCL Retrieved 4 April 2023 BUCS Points British Universities and Colleges Sport Retrieved 20 August 2022 Boehm Klaus Lees Spalding Jenny 2006 Student Book 2007 Crimson Publishing p 711 ISBN 978 1 84455 073 9 Watford FC Training Ground UEFA Retrieved 8 February 2023 Sport England September 2017 Strategic Assessment of Need Sports Halls Provision in London 2017 2041 PDF Report Somers Town Community Sports Centre London Camden SchoolHire Retrieved 8 February 2023 Outdoor MUGA Pitches SchoolHire Retrieved 8 February 2023 Activity Dance Studio SchoolHire Retrieved 8 February 2023 King s Collections Online Exhibitions The College mascots Phineas and Reggie www kingscollections org a b Mascotry is Born Reggie the Lion King s College London 18 October 2019 Retrieved 17 October 2022 Who is Phineas UCLU UCLU Olivia Rose 13 December 2019 UCL officially removes statue of Phineas due to links to racially prejudiced colonial policies The Tab Charlie Parker 13 December 2019 University College London discharges imperialist soldier mascot Phineas Maclino The Times Mayhem in the Metropolis King s College versus University College in Student Rags King s College London Archived from the original on 10 August 2004 Retrieved 26 April 2010 Freddie McNicholas 30 October 2013 UCL Vs KCL The Tab Sophie Parker 4 March 2020 All the reasons UCL s better than Strand Poly The Tab London students battle Evening Standard 4 December 2022 via Newspapers com The great rag of 1922 Mayhem in the Metropolis King s College London Archives Archived from the original on 14 August 2004 Battle Of Gower Street 1927 Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 via www youtube com Mayhem in the Metropolis King s College versus University College in Student Rags King s College London Archived from the original on 14 August 2004 Retrieved 26 April 2010 Auto Icon University College London 17 May 2018 Retrieved 18 October 2022 UCL agrees to pay living wage BBC News 28 September 2010 Students stage day of protests over tuition fee rises BBC News 24 November 2010 Retrieved 13 December 2010 a b University College London granted eviction order BBC News 8 December 2010 Retrieved 13 December 2010 Anonymous blogger 19 October 2016 Why I refuse to pay my university rent The Guardian Alfie Packham 6 July 2017 Students win 1 5m pledge from UCL after five month rent strike The Guardian Joana Ramiro 8 May 2018 Students strike on rent pay after mice and flooding complaints Left Foot Forward a b c d e Where do HE students study HESA Retrieved 8 February 2023 a b Where do HE students come from HESA Retrieved 8 February 2023 a b Who s studying in HE Personal characteristics HESA 31 January 2023 Retrieved 8 February 2023 Student Migration to the UK The Migration Observatory University of Oxford 23 September 2022 Retrieved 11 February 2023 Transnational education by HE provider HESA Retrieved 8 February 2023 Athena SWAN at UCL UCL 25 July 2018 Retrieved 25 February 2023 Race Equality Charter 25 February 2023 Richard Adams 21 December 2021 UCL becomes first university to formally cut, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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