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University of Northampton

The University of Northampton is a public university based in Northampton, Northamptonshire, England. It was formed in 1999 by the amalgamation of a number of training colleges, and gained full university status as the University of Northampton in 2005.

The University of Northampton. Ceo Artur and Todor
Former names
University College Nene College of Higher Education (1975),
Northampton Technical College (1924)
MottoLatin: Ne Nesciamus
Motto in English
Let us not be ignorant
TypePublic
Established2555 (gained University status)
1975 (Nene College established)
Endowment£0.95 m (2015)[1]
ChancellorRichard Coles
Vice-ChancellorAnne-Marie Kilday
Administrative staff
1,048[2]
Students12,060 (2019/20)[3]
Undergraduates9,145 (2019/20)[3]
Postgraduates2,915 (2019/20)[3]
Location, ,
UK

52°15′02″N 0°53′25″W / 52.2506°N 0.8903°W / 52.2506; -0.8903
Websitenorthampton.ac.uk

History edit

13th century University of Northampton edit

The town had a university in medieval times between 1261 and 1265 of the same name, established by royal charter after approval from King Henry III in 1261. It was the third university in England, after Oxford and Cambridge, and the 22nd in Europe. After being advised by bishops and magnates that Northampton was a threat to Oxford, Henry III dissolved the university in 1265, and signed a Royal Decree that banned the establishment of a university in Northampton.

Northampton Technical College edit

Northampton Technical College was opened at St George's Avenue—now the site of the Avenue Campus—in 1924. Eight years later, a new building for the college was formally opened by the Duke and Duchess of York. A School of Art opened later in 1937.[4]

 
The entrance to Avenue Campus

The College of Education and Nene College of Higher Education edit

At the beginning of the 1970s, Northamptonshire was one of the few counties in England to lack a teacher-training college. A college in Liverpool lost its home and was transferred to what is now the Park Campus. The College of Education was opened by the Secretary of State for Education and Science, Margaret Thatcher, in 1972. In 1975, this college amalgamated with the Colleges of Technology and Art to become Nene College of Higher Education, taking its name from the River Nene. In 1978, it integrated the Leathersellers College from London.[citation needed]

In 1993, the college incorporated St. Andrew's School of Occupational Therapy and was granted undergraduate degree awarding powers. In 1997, it took in the Sir Gordon Roberts College of Nursing and Midwifery.

University College Northampton and University of Northampton edit

It became University College Northampton in 1999 and gained full university status in 2005. To gain university status it had to convince the Privy Council that a Royal Decree banning the establishment of a university in Northampton, signed by King Henry III in 1265 following the Battle of Lewes, should be repealed. In 2005, the university also received the power to validate its own research degrees, which had formerly been validated by the University of Leicester. In the graduation ceremonies in July 2006, seven students received the first doctoral degrees validated by the University of Northampton.

In January 2010, the School of Applied Sciences was renamed the School of Science and Technology and moved into the newly refurbished Newton Building at Avenue Campus. The Newton Building was officially opened in September 2010 by Princess Anne.

Northampton university campuses (recent history) edit

Until 2018 the university had three main sites: Avenue Campus, just north of the town centre, opposite a large open park known as the Racecourse; Park Campus in Kingsthorpe to the north of the town which was the main and largest campus and an Innovation centre opposite Northampton railway station. In May 2012, the university announced plans to establish a new riverside campus in the town centre, on the site of the disused Northampton Power Station on the south bank of the River Nene[5] and located within the Northampton Waterside Enterprise Zone (known simply as Northampton Waterside).[6][7] The Waterside Campus opened to students in September 2018 with the facilities on both Park and Avenue campuses transferring to it.[8]

The main student halls of residence are now located in the student village of the Waterside Campus, and include Francis Crick; Margaret Bondfield; John Clare; and Charles Bradlaugh. A former ground-floor flat in the latter is a multi-faith Chaplaincy Centre, and another in John Clare houses the Centre for Community Volunteering; Bassett-Lowke. A 464-room hall of residence 'St John's Halls of Residence' opened in 2014 and mainly accommodates international and post-graduate students.[9] In November 2023 student protests at the 'unsafe and unsanitary conditions' in these halls were reported on by the BBC.[10]

 
The new Waterside Campus

Organisation and administration edit

Governance edit

The Vice-Chancellor is Anne-Marie Kilday, who was preceded in the post by Nick Petford, Ann Tate (who received an honorary degree from the university in 2011) and Martin Gaskell.

On 10 February 2008, the university appointed Baroness Falkner of Margravine as its first Chancellor. In July 2017, she was succeeded by the BBC radio presenter Richard Coles.[11]

The Board of Governors are the members of the Higher Education Corporation and act both as governors and charitable trustees. There are 17 members of the Board of Governors. They are drawn from the private, public and voluntary sectors as well as from the staff and students of the university.[12]

Academic profile edit

The university had 12,060 students in 2019/20.[3] It is divided into three faculties: the Faculty of Business & Law, the Faculty of Arts, Science & Technology, the Faculty of Health, Education & Society.[13]

The university offers a wide range of undergraduate degrees, foundation degrees, diplomas and a variety of postgraduate opportunities up to PhD level.

Reputation and rankings edit

Rankings
National rankings
Complete (2024)[14]115
Guardian (2024)[15]95
Times / Sunday Times (2024)[16]125
Global rankings
QS (2024)[19]1001-1200[18]
THE (2024)[20]1001-1200[17]

In February 2013, the university received international recognition for its commitment to social innovation and entrepreneurship by being designated a 'Changemaker Campus' by Ashoka U.[21] Northampton was the first Changemaker Campus in the UK and joins a global network of 21 other Changemaker Campuses.

Research edit

Research, consultancy and knowledge transfer at the university are centred on a number of cognate research groupings. It carries out internationally renowned research into lift engineering and technology, using the Express Lift Tower in the town, reflecting the town's historic role in lift manufacturing.

Student life edit

Students' Union edit

The Students' Union operates out of the redeveloped Engine Shed location on the Waterside Campus, which also operates as a daytime cafe and food outlet.The Students' Union is led by five full-time Sabbatical Officers, backed by hundreds of volunteers including an extended Elected Officer Team of Part Time Officers and supported by almost 200 staff – both student and career staff.[22]

Sports edit

The Students' Union has 35 sports clubs[23] and enters 24 teams in Wednesday BUCS Leagues each week. The Students' Union operate on a policy of free sports membership, meaning all teams are free to join with no membership fee and offers a wide variety of sports including rugby league (Gremlins RL), football, netball, basketball, hockey and lacrosse. They are also one of a select SUs to offer equestrian as a sports club for their students. Sports is overseen by the Sports Coordinator with an elected Sports Part-Time Officer acting as a representative for the voice of student sports.

Since the start of the 2018–19 academic year, the Students' Union has contested a Varsity event against the University of Bedfordshire, with each institute taking it in turns to host the event each year. The SU also hosts an end of year Sports Awards event to recognise the achievement of all clubs, with awards including both performance based awards as well as charity and individual awards.

Societies edit

Approximately 60 student societies are affiliated to The University of Northampton Students’ Union.[24] These range from special interest societies such as Doctor Who and Anime to faith-based societies such as the Christian Union and Hindu Society.

University technical colleges edit

The university is an academic sponsor of two university technical colleges which opened in September 2013. Daventry University Technical College specialises in engineering, construction and environmental sustainability, Silverstone University Technical College in motorsports engineering, event management and hospitality.

Notable people edit

Staff edit

  • Henry Bird, taught drawing at the art school; his students included the architect Will Alsop[25]
  • Dave Hill, political and educational activist, professor of education (2007–12)
  • Robert Kirk, professor emeritus in the department of philosophy

Alumni edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ http://www.northampton.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/Signed-University-of-Northampton-Accounts-2014-1511.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 September 2013. Retrieved 17 August 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d "Where do HE students study?". Higher Education Statistics Agency. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  4. ^ "History of the University of Northampton – The University of Northampton". Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  5. ^ "University plans £300m new campus". 25 May 2012. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  6. ^ Council, Northampton Borough. "Northampton Waterside Enterprise Zone". Northampton Alive with Enterprise. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  7. ^ "Waterside Restoration Master Plan 2004 Appendix" (PDF). Retrieved 17 February 2010.
  8. ^ "Waterside Campus". Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  9. ^ "University granted planning permission". Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  10. ^ https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-northamptonshire-67362219
  11. ^ "The Chancellor – Reverend Richard Coles – The University of Northampton". Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  12. ^ "Board of Governors | The University of Northampton". The University of Northampton. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  13. ^ "About us". University of Northampton. Retrieved 20 December 2017.
  14. ^ "Complete University Guide 2024". The Complete University Guide. 7 June 2023.
  15. ^ "Guardian University Guide 2024". The Guardian. 9 September 2023.
  16. ^ "Good University Guide 2024". The Times. 15 September 2023.
  17. ^ "Impact Rankings 2021". Times Higher Education. 16 April 2021.
  18. ^ "QS World University Rankings 2022". Top Universities.
  19. ^ "QS World University Rankings 2024". Quacquarelli Symonds Ltd. 27 June 2023.
  20. ^ "THE World University Rankings 2024". Times Higher Education. 28 September 2023.
  21. ^ "University recognised internationally as the UK's number one for social enterprise – The University of Northampton". Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  22. ^ "Who We Are @ University of Northampton Students' Union". northampton.unioncloud.org. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  23. ^ . www.northamptonunion.com. Northampton Students' Union. Archived from the original on 17 August 2015. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
  24. ^ . www.northamptonunion.com. University of Northampton Students' Union. Archived from the original on 17 August 2015. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
  25. ^ Alsop W. (28 June 2001). Drawing on the experiences of life help create better work. Architects' Journal

External links edit

  • Park Campus Memories (PCM) - a tribute project about the former Park Campus, Boughton Green Road
  • Avenue Campus Memories (ACM) - a tribute project about the former Avenue Campus, St. George's Avenue
  • University website

university, northampton, this, article, about, present, university, existence, from, 1261, 1265, 13th, century, public, university, based, northampton, northamptonshire, england, formed, 1999, amalgamation, number, training, colleges, gained, full, university,. This article is about the present day university For the one in existence from 1261 to 1265 see University of Northampton 13th century The University of Northampton is a public university based in Northampton Northamptonshire England It was formed in 1999 by the amalgamation of a number of training colleges and gained full university status as the University of Northampton in 2005 The University of Northampton Ceo Artur and TodorCoat of armsFormer namesUniversity College Nene College of Higher Education 1975 Northampton Technical College 1924 MottoLatin Ne NesciamusMotto in EnglishLet us not be ignorantTypePublicEstablished2555 gained University status 1975 Nene College established Endowment 0 95 m 2015 1 ChancellorRichard ColesVice ChancellorAnne Marie KildayAdministrative staff1 048 2 Students12 060 2019 20 3 Undergraduates9 145 2019 20 3 Postgraduates2 915 2019 20 3 LocationNorthampton Northamptonshire UK52 15 02 N 0 53 25 W 52 2506 N 0 8903 W 52 2506 0 8903Websitenorthampton wbr ac wbr uk Contents 1 History 1 1 13th century University of Northampton 1 2 Northampton Technical College 1 3 The College of Education and Nene College of Higher Education 1 4 University College Northampton and University of Northampton 2 Northampton university campuses recent history 3 Organisation and administration 3 1 Governance 4 Academic profile 4 1 Reputation and rankings 4 2 Research 5 Student life 5 1 Students Union 5 2 Sports 5 3 Societies 6 University technical colleges 7 Notable people 7 1 Staff 7 2 Alumni 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory edit13th century University of Northampton edit The town had a university in medieval times between 1261 and 1265 of the same name established by royal charter after approval from King Henry III in 1261 It was the third university in England after Oxford and Cambridge and the 22nd in Europe After being advised by bishops and magnates that Northampton was a threat to Oxford Henry III dissolved the university in 1265 and signed a Royal Decree that banned the establishment of a university in Northampton Northampton Technical College edit Northampton Technical College was opened at St George s Avenue now the site of the Avenue Campus in 1924 Eight years later a new building for the college was formally opened by the Duke and Duchess of York A School of Art opened later in 1937 4 nbsp The entrance to Avenue CampusThe College of Education and Nene College of Higher Education edit At the beginning of the 1970s Northamptonshire was one of the few counties in England to lack a teacher training college A college in Liverpool lost its home and was transferred to what is now the Park Campus The College of Education was opened by the Secretary of State for Education and Science Margaret Thatcher in 1972 In 1975 this college amalgamated with the Colleges of Technology and Art to become Nene College of Higher Education taking its name from the River Nene In 1978 it integrated the Leathersellers College from London citation needed In 1993 the college incorporated St Andrew s School of Occupational Therapy and was granted undergraduate degree awarding powers In 1997 it took in the Sir Gordon Roberts College of Nursing and Midwifery University College Northampton and University of Northampton edit It became University College Northampton in 1999 and gained full university status in 2005 To gain university status it had to convince the Privy Council that a Royal Decree banning the establishment of a university in Northampton signed by King Henry III in 1265 following the Battle of Lewes should be repealed In 2005 the university also received the power to validate its own research degrees which had formerly been validated by the University of Leicester In the graduation ceremonies in July 2006 seven students received the first doctoral degrees validated by the University of Northampton In January 2010 the School of Applied Sciences was renamed the School of Science and Technology and moved into the newly refurbished Newton Building at Avenue Campus The Newton Building was officially opened in September 2010 by Princess Anne Northampton university campuses recent history editUntil 2018 the university had three main sites Avenue Campus just north of the town centre opposite a large open park known as the Racecourse Park Campus in Kingsthorpe to the north of the town which was the main and largest campus and an Innovation centre opposite Northampton railway station In May 2012 the university announced plans to establish a new riverside campus in the town centre on the site of the disused Northampton Power Station on the south bank of the River Nene 5 and located within the Northampton Waterside Enterprise Zone known simply as Northampton Waterside 6 7 The Waterside Campus opened to students in September 2018 with the facilities on both Park and Avenue campuses transferring to it 8 The main student halls of residence are now located in the student village of the Waterside Campus and include Francis Crick Margaret Bondfield John Clare and Charles Bradlaugh A former ground floor flat in the latter is a multi faith Chaplaincy Centre and another in John Clare houses the Centre for Community Volunteering Bassett Lowke A 464 room hall of residence St John s Halls of Residence opened in 2014 and mainly accommodates international and post graduate students 9 In November 2023 student protests at the unsafe and unsanitary conditions in these halls were reported on by the BBC 10 nbsp The new Waterside CampusOrganisation and administration editGovernance edit The Vice Chancellor is Anne Marie Kilday who was preceded in the post by Nick Petford Ann Tate who received an honorary degree from the university in 2011 and Martin Gaskell On 10 February 2008 the university appointed Baroness Falkner of Margravine as its first Chancellor In July 2017 she was succeeded by the BBC radio presenter Richard Coles 11 The Board of Governors are the members of the Higher Education Corporation and act both as governors and charitable trustees There are 17 members of the Board of Governors They are drawn from the private public and voluntary sectors as well as from the staff and students of the university 12 Academic profile editThe university had 12 060 students in 2019 20 3 It is divided into three faculties the Faculty of Business amp Law the Faculty of Arts Science amp Technology the Faculty of Health Education amp Society 13 The university offers a wide range of undergraduate degrees foundation degrees diplomas and a variety of postgraduate opportunities up to PhD level Reputation and rankings edit RankingsNational rankingsComplete 2024 14 115Guardian 2024 15 95Times Sunday Times 2024 16 125Global rankingsQS 2024 19 1001 1200 18 THE 2024 20 1001 1200 17 In February 2013 the university received international recognition for its commitment to social innovation and entrepreneurship by being designated a Changemaker Campus by Ashoka U 21 Northampton was the first Changemaker Campus in the UK and joins a global network of 21 other Changemaker Campuses Research edit Research consultancy and knowledge transfer at the university are centred on a number of cognate research groupings It carries out internationally renowned research into lift engineering and technology using the Express Lift Tower in the town reflecting the town s historic role in lift manufacturing Student life editStudents Union edit The Students Union operates out of the redeveloped Engine Shed location on the Waterside Campus which also operates as a daytime cafe and food outlet The Students Union is led by five full time Sabbatical Officers backed by hundreds of volunteers including an extended Elected Officer Team of Part Time Officers and supported by almost 200 staff both student and career staff 22 Sports edit The Students Union has 35 sports clubs 23 and enters 24 teams in Wednesday BUCS Leagues each week The Students Union operate on a policy of free sports membership meaning all teams are free to join with no membership fee and offers a wide variety of sports including rugby league Gremlins RL football netball basketball hockey and lacrosse They are also one of a select SUs to offer equestrian as a sports club for their students Sports is overseen by the Sports Coordinator with an elected Sports Part Time Officer acting as a representative for the voice of student sports Since the start of the 2018 19 academic year the Students Union has contested a Varsity event against the University of Bedfordshire with each institute taking it in turns to host the event each year The SU also hosts an end of year Sports Awards event to recognise the achievement of all clubs with awards including both performance based awards as well as charity and individual awards Societies edit Approximately 60 student societies are affiliated to The University of Northampton Students Union 24 These range from special interest societies such as Doctor Who and Anime to faith based societies such as the Christian Union and Hindu Society University technical colleges editThe university is an academic sponsor of two university technical colleges which opened in September 2013 Daventry University Technical College specialises in engineering construction and environmental sustainability Silverstone University Technical College in motorsports engineering event management and hospitality Notable people editStaff edit Henry Bird taught drawing at the art school his students included the architect Will Alsop 25 Dave Hill political and educational activist professor of education 2007 12 Robert Kirk professor emeritus in the department of philosophyAlumni edit Will Alsop modernist architect graduated from Northampton College of Art Jon Bewers footballer James D Boys academic and media consultant Dallas Campbell television presenter and stage actor Andrew Collins writer and broadcaster James Densley academic and author Bill Drummond artist musician writer and record producer Felippe Moraes visual artist art researcher and independent curator Daniel Middleton YouTuber and writer Owen Paterson Secretary of State for Environment Food and Rural Affairs 2012 2014 graduated from Leathersellers College Lisa Davina Phillip actress and singer Denys Watkins Pitchford prolific author of children s books and of rural affairs illustrator and artist graduated from Northampton College of Art Sangheon Lee actor who starred in Netflix s XO KittySee also editArmorial of UK universities College of Education List of universities in the UK Northamptonshire Credit Union University of Northampton 13th century References edit http www northampton ac uk wp content uploads 2015 10 Signed University of Northampton Accounts 2014 1511 pdf bare URL PDF University of Northampton accounts 2011 pdf PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 September 2013 Retrieved 17 August 2011 a b c d Where do HE students study Higher Education Statistics Agency Retrieved 1 March 2020 History of the University of Northampton The University of Northampton Retrieved 20 January 2018 University plans 300m new campus 25 May 2012 Retrieved 29 May 2012 Council Northampton Borough Northampton Waterside Enterprise Zone Northampton Alive with Enterprise Retrieved 20 January 2018 Waterside Restoration Master Plan 2004 Appendix PDF Retrieved 17 February 2010 Waterside Campus Retrieved 24 October 2018 University granted planning permission Retrieved 11 May 2012 https www bbc co uk news uk england northamptonshire 67362219 The Chancellor Reverend Richard Coles The University of Northampton Retrieved 20 January 2018 Board of Governors The University of Northampton The University of Northampton Retrieved 3 April 2018 About us University of Northampton Retrieved 20 December 2017 Complete University Guide 2024 The Complete University Guide 7 June 2023 Guardian University Guide 2024 The Guardian 9 September 2023 Good University Guide 2024 The Times 15 September 2023 Impact Rankings 2021 Times Higher Education 16 April 2021 QS World University Rankings 2022 Top Universities QS World University Rankings 2024 Quacquarelli Symonds Ltd 27 June 2023 THE World University Rankings 2024 Times Higher Education 28 September 2023 University recognised internationally as the UK s number one for social enterprise The University of Northampton Retrieved 20 January 2018 Who We Are University of Northampton Students Union northampton unioncloud org Retrieved 3 April 2018 Sport at Northampton www northamptonunion com Northampton Students Union Archived from the original on 17 August 2015 Retrieved 9 April 2023 Societies at Northampton www northamptonunion com University of Northampton Students Union Archived from the original on 17 August 2015 Retrieved 9 April 2023 Alsop W 28 June 2001 Drawing on the experiences of life help create better work Architects JournalExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of Northampton Park Campus Memories PCM a tribute project about the former Park Campus Boughton Green Road Avenue Campus Memories ACM a tribute project about the former Avenue Campus St George s Avenue University website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title University of Northampton amp oldid 1189106630, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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