University of Portsmouth

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University of Portsmouth

Established 1869 (Gained university status in 1992)
Type: Public
Chancellor: Sheila Hancock
Vice-Chancellor: Professor John Craven
Staff: 1,264
Students: 20,230 [1]
Undergraduates: 15,815 [1]
Postgraduates: 4,095 [1]
Other students: 320 FE[1]
Location Portsmouth, Hampshire, UK
Colors:
Affiliations: Alliance of Non-Aligned Universities
Association of Commonwealth Universities
European University Association
The Channel Islands Universities Consortium
Website: http://www.port.ac.uk/

The University of Portsmouth is a British university in the city of Portsmouth, Hampshire. It is based on two main campuses, Guildhall and Langstone. Recently, the institution has shown a level of co-operation with the University of Southampton, for example by submitting in July 2005 a joint bid for £35 million pounds of funding towards a Dentistry school.

Portsmouth seems better placed than most Post-1992 universities to deal with the surge of applications encouraged by the government's target that 50% of those under-35 should experience Higher Education at some point in their life.[citation needed] Portsmouth has seen its applications for courses increasing, with a 67% year-on-year for the years 2001 - 2005. The University has a successful programme in encouraging wider access to Higher Education through its award-winning "UP for It" scheme.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] History

The University was founded as the Portsmouth and Gosport School of Science and the Arts in 1869. Due to the dependence on shipping and trade to the city, the main function of the college was to train the engineers and skilled workmen who went on to work at the city docks, as well as at the large Royal Navy dockyard situated in Portsmouth. However, due to a decline in shipping and population since World War II, when large swathes of the city were destroyed by German bombing, the college was forced to diversify in terms of its syllabus and teaching in order to attract new students.

This steadily continued until the 1960s when, due to a massive government-sponsored expansion in Higher Education, the college was renamed Portsmouth Polytechnic. Along with this new name came the power for Portsmouth to award degrees, accredited and validated by the centralised CNAA. The expansion of the polytechnic continued and in the late 1980s, it was considered one of the largest and the best performing polytechnics in the UK. It narrowly missed being awarded university status in its own right in 1990, and instead was awarded university status with the power to validate its own degrees along with the other polytechnics in 1992, under the provision of the Further and Higher Education Act 1992.

Since then the University has continued to grow and expand its range of degrees given till this day

Spinnaker Tower, Portsmouth.
Spinnaker Tower, Portsmouth.

[edit] Campus

The University is split between two campuses: Guildhall and Langstone.

Langstone is the smaller of the two campuses, located in Milton on the eastern edge of Portsea Island, the island on which the city of Portsmouth sits. The campus overlooks Langstone Harbour and it is home to the University's sports grounds. It also includes a canteen and bar, as well as a 'student village', which provides accommodation for 570 students in three halls of residence; Queen Elizabeth Queen Mother (QEQM), Trust and Langstone Flats. Students in QEQM and Langstone Flats have access to en-suite bathrooms. It used to be home of the University's School of Languages and Area Studies. The School has now moved into the Park Building on the Guildhall Campus.

The Guildhall site is much larger. Unlike most university campuses, it is not all enclosed on one tract of land, instead featuring various university buildings scattered throughout the centre of the city. This campus contains much of the University's teaching facilities, and nearly all of the Student Halls of residence (except the Langstone student village and two halls (Rees Hall and Burrell House) located on Victoria Promenade, the city's main esplanade).

The University Library (formerly the Frewen Library) was extended in 2006 at a cost of £11 million.[citation needed] Originally due to open in October, ongoing delays meant that it was not complete until January 2007, when it was opened by the crime writer P D James. The University has also in recent years invested in the Faculty of Science, in particular through the renovation of its aluminium-clad main building, St Michael's.

A new faculty called Creative and Cultural Industries was opened in September 2006. It aims to provide a unique environment in which all aspects of creative thinking will flourish and develop by combining creative schools from across the university.

[edit] Academic organization

[edit] Teaching

The University's teaching in pharmacology and pharmacy, biosciences, mathematics, electronic and computer engineering, statistics and operational research has been rated "excellent" by the Quality Assurance Agency (QAA).[citation needed]

Social sciences are also a strength of the University, with education, modern foreign languages (with increasing provision for Mandarin and Arabic), politics, psychology, and nursing also rated as excellent by the QAA. The University has also delivered one of the longest-running MBAs in the UK and has in 2007 received accreditation from the Association of MBAs (AMBA).


[edit] Structure

Portsmouth Business School

  • Department of Accounting and Law
  • Department of Economics
  • Department of Human Resource and Marketing Management
  • Department of Strategy and Business Systems

Faculty of Technology

  • Department of Civil Engineering
  • School of Computing
  • Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation
  • Department of Electronic and Computer Engineering
  • School of Environmental Design and Management
  • Department of Mathematics
  • Department of Mechanical and Design Engineering
  • Technology Extended Campus

Faculty of Science

  • School of Biological Sciences
  • School of Earth and Environmental Sciences
  • Department of Geography
  • School of Professionals Complementary to Dentistry
  • School of Health Sciences and Social Work
  • Institute of Marine Sciences
  • School of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences
  • Department of Psychology
  • Department of Sport and Exercise Science

Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences

  • Institute of Criminal Justice Studies
  • School of Education and Continuing Studies
  • School of Languages and Area Studies
  • School of Social, Historical, and Literary Studies

Faculty of Creative and Cultural Industries

  • Portsmouth School of Architecture
  • School of Art, Design, and Media
  • School of Creative Arts, Film, and Media
  • Department of Creative Technologies
  • Portsmouth Centre for Enterprise
King Henry Building
King Henry Building

[edit] Student activities

The University offers a wide range of sports clubs, and fields teams in many competitions and in BUSA leagues. The sports on offer vary from traditional team games like football, rugby union, and cricket to Octopush, a form of under-water hockey. Notably, the University is home to the longest running university paintball club in the United Kingdom. Unsurprisingly given Portsmouth's rich maritime history and location, Sailing and Rowing are also very popular, and the sailing team enters a team the for the annual Cowes Week regatta on the Isle of Wight.

Despite not offering a degree in Music, the University has a full time music department offering instrumental lessons and ensembles. These include the Choir, Orchestra, Wind Band and Big Band.

Portland Building
Portland Building

[edit] Student Union

The University of Portsmouth Students' Union was voted best Union in the UK in the New Musical Express in 2004. Formerly housed in the ex-NAAFI (Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes) building Alexandra House, a new £6.5 million purpose-built Union was opened in 2002 at the other end of Ravelin Park, to the north of Frewen Library, though the main entertainment area has been significantly altered recently.

The Union houses a bar. It also has 2 nightclubs and a Balfours/Co-Op grocery shop, along with Blackwells bookshop, Connect up the university's computer help store(part run by pcideals) and also its own radio station, Pure FM ([1]).

Since the summer of 2005, a restructure resulted in the division of the Union into the UPSU Charity - whose broad remit covers such areas as the running of University clubs and societies - and its trading-orientated operations, under the remit of the University of Portsmouth Enterprise Ltd., a company owned by the University of Portsmouth to "[offer] to business, industry and the public sector the wide range of skills and knowledge in the University".

Student Union
Student Union

[edit] Media

The Union's media outlets include radio and magazine- and newspaper-format printed materials, as well as various periodical publications.

Pure FM - [2]

The Union's student radio station is run as a society as part of the UPSU Charity, with a remit to broadcast student-orientated content suitable for a wide range of audiences.

Pugwash magazine

The student magazine is called Pugwash and is published approximately five times per academic year. In its time it has won the Best Student Magazine award from the National Union of Students.

Purple Wednesdays

There is also a weekly sports and societies newspaper called Purple Wednesdays. The name stems from the ubiquitous day for BUSA (British Universities Sports Association) activities and the fact that purple is the corporate colour of the University (though strangely enough, it doesn't feature prominently on the University's armorial bearings). Sporting 'colours' (awarded annually for achievement and effort) are thus "Purples" and "Half Purples".

"Purple Wednesdays" is also the name given to the weekly nightclub and bar event held at the Union.

Pompey Guide

This is published annually to coincide with the start of the academic year, and is designed to offer new and returning students alike a snapshot of the range of facilities on offer throughout the Union, the University, and in the wider context of Portsmouth.

Website UPSU.net

Primarily controlled by the UPSU charity, the Union's website was recommissioned in 2005 to provide a single point of reference for each and every activity within the Union. The site covers news, support, general and contact information, as well as listing clubs and societies, details of democratic process and so forth for the UPSU (Charity) side of the Union.

The UPEL (trading) side of the Union is represented under the "Social:Life" heading and its aim is to ensure customers are fully aware of the Union's events and other trading activities. To that end, this can be considered the only part of the UPSU.net website which has a clearly-defined and comparatively tangible role as that of an advertising platform.

UPSU.net is one of the first students' Unions in the country to transfer its membership registration process online, a move which has reaped many rewards for the Union both in terms of reducing the inconvenience associated with the issue of student memberships, and the accuracy and security of the Union's data collection processes.

In the future, the Union have stated their aim to expand the use of the website to capitalise on the ease with which students and non-students alike can provide feedback, as a way of improving the Union's relationship with its customers.

[edit] UPEL

University of Portsmouth Enterprise (UPEL) is a limited company, which operates trading functions within the Students' Union, including bars, catering and entertainments.

Following financial difficulties in 2005, UPSU was re-structured and is now a registered charity, with its trading arm (UPSU Trading Ltd.) placed under the direct control of the University, through the auspices of UPEL (University of Portsmouth Enterprise Ltd, previously only used for commercialising research). As a result of this new investment, in October 2005 the Union was redeveloped.

[edit] People

[edit] University officers

On 16 May 2007, Sheila Hancock OBE was appointed Chancellor of the University.[2]

The former Chancellor was Lord Palumbo of Walbrook, a property developer who was once Chairman of the Arts Council of Great Britain. He sits as a Conservative peer in the House of Lords and was educated at Eton College and also Worcester College, Oxford.

The Vice-Chancellor is Professor John Craven who was appointed in 1997. Professor Craven is an economist, and was educated at the University of Cambridge and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He previously was a Professor of Economics at the University of Kent.

The Pro Vice Chancellor is Professor John David Turner appointed in 2006.

[edit] Notable alumni

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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