University of Bedfordshire

University of Bedfordshire
Established 2006 - University of Bedfordshire
1993 - gained University Status as University of Luton
1882 - Teacher Training College
Type Public
Endowment £1.4 million[1]
Chancellor Baroness Howells of St Davids
Vice-Chancellor Les Ebdon
Students 23859[2]
Undergraduates 13,480[2]
Postgraduates 10,379[2]
Location Luton and Bedford, Bedfordshire, UK
Campus Urban
Website http://www.beds.ac.uk

The University of Bedfordshire is based in Luton and Bedford, the two largest towns in the English county of Bedfordshire. The university was created by the merger of the University of Luton and the Bedford campus of De Montfort University on 1 August 2006 following approval by the Privy Council.[3] The University of Luton purchased the De Montfort campus in Bedford for £15 million.[4]

Contents

History

The University of Luton was a university based in Luton, the largest town in Bedfordshire. The institution was founded as the Modern School in the 1890s. It became Luton College of Higher Education with the merger of Luton College of Technology and Putteridge Bury College of Education in the mid-seventies. With the passing of the Further and Higher Education Act, 1992 it converted to university status in 1993. On the 15 December 2005, the University announced that it was taking over the Bedford campus of De Montfort University. With permission from the Privy Council, the preferred name of the University of Bedfordshire came into effect on 1 August 2006.[5]

The campus at Bedford dates back to the Bedford Training College for Teachers which was founded in 1882 and Bedford Physical Training College founded in 1903. These merged with a further education college to become the Bedford College of Higher Education. In 1994 the higher education areas of the college merged with De Montfort University (based in Leicester). There are currently just under 3,000 students based in Bedford.

Putteridge Bury is a neo-Elizabethan country mansion located on the edge of Luton on the A505 road to Hitchin. The campus is situated in approximately thirty acres of landscaped gardens. Putteridge Bury can be traced back to Edward the Confessor's time and has links to the Domesday Book. The building was completed in 1911 and was designed by architects Sir Ernest George and Alfred Yeats in the style of Chequers, having had various redesigns and rebuilds over the years. The campus is home to the university's postgraduate business school as well as the university’s Conference Centre.

Reputation

In 2004, Luton University's then high drop-out rate, and proposals to relax the consequences for students failing second-year exams, had led the Sunday Telegraph to ask "Is this the worst university in Britain?"[6] Luton's vice-chancellor responded by noting the challenges inherent in its mission as an access institution to offer the life-changing experience of higher education to people from families with little or no experience of university and for whom university is not an obvious destination after school; and drew attention to its teaching quality, which had been rated 14th out of 121 similar institutions the previous year by The Times.[7] However, The Sunday Times awarded the University of Luton the title of Best New University in 2004 (prior to the purchase of the Bedford campus and rebranding).[8]

The QAA conducted a thorough institutional audit of the University as a whole in 2005 (prior to the merger of the University), which resulted in the audit team’s questioning of the academic standards of its awards and its lack of confidence in the university's quality standards.[9] However, after the audit was taken the QAA was provided with information that indicates that appropriate action was taken by the University in response to the findings of this report. As a result the audit was signed off in July 2007.[10]

In 2007 the University of Bedfordshire was short-listed for the Times Higher Education Supplement's University of the Year 2007.[11]

In 2008 Professor Les Ebdon said that he had accepted voluntary redundancy from 30 staff members. The university said that less than half were academic staff. Professor Ebdon said: "I don't know of any university in the East of England which isn't making some adjustment to staff numbers. Most of us have squeezed other expenditures as much as we can. Staffing is the area left where expenditure can be taken out, and it is the biggest cost." According to the same article "Relative to many other universities, Bedfordshire spends a low proportion of its income on staff."[12]

Bedfordshire was ranked 71 of 114 British universities in The Times Good University Guide league table, released in June 2009,[13] 72 out of 113 in The Independent Complete University Guide,[14] and 88 out of 117 in The Guardian University Guide.[15] The Guardian's league tables are compiled mainly on the basis of teaching data (staff/student ratio, job prospects, inclusiveness), and The Times's also include data on research ratings and the percentage of students who complete a degree.

The university has been criticised for its association with the Institute for Optimum Nutrition,[16] an unacredited and controversial organisation whose founder, Patrick Holford's advocacy of vitamin C as better than conventional drugs to treat AIDS was described as 'very scary' by the British Dietetic Association.[17]

According to the THES in 2008 the university threatened legal action against a web site after one of its course was labelled "shocking" because of its staff-to-student ratio.[18]

After the QAA audit conducted in 2009 the University was awarded a “Confidence” rating.[19]

UK rankings
2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001
Times Good University Guide 71st=[20] 89th[20] 84th
Guardian University Guide 103rd 88th[21] 91st[22] 95th
Sunday Times University Guide 102nd[23] 102nd= 98th 104th 106th[24] 83rd[25] 82nd 74th 100th
The Complete University Guide 101st=[26] 72nd[27] 86th=[28] 86th=
The Daily Telegraph 86th

Campuses

The university has two main campuses: Luton (in the town centre), and Bedford (on Polhill Avenue). Both these campuses have on campus accommodation. There are also two dedicated campuses for the teaching of nursing and midwifery degrees at Butterfield Park on the outskirts of Luton and at the Buckinghamshire campus at Oxford House in Aylesbury. The university also has a fifth site which is Putteridge Bury, home of the University of Bedfordshire's Knowledge Hub and postgraduate Business School.[29]

2012 Olympics

The Bedford Campus of the University has been selected as an official training site for the London 2012 Olympics. The campus is hoping to attract a major national team to train there for the event, and will act as a main hub for other training sites in the Bedford area. In June 2009 it was reported that over 13 national teams have expressed an interest in using the Bedford campus for their olympic preparations.[30][31]

Faculties

The University of Bedfordshire has four faculties, encompassing a number of schools, departments and divisions.[32]

Educational partner institutions

The University works together with a number of partner institutions to offer a range of courses.[33]

Notable alumni

Photo gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.beds.ac.uk/aboutus/qa/foi/finance/fin-stat/finstat09.pdf
  2. ^ a b c "Bedfordshire University Profile". http://universitiesprofile.com/uk_Bedfordshire.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-05. 
  3. ^ University of Bedfordshire, History and Locations
  4. ^ University of Bedfordshire Financial Statements http://www.beds.ac.uk/aboutus/qa/foi2005/finres/21fin/2fin-finstat07
  5. ^ http://education.independent.co.uk/higher/article1210272.ece Article in The Independent re the Merger
  6. ^ Julie Henry, Is this the worst university in Britain?, Sunday Telegraph, 8 February 2004; page updated 30 March 2004
  7. ^ Alan Thomson, Lay off, says Luton, as it plays to strengths, Times Higher Education Supplement, 9 April 2004
  8. ^ Best New University 2004
  9. ^ University of Luton - APRIL 2005
  10. ^ Institutional audit - University of Luton
  11. ^ Times Education Supplement shortlists (see page 28)
  12. ^ Times Higher Education - Job losses loom at Bedfordshire
  13. ^ Watson, Roland; Elliott, Francis; Foster, Patrick (June 2009). "University Rankings League Table 2010: Good University Guide". London: The Times. http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/tol_gug/gooduniversityguide.php. Retrieved 2009-08-01. 
  14. ^ The Independent, Education, The Complete University Guide: University League Table 2010.
  15. ^ guardian.co.uk, University Guide.
  16. ^ D. Thompson, Counterknowledge (Atlantic Books, 2008).
  17. ^ http://www.dcscience.net/?p=159
  18. ^ Times Higher Education - Website closes after Hesa withholds data
  19. ^ [1]
  20. ^ a b Watson, Roland; Elliott, Francis; Foster, Patrick. "University Rankings League Table 2010 | Good University Guide – Times Online". London: Extras.timesonline.co.uk. http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/tol_gug/gooduniversityguide.php. Retrieved 2010-04-26. 
  21. ^ "University guide 2010: University league table | Education". London: guardian.co.uk. 2009-05-12. http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/table/2009/may/12/university-league-table. Retrieved 2010-04-26. 
  22. ^ "University ranking by institution". The Guardian (London). http://browse.guardian.co.uk/education?SearchBySubject=&FirstRow=29&SortOrderDirection=&SortOrderColumn=GuardianTeachingScore&Subject=University+ranking&Institution=. Retrieved 2007-10-29. 
  23. ^ "The Sunday Times University League Table". The Sunday Times (London). http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/stug/universityguide.php. Retrieved 2009-09-13. 
  24. ^ "University ranking based on performance over 10 years" (PDF). London: Times Online. 2007. http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/pdfs/univ07ten.pdf. Retrieved 2008-04-28. 
  25. ^ "The Sunday Times University League Table" (PDF). The Sunday Times (London). http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/stug2006/stug2006.pdf. Retrieved 2007-11-03. 
  26. ^ "The Complete University Guide 2011". Complete University Guide. http://www.thecompleteuniversityguide.co.uk/single.htm?ipg=8726. 
  27. ^ "The Complete University Guide 2010". Complete University Guide. http://www.thecompleteuniversityguide.co.uk/single.htm?ipg=8726. 
  28. ^ "The Independent University League Table". The Independent (London). 2008-04-24. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/higher/the-main-league-table-2009-813839.html. Retrieved 2010-05-27. 
  29. ^ http://www.beds.ac.uk/contactus
  30. ^ Bedfordshire to host Olympic training camps - Bedford Today
  31. ^ http://www.bedsonsunday.com/bedsonsunday/DisplayArticle.asp?ID=423332
  32. ^ University of Bedfordshire, Departments
  33. ^ Educational partners

External links