University of East Anglia
Large suburb: 320-acre (130-hectare)[8] | |
Chair of Council | Sally Howes |
---|---|
Colours | Blue & Black[9] |
Affiliations | |
Website | uea |
The University of East Anglia (UEA) is a public research university in Norwich, England. Established in 1963 on a 320-acre (130-hectare) campus west of the city centre, the university has four faculties and twenty-six schools of study.[10] It is one of five BBSRC funded research campuses with forty businesses, four independent research institutes (John Innes Centre, Quadram Institute, Earlham Institute, and The Sainsbury Laboratory) and a teaching hospital (Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital) on site.[11][12]
The university is a member of
UEA's
History
1960s
Attempts to establish a university in Norwich were made in 1919 and 1947, but due to a lack of government funding on both occasions the plans had to be postponed.
In 1961, the first vice-chancellor, Frank Thistlethwaite, had approached Denys Lasdun, an adherent of the "New Brutalist" trend in architecture, who was at that time building Fitzwilliam College, to produce designs for the permanent campus.[22] The site chosen was on the western edge of the city, on the south side of Earlham Road. The land, formerly part of the Earlham Hall estate was at that time occupied by a golf course.[23] Lasdun presented a model and an outline plan at a press conference in April 1963, but it took another year to produce detailed plans, which diverged considerably from the model. As a result, the first buildings did not open until late-1966.[22]
Lasdun moved the teaching and research functions into the "teaching wall" which was a single 460-metre (1,510-foot) long block following the contour of the site. Alongside this a walkway was built, giving access to the various entrances of the wall, with
1970s
Malcolm Bradbury and Angus Wilson helped establish the first creative writing course in the United Kingdom and founded The School of Literature, Drama, and Creative Writing. In the early-1970s, UEA:TV (under the name of Nexus UTV),[26] was formed and created student-made television with it operating for two hours a day over lunchtime. The student newspaper Concrete was first officially launched in 1973, replacing Mandate which launched in 1965. Additional publications included Phoenix, Can Opener, Mustard Magazine and Kett before Concrete re-launched in 1992.[25] In 1972, the Centre for Climatic Research opened and was founded by climatologist Hubert Lamb. In the same year, architect Bernard Feilden helped the university win a Civic Trust Award for the design of the Square, the university's main social area. In 1973, work began on the UEA Broad, which involved excavating an 18-acre (7.3-hectare) area of gravel and was arranged as part of a "no money" deal where a local aggregate company took the gravel leaving a landscaped body of water fed by the River Yare.[25]
In the mid-1970s, the School of Computing Sciences first opened at UEA, and the university started offering
1980s
In 1984, the School of Law first moved to
1990s
In 1990, the student radio station Livewire1350AM launched, completing the university's student media collective of print, television, and radio. It was opened by Radio 1 DJ
2000s
In 2000, UEA's reputation within the field of environmental research led to the government choosing the university as the site for the
In 2001, UEA alumnus Sir
In November 2009, computer
2010s
In 2010, the
In 2014, UEA opened an environmentally friendly accommodation block, Crome Court, which has won a number of awards for sustainability.
In late-September 2016, two new accommodation blocks opened; Barton House and Hickling House were named after two of the
2020–present
During the
The university's teaching block, known as the Lasdun Wall, urgently required major repairs; its condition was described as "deteriorating fast" and it was said that if repairs were not done it might have "to be closed permanently".[53][55] The financial turmoil alongside a previous vote of no-confidence by the UCU branch of East Anglia, and a "scathing" letter written to the UEA Council by the professoriate demanding change at the top, led to the immediate resignation of Vice-Chancellor David Richardson on 17 February 2023, who had been the Vice-Chancellor for ten years.[56][57]
Questions were asked about the university's sudden crisis in Parliament, with the local MP Clive Lewis talking of the institution being in a "death spiral".[57] Professor David Maguire, formerly Vice-Chancellor at the University of Greenwich, was appointed as the new Vice-Chancellor on 22 May 2023.[5] According to a UEA press release, Maguire "will lead UEA through a significant period of transformation and change as it works to secure its future financial stability, and continue its success as a world-leading teaching and research University for future generations of students and staff".[58] In practice this meant job cuts, and threats of compulsory redundancy (113 staff posts were lost over the summer).[59]
In September 2023, it was announced that some of the university's student accommodation would be temporarily closed, due to government guidance on the unsafe nature of the building material
Campus
Features of the UEA campus include Earlham Hall, childhood home of Elizabeth Fry, which is now home to the UEA Law School; the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts at the western end of the main teaching wall designed by
Accommodation blocks on the university campus include Constable Terrace, Nelson Court, and Britten, Paston, Colman, Victory, Kett and Browne Houses, and the University Village. Residences are named after
Facilities on campus include the Union Pub and Bar, a 24-hour library, a concert venue called the Lower Common Room (LCR), a canteen called the Campus Kitchen, a café called the Blend, a bar called Unio, a graduate bar called the Scholar's Bar and The Street with a 24-hour launderette, the Union shop, and a coffee shop called Ziggy's. Other food establishments situated on campus include Café 57 and the Bio Cafe.[66] There is also a medical centre, dentist, and pharmacy, located on the eastern side of the campus.[67]
The campus is linked to the city centre and railway station by frequent buses, operated by
Academic profile
Overview
The Climatic Research Unit, founded in 1972 by
National and international partnerships
In 2005, UEA in partnership with the
Additionally, UEA is involved in several Doctoral Training Partnerships (DTPs) and Centres for Doctoral Training (CDTs),
Internationally, UEA has multiple international partner institutions where there are formal agreements for student exchange, research collaborations, staff and faculty mobility and study abroad schemes (semester or year) including: University of California (Berkeley, Davis, Irvine, Los Angeles, Merced, Riverside, San Diego, San Francisco, Santa Barbara, and Santa Cruz), Georgetown University, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, University of Arizona, Temple University, University of Colorado Boulder, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, University of Notre Dame, Middlebury College, Bennington College, University of British Columbia, University of Calgary, Australian National University, Monash University, University of Melbourne, University of Sydney, Nanyang Technological University, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and the University of Hong Kong.[85]
Admissions
|
UEA had the joint twenty-fifth highest average entry qualification for undergraduates of any UK university in 2015, with new students averaging 407 UCAS points,
Grade distribution and inflation
Data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA) showed that UEA has one of the highest proportions of First Class and Upper Second Class degrees achieved by students with more than Oxford and Cambridge.[91] Only three universities in the United Kingdom have been awarded a higher proportion of First Class degrees than UEA between the academic years 2014/15 and 2017/18.[91][92] There is a concern about grade inflation with the degrees awarded by English universities,[93][94] with the University of East Anglia awarding 35.7% First Class degrees, 52.1% Upper Seconds (2:1), 11.2% Lower Seconds (2:2), and 1% Third Class degrees in 2016/17.[91]
Rankings and reputation
National rankings | |
---|---|
Complete (2025)[95] | 21 |
Guardian (2024)[96] | 33 |
Times / Sunday Times (2024)[97] | 26 |
Global rankings | |
ARWU (2023)[98] | 201–300 |
QS (2024)[99] | 295= |
THE (2024)[100] | 251–300 |
The results of the 2021
In 2012, UEA was named the tenth best university in the world under 50-years-old, and third best within the United Kingdom.[106] In national league tables, UEA has been ranked within the Top 20 by The Times, The Sunday Times, The Guardian, and The Complete University Guide.[107][108][109] In April 2013, the university was ranked first for student experience according to the Times Higher Education Magazine.[110] It currently ranks third for student satisfaction in the National Student Survey when ranking mainstream English universities. UEA is the only institution to have ranked within the Top 5 since the survey began.[110] In 2022, UEA was ranked first for "UK University Job Prospects" by students in the Student Crowd Survey.[1] In 2017, the university was rated "gold" by the Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF) for quality of teaching.[111] In the 2023 TEF assessment, UEA's award was revised to "silver".[112]
Organisation
Faculties and schools
The university offers over 300 courses in its four faculties, which contain twenty-six schools of study:[113]
Faculty of Arts and Humanities
- Art, Media and American Studies
- History
- Interdisciplinary Institute for the Humanities
- Literature, Drama and Creative Writing
- Politics, Philosophy and Language and Communication Studies
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
- Norwich Medical School
- Health Sciences
Faculty of Science
- Actuarial Sciences
- Biological Sciences
- Biomedical Sciences
- Biochemistry
- Chemistry
- Computing Sciences
- Engineering
- Environmental Sciences
- Geography
- Mathematics
- Natural Sciences
- Pharmacy
- Physics
- Psychology
Faculty of Social Sciences
- Economics
- Education and Lifelong Learning
- International Development
- UEA Law School
- Norwich Business School
- Psychology
- Social Work
Student life
All students at the university and INTO UEA automatically become members of the union but do have the right to opt out of membership. Membership confers the ability to take part in the union's activities such as clubs and societies and being involved in the democratic processes of the union. The union is a democratic organisation run by its members via an elected student officer committee and student council. It is affiliated to the
The UEA Student Union hosts events like Pimp My Barrow, which was an annual fundraising event for The Big C, and involved decorated wheelbarrows from 2006 to 2018. It has raised more than £50,000 for the Norfolk charity.[119] The annual Derby Day sports event sees UEA take on the University of Essex in approximately 40 sports. UEA has won the Derby Day trophy since 2013.[120] The UEA Student Union organises gigs and club nights at the Lower Common Room in Union House.[121] The union also runs The Waterfront venue, off campus in Norwich's King Street, which was awarded a Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) award in 2018 for engagement with alumni. Acts to have performed at these venues include Captain Beefheart, The Cure, Coldplay, Pere Ubu, U2, Haim, The Smiths, Sparks, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Radiohead, and Iron Maiden. The union operates a number of other services within Union House which underwent a refurbishment in 2015 after a £6 million investment from the university.[122]
Public events
Community
UEA offers many free public events, both on-and-off campus, alongside public access to the Sainsbury Centre, Sportspark and open campus spaces. The university's lecture theatres regularly host film screenings, discussions, lectures and presentations for the public to attend. UEA also has a long-term partnership with the Norwich Science Festival which is an annual event that takes place at The Forum in Norwich where organisations from Norwich Research Park hold workshops and exhibit science activities for the public.[123][124]
UEA Literary Festival
The university hosted its inaugural literary festival in 1991 and has welcomed notable speakers including
Notable people
Alumni
UEA alumni in the sciences include the 2001
Literary alumni include the 2017 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate Sir Kazuo Ishiguro (Creative Writing, 1980),[155] renowned German writer W. G. Sebald (PhD, 1973),[156] Booker Prize winners, Ian McEwan (Creative Writing, 1971),[155] and Anne Enright (Creative Writing, 1988);[155] Costa Book Award (formerly Whitbread Award) winners Dame Rose Tremain (Creative Writing, 1967),[157] Andrew Miller (Creative Writing, 1991),[158] David Almond (English Literature, 1993),[159] Tash Aw (Creative Writing, 2003),[160] Emma Healey (Creative Writing, 2011),[161] Susan Fletcher (Creative Writing, 2002),[162] Adam Foulds (Creative Writing, 2001),[163] Avril Joy (History of Art, 1972) and Christie Watson (Creative Writing, 2009); and the Caine Prize winners Binyavanga Wainaina (MPhil, 2010), Helon Habila (PhD, 2008) and Henrietta Rose-Innes (PhD). Other alumni include Tracy Chevalier (Creative Writing, 1994),[164] John Boyne (Creative Writing, 1996),[165] Neel Mukherjee (Creative Writing, 2001), Mick Jackson (Creative Writing, 1992), Trezza Azzopardi (Creative Writing, 1998), Paul Murray (Creative Writing, 2001), James Scudamore (Creative Writing, 2006), Mohammed Hanif (Creative Writing, 2005), Richard House (PhD, 2008), Sebastian Barker (English Literature, 1970), Clive Sinclair (BA, 1969; PhD, 1983), Kathryn Hughes (Creative Writing, 1986), Peter J. Conradi, and Craig Warner (Creative Writing, 2014).
Alumni in international politics and government include the current
Alumni in national politics include the Labour Members of Parliament Rachael Maskell (Physiotherapy, 1994),[176] and Karin Smyth (Politics, 1988);[177] two former Leaders of the House of Lords, Valerie Amos, Baroness Amos (Applied Research in Education, 1978),[178] and Thomas Galbraith, 2nd Baron Strathclyde (Modern Languages & European Studies, 1982);[179] and the Liberal Democrat peer Rosalind Scott, Baroness Scott of Needham Market (European Studies, 1999).[180] UEA is also the alma mater of the former Crossbench peer Timothy Bentinck, 12th Earl of Portland (History of Art, 1975);[181] and the former Members of Parliament Caroline Flint (American Literature, History & Film, 1983),[182] Douglas Carswell (History, 1993),[183] Tony Colman (International Development), Jon Owen Jones (Ecology, 1975), Tess Kingham (Education), Judith Chaplin and Ivor Stanbrook (Law, 1995).[184][185][186][187][188]
In the arts, alumni include the actors
Alumni in the media include news correspondents Mark Stone (History of Art and Architecture, 2001), Stuart Ramsay,[204] Razia Iqbal (American Studies, 1985),[165] Geraint Vincent (History, 1994),[205] David Grossman (Politics, 1987),[165] and Selina Scott (English & American Literature, 1972); Radio 1 presenter Greg James (Drama, 2007)[205] and Radio 4 newsreader and author Zeb Soanes (Drama 1997);[206] political commentator Iain Dale (German & Linguistics, 1985);[207] journalists Christina Patterson, Jake Wallis Simons (Creative Writing, 2009) and Emily Sheffield;[208][209][210] BBC executives Dame Jenny Abramsky (English),[211] Jonathan Powell (English Literature),[212] and James Boyle; and the weather forecasters Darren Bett (Environmental Sciences, 1989) and Penny Tranter (Environmental Sciences, 1982).[213][214] UEA alumni in business and economics include the Argentine billionaire businessman and real estate developer Eduardo Costantini,[215] Hong Kong billionaire Billy Kan,[216] the founders of Autonomy (David Tabizel) and Café Rouge (Karen Jones), and CEOs of Computacenter, ICI, Jaguar Land Rover, Premier Foods, Diageo, and Punch Taverns. UEA is also the alma mater of the explorer Benedict Allen (Environmental Sciences, 1981);[217] England rugby player Andy Ripley;[218] and the football commentator Martin Tyler (Sociology, 1967).[219]
-
King of Tonga Tupou VI(BA, 1980)
-
Master of University College, Oxford Baroness Amos (Applied Research in Education, 1978)
-
Mongolian Culture Minister Nomin Chinbat (BA, 2006)
-
Secretary-General of theOECD Mathias Cormann(Law, 1994)
-
Argentine billionaire businessman Eduardo Costantini (MA, 1975)
-
2007 Booker Prize winner Anne Enright (MA, 1988)
-
Former Governor-General of Grenada Sir Carlyle Glean (MA, 1982)
-
Comedian Charlie Higson (BA, 1980)
-
1998 Booker Prize winner Ian McEwan (MA, 1971)
-
Former Leader of the House of Lords Lord Strathclyde (BA, 1982)
Academics
UEA has benefited from the services of academics at the top of their fields, including
Chancellors
- Harold Mackintosh, 1st Viscount Mackintosh of Halifax (1962–1964)
- Oliver Franks, Baron Franks (1965–1984)[259]
- Owen Chadwick (1984–1994)
- Sir Geoffrey Allen (1994–2003)
- Sir Brandon Gough (2003–2012)
- Dame Rose Tremain (2013–2016)
- Karen Jones (2016–2024)
- Dame Jenny Abramsky (2024–present)[4]
Vice-Chancellors
- Frank Thistlethwaite (1961–1980)
- Sir Michael Thompson (1980–1986)
- Derek Burke (1987–1995)
- Dame Elizabeth Esteve-Coll (1995–1997)
- Vincent Watts (1997–2002)
- Sir David Eastwood (2002–2006)
- Bill MacMillan (2006–2009)
- Edward Acton (2009–2014)
- David Richardson (2014–2023)[260][261]
- David Maguire (2023–present)[5]
See also
- Armorial of UK universities
- List of universities in the United Kingdom
- Plate glass university
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Further reading
- Dormer, P.; Muthesius, S. (2002). Concrete and Open Skies: Architecture at the University of East Anglia, 1962–2000. Unicorn Press. OCLC 45766111.
- Sanderson, M. (2002). The History of the University of East Anglia, Norwich. Hambledon Continuum. OCLC 59431664.