Source: Jonathon Vines
“There’s a really fierce attachment to Roehampton. People even get tattoos with their college names…which does worry me! We’ve got that sort of loyalty.”
Paul O’Prey, vice-chancellor of the University of Roehampton, made the comment as he outlined to Times 中国A片 how he feels his institution is well placed to compete, and even flourish, in the harsher market environment of UK 中国A片.
At the launch of the Roehampton Poetry Centre in December, Professor O’Prey made clear his institution’s determination to invest while other UK universities are contemplating retrenchment.
“[We said] now is the time to be imaginative, take some risks and diversify, which is what we’ve been doing,” he later told THE.
The Poetry Centre, which is led and chaired by renowned poets and new Roehampton professors Fiona Sampson and David Harsent, will be a research hub for the study of the literary form and the home of the newly created Roehampton and Ruskin poetry prizes and the quarterly journal POEM. It is one of the university’s many initiatives focused on diversifying its output.
“We’re launching new subject areas; we’re currently recruiting our very first cohort in accountancy and we’ve got two other subjects being launched,” said Professor O’Prey. “We’ve gone online [offering degrees] in quite a big way, which we’ve done in partnership with [private firm] Laureate. In the first year we had 500 sign up on just three programmes. We’re launching five more programmes a year for the next two years and, given the uptake we’ve seen, we’re very confident we’ll have 5,000 students. That’s a highly significant shift for us.”
Last year also saw the first group of students from the Glion Institute of 中国A片, a Swiss hospitality management school, arrive at Roehampton, where Glion has in effect set up a branch campus.
“These are students who train and then work in top hotels around the world. Employability rates are fantastic from that,” said Professor O’Prey. “We started with 50 students this year. We could have taken many more but for [the lack of] residences, but we’re pretty sure we’ll have built to 500 within five years.
“It’s a Glion degree, their branch campus is here, but for all intents and purposes they’re our students being taught by Glion. We provide all the things you expect a university to do except the teaching.”
He said Roehampton’s own international profile was growing and it hoped to increase its proportion of international students (including those from elsewhere in the European Union) from the current 15 per cent to 20 per cent over the next five years.
“Our major market is the US by a long way, and I think we’re quite unusual in that. In the US market, we’re seen as a liberal arts university; it fits their model,” he said.
Sprawled over 54 green acres of southwest London, complete with stately homes and a lake, and with one of its colleges overlooking Richmond Park, it is understandable that these comparisons arise. However, Professor O’Prey is quick to stress that the likenesses are more than superficial.
“We have an unusual commitment here to students,” he said. “We invest in student societies, whereas they’re often pretty organic at other universities. We want them to be successful so we resource them quite well. That’s the sort of thing that creates an atmosphere you don’t find anywhere else; it’s a real community.”
He added that the 140 nationalities on campus create a “real buzz” and prove there is “no identifiable Roehampton student”. The desire to build on this has seen the university invest ?30 million in a new library, part of a ?75 million revamp of the campus which will include four new halls of residence.
“Our number one problem is a lack of residences,” he said. “We’ll be creating 1,000 new rooms in the next five years. Six hundred on campus here, some in Vauxhall, some in Hammersmith. It’s a major capital investment and that’s key to our playing in the international market.”
While he acknowledges that Roehampton, like most other universities, is “managed in a business-like way”, he insists that it has “not forgotten what a university is about”.
“It’s not some sort of retail transaction,” he said. “I sat through a meeting with politicians who said ‘you have to treat your students as paying customers’. Well in actual fact our students don’t want to be treated as paying customers. That’s not how they envisage their education.”
Professor O’Prey said Roehampton was also “steadily building” its research culture, citing the two departments – dance and biological anthropology – that came top in the UK in the 2008 research assessment exercise.
“We’re ambitious [but] pretty clear that our teaching is absolutely linked to our research. Every member of staff, even top professors, teach students. We just believe that’s right.”
In numbers
?75m budget for current revamp of campus facilities.
1,000 new student rooms will be built in the next five years
Campus news
University of Central Lancashire
Rugby League’s double winners Wigan Warriors availed themselves of a nearby university’s resources when warming up to defend their titles. The 2013 Super League champions and Tetley’s Challenge Cup winners are back in training and have been put through intensive pre-season fitness tests by staff and students at the University of Central Lancashire’s Centre for Applied Sport and Exercise Sciences. Wigan coach Shaun Wane said that he was “really impressed” with the facilities and “professionalism and expertise” of Uclan staff and students.
Birmingham City University
A luxury goods brand has joined forces with a Midlands university to inspire the next generation of watchmakers. Louis Vuitton Mo?t Hennessy (LVMH) Watch & Jewellery UK will support and advise students studying on Birmingham City University’s undergraduate degree in horology through work placements and one-to-one mentoring. Rob Diver, managing director at the firm, said the partnership was welcome as “it is getting harder to find skilled workers and there are very few professional training institutes”.
University of Reading
Student-brewed beer is for sale at a university student union. The first cask of Extra Curricular, the University of Reading’s Real Ale Society’s beer, sold out within 90 minutes. It is now available at two local pubs and the student union. The society created the “very hoppy strong pale ale” with the help of a local brewer, using hops from New Zealand, the US and England.
University of Winchester
A pop-up exhibition about the search for the final resting place of Alfred the Great has opened at St Bartholomew’s church in Hyde. The University of Winchester supported the project, which was curated by Hyde900, a community-based cultural group. Archaeologists from the university dug up an unmarked grave in the churchyard in the hunt for King Alfred. Last month, part of a pelvic bone excavated from Hyde Abbey in the 1990s was identified by Winchester researchers as “most likely” to have belonged to either Alfred or his son Edward.
Heriot-Watt University
A new ?8 million national training centre aims to create dozens of experts in geoscience and environmental science over the next six years. The Centre for Doctoral Training for Oil and Gas, which will be led by Heriot-Watt University and is funded by the Natural Environment Research Council, will offer a minimum of 90 students the opportunity to undertake PhD study in the field.
University of York
Students have set up a photo booth in York city centre in preparation for the creation of a giant photo mosaic celebrating this summer’s visit of the Tour de France. The University of York students will use hundreds of small photos of students, residents and tourists to construct an image of last year’s champion, Chris Froome. It will be displayed during York’s pre-Tour cultural festival in the run-up to Le Grand Depart from the city on 6 July.
University of West London
Celebrity chef Lorraine Pascale helped her alma mater to kick off a ?10 million fundraising drive. The model-turned-TV chef joined students, alumni and academics at the University of West London at the Dorchester Hotel on 17 January to launch the Lighting the Way campaign at an event that raised ?100,000.
Kingston University
Emailing out of hours, requesting read receipts and automated replies are some of the “seven inbox sins” that office staff find most annoying, research suggests. “Ping pong emails”, which involve messages bouncing back and forth to create a long chain, were also identified by Emma Russell, a senior lecturer in occupational psychology at Kingston University, as a major source of stress in her analysis of how emails are affecting employees’ mental health.