- University of Exeter
-
University of Exeter Motto Lucem sequimur
(We follow the light)Established 1955 - gained University Status by Royal Charter
1922 - University CollegeType Public Endowment £18.1 million[1] Chancellor The Baroness Benjamin Vice-Chancellor Professor Sir Steve Smith Visitor HM Queen Elizabeth II ex officio Students 15,720[2] Undergraduates 10,815[2] Postgraduates 4,905[2] Location Exeter, Devon
Tremough, Cornwall, England
50°44′11″N 3°32′04″W / 50.736509°N 3.534422°WCoordinates: 50°44′11″N 3°32′04″W / 50.736509°N 3.534422°WCampus Streatham - 350 acres (1.4 km2)[3]
St. Luke's - 16 acres (65,000 m2)
Tremough - 70 acres (280,000 m2)[4]Colours Green and White Affiliations 1994 Group
Association of Commonwealth UniversitiesWebsite www.exeter.ac.uk The University of Exeter (usually abbreviated as Exon. for post-nominals) is a public university in South West England. It belongs to the 1994 Group, an association of 19 of the United Kingdom's smaller research-intensive universities.
The University has three campuses: Streatham; St Luke's (both of which are in Exeter); and Tremough in Cornwall. Most of its work is conducted in the city of Exeter, Devon, where it is the principal higher education institution. The Tremough campus is maintained in conjunction with University College Falmouth under the Combined Universities in Cornwall (CUC) initiative.
The University's Chancellor is Baroness Benjamin, an actress, author and businesswoman. Its Vice-Chancellor is Professor Sir Steve Smith, who is currently President of Universities UK.
Contents
Coat of arms
The University coat of arms symbolises the university's historical associations with the locality. The triangular gold castle with three towers comes from Exeter's coat of arms and probably represents the Rougemont Castle, as alluded to by the red background. The 15 gold Besants around the edge of the shield are from Cornwall's coat of arms, while the green cross on the white background is from the Plymouth City Council's coat of arms. The theme of learning is symbolised by the book with gold edges and a Latin motto, "lucem sequimur" ("we follow the light").
History
After earlier beginnings, university education in Exeter began in 1922 with the conversion of the previous Royal Albert Memorial College into the University College of the South West of England, and the College's inclusion on the list of institutions eligible to receive funds from the then University Grants Committee. The College was conceived as a territorial institution, making university education available relatively locally for students from Devon, Cornwall, Dorset and Somerset. As was customary for new university institutions in southern England in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the College prepared students for external degrees of the University of London.[5] With further growth in the 1920s and 1930s, it was granted increasing autonomy, but full independence was delayed by the Second World War. The university college received its Royal Charter and became the free-standing University of Exeter in December 1955. In the post-war period, Exeter like other UK universities became much more of a national institution, with students coming from all over the southern United Kingdom; as a research-intensive institution, it now attracts significant numbers of students from overseas. However, regional activity continued – for example, through extramural teaching throughout Devon and Cornwall, and the establishment of an Institute of Cornish Studies in Truro.
Timeline
1829 John Taylor published his Prospectus for a School of Mines in Cornwall 1840 Foundation of Exeter Diocesan Training College 1855 Foundation of Exeter School of Art 1863 Foundation of Exeter School of Science 1868 Schools of Art and Science relocate to Albert Memorial Museum 1876 Foundation of Camborne Miners' Association laboratory 1888 Camborne laboratory established as Camborne Mining School 1893 Schools of Art and Science renamed as the Exeter Technical and University Extension College 1900 Exeter Technical and University Extension College renamed as Royal Albert Memorial College, Gandy Street 1922 Royal Albert Memorial College renamed as the University College of the South-West of England;
Streatham Hall (now Reed Hall) given to the University College1930 Exeter Diocesan Training College renamed to St Luke's College, Exeter 1955 The University College received its Charter and became the University of Exeter 1962 Post-graduate Medical School founded 1966 St Luke's College became co-educational 1978 Merger of the University's School of Education and St Luke's College of Education into the University's new Department of Education 1991 Affiliation of the College of St Mark and St John, Plymouth 1993 Incorporation of Camborne School of Mines 1995 Affiliation of St Loyes School of Health Studies 1997 Establishment of Centre of Leadership Studies 2000 The Peninsula Medical School was established in conjunction with the University of Plymouth and the National Health Service. This is based at St Luke's and local hospitals. 2004 The University's new Cornwall Campus opened, moving all of its interests in Cornwall to a single campus. Closure of Chemistry and Music departments announced. Closure of Italian department considered but plans were eventually dropped. Closure of the Cognitive Science BSc. (Hons) degree programme and the re-structuring of the Biology department, now called the Biosciences department. 2006 Closure of the Crossmead Conference Centre, formerly Crossmead Hall of Residence. 2007 Exeter admitted its first intake of dental students. The College of St Mark and St John stopped awarding University of Exeter degrees as it became a university college. Chancellors Vice-Chancellors 1955–1972 The Dowager Duchess of Devonshire, GCVO, CBE 1972–1981 The Viscount Amory, KG, PC, GCMG, TD, DL 1982–1998 Sir Rex Richards, MA, DPhil, DSc, FRS, FRSC, Hon DSc 1998–2005 The Lord Alexander of Weedon, QC, FRSA, Hon. LLD 2006– The Baroness Benjamin, OBE, DLitt (Hon) 1954–1966 Sir James Cook 1966–1972 Sir John Llewellyn 1973–1984 Professor Harry Kay 1984–1994 Sir David Harrison 1994–2002 Sir Geoffrey Holland 2002– Professor Sir Steve Smith Centre for Leadership Studies
In 1997 the Centre for Leadership Studies was established as a leading centre for research and advanced study into leadership theory. It is the only specialist centre in the whole of Europe dedicated to scholarship in leadership studies.
The centre offers MA, MRes and Certificate programs in Leadership which can be learned through coached elearning.
Xfi Centre for Finance and investment
A specialist centre for the study of Finance and Investment. It offers an MSc in Financial Analysis and Fund Management, which is designed around the CFA curriculum.
Reputation
In recent years, Exeter has risen sharply in all the main league tables, except in the QS World University Rankings, as the following tables show.
UK University Rankings 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 Times Good University Guide 10th[6] 9th[7] 13th[8] 9th[9] 28th[10] 34th 31st=[11] 34th[12] 35th 36th 38th 38th 40th[13] 37th 36th 35th= 36th= 39th= 36th Guardian University Guide 11th[14] 13th[14] =14th[15] 34th[16] 27th 28th[17] 46th[18] 29th[19] 31st[20] Sunday Times University Guide 9th[21] 17th[22] 14th[23] 17th[24] 18thth[25] 25th[25] 24th[26] 20th[26]= 28th[26] 24th[26] 27th[26] 34th[26] 32nd[26]= Daily Telegraph 17th[27] 30th[12] The Independent 19th[28] 17th[28] The Financial Times 40th[29] 40th[30] 40th[31] 41st[32] World 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 THES - QS World University Rankings 184th[33] 266th[34] 237th[35] 220th[36] 224th[37] 202nd[38] Academic Ranking of World Universities 303-401[39] 305-402[40] 301-400[41] 401-500[42] Exeter's strongest performance is in the Times Good University Guide rankings.
Exeter was the winner of the "Times Higher University of the Year" award in 2007/8, after finishing runner up three times running. In 2006, it was noted that, "Exeter's excellent record merits special recognition as runner-up this year. Students here are some of the most satisfied in the country, ranking it on the fringes of the top 10. High entry standards and low dropout rates further entrench its standing." Sunday Times, 10 September 2006.
National Student Survey
The 2007 National Student Survey found that some 91% of Exeter students are satisfied with their experience compared to a national average of 81%. This means that Exeter is 7th in the national universities and colleges satisfaction ranking and 4th in the list of traditional universities. This is the third year in a row that Exeter has come within the top ten.
In the 2005 National Student Survey, Exeter was ranked joint 10th nationally for overall satisfaction. The results put Exeter in the top 25 per cent of UK universities for learning resources (such as IT resources) and for course management and organisation.
Other
In 2007/08 academic year the University has seen a rise of 23.8% in applications for places – one of the highest rises among universities in the country.
In the 2001 UK Research Assessment Exercise, 98% of subject areas at Exeter were rated 4, 5 or 5* (of national or international standing).[citation needed] In 2008, 17% of the submitted research was rated 4* ("world-leading") and 89% no lower than 2* ("recognised internationally").[43]
In the 2006 National Student Survey, Exeter was ranked joint 11th, and the University of Exeter Business School was ranked 1st in the country for Business, Accounting & Finance and Management.
The University hosts the Innovation Centre which is based on the Streatham Campus and supports businesses at different stages of growth.
Campus life
Streatham campus
Main article: Streatham CampusMost students work on the main campus, Streatham, which includes the Northcott Theatre. Sitting on a hillside one side of which looks down across Exeter city centre, the campus is renowned for its beautiful landscaping and excellent views. The Independent has described the campus environment as ‘sublime’. The campus also has several galleries, including the Bill Douglas Centre for the history of cinema and popular culture. There is also a Sculpture Walk, including pieces by Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth and a statue to commemorate the events at Tiananmen Square. There is a pub type bar called the Ram and a Bar (previously called the Ewe) within a nightclub called the Lemon Grove (or Lemmy), both run by the Students' Guild. The campus boasts a medical centre, a counselling service, a children’s day-care centre, and numerous catering outlets. Many halls of residence and some self-catering accommodation are located on this campus or in the near vicinity. In 2005 Streatham Campus's newest building, the Xfi centre, was completed to provide facilities mainly but not exclusively for postgraduate study into finance and investment.
St Luke's campus
Main article: St Luke's CampusThe St Luke’s campus is home to the largest academic school of the University, the Graduate School of Education (previously known as School of Education & Lifelong Learning). It shares the campus with the Peninsula Medical School (a joint venture with the University of Plymouth) and the School of Sport and Health Sciences. The campus is just over a mile from the larger Streatham campus and 10 minutes’ walk from the city centre.
The St Luke’s campus also has its own restaurant, cafeteria, bar, bookshop, bank, indoor swimming pool, two gymnasia including an advanced conditioning studio and grass tennis courts for summer use.
The future of St Luke's is currently under review, with a proposal to bring one of the Schools located there to the Streatham Campus to allow further expansion (see below).
Tremough campus (University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus)
Main article: University of Exeter, Cornwall CampusThe University of Exeter's Cornwall campus, Tremough now houses all the university's activity in Cornwall, previously scattered across the county. It is part of the Combined Universities in Cornwall project, and is shared with University College Falmouth. University of Exeter departments on the site include the internationally renowned CSM (Camborne School of Mines), whose graduates are highly sought after by mining and civil engineering industries as well as the (renewable) energy sector. CSM, founded over 100 years before the University of Exeter, merged with Exeter in 1993 and is now part of the School of Engineering, Mathematics and Physical Sciences (SEMPS). Other departments at Tremough include the rapidly growing Centre for Ecology and Conservation (CEC), English, Geography and the Institute of Cornish Studies, and additional departments are being added, such as History and Law, the first year of which started in October 2007.
Students' Guild
Students at Exeter are represented by a Guild of Students,[44] which has an active role in campaigning at local and national levels. It is run by four elected Sabbatical Officers: Nick Davis (President), James Fox (Vice President Participation & Campuses), Emma Payne (Vice President Welfare & Community) and James Eales (Vice President Academic Affairs). They were elected in February 2011 with a record numbers of students voting in the elections, a national record 38.1% turnout of registered students.[45]
Exeter's Guild is home to award winning media: a student radio station Xpression FM, a newspaper Exeposé,[46] a website X-Media Online[47] and television station XTV.[48] There is also a volunteering agency within the Students' Guild called Community Action,[49] which runs its own projects with members of the local community that are run by volunteers and provides further volunteering opportunities through links with external partner organisations. There is a RAG (Raising and Giving) group[50] which exists to raise money for five nominated charities, and collects in town centres around Britain every weekend. RAG events are run by students, under the co-ordination of a full-time member of staff. The main aim of these societies and activities groups is to provide opportunities for student development. The Guild of Students was renamed the Students' Guild in 2005.
There are over 100 affiliated student societies, ranging from the Theatre Company and Creative Writing to the LDYS, Conservative Future, and Socialist Students societies. There are a very large number of sports clubs, and the Athletic Union (AU) is now a separate body from the Students' Guild. This organisation is led by a student-elected President, currently Simon Tyson. The Debating Society which predates establishment of the university, started life in 1893 as The Exeter Debating Society at the Royal Albert Memorial College, and has played host to many notable speakers including Anthony Eden, H H Asquith, Ludovic Kennedy, Michael Foot and Stephen Fry.
Students are represented by a sabbatical team consisting of a President, Vice President Participation and Campuses, Vice President Welfare and Community, Vice President Academic Affairs, and the Athletic Union President. There are also other non sabbatical officers representing areas of the student population and student activities areas.These are elected by students in a series of elections throughout the academic year.
Evangelical Christian Union disputes
Since late 2006, the Exeter Students' Guild has been in dispute[51][52][53] with the Evangelical Christian Union (ECU),[54] over the ECU's requirement that members sign a declaration saying they agree to a statement of beliefs, and the requirement that speakers and committee members agree to a doctrinal basis.[55] The ECU's umbrella organisation, the Universities and Colleges Christian Fellowship, promote the idea of the doctrinal basis for committee members.[56]
On 24 October 2006, the existing Christian Union was instructed by the Guild to change its name to the Evangelical Christian Union, following a referendum vote by students at Exeter University. The name change was intended to clarify that the society's position was that of Evangelical Christianity, rather than of all forms of Christianity, and was proposed by a member of the Christian Union.
The dispute was covered nationally by news channels including the BBC, with the Students' Guild freezing the accounts of the Christian Union, and refusing them free access to Guild facilities as well as advertising rights.
On 26 February 2007, the Guild issued a statement saying that Ben Martin is now willing to follow the Internal Complaints Procedure.[57] By the summer this was completed, with Mark Shaw QC ruling in the students' guild's favour.[58]
In 2008/9, after one more failed try by the ECU to change the Students' Guild Constitution in terms of being able to restrict membership to only Christians, the President Robert Moore decided to make a U-turn at the end of the academic year. He proposed scrapping this idea entirely and opening the doctrine of the society up to those of all faiths. This idea seemed greatly supported but the committee of 2009 preferred that this decision be reviewed by them.
New developments
The University has undergone an investment programme worth more than £235 million[59] in recent years. £38 million has been invested in new student accommodation, including the new Holland Hall, named after the former vice-chancellor of the same name. £8m has been invested in sports facilities, including a professional-standard tennis centre. A £1m upgrade has been carried out to the students’ union building and nightclub and £1.5 m has been spent improving access for people with disabilities. In October 2002, The Peninsula Medical School, a partnership between the Universities of Exeter and Plymouth, admitted its first students of medicine. In 2005, the new Xfi Centre for Finance and Investment opened, the result of a multi-million pound gift from an anonymous donor. After a donation of £650,000 from the ruler of Sharjah, Sultan bin Mohamed Al-Qasimi, an extension has been added to the also recently constructed Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies Building. In 2006, the Department of Drama completed a major renovation. The Department of Drama's state-of-the-art £3 million Alexander Building was named after the former University Chancellor Lord Alexander. A new £28 million Peninsula Dental School, a partnership between the Universities of Exeter and Plymouth,opened its doors in October 2007. The dental school will have places for 62 graduate entry students each year. The South West of England Regional Development Agency is investing £9.7 m in phase II of the University of Exeter Innovation Centre. The project is currently under construction and will create a 38,000 sq ft (3,500 m2) building for use by new and growing businesses within the development and research sectors at the university's Streatham campus. Phase I of the Innovation Centre was finished in 2000 and houses high-tech businesses from the software, biomedical sectors to advanced manufacturing and internet firms.
The School of Biosciences is undergoing massive investment to further improve the facilities. The Business School, formerly SoBE - The school of Business and Economics, is set to receive investment in the form of a new building to add to its existing buildings of Streatham Court and XFi. Further to the new building, a new student services centre has been constructed in Streatham Court and its lecture theatre corridor and MBA suite renovated.
Forum Project
£48 million has recently been invested into the renovation of the library, great hall and the area between it. The large glass structure will resemble a large shopping mall style, with a top of the range conference lecture theatre, and many seminar rooms. It will have trees planted, as well as flowing water to give a modernist, yet natural atmosphere.
The new building will act as the University's main reception, and is intended to help push the University further into the top 10 in the UK.
Restructuring
For nearly 40 years Exeter was the only university in the south-west peninsula, and as such it sought to offer the maximum number of academic disciplines. By 1995 the University had nearly 50 separate departments and centres. Its Research Assessment Exercise performance in 1996 was poor, and this was widely attributed to the absence of large strong units. As a result, an internal working party recommendation a reorganisation into a smaller number of Schools (18, now reduced further to 11, though the two schools of the Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry have been added), with the abolition of the traditional Faculties of Arts, Science etc.
Despite this internal reorganization, the University again entered the 2001 RAE with substantially more disciplines than most comparable universities, and consequently with smaller units. Since 2000, the University has therefore undergone a further process of restructuring in order to focus on areas of strength. In 2004, it closed two departments (chemistry and music) that had been suffering low student demand for a long period, and had failed to achieve a 5-grade in any of the RAEs. Although similar moves elsewhere had attracted little attention, a media storm blew up around this issue at Exeter, perhaps because of the high profile that the Vice-Chancellor, Professor Steve Smith, was taking in UK university politics at the time (for example, he had just been appointed as Chair of the 1994 Group). There was also protest within the institution. The closures eliminated 130 jobs, and the AUT questioned the University's financial figures.[60]
On Thursday, 25 November 2004, about 2,000 students marched in protest over the decision,[61] making the local television news. Some even attempted to sell the University on eBay in protest.[62] Sir Harold Kroto, a Nobel laureate, returned his honorary degree from this institution in protest against this move.,[63] as did celebrated percussionist Dame Evelyn Glennie.[64] The university faced further protest in 2008 when more than 2,000 people signed a petition against plans to get an outside firm to run its profitable and outstanding-rated campus Family Centre.[65]
The future of St Luke's
In 2006, the University commissioned a feasibility study into the future of the St Luke's site, the location of the Schools of Education and Lifelong Learning, the School of Sports and Health Science, and the university's part of the Peninsula Medical School. The Vice-Chancellor stated that the "problem is one of success, that is if these three Schools achieve their planned expansion ... then we will simply run out of space at St Luke's.".[66] The options considered were moving the three schools currently located there onto the Streatham campus, with the sale of the St Luke's site; moving one of the Schools to the Streatham campus, and expanding the other two at St Luke's; and attempting to expand all three at St Luke's. Although media and student attention focussed on the first of these possibilities,[67] the consultants' advice was that the middle path of moving one School was the most financially sensible, and it is likely that this is what university management had always intended.
Notable current and former members of academic staff
Main article: Academics of the University of ExeterExeter has a large number of leading academics. Sir John Tooke, who was knighted in the 2007 Queen's New Years Honours list for services to medicine is the inaugural dean of the Peninsula Medical School. Professor Roy Sambles in the school of physics is a Fellow of the Royal Society. Professor Richard Overy, fellow of the British Academy and distinguished Historian specialising in the Third Reich.
Notable alumni
Main article: Alumni of the University of ExeterExeter has a large number of well-known alumni. Both Princess Anne's children Peter Phillips and Zara Phillips attended the University in the late 1990s. J. K. Rowling, the author of the Harry Potter books read French and Classics in the mid 80's. Robert Bolt, playwright and two-time Oscar and BAFTA winning screenwriter (Lawrence of Arabia, Doctor Zhivago, A Man For All Seasons) also attended Exeter. Jonathon Band, the First Sea Lord of the United Kingdom, the most senior serving officer in the Royal Navy read Economics in the 70s. Fiona Shackleton, the divorce case lawyer, read law in the 1970s. Thom Yorke, lead singer of Radiohead, read English and Fine Arts at the University of Exeter. Frank Gardner, the BBC's security correspondent, shot in Riyadh by jihadist radicals but continuing his work, and especially respected for his Middle East expertise, graduated in Arabic in the 1980s. Prof. Abdulaziz N. Al-Mani, winner of the 'Arab Nobel Prize', the 2009 King Faisal Prize, in the category of Arabic Literature, and now emeritus professor of Arabic literature at King Saud University, obtained his doctorate in Arabic literature from Exeter in 1976. Writer and broadcaster John O'Farrell studied English and Drama in the early 1980s and children's author Steve Voake obtained a PGCE at Exeter University. Chris Johnson LLB, of Team GB Clay Shooting, also attended the University, from 2006-2009. Felix Barrett, founder and artistic director of Punchdrunk Theatre studied drama from 1997-2000. The mathematical physicist Professor Sir Michael Berry completed a BSc in Physics at Exeter in 1962 and is now known for, amongst other things, the Berry Phase and receiving an Ig Nobel Prize for levitating a frog. Singer Will Young read politics at Exeter and was a RAG Safer Sex Ball Co-ordinator.
See also
References
- ^ http://www.exeter.ac.uk/media/universityofexeter/webteam/shared/pdfs/financialstatements/UoE_Financial_Statements_2008_09.pdf
- ^ a b c "Table 0a - All students by institution, mode of study, level of study, gender and domicile 2006/07" (Microsoft Excel spreadsheet). Higher Education Statistics Agency. http://www.hesa.ac.uk/dox/dataTables/studentsAndQualifiers/download/institution0607.xls. Retrieved 2008-04-09.
- ^ "The University of Exeter - Hospitality Services - Visitors - Events". Archived from the original on 2006-12-17. http://web.archive.org/web/20061217043102/http://www.admin.ex.ac.uk/hospitality/visitors/events/index.shtml. Retrieved 2007-01-31.
- ^ "About the University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus". http://www.uec.ac.uk/studying/about.htm. Retrieved 2007-01-31.
- ^ "Student lists". http://www.shl.lon.ac.uk/specialcollections/archives/studentrecords.shtml. Retrieved 05-10-2010.
- ^ Watson, Roland; Elliott, Francis; Foster, Patrick. [url= http://extras.thetimes.co.uk/gooduniversityguide/institutions/ "The Times Good University Guide 2012"]. The Times (London). url= http://extras.thetimes.co.uk/gooduniversityguide/institutions/. Retrieved 2011-11-07.
- ^ Watson, Roland; Elliott, Francis; Foster, Patrick. "The Times Good University Guide 2010". The Times (London). http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/tol_gug/gooduniversityguide.php. Retrieved 2010-04-09.[dead link]
- ^ Watson, Roland; Elliott, Francis; Foster, Patrick. "The Times Good University Guide 2009". The Times (London). http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/tol_gug/gooduniversityguide.php. Retrieved 2009-06-03.[dead link]
- ^ Watson, Roland; Elliott, Francis; Foster, Patrick. "The Times Good University Guide 2008". The Times (London). http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/gug/gooduniversityguide.php. Retrieved 03-11-2007.[dead link]
- ^ Watson, Roland; Elliott, Francis; Foster, Patrick. "The Times Good University Guide 2007 - Top Universities 2007 League Table". The Times (London). http://www.timesonline.co.uk/displayPopup/0,,102571,00.html. Retrieved 03-11-2007.[dead link]
- ^ "The Times Top Universities". The Times (London). http://www.timesonline.co.uk/displayPopup/0,,32607,00.html. Retrieved 03-11-2007.[dead link]
- ^ a b "The Daily Telegraph Table of Tables". The Daily Telegraph (London). http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/graphics/2003/06/27/unibigpic.jpg;jsessionid=TGNWKTF3UJNBNQFIQMGCFFOAVCBQUIV0. Retrieved 2008-10-13.[dead link]
- ^ "The Times Top Universities 1999=The Times". http://www.indonesianembassy.org.uk/education_the_times_gug.html. Retrieved 08-11-2008.
- ^ a b "University ranking by institution". The Guardian (London). 2011-11-07. http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/table/2011/may/17/university-league-table-2012. Retrieved 2011-11-07.
- ^ "University ranking by institution". The Guardian (London). 2008-02-10. http://browse.guardian.co.uk/education?SearchBySubject=&FirstRow=10&SortOrderDirection=&SortOrderColumn=GuardianTeachingScore&Subject=University+ranking&Institution=. Retrieved 2008-05-07.
- ^ "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.
- ^ "University ranking by institution". The Guardian (London). http://browse.guardian.co.uk/education/2006?SearchBySubject=&FirstRow=20&SortOrderDirection=&SortOrderColumn=GuardianTeachingScore&Subject=Institution-wide&Institution=. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
- ^ "University ranking by institution". The Guardian (London). http://education.guardian.co.uk/universityguide2005/table/0,,-5163901,00.html?start=40&index=3&index=3. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
- ^ "University ranking by institution 2004". The Guardian (London). http://education.guardian.co.uk/universityguide2004/table/0,,1222167,00.html. Retrieved 2009-01-19.
- ^ "University ranking by institution". The Guardian 2003 (University Guide 2004) (London). http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/unitable/0,,-4668575,00.html. Retrieved 2010-04-09.
- ^ The Sunday Times (London). http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/University_Guide. Retrieved 15 September 2010.|title=The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2010 League Tables |work=The Sunday Times | location=London | accessdate=2010-04-09}}
- ^ "The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2010 League Tables". The Sunday Times (London). http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/stug/universityguide.php. Retrieved 2010-04-09.[dead link]
- ^ "The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2008 League Tables". The Sunday Times (London). 2009-09-13. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/education/sunday_times_university_guide/article4768022.ece?token=null&offset=0&page=1. Retrieved 03-10-2008.
- ^ "The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2008 League Tables". The Sunday Times (London). http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/stug/universityguide.php. Retrieved 03-11-2007.[dead link]
- ^ a b "The Sunday Times University League Table". The Sunday Times (London). http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/stug2006/stug2006.pdf. Retrieved 03-11-2007.
- ^ a b c d e f g "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.
- ^ Haldenby, Andrew (2007-07-30). "University league table". The Daily Telegraph (London). http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=HXFCSGXMNVABTQFIQMFCFGGAVCBQYIV0?xml=/news/2007/07/30/ncambs430.xml. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
- ^ a b "The main league table 2009". The Independent (London). 2008-04-24. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/higher/the-main-league-table-2009-813839.html. Retrieved 2008-04-11.
- ^ "The FT 2003 University ranking". Financial Times 2003. http://www.grb.uk.com/448.0.html?cHash=5015838e9d&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=9&tx_ttnews%5Buid%5D=9.
- ^ "FT league table 2001". FT league tables 2001. http://specials.ft.com/universities2001/FT3HLLAN6LC.html.
- ^ "FT league table 1999-2000". FT league tables 1999-2000. http://specials.ft.com/ln/ftsurveys/industry/pdf/top100table.pdf.
- ^ "FT league table 2000". FT league tables 2000. http://specials.ft.com/ln/ftsurveys/industry/scbbbe.htm.
- ^ "THES - QS World University Rankings 2010". THES. http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/world-university-rankings/2010-2011/top-200.html. Retrieved 2008-10-13.
- ^ "THES - QS World University Rankings 2009". THES. http://www.topuniversities.com/university-rankings/world-university-rankings/2009/results/201-300. Retrieved 2008-10-13.
- ^ "THES - QS World University Rankings 2008". THES. http://www.topuniversities.com/worlduniversityrankings/results/2008/overall_rankings/fullrankings/. Retrieved 2008-10-13.[dead link]
- ^ "THES - QS World University Rankings 2007". THES. Archived from the original on 05-12-2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20071205100151/http://www.topuniversities.com/worlduniversityrankings/results/2007/overall_rankings/top_400_universities/. Retrieved 08-12-2007.
- ^ "THES - QS World University Rankings 2006". THES. Archived from the original on 23-10-2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20071023070825/http://www.topuniversities.com/worlduniversityrankings/results/2006/over200/. Retrieved 03-11-2007.
- ^ "THES - QS World University Rankings 2005". THES. Archived from the original on 12-10-2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20071012050800/http://www.topuniversities.com/worlduniversityrankings/results/2005/over2000/. Retrieved 03-11-2007.
- ^ Academic Ranking of World Universities by Shanghai Jiao Tong University 2008
- ^ Academic Ranking of World Universities by Shanghai Jiao Tong University 2007
- ^ Academic Ranking of World Universities by Shanghai Jiao Tong University 2006
- ^ Academic Ranking of World Universities by Shanghai Jiao Tong University 2005
- ^ "A rising star among research-intensive institutions". Research news. University of Exeter. http://www.exeter.ac.uk/research/news/title,2041,en.php. Retrieved 2009-02-01.[dead link]
- ^ "Students' Guild". http://guild.ex.ac.uk.
- ^ "Sabbatical elections 2011". http://www.exeterguild.org/news/article/6001/62/.
- ^ "Exeposé". http://www.xmedia.ex.ac.uk/newspaper/.
- ^ "X-Media". http://xmedia.ex.ac.uk.
- ^ "XTV". http://www.xmedia.ex.ac.uk/tv/.
- ^ "Community Action". http://ca.ex.ac.uk.
- ^ "RAG". http://www.exeterrag.org.
- ^ Exeter Guild of Students. "Situation regarding the ECU". http://www.guild.exeter.ac.uk/ecu.
- ^ X-Net. "Special Report: ECU vs. Students' Guild". http://xnet.ex.ac.uk/content/specials/ecu/.
- ^ BBC News website (2006-11-17). "Christians threaten legal action". http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/6159456.stm. Retrieved 2010-01-06.
- ^ Evangelical Christian Union website
- ^ Evangelical Christian Union. "Doctrinal Basis". http://societies.ex.ac.uk/~eucu/docbasis.
- ^ Adrian Warnock. "Adrian Interviews Richard Cunningham, director of the UCCF". http://www.adrian.warnock.info/2005/12/adrian-interviews-richard-cunningham.htm.
- ^ "ECU Taking Internal Measures (login required)". http://xnet.ex.ac.uk/content/news/getNews.php?id=190.
- ^ "Independent Ruling on Dispute between Students' Guild and ECU". http://atom.exeter.ac.uk/news/uni/2007/07/dispute.html.
- ^ http://www.exeter.ac.uk/news/stlukes/index.shtml?icid=D007-4008488-074F
- ^ AUT (26 November 2004). "AUT questions 130 Exeter redundancies". http://www.ucu.org.uk/index.cfm?articleid=1039.
- ^ "Save Our Departments". Exeposé. 29 November 2004. http://exepose.ex.ac.uk/pages_2005/week9/002-003%20-%20newsspecial.pdf.
- ^ "Students put university on eBay". BBC News. 25 November 2004. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/4040777.stm.
- ^ "Nobel winner in degree protest". BBC News. 29 November 2004. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/education/4052221.stm.
- ^ Curtis, Polly (9 December 2004). "'Disgusted' Glennie returns honorary Exeter degree". London: The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2004/dec/09/highereducation.uk2.
- ^ http://www.thisisexeter.co.uk/displayNode.jsp?nodeId=142327&command=displayContent&sourceNode=142322&contentPK=20073846&folderPk=79877&pNodeId=142332
- ^ Email from the Vice-Chancellor to all students, 4 October 2006
- ^ "Is this the end for St Lukes?". Exeposé. 9 October 2006. http://exepose.ex.ac.uk/exepose/200607/Exepose%20-%202006-10-09.pdf.
External links
- University of Exeter
- Exeter Uni
- Works by or about the University of Exeter in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- University of Exeter Film footage from 1926 Australian Prime Minister cuts first sod of soil on the site of new building
- Film footage of The Queen unveiling Foundation Stone of new Exeter University in 1957
University of Exeter Chancellor: The Baroness Benjamin OBE DL • Vice Chancellor: Professor Steve Smith
Departments: Bill Douglas Centre • Camborne School of Mines • Institute of Cornish Studies • University of Exeter Business School • Centre for Leadership Studies • Xfi Centre for Finance and Investment
Sport: University of Exeter Hockey Club • University of Exeter A.F.C. • Exeter University Rugby Football Club
Campuses: Cornwall Campus • St. Luke's • Streatham •
Accommodation: Halls of Residence
Media: Northcott Theatre • Xpression FM• Exeposé
Commercial: Science Park • University of Exeter Press
Buildings: University Chapel (Holy Trinity) • University Chapel (St Luke) • Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital
Miscellaneous: Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry • People • Academic dress
Categories: University • Chancellors • Vice-Chancellors • Academics • Alumni • Associates • Websites: University • Guild of Students • X-Media
Universities and colleges in South West England Universities University colleges Further Education colleges Bath · Bicton · Bournemouth & Poole · Bridgwater · Bristol · Cirencester · Cornwall · Exeter · Filton · Gloucestershire · Hartpury · Kingston Maurward · New Swindon · Norton Radstock · Petroc · Plymouth · Plymouth Art · Somerset · South Devon · Strode · Stroud · Swindon · Truro & Penwith · Weston · Weymouth · Wiltshire · YeovilSixth form colleges Bath • Birkbeck • Durham • East Anglia • Essex • Exeter • Goldsmiths College • Institute of Education • Lancaster • Leicester • Loughborough • Queen Mary • Reading • Royal Holloway • School of Oriental and African Studies • St Andrews • Surrey • Sussex • York
Categories:- University of Exeter
- Buildings and structures in Exeter
- 1994 Group
- Association of Commonwealth Universities
- Educational institutions established in 1922
- 1922 establishments in England
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.