Swansea Metropolitan University Explained

Swansea Metropolitan
Native Name:Welsh: Metropolitan Abertawe
Students:5,765[1]
Undergrad:4,520
Postgrad:1,075
Other:175 FE
City:Swansea
Country:Wales, UK
Campus:Urban
Address:Mount Pleasant
Swansea SA1 6ED
Former Names:Swansea Metropolitan University (2008), Swansea Institute of Higher Education (1992-2008), West Glamorgan Institute of Higher Education (1976-1992), Swansea (Municipal) School of Art and Crafts (1853), Swansea Training College (1872), Swansea Technical College (1897).

Swansea Metropolitan University (Welsh: Prifysgol Fetropolitan Abertawe) is a former university based in Swansea, Wales, UK. The university merged with, and became a constituent campus of, the University of Wales Trinity Saint David on 1 August 2013.

Employing more than 500 staff and teaching over 6,000 students, the Swansea Metropolitan University grew out of the three former Swansea colleges of Art, Teacher Education, and Technology which were founded in 1853, 1872 and 1897 respectively and merged in 1976 to form a centre for the delivery of vocational higher education.[2]

History

For most of the 20th century there were – in addition to Swansea University – three separate further educational institutions serving the city of Swansea: the Swansea (Municipal) School of Art and Crafts (established in 1853); the Swansea Training College (established in 1872) and Swansea Technical College (established in 1897). Swansea Training College which had been funded by Rose Mary Crawshay was the first place in Wales where women could train as teachers.[3]

During this time, the School of Art and Crafts was based on Alexandra Road, near Mount Pleasant Hill opposite Swansea Central Police Station.

The former College of Education was based in the Townhill area of the city where the Metropolitan University's teaching and humanities courses were taught before relocating to the new university development.

Swansea Technical College, formerly based in Mount Pleasant, was a well known and respected supplier of vocational qualifications; where many of the Metropolitan University's programmes were based, including business, computing, engineering, and construction.

In 1976 the three institutions came together to form the West Glamorgan Institute of Higher Education.[4] In 1992 the institution was renamed Swansea Institute of Higher Education and became an independent Higher Education Corporation away from local authority control. In 2008 and following a successful two-year inspection, the Privy Council gave permission for the institution to be renamed Swansea Metropolitan University.

Despite these radical changes, the university stayed close to its roots, with the three founder institutions reflected in the four faculties that made up the university.

The make-up of the institution changed over half a century, moving from three separate establishments offering few higher education programmes, to a university with close to 7,000 students and was an established and respected provider of undergraduate, postgraduate and research qualifications, as well as professional programmes. Yet, at the same time, it stayed a vocationally driven, industry-focused university, serving the local and wider community beyond.

Despite being an institution that focused on teaching, sixty per cent of the university's research work was rated as being of 'international significance', and in some cases 'world leading' in the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise, with particular strengths in art and design, teaching and engineering.

Both Townhill and Mount Pleasant campuses subsequently closed as the university relocated to a new development based in SA1 waterfront.

Faculties

Swansea Metropolitan University had four faculties:

Faculty of Architecture, Computing & Engineering

The Faculty of Applied Design and Engineering taught skills for engineering, logistics, construction, computing, industrial design, and the creative industries.

Schools:[5]

Swansea College of Art

Based in the redeveloped former Dynevor Grammar School, the school is now known as Swansea College of Art a constituent campus of the University of Wales Trinity Saint David.

Schools:

Faculty of Humanities

The Faculty of Humanities was formerly based on Swansea Metropolitan University's Townhill campus. It provided teacher training with an extensive range of undergraduate and postgraduate teaching programmes. It has also expanded to include courses in performance and literature, counselling and psychology. The Facility of Humanities moved from the university Townhill Campus to SA1 Waterfront campus when the university closed Townhill Campus. The campus was to be sold to developers.

Schools:

Faculty of Business and Management

This was based at University of Wales Trinity Saint David, Business campus, High Street Swansea (the site of the former Swansea College of Technology). It had a portfolio of programmes including business, leisure and tourism, public services, management and health and social care.

Schools:

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Table 0 – All students by institution, mode of study, level of study and domicile 2007/08 . Higher Education Statistics Agency online statistics . 6 October 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20101207072113/http://www.hesa.ac.uk/dox/dataTables/studentsAndQualifiers/download/institution0708.xls?v=1.0 . 7 December 2010 .
  2. Web site: History and Timeline University of Wales Trinity Saint David . 2023-12-13 . www.uwtsd.ac.uk.
  3. Crawshay [née Yeates], Rose Mary (1828–1907), educationist and feminist Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. en. 10.1093/ref:odnb/53008. 2004.
  4. Web site: History and Timeline University of Wales Trinity Saint David . 2023-12-13 . www.uwtsd.ac.uk.
  5. Web site: Faculty of Architecture, Computing and Engineering . uwtsd.ac.uk . 7 May 2017 .