Thames Valley University

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Thames Valley University

Established 1990 (as the Polytechnic of West London)
Type Public
Chancellor Lord Karan Bilimoria
Vice-Chancellor Professor Geoff Crispin
Students 52,890[1]
Undergraduates 17,935[1]
Postgraduates 1,990[1]
Location Ealing, Reading and Slough, UK
Further education 32,965[1]
Website http://www.tvu.ac.uk/

Thames Valley University (TVU) is a British university based on campuses in Slough, Reading and Ealing, all in the Thames Valley area west of London.

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Originally founded in 1860 as Lady Byron School, the former Ealing College of Higher Education became a university in 1992, merging with Slough Technical College and the London College of Music, which relocated from central London.

In 2004, TVU (then based at Ealing and Slough) merged with Reading College and School of Arts & Design to form a university that is very large by UK standards; since then a major rebranding has taken place. As a university, TVU is unconventional. It appeals almost exclusively to a West London and Thames Valley student body, with many students commuting from home. It offers a variety of professional training courses unavailable elsewhere. Some 45% of students come from non-white ethnic groups, and 60% study part-time (Guardian 2006).

TVU currently comprises four Faculties: the Faculty of the Arts (FOTA), formerly the London College of Music and Media; the Faculty of Professional Studies; the Faculty of Health and Human Sciences; and Technology. There is also a 14-19 Academy, based at Reading and structured as a department of the University,[2] offering predominantly GCSE and A level courses. Finally, the Graduate School[3] (based in Ealing) co-ordinates and provides support to research activities[4] and research degree courses.

All 45,000 of the university's students are represented by Thames Valley University Students' Union.

The University has weathered several storms in its short life. In the mid-1990s its high-profile Vice-Chancellor, Mike Fitzgerald, ushered through a new networked "New Learning Environment" for undergraduate students, involving a shift to online delivery and asessment. The NLE did not last in that form, and in 1998 Fitzgerald resigned following a negative Quality Assurance Agency report (QAA 1998) that cited serious management failures in the delivery of this model (Webster 2000).

By 2003 the QAA report on the University had returned a much more positive verdict [1], repeated in 2005 [5]. The NLE has now become a VLE (virtual learning environment) with a "blended e-learning" approach to teaching. In 2006 admissions were down and the University has consistently struggled to meet financial targets. Lower admissions in 2006 were evident across the HE sector following the introduction of tuition fees[6]

  1. ^ a b c d Table 0a - All students by institution, mode of study, level of study, gender and domicile 2005/06. Higher Education Statistics Agency online statistics. Retrieved on March 28, 2007.
  2. ^ TVU: Sixth Form Academy. Retrieved on March 15, 2007.
  3. ^ TVU: Graduate School. Retrieved on March 27, 2007.
  4. ^ TVU: Research. Retrieved on March 27, 2007.
  5. ^ http://www.qaa.ac.uk/reviews/reports/institutional/ThamesValley06/findings.asp
  6. ^ Guardian. Retrieved on March 28, 2007.


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