Recent from talks
Birmingham Newman University
Knowledge base stats:
Talk channels stats:
Members stats:
Birmingham Newman University
Birmingham Newman University is a public university based in the suburb of Bartley Green in Birmingham, England. The university was founded in 1968 as Newman College of Higher Education. From 2008 to 2013, it was known as Newman University College, gaining full university status in 2013. From 2013 to 2023, it was known as Newman University and Birmingham Newman University in 2023.
The university is named after the 19th-century religious figure John Henry Newman, who had strong links with the city of Birmingham as an Oratorian and a member of the Birmingham Oratory. His view of a university was of a scholarly community wherein the focus should be on training the mind to think rather than the simple diffusion of knowledge.
In 1965, the Catholic Archbishop of Birmingham, George Patrick Dwyer, donated land in Bartley Green that was once the site of Athol House Farm for the purposes of building a teacher training college. In 1966, while under construction, the college appointed Simon Quinlan as its first principal and Joe Blackledge as vice principal. At its opening, the college was the first mixed-gender institution under lay control. The college accepted its first group of 182 students in 1968.
Initially, the college's degree qualifications were awarded by the University of Birmingham. In 1983, under threat of closure, the college entered into an agreement with nearby Westhill College to share facilities. This relationship ended abruptly in 1998 when Coventry University started to award all degrees and Westhill College was absorbed into the University of Birmingham. Between 2003 and 2008, the University of Leicester validated all degrees at the college. The Privy Council gave the institution degree-awarding powers in 2007, finally marking the institution's independence.
Between the years 2000 and 2008 the college expanded, student numbers increasing by 112%.
Originally called Newman College of Higher Education, the college was established as a centre for the training of teachers for local primary and secondary schools. The institution changed its name to Newman University College in January 2008, to Newman University in 2013 and to Birmingham Newman University in 2023. Upon receiving university status, then principal, Professor Peter Lutzeier, commented "it has been a long road to get here but achieving full university status provides welcome recognition for the quality of Newman's courses, graduates and staff".
In April 2017 Newman University's licence to recruit and teach overseas students was revoked. Vice-Chancellor, Scott Davidson, commented on the government's decision in an article in the Times Higher Education Supplement. Professor Davidson noted how "As a smaller university, we issued less than 20 CASs over the last 12 months, meaning just two rejections was enough to trigger the 10% threshold. This is in contrast with larger universities, which may have several hundred CAS refusals before the 10% threshold is crossed." The university noted its commitment to regaining Tier 4 powers as soon as possible. An industry observer, Jack Grove, commented that the revocation of the university's Tier 4 licence was a 'ridiculous decision'.
In 2018 the university started a year of celebrations to mark the fiftieth anniversary of its foundation. On 13 February 2018 the Vice Chancellor, Professor Scott Davidson, opened the year of events with a drinks reception at the Bartley Green campus. Davidson told visitors
Hub AI
Birmingham Newman University AI simulator
(@Birmingham Newman University_simulator)
Birmingham Newman University
Birmingham Newman University is a public university based in the suburb of Bartley Green in Birmingham, England. The university was founded in 1968 as Newman College of Higher Education. From 2008 to 2013, it was known as Newman University College, gaining full university status in 2013. From 2013 to 2023, it was known as Newman University and Birmingham Newman University in 2023.
The university is named after the 19th-century religious figure John Henry Newman, who had strong links with the city of Birmingham as an Oratorian and a member of the Birmingham Oratory. His view of a university was of a scholarly community wherein the focus should be on training the mind to think rather than the simple diffusion of knowledge.
In 1965, the Catholic Archbishop of Birmingham, George Patrick Dwyer, donated land in Bartley Green that was once the site of Athol House Farm for the purposes of building a teacher training college. In 1966, while under construction, the college appointed Simon Quinlan as its first principal and Joe Blackledge as vice principal. At its opening, the college was the first mixed-gender institution under lay control. The college accepted its first group of 182 students in 1968.
Initially, the college's degree qualifications were awarded by the University of Birmingham. In 1983, under threat of closure, the college entered into an agreement with nearby Westhill College to share facilities. This relationship ended abruptly in 1998 when Coventry University started to award all degrees and Westhill College was absorbed into the University of Birmingham. Between 2003 and 2008, the University of Leicester validated all degrees at the college. The Privy Council gave the institution degree-awarding powers in 2007, finally marking the institution's independence.
Between the years 2000 and 2008 the college expanded, student numbers increasing by 112%.
Originally called Newman College of Higher Education, the college was established as a centre for the training of teachers for local primary and secondary schools. The institution changed its name to Newman University College in January 2008, to Newman University in 2013 and to Birmingham Newman University in 2023. Upon receiving university status, then principal, Professor Peter Lutzeier, commented "it has been a long road to get here but achieving full university status provides welcome recognition for the quality of Newman's courses, graduates and staff".
In April 2017 Newman University's licence to recruit and teach overseas students was revoked. Vice-Chancellor, Scott Davidson, commented on the government's decision in an article in the Times Higher Education Supplement. Professor Davidson noted how "As a smaller university, we issued less than 20 CASs over the last 12 months, meaning just two rejections was enough to trigger the 10% threshold. This is in contrast with larger universities, which may have several hundred CAS refusals before the 10% threshold is crossed." The university noted its commitment to regaining Tier 4 powers as soon as possible. An industry observer, Jack Grove, commented that the revocation of the university's Tier 4 licence was a 'ridiculous decision'.
In 2018 the university started a year of celebrations to mark the fiftieth anniversary of its foundation. On 13 February 2018 the Vice Chancellor, Professor Scott Davidson, opened the year of events with a drinks reception at the Bartley Green campus. Davidson told visitors