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Post-1992 university
View on WikipediaIn the United Kingdom, a post-1992 university, synonymous with new university or modern university, is a former polytechnic or central institution that was given university status through the Further and Higher Education Act 1992, or an institution that has been granted university status since 1992 without receiving a royal charter.[1] This is used in contrast to "pre-1992" universities.[2]
The term "new universities" was historically used to refer to universities that were at the time new. In the mid-19th century, it was used in England to distinguish the recently established universities of Durham and London from the "old universities" of Oxford and Cambridge.[3][4] In the early 20th century, the term was applied to the civic universities that had recently gained university status, such as Bristol and others (now known as red brick universities).[5] The term was later used to refer to universities gaining their status in the 1960s, such as the former colleges of advanced technology, which were converted to universities following the 1963 Robbins Report on higher education, and the plate glass universities, which were already in the process of being established at the time of the report.[1][6]
Formation
[edit]Following the 1992 Act, 33 polytechnics in England, the Derbyshire College of Higher Education, the Polytechnic of Wales and three Scottish central institutions were the first to be granted university status, alongside another trio of central institutions in the years following. Many of these Polytechnics had roots in the middle 19th Century. All the categories of university award their own academic degrees, but universities created in England and Wales since 2004 may only have the power to award taught degrees, because the power to award research degrees has been removed from the criteria for university title. The Cheltenham & Gloucester College of Higher Education, which became the University of Gloucestershire in 2001, was the only institute to become a university in England between the polytechnics in 1992 and the relaxation of the criteria in 2004. Two new universities have subsequently been established in Scotland, where the old criteria still apply: Queen Margaret University (2007), another former central institution, and the University of the Highlands and Islands (2011).
Post-1992 universities with polytechnic roots
[edit]- Anglia Ruskin University – formerly Anglia Higher Education College, Anglia Polytechnic then Anglia Polytechnic University.
- Birmingham City University – formerly the University of Central England in Birmingham and before that, Birmingham Polytechnic.
- Bournemouth University – formerly Bournemouth Municipal College, Bournemouth College of Technology, Dorset Institute of Higher Education then Bournemouth Polytechnic.
- University of Brighton – formerly Brighton Polytechnic.
- University of Lancashire – formerly Lancashire Polytechnic, then the University of Central Lancashire.
- Coventry University – formerly Lanchester Polytechnic then Coventry Polytechnic.
- De Montfort University – formerly Leicester School of Art and later City of Leicester Polytechnic.
- University of East London – formerly the West Ham College of Technology, before being the North East London Polytechnic, and then finally the Polytechnic of East London.
- University of Greenwich – formerly Woolwich Polytechnic, then Thames Polytechnic.
- University of Hertfordshire – formerly Hatfield Technical College then Hatfield Polytechnic.
- University of Huddersfield – formerly Huddersfield Polytechnic.
- Kingston University – formerly the Kingston Technical Institute then Kingston Polytechnic.
- Leeds Beckett University – formerly Leeds Polytechnic, then Leeds Metropolitan University.
- University of Lincoln – formerly Humberside Polytechnic then the University of Humberside and the University of Lincolnshire and Humberside.
- Liverpool John Moores University – formerly Liverpool Polytechnic.
- London Metropolitan University – merger of London Guildhall University, formerly the City of London Polytechnic, and University of North London, formerly the Polytechnic of North London.
- London South Bank University – formerly South Bank Polytechnic.
- Manchester Metropolitan University – formerly Manchester Polytechnic.
- Middlesex University – formerly Middlesex Polytechnic.
- Northumbria University – formerly Newcastle Polytechnic, formed from the merger of Rutherford College of Technology, the College of Art & Industrial Design and the Municipal College of Commerce.
- Nottingham Trent University – formerly Trent Polytechnic then Nottingham Polytechnic.
- Oxford Brookes University – formerly Oxford School of Art then Oxford Polytechnic.
- University of Plymouth – formerly Polytechnic South West, formed from Plymouth Polytechnic, Exeter College of Art and Design, Rolle College, Seale-Hayne College and Plymouth School of Maritime Studies.
- University of Portsmouth – formerly Portsmouth Polytechnic.
- Sheffield Hallam University – formerly Sheffield Polytechnic then Sheffield City Polytechnic.
- University of South Wales – formed in April 2013 from the merger of the University of Glamorgan, formerly Glamorgan Polytechnic then the Polytechnic of Wales, and the University of Wales, Newport, formerly Gwent College of Higher Education then University of Wales College, Newport.[7]
- University of Staffordshire – formerly Staffordshire Polytechnic (originally North Staffordshire Polytechnic) and previously the separate Staffordshire College of Technology, the Stoke-on-Trent College of Art and the North Staffordshire College of Technology.
- University of Sunderland – formerly Sunderland Technical College then Sunderland Polytechnic.
- Teesside University – formerly Teesside Polytechnic.
- University of the West of England – formerly Bristol Polytechnic.
- University of West London – formerly Thames Valley University, previously the Polytechnic of West London.[8]
- University of Westminster – formerly the Polytechnic of Central London, founded as the Royal Polytechnic Institution at Regent Street (1838).
- University of Wolverhampton – formerly The Polytechnic, Wolverhampton then Wolverhampton Polytechnic
Post-1992 universities with central institution roots
[edit]- University of Abertay Dundee – formerly Dundee Institute of Technology
- Edinburgh Napier University – formerly Napier Technical College, Napier College of Commerce and Technology then Napier Polytechnic
- Glasgow Caledonian University – formed from the merger of Glasgow Polytechnic and The Queen's College, Glasgow
- The Robert Gordon University – based in Aberdeen, formerly Robert Gordon's Technical College then The Robert Gordon Institute of Technology
- University of the West of Scotland – formerly University of Paisley (itself formerly Paisley College of Technology)
Post-1992 universities that are not former polytechnics or central institutions
[edit]- Arden University - formerly RDI
- University of the Arts London – formerly London Institute
- The Arts University Bournemouth – formerly The Arts University College at Bournemouth and before that The Arts Institute at Bournemouth
- Bath Spa University – formerly Bath Spa University College and before that Bath College of Higher Education
- University of Bedfordshire – formerly University of Luton, created by the merger of the University of Luton and De Montfort University's Bedford campus
- University College Birmingham - kept its name on gaining university status
- Bishop Grosseteste University – formerly Bishop Grosseteste College, and Bishop Grosseteste University College
- University of Greater Manchester – formerly Bolton Institute of Higher Education then the University of Bolton
- BPP University – formerly BPP University College, and before that BPP College, and earlier BPP Law School
- Buckinghamshire New University – formerly Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College, and before that Buckinghamshire College of Higher Education, and earlier the High Wycombe College of Art and Technology
- Canterbury Christ Church University – formerly Christ Church College
- Cardiff Metropolitan University – formerly University of Wales Institute, Cardiff (UWIC), and before that Cardiff Institute of Higher Education,[9] and earlier the South Glamorgan Institute of Higher Education
- University of Chester – formerly Chester College of Higher Education
- University of Chichester – formerly West Sussex Institute of Higher Education, then Chichester Institute of Higher Education, then University College Chichester
- University for the Creative Arts – formerly Kent Institute of Art & Design and Surrey Institute of Art & Design, University College
- University of Cumbria – formed in January 2007 from the merger of St Martin's College, the Cumbria Institute of the Arts (CIA) and the Cumbrian campuses of the University of Central Lancashire
- University of Derby – formerly the Derbyshire College of Higher Education
- Edge Hill University – formerly Edge Hill College
- Falmouth University – formerly Falmouth College of Arts
- University of Gloucestershire – formerly Cheltenham & Gloucester College of Higher Education
- Harper Adams University – formerly Harper Adams University College
- University of the Highlands and Islands
- University of Law - formerly the College of Law
- Leeds Trinity University – formerly Trinity and All Saints College, when merged with Trinity College and All Saints College
- Liverpool Hope University – formerly a fully accredited institution of the University of Liverpool, then Liverpool Hope University College
- Newman University – formerly Newman College of Higher Education, then Newman University College
- University of Northampton – formerly Northampton Technical College, Nene College then University College Northampton
- Norwich University of the Arts – formerly Norwich University College of the Arts
- Queen Margaret University – formerly Queen Margaret College then Queen Margaret University College
- University of Roehampton – formerly Roehampton Institute, then University of Surrey Roehampton (as part of the federal University of Surrey)
- Regent's University London - formerly Regent's College
- Royal Agricultural University – formerly the Royal Agricultural College
- Solent University – formerly Southampton Institute of Higher Education
- University of St Mark & St John - formerly University College Plymouth St Mark & St John
- St Mary's University, Twickenham – formerly St Mary's University College, Twickenham
- University of Suffolk - formerly University Campus Suffolk
- University of Winchester – formerly Winchester Diocesan Training School, renamed King Alfred's College then University College Winchester
- University of Worcester – formerly part of the University of Birmingham Department of Education then Worcester College of Higher Education
- Wrexham Glyndŵr University – formerly the North East Wales Institute of Higher Education
- York St John University – formerly the College of Ripon and York St John then York St John College
Mergers of post-1992 and pre-1992 universities
[edit]These may not meet a strict definition of new universities as being universities under the 1992 act, but have elements of common heritage with new universities.
- University of Wales Trinity Saint David – formed by the merger of University of Wales, Lampeter, Trinity University College, Carmarthen and Swansea Metropolitan University (formerly West Glamorgan Institute of Higher Education). University by royal charter rather than under the 1992 act.
- Ulster University - formed in 1984 by the merger of the New University of Ulster and Ulster Polytechnic. University by royal charter.
Secondary issues
[edit]Most former polytechnics welcomed the new nomenclature of "university" as evidence of the abolition of the hierarchical binary system of universities and polytechnics. The new title also assisted recruitment of foreign students (a lucrative market sector which was not always sure what a "polytechnic" was). However, since most former polytechnics were established from locally funded technical colleges, polytechnics were, like their predecessors, controlled by and answerable to local government. The adoption of university status severed that link with the community, creating universities as semi-autonomous bodies answerable only to central government. As a result of their roots under local government, most employees of those polytechnic post-1992 universities are members of the Teachers' Pension Scheme, rather than the Universities Superannuation Scheme.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Catherine Armstrong (10 June 2008). "What is a University in the UK". Jobs.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 13 May 2010. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ Anesa Hosein, Namrata Rao, Chloe Shu-Hua Yeh, Ian M. Kinchin (14 June 2018). Academics' International Teaching Journeys. Bloomsbury. p. 76. ISBN 9781474289795.
In the UK, these institutions are referred to as a 'post-1992 university', 'modern university', or 'new university' (Read, Archer and Leathwood 2003: 263) established under the Further and Higher Education Act of 1992, expanding university provision in the UK. … While the Act of 1992 immediate awarded former polytechnics in the UK university status, post-1992 universities also include institutions that were not polytechnics, often colleges (in the UK sense) of HE
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ The Anomalous Position of the University of London. Vol. 2. 19 July 1851. p. 64.
We are now only seeking to contrast the general powers conferred on the old and on the new Universities
{{cite book}}:|work=ignored (help) - ^ The Charitable Trusts Bill. Vol. 2. 27 August 1853. p. 193.
the Solicitor General, by a piece of flimsy special pleading, endeavoured to establish a distinction between the cases of the old and the new Universities.
{{cite book}}:|work=ignored (help) - ^ Herklots, H, 1928, The New Universities – an external examination, Ernest Benn, London
- ^ "Chapter IV: Institutions of higher education in Great Britain". Higher Education – Report of the Committee appointed by the Prime Minister under the Chairmanship of Lord Robbins. 1963. Archived from the original on 30 October 2013. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
- ^ "Our History". University of South Wales. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
- ^ "Our History". University of West London. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
- ^ "Our History". Retrieved 18 October 2022.
Post-1992 university
View on GrokipediaHistorical Context and Formation
Legislative Foundations
The Education Reform Act 1988 established higher education corporations for polytechnics, severing their ties to local education authorities and granting them independent corporate status.[5] This reform empowered polytechnics to exercise direct control over operations, including staff appointments, asset management, and the provision of higher education courses, while fostering greater responsiveness to market demands.[6] Although polytechnics continued to rely on external validation from the Council for National Academic Awards for degree conferral, the Act laid the groundwork for institutional autonomy that anticipated further liberalization.[7] The Further and Higher Education Act 1992, enacted on 6 March 1992, represented the decisive legislative step by abolishing the binary divide that had separated traditional universities from polytechnics since 1965.[8] It authorized polytechnics to seek university designation and independent taught degree-awarding powers through Privy Council approval, eliminating the need for external accreditation and enabling self-validation of qualifications.[9] The Act also created new funding councils—such as the Higher Education Funding Council for England—to allocate resources across a unified higher education sector, promoting efficiency and expansion.[10] These measures were motivated by the Conservative government's objective to broaden higher education access amid stagnating elite-level participation, where enrollment hovered at around 1.3 million students in 1991/92, corresponding to under 20% age participation rates for young entrants.[11][12] By equalizing institutional status, the legislation incentivized polytechnics to scale up intake and diversify offerings, directly contributing to enrollment surging to 1.94 million by 1997/98—a near 50% rise that marked the shift toward mass higher education.[11] This causal pathway, rooted in enhanced competitive pressures and funding incentives, dismantled structural constraints on growth without requiring proportional increases in traditional university capacity.[1]Shift from Binary Divide
The binary system of higher education in the United Kingdom emerged in the 1960s, shaped by the expansionist recommendations of the Robbins Report published in October 1963, which called for increased access to full-time higher education while distinguishing between traditional universities—autonomous institutions emphasizing pure research and scholarship—and polytechnics, which were publicly funded entities under local authority control focused on applied, vocationally oriented teaching and regional needs.[13] This division, formalized through government policy and the creation of 30 polytechnics between 1966 and 1988, sought to balance academic rigor with practical training but imposed structural constraints, including polytechnics' reliance on local education authorities for governance and funding, which limited their operational flexibility compared to the central funding model of universities via bodies like the University Grants Committee.[14] Critics of the binary system argued that it fostered inefficiencies by artificially segregating institutions, stifling inter-sector competition, and underutilizing polytechnics' comparative advantages in applied disciplines, as their lack of independent degree-awarding powers and restricted access to research funding—polytechnics were excluded from the dual support system combining teaching grants with separate research allocations—hindered adaptation to evolving economic demands for skilled labor.[15] Polytechnics received funding through varied local authority budgets rather than a unified national stream, resulting in disparities such as inconsistent resource allocation and vulnerability to municipal priorities, which contrasted with the more stable per-student funding for universities and constrained polytechnics' ability to compete on merit.[16] From a structural perspective, preserving the divide perpetuated a rigid hierarchy that discouraged specialization driven by institutional strengths, whereas unification could enable causal efficiencies through market-like incentives, allowing former polytechnics to pursue research and innovation without bureaucratic intermediaries.[17] The Further and Higher Education Act, enacted on 6 March 1992, dismantled the binary divide by transferring polytechnics to a unified funding council system and granting them university charters, immediately upgrading 34 polytechnics to full university status with autonomous governance.[2] This transition spurred a rapid expansion in capacity, with higher education enrollment rising by 16% to over 1.5 million students by 1995, reflecting increased access and the removal of enrollment caps that had previously limited polytechnic growth under local control.[18]Initial Expansion and Designations
The Further and Higher Education Act 1992 enabled the designation of polytechnics as universities by incorporating them as independent statutory corporations, thereby removing them from local authority control and granting them the power to award their own taught degrees.[19][20] This legislative change, enacted on 6 March 1992, targeted institutions previously designated under the Education Reform Act 1988 as having substantial higher education provision, with the Privy Council issuing orders to confer university status upon meeting administrative and governance criteria.[21][1] Initial designations occurred rapidly in 1992, with the first wave converting 35 polytechnics into universities, including the Polytechnic of North London to the University of North London, Manchester Polytechnic to Manchester Metropolitan University, and Middlesex Polytechnic to Middlesex University.[22][23] These grants required institutions to establish financial viability through audited accounts and sustainable planning, as scrutinized by the newly formed Higher Education Funding Councils (HEFCs) for England, Scotland, and Wales, which assumed responsibility for allocating public funds and monitoring institutional stability from 1 April 1993.[19] Quality assurance processes were integrated via HEFC oversight, ensuring compliance with emerging standards for academic provision without prior local government veto.[1] By the mid-1990s, the initial expansion had extended to around 50 post-1992 universities, incorporating select former colleges alongside the polytechnic conversions, as additional institutions applied and received Privy Council approval under similar viability and independence benchmarks.[22] This phase marked a verifiable scale-up in capacity, with UK higher education student numbers rising from approximately 1.1 million in 1990/91 to over 2 million by 2000/01, driven in part by the enlarged university sector's ability to admit more undergraduates post-designation.[24][25]Institutional Origins and Classifications
Universities from Polytechnic Heritage
The polytechnics forming the core of post-1992 universities were designated starting in the late 1960s under the UK's binary higher education policy, which aimed to expand access to applied and technical education distinct from the research-oriented universities.[6] These institutions emerged from mergers of existing local colleges of technology, art, commerce, and teacher training, often tracing roots to 19th-century mechanics' institutes but consolidated into modern entities during the 1960s and 1970s to address industrial and vocational needs.[7] By the early 1990s, approximately 30 such polytechnics operated across England and Wales, emphasizing practical disciplines like engineering, applied sciences, and business to support regional economies.[23] Prominent examples include Manchester Metropolitan University, established as Manchester Polytechnic in 1970 via the amalgamation of several Manchester-based colleges including the Manchester College of Art and the City of Manchester College of Commerce.[26] Similarly, Sheffield Hallam University originated from Sheffield Polytechnic, formed in 1969 by merging the Sheffield College of Technology, Sheffield School of Design, and Sheffield City College of Education, reflecting the era's push for integrated technical provision in industrial heartlands.[27] These mergers typically preserved elements of practical heritage, such as dedicated workshops and laboratories from predecessor institutions, while adopting polytechnic charters that mandated a teaching-led mission over pure scholarship.[6] Unlike other post-1992 categories, polytechnic-derived universities were characterized by their larger scale and concentration in urban centers of former heavy industry, such as Manchester, Sheffield, Birmingham, and London, to serve populations from working-class backgrounds with limited prior higher education access.[23] This geographic focus aligned with their mandate to deliver sandwich courses integrating work placements and to align curricula with local employer demands in manufacturing, construction, and services, fostering institutions that enrolled higher proportions of mature and part-time students from proximate communities.[28] Names like "Metropolitan" or "Hallam" often endured post-1992, evoking this applied legacy, as did campus footprints incorporating repurposed industrial-era buildings adapted for hands-on training.[7]Institutions from Central or Teacher Training Roots
In Scotland, central institutions served as the primary providers of higher education outside the ancient universities prior to 1992, functioning as state-designated entities focused on vocational and professional training under the oversight of the Scottish Education Department. Established mainly between the late 19th and mid-20th centuries, these institutions delivered degrees and diplomas in applied fields, including engineering, business, and specialized pedagogy, often with direct linkages to workforce needs or public service sectors like teaching. The Further and Higher Education (Scotland) Act 1992 facilitated their redesignation as universities, aligning them with the broader sector while retaining a mandate for practical education; this occurred amid Scotland's distinct administrative framework, which emphasized regional economic relevance and state coordination rather than the competitive designation processes in England and Wales. Unlike polytechnics, central institutions typically featured fewer mergers and more singular institutional evolutions, with around six principal examples gaining university status in or shortly after 1992. Teacher training roots characterized several of these, where former colleges of education integrated pedagogy as a core mission, prioritizing certification for primary and secondary instruction over diverse vocational streams. For instance, Queen Margaret University originated from the Edinburgh School of Domestic Science (founded 1875), which evolved into a central institution emphasizing women's training in health, speech therapy, and domestic economy with teacher preparation components, achieving university college status in 1999 and full university designation in 2007. Similarly, components of Glasgow Caledonian University incorporated pedagogical elements from Queen's College, Glasgow (founded 1877 for needlework and domestic training), which supplied teacher education programs until the 1993 merger forming the university. These pedagogy-focused lineages often involved pre-1992 governance ties to ecclesiastical bodies, such as Church of Scotland oversight for certain education colleges, ensuring alignment with national curriculum standards and moral instruction mandates. The following table summarizes key institutions from central or teacher training origins:| Institution | Pre-1992 Roots | Year of University Status | Notable Focus from Origins |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of Abertay Dundee | Dundee Institute of Technology (1888) | 1994 | Technology and design training |
| Edinburgh Napier University | Napier Technical College (1966) | 1992 | Computing and engineering applications |
| Glasgow Caledonian University | Glasgow Polytechnic (central institution, with teacher training from Queen's College) | 1993 | Business, health, and pedagogy |
| Queen Margaret University | Queen Margaret College (central institution with teacher training in domestic/health fields) | 2007 | Allied health professions and education |
| Robert Gordon University | Robert Gordon's Institute of Technology (central institution) | 1992 | Energy, pharmacy, and professional services |
| University of the West of Scotland | Paisley College of Technology (central institution, incorporating teacher training colleges) | 1992 (as Paisley; restructured 2007) | Engineering, education, and social sciences |
