Swansea University
Welsh: Prifysgol Abertawe | |
Former names | University College of Swansea, University of Wales Swansea |
---|---|
Motto |
Gweddw crefft heb ei dawn (Technical skill is bereft without culture) |
Type | Public |
Established |
1920– University College of Swansea 1996 – University of Wales, Swansea 2007 – Swansea University |
Endowment | £5.7M (2015)[1] |
Budget | Total Income: £205 million (2013/14)[2] |
Chancellor | The Rt Hon. Rhodri Morgan |
Vice-Chancellor | Richard B. Davies |
Administrative staff | 1187 |
Students | 16,020 (2014/15)[3] |
Undergraduates | 13,465 (2014/15)[3] |
Postgraduates | 2,555 (2014/15)[3] |
Location | Swansea, UK |
Campus | Suburban/Coastal |
Colours |
Academic: Red, silver and black Athletic Union: Green and white |
Affiliations | University of Wales, EUA, ACU |
Website |
www |
Swansea University (Welsh: Prifysgol Abertawe) is a public research university located in Swansea, Wales, United Kingdom. It was chartered as University College of Swansea in 1920,[4] as the fourth college of the University of Wales and in 1948 became the first campus university in UK. In 1996, it changed its name to the University of Wales Swansea[4] following structural changes within the University of Wales. The title of Swansea University was formally adopted on 1 September 2007 when the University of Wales became a non-membership confederal institution and the former members became universities in their own right.[5]
Swansea University has two campuses located adjacent to the coast at the north of Swansea Bay. The Singleton Park Campus is set in the grounds of Singleton Park to the west of Swansea city centre. The Bay Campus which opened in September 2015, is located adjacent to Jersey Marine Beach to the east of Swansea city centre.
It is the third largest university in Wales in terms of number of students. It currently offers about 330 undergraduate courses and 120 post-graduate courses to 16,020 undergraduate and postgraduate students.[6]In 2014 Swansea was named University of the Year in the WhatUni.com Student Choice Awards and shortlisted in the same category in the Times Higher Education awards.[7]
In 2016, Swansea University was named as the best university in Wales by The Times and The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2017 League Table. It was also awarded the inaugural Welsh University of the Year title. [8]
Campus
The university is divided between two campuses. The 46-acre Singleton Park campus, set in parkland two miles west of Swansea city centre, houses the colleges of Arts and Humanities, Human and Health Sciences, Medicine, Science and Law. It lies on the eastern approach to the Gower Peninsula, the UK’s first Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, and is also home to the Taliesin Arts Centre.
The 65-acre, £450 million beachfront science and innovation Bay Campus opened up in September 2015 and houses the College of Engineering and School of Management, the Great Hall auditorium and a new library. It lies three miles east of Swansea city centre in the County Borough of Neath Port Talbot.[9]
Libraries
Information Services and Systems has provided a combined library, IT and careers service for the university since 2011. In 2013, ISS received a renewed Customer Service Excellence award along with the university's Registry and Student Services. From September 2015 the service will be split across two buildings, the Library and Information Centre at the Singleton Park campus and a new library on the Bay Campus overlooking the Crymlyn Burrows Site of Special Scientific Interest. Visitors can access a wide range of electronic resources, including 23,000 e-journals, and 850,000 books and periodicals which are split across subject areas but can be transferred between campuses.
The main Library Information Centre on the Singleton campus has over 800,000 books and periodicals, along with access to a wide range of electronic resources including over 23,000 electronic journals. There are over 1,000 study spaces, almost half of which are equipped with networked PCs. LIS was awarded the Charter Mark in 2006, and received the new Customer Service Excellence award in 2009. In 2013 it received a renewed Customer Service Excellence award in combination with the university's Registry and Student Services. The library also houses the Richard Burton Archive which includes, among other treasures, the South Wales Coalfield Collection, several papers of Welsh writers in English and the Richard Burton Collection, a learning resource dedicated to the actor’s life and work which was donated by Burton's widow, Sally. Morriston Hospital Nursing Library is also housed there.
The 2,624 square-metre Bay Library is open round the clock to provide learning spaces for more than 650 students including 400 study spaces and silent study areas for a further 150 students. It holds 1,800m of library stock, focused on Engineering and Management titles and has dedicated postgraduate rooms, a 30-seat computing and teaching room and a café.[10]
Sports
Swansea University’s £20 million International Sports Village is five minutes’ walk from the Singleton Park campus on the western side of Sketty Lane. It has an eight-lane track, six-lane indoor track and training centre, floodlit playing fields including rugby, football, lacrosse and cricket pitches, two artificial hockey pitches, a sports hall, tennis and squash courts, a climbing wall and spin room. The University also owns training pitches in the north of the city, in Fairwood, which it has developed alongside Swansea City A.F.C..[11]
During the 2012 Summer Olympics, the University hosted the training camps for the Mexican and New Zealand Paralympic teams and the Ireland Triathlon team.[12] In 2014, it hosted the IPC Athletics European Championships. Furthermore, in 2015 it hosted the training camps of the Canada national rugby union team and the Fiji national rugby union team in preparation for the 2015 Rugby World Cup.[13]
Sports Science at the university leapt from 40th to 8th in the 2015 Guardian University Guide.[14] The department has links with Swansea City A.F.C., Ospreys and Welsh Athletics. Former scholars include Wales rugby union player Alun Wyn Jones, Olympic swimmer Georgia Davies, Paralympian swimmer Liz Johnson and Paralympian Boccia player David Smith. Swansea is in the top quarter of the British University’s sporting leagues.[15] It competes with Cardiff University in the Welsh Varsity tournament, the largest student sports event in Wales. This includes The Welsh Boat Race and the showcase rugby union varsity match which attracted 16,000 students to Swansea’s Liberty Stadium in 2015.[16][17]
Wales National Pool
The Wales National Pool, next to the International Sports Village, is a 50-metre pool built to FINA standards. The facility, which also has a 25m × 9.5m training pool and 1,200 spectator seats, is HQ of Wales Amateur Swimming Association.
The pool, one of five of British Swimming's Intensive Training Centres (ITC), was used to train swimmers for the London 2012 Olympics was built with funding from Sport Wales, Swansea Council and Swansea University.
It is home to the new Welsh Swimming National Performance Centre, a hub for elite and performance swimming in Wales including disability swimming under renowned coach Billy Pye who has trained several Paralympians in Swansea, including Ellie Simmonds and Liz Johnson. University sports science researchers provide back-up to the hub. The centre is also home to Swansea University Swimming and City of Swansea Aquatics.
360 Beach and Water Sports Centre
The £1.4 million 360 Beach and Water Sports Centre is the only university-operated centre of its kind in the UK. It is on the prom a five-minute walk from the Singleton Park Campus. The centre, opened in autumn 2012, is a not for profit company set up by Swansea University offering a range of activities and training such as kite surfing, paddle boarding, kayaking and beach volleyball. It houses a beachside bistro open to the public.[18]
Museum of Egyptian Antiquities (Egypt Centre)
Located in the Taliesin building, the Egypt Centre is open to the public. More than 4,000 items are in its collection.[19] Most were collected by the pharmacist and entrepreneur Sir Henry Wellcome. Others came from the British Museum, the Royal Edinburgh Museum, National Museums and Galleries of Wales Cardiff, the Royal Albert Museum and Art Gallery and private donors.
Staff lecture museum groups and other outside bodies on volunteering, social inclusion and how to widen community participation with university museums. School parties regularly visit for interactive events.[19]
Recent developments
The University has restructured in recent years, expanding popular areas such as History, English, Geography and Computer Science.
Recent course additions include Aerospace Engineering as well as a partnership with Cardiff University to provide a four-year accelerated graduate-entry medical degree (MB BCh) in Swansea which was launched in 2004. In 2007, Swansea University was awarded the four-year course on its own.
In July 2007 the £52 million Institute of Life Science (ILS) opened as the research arm of the university's school of medicine. The ILS is based in a six-storey building housing laboratories, business incubation suites and an IBM Blue C supercomputer. The supercomputer is used for projects including numerically-intensive analysis of viral genomes, epidemiological modelling, large clinical databases and analysis of the genetics of disease susceptibility.[20] In July 2009, an expansion of the ILS was announced with a £29m investment from Swansea University, the Welsh Assembly Government, the European Union and Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board.[21] ILS2 was completed in November 2011.[22]
Campus renovation and expansion
Recent expansion meant the 46-acre Singleton Park Campus was no longer big enough for the needs of Swansea University. In September 2015 doors opened on the £450 million science and innovation Bay Campus.
In December 2010 outline planning permission for the new campus was granted by Neath Port Talbot Borough Council. The final tranche of funding was guaranteed by the Welsh Assembly Government in March 2011. Work began in spring 2013 and the first phase will be completed by January 2016.
The Bay campus has been developed on a 65-acre beachfront site between Fabian Way and Jersey Marine beach at Crymlyn Burrows. It initially houses the College of Engineering and School of Management, a Great Hall seating 800, a library offering views over a Site of Special Scientific Interest, and student accommodation. Projects moving on to campus include the UK’s first Energy Safety Research Institute, and the Institute of Structural Materials, home to the University Technology Centre for Rolls Royce materials testing. The campus has created significant additional student places principally in Technology and Engineering, addressing a deficiency in STEM research in Wales.
The transfer of College of Engineering and the School of Management to the Bay Campus will allow the transformation of the original Singleton Park Campus. Fulton House, the Students' Union and the Faraday Building have already been renovated while the Talbot, Amy Dillwyn and Vivian buildings (including the Sports Science Motion Lab), and the Taliesin Annexe are earmarked for demolition upon completion of the new campus.
In Summer 2015, the £9.3 million Farr Institute of Health Informatics Research and the £8 million Administrative Data Research Centre Wales opened on the Singleton Park campus allowing researchers and NHS and industry staff to work together on a suite of supercomputers. Other recent projects include the £80 million Institute of Life Science, the £21.6 million Centre for NanoHealth and a state-of-the-art facility to house the Richard Burton Archive.
Organisation and administration
Governance
Swansea received its royal charter in 1920 and like many universities is governed by its constitution that is set out in its statutes and a charter. The governing body of Swansea University is its Council, which is supported by the Senate and the Court.
- The Council consists of 29 members including the Chancellor, Pro-chancellors, Vice-chancellor, Treasurer, Pro-vice-chancellors, staff and student members, city council representation and a majority of lay members. The council is responsible for all of the University's activities and has a well-developed committee structure to help discharge its powers and duties.
- The Senate is the main academic body of the university and is responsible for teaching and research. Most of its 200 members are academics but it also includes representatives of the Students' Union and the Athletic Union. The Senate is chaired by the Vice-Chancellor, who is the head of the university both academically and administratively.
- The Court consists of more than 300 members representing stakeholders from local to national institutions. in the university and stretch from local to national institutions. It meets annually to discuss the university's annual report, its financial statements and issues in higher education.
Colleges
Swansea University's academic departments are organised into seven colleges:
College of Arts and Humanities
The college offers courses in American Studies, Ancient History, Applied Linguistics, Chinese, Classics, Cymraeg/Welsh, Egyptology, English, English Literature, French, German, History, Italian, Medieval Studies, Media Studies (with Film and PR options), Politics and International Relations, Spanish-Hispanic Studies, Translation, and War and Society.
In the Research Excellence Framework 2014, the research performance of the English department was ranked 7th in the UK. More than half its research was judged to be world leading and it was first in the UK for the impact of its research.History and Modern Languages were both classed in the UK top 30 for research excellence while the Politics department came 20th for research impact. Celtic Studies came second in the UK for research excellence and research impact, according to submissions made to the Celtic Studies REF sub panel.
In spring 2006, M Wynn Thomas and Dai Smith established the Library of Wales series as an offshoot of the college which has influenced Welsh Government policy to benefit the creative industries, cultural tourism and education.[23]
School of Management
In the Research Excellence Framework 2014 the school was ranked in the top 30 for Research Excellence and in the top 20 for Research Impact. Postgraduate programmes include Business Management, Management Consultancy, Business Analytics, Banking, Accounting and Finance.
College of Law
The College has four departments: Department of Legal Studies which offers courses such as the LLB, Department of Shipping and Trade Law, Department of Professional Legal Studies which offers the Graduate Diploma in Law as well as the Legal Practice Course, and the Department of Criminology.
College of Engineering
The Engineering department is ranked 10th in the UK for the combined score in research quality across the Engineering disciplines according to REF 2014 and 94 per cent of Swansea’s engineering research is classed as world leading and internationally excellent.[24]
Materials Engineering is 1st in the UK for student satisfaction (National Student Survey) and 5th in the UK (The Guardian University Guide). Civil Engineering is ranked 9th in the UK (The Times Good University Guide) and is recognised as one of the top 200 departments in the world (QS World Subject Rankings). Sports Science is ranked 15th in the UK according to REF 2014 and 10th in UK for research impact.
The college also offers courses in Aerospace, Chemical and Biological, Electrical and Electronic, Environmental, Information, Communication and Computing Technology, Mechanical, Medical, Product Design, Engineering and Technology.[25]
College of Human and Health Science
The college offers courses in Health and Social Care, Audiology, Cardiac Physiology, Nuclear Medicine or Radiotherapy Physics, Respiratory and Sleep Sciences, Medical Sciences and Humanities, Midwifery, Nursing (Child, Adult and Mental Health), Osteopathy, Paramedic Science, Psychology (including Psychology and Criminology), Social Policy and Social Work. It also offers post-graduate programmes in Ageing, Childhood Studies, Education, Health and Social Care, Management, Psychology and Social Research Methods and a range of work-based learning and continuing professional development programmes.
The Psychology Department is ranked in the top 30 in the UK for research excellence – 100% of the research impact for psychology was ranked as world-leading. Social Work is ranked 14th in the UK, and first in Wales for research quality. Swansea is ranked ninth in the UK for allied health professions research – 100% of the research impact for nursing is of world-leading international excellent quality.
Medical School
Swansea University Medical School is ranked as the 6th best medical school in the UK. It also ranked joint first in the UK for Research Environment, according to the Research Excellence Framework 2014, and second in the UK out of 94 in the Allied Health Professions, Dentistry, Nursing and Pharmacy (Unit of Assessment 3).[26]
Established in 2004, the Medical School works closely with government, industry and the NHS, in particular Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board, over teaching, research and innovation. It is home to four research council centres: the EPSRC National Mass Spectrometry Facility, the MRC Consortium for Medical Microbial Bioinformatics, the ESRC Administrative Data Research Centre Wales and the MRC Centre for Improvement in Population Health through E-records Research (CIPHER). It also has two Institute of Life Science research centres, equipped with clinical trials, medical imaging, research and business development facilities and a Centre for NanoHealth.
College of Science
Swansea's Department of Biosciences is ranked 7th in the UK for its research excellence.
The Geography department and it is ranked joint 6th in the UK for research impact.
The Computer Science department is ranked 18th in the UK according to REF 2014 and 80 per cent of its research was judged to be internationally significant and world leading.
The College of Science offers courses in Biological Sciences, Computer Science, Geography, Mathematics and Physics.
The university also provides Welsh medium courses delivered by Academi Hywel Teifi, named after Hywel Teifi Edwards, which offers subjects across all colleges. Academi Hywel Teifi was established in 2010 in memory of Hywel Teifi Edwards, a former Professor of Welsh at the university, and father of broadcaster Huw Edwards.
Research
Swansea is a research-led university with 61 centres of research.[27] The Research Excellence Framework (2014) ranked Swansea 26th in the UK for research excellence.[24] It looked at the work of nearly 400 staff across 18 subject areas. A third of research is now classed as world-leading, 90 per cent as internationally excellent across all disciplines. Swansea University was ranked 22nd in the UK for delivering research that has genuine impact on global issues.
For every £1 million of funding awarded in the research grant by the Higher Education Funding Council for Wales, Swansea University raised another £2.5 million from other bodies.[28] It has received the Athena SWAN Bronze award for advancing women’s careers in Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics and Medicine.[29]
Swansea academics in the area of Computational Fluid Dynamics and Aerodynamic Design are part of the Bloodhound Supersonic Car land-speed world record attempt which is due to take place in Hakskeenpan, South Africa in October 2016.[30][31] The university was also a key partner in the successful Thrust SSC and-speed record attempt which currently holds the world land-speed record.
Research centres and institutes
- Centre for Nanohealth
- Research Institute for Arts and Humanities
- Institute of Life Sciences
- Research Institute for Applied Social Sciences
- Welsh Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience
- SPECIFIC
Academic profile
Rankings and reputation
QS[32] (2016/17, national) | 48 | |
---|---|---|
QS[33] (2016/17, world) | 390 | |
THE[34] (2016/17, national) | 38 | |
THE[35] (2016/17, world) | 301-350 | |
Complete[36] (2017, national) |
45 | |
The Guardian[37] (2017, national) |
39 | |
Times/Sunday Times[38] (2017, national) |
44 |
The university is listed as one of the top 400 universities in the World University Rankings.[39] Swansea is placed 45th in the 2016 Complete University Guide.
Swansea University's best departments are Medicine and Engineering, ranked 2nd and 15th respectively 2014 Research Excellence Framework. Overall, Swansea University is ranked 26th in the 2014 Research Excellence Framework.[40]
National Student Survey results show Swansea’s score for "overall satisfaction" is 87%, up from 82% last year, and higher than the Wales and UK average.[41] Swansea improved in each of the 22 questions in the survey. Swansea is now in the top third of institutions for levels of student satisfaction, and are 42nd out of 136, a jump of 38 places compared to last year and the biggest improvement in Wales.
In May 2014, Swansea was voted University of the Year based on student reviews carried out by Whatuni[42]
International partnerships
In recent years, Swansea University has established many partnerships with leading universities in Europe, North America, Africa and Asia.
Swansea University has a strategic partnership with Wuhan Union Hospital in Wuhan, China.[43] The hospital was originally founded by Swansea missionary Reverend Doctor Griffith John. As a result of this partnership, in 2015, the College of Medicine hosted the 2nd UK-China Medical Forum at Singleton Hospital. Swansea University has also established a joint medical centre at the Wuhan Union Hospital to engage in clinical collaboration.
in 2013, Swansea University established a partnership with Rice University and Texas A&M University.[44] The universities will have their European office in Swansea while Swansea University has established an office in Houston, Texas. The universities will collaborate on research as well as exchange visits by academics and students.
Additionally in 2013, Swansea University established a partnership with the Joseph Fourier University in Grenoble, France with the aim of beginning joint degree programmes, collaborative bids for European funding and student and staff exchanges particularly in the subject areas of Medicine, Computer Science and Engineering.[45][46]
In 2007, the university set up a programme along with the local NHS trust, Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board, to establish a partnership with the School of Medicine at the University of the Gambia in The Gambia. The purpose of this partnership is to improve health care outcomes as well as collaborate on clinical care, health service delivery, teaching and research. This programme also provides opportunity for local doctors and medical students to pursue a placement in either the Gambia or Swansea Bay.[47] In December 2014, this programme was awarded a United Nations Gold Star for its contribution to the improvement of Gambian health outcomes.[48]
Swansea University collaborates with Navitas with an International College – International College Wales Swansea to provide foundation, 1st year degree and Pre-Masters programmes on campus.[49][50]
Student life
Swansea University Students' Union (Welsh: Undeb Myfyrwyr Prifysgol Abertawe) is the students' union for Swansea University. The Union supports more than 140 student clubs including Afro Caribbean, Chinese, Hellenic and Indian societies, among others. The Union runs student bars and nightclubs, a travel shop offering trips around the UK and Europe, a radio station, nursery, launderette and shops. Profits are reinvested into improving the student experience, including supporting students through its Advice and Support Centre.
Services include Money Advice and Support Office, Student Counselling, a Health Centre, Dentist, Chaplains, an Academic Success Programme, Specialist Tuition and Residential Services.
Sports
The Athletics Union caters for sports from rugby and hockey to Ultimate Frisbee.
Swansea and Cardiff University compete in an annual varsity competition, known as the Welsh version of the Oxbridge event, which includes the Welsh Varsity rugby match and The Welsh Boat Race.
Xtreme Radio
Xtreme Radio is the radio station of the University, run by students. It was founded in November 1968 as Action Radio, making it the third oldest student radio station in the UK and oldest in Wales.[51] It broadcasts to various areas around campus and is available worldwide on the internet. The station plays a wide variety of music, as well as having a number of specialist programmes including talk and sports shows.
Student accommodation
Swansea University provides approximately 3400 places in University halls and aims to offer accommodation to over 98% of new Undergraduate students who request it. Accommodation is also available for all International Postgraduate students.
Swansea University maintains on-campus and off-campus halls of residence and the purpose built Hendrefoelan Student Village. Several new halls of residence were completed in 2004, 2008 and 2015.
There are also a number of university managed properties in the Uplands and Brynmill areas of the city.[52]
Bay Campus halls
The Bay Campus halls have 1462 rooms and have replaced the student accommodation which was based in the Hendrefoelan Student village.[53] The Hendrefoelan estate was 2.5 miles from the Singleton Park campus, just off the main Swansea to Gower road, set amongst mature woodland with open grassy areas. The student village is now being redeveloped through the construction of 3 and 4 bedroom family homes.[54]
Singleton Campus halls
There are nine halls that make up the campus residences providing accommodation to around 1226 students. The halls offer a combination of part and self-catered rooms and a choice of standard or ensuite study rooms. Three of these halls (Caswell, Langland and Oxwich) were completed in 2004 and the original halls (Kilvey, Preseli, Rhossili and Cefn Bryn, formerly known as Sibly, Lewis Jones, Mary Williams Annexe and Mary Williams respectively) have undergone some refurbishment in recent years. Penmaen and Horton are the newest addition to the campus residences providing 351 self-catered, ensuite study rooms. Many rooms have views over the bay or across the park.[55]
Tŷ Beck / Beck House
Tŷ Beck consists of six large Victorian town houses situated in the Uplands area of Swansea, approximately a mile from the Singleton campus. It predominantly provides rooms for postgraduates and students with families, as well as overseas exchange students.[56]
Notable alumni and academics
Academics
- Tom Cheesman, Reader in German
- Ralph A. Griffiths, Emeritus Professor of Medieval History
- Jon Latimer, Historian
- Robin Milner, Computer scientist
- David Olive Physicist
- Gyan Pande, Emeritus Professor
- Rush Rhees, Philosopher
- Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosopher; spent six months in 1941 writing and teaching at Swansea University
- Olgierd Zienkiewicz, Pioneer of computational methods for engineering
- Dewi Zephaniah Phillips, Prominent Wittgenstinian philosopher of religion
- Keith Lloyd, Dean & Head of Medical School. Chair of Welsh Psychiatric society.
- Julian Hopkin CBE, Founder of Medical School. Awarded CBE in 2011 for service to medicine.
Alumni
Science, engineering and technology
- Edward George Bowen FRS CBE, Radiophysicist
- Alan Cox (shared with University of Wales, Aberystwyth), Linux pioneer
- Jonathan Elphick, Ornithologist and Zoologist
- Lyn Evans, CBE, Project Leader, Large Hadron Collider, CERN
- Andy Hopper CBE FRS, co-founder of Acorn Computers Ltd
- Lionel Kelleway, natural history broadcaster
- Sir Terry Matthews KBE, technological entrepreneur
- Colin Pillinger CBE, Planetary Scientist
- Graham Ryder, Geologist and Lunar Scientist and posthumous winner of the Barringer Medal in 2003
- Sir John Meurig Thomas, Chemist
- Evan James Williams, Physicist
- Sir Jonathan Asbridge. former President of the Nursing and Midwifery Council
Business
- Ron Jones, Director of Tinopolis
- Paul Pindar, Chief Executive of Capita
Politics
Welsh Assembly
- Peter Black, AM for South Wales West
- Andrew Davies, former AM for Swansea West and former Minister for Finance and Public Service Delivery, Welsh Assembly Government
- Mike Hedges, AM for Swansea East
- Val Lloyd, former AM for Swansea East
Houses of Parliament
- Lord Anderson of Swansea, former MP
- Caroline Dinenage, MP for Gosport and Minister for Women and Equalities
- Nigel Evans, MP for Ribble Valley
- Hywel Francis, former MP for Aberavon
- Sylvia Heal, former MP and former Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons
- Sian James, former MP for Swansea East
- Anne Main, MP for St Albans
- Rod Richards, former MP for North West Clwyd and former AM for North Wales
- John Sewel, Baron Sewel, former Deputy Speaker of the House of Lords
- Mark Tami, MP for Alyn and Deeside
International
- Stanislaus A. James, Governor-General of Saint Lucia, 1988-1996
- Isatou Njie-Saidy, Vice President of The Gambia
- Wictor Sajeni, Deputy Minister of Primary Education in the Malawian government
Academia
- Peter Cottrell, novelist and historia
- Paul Dolan, behavioural scientist
- Paul Moorcraft, Professor in Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies at Cardiff University
- D.Z. Phillips, philosopher
- Geoffrey Thomas, President of Kellogg College, Oxford
- Dame Jean Thomas, first female Master, St Catharine's College, Cambridge
- Colin H. Williams, sociolinguist
- Sir Glanmor Williams, religious historian
Sports
- Daniel Caines, Athlete
- Jazz Carlin, British Olympic Swimmer
- Mike Hooper, Former Liverpool Goalkeeper
- Rob Howley, Wales and British Lions rugby union international
- Liz Johnson, Gold medal winner at Beijing Paralympics in swimming
- Alun Wyn Jones, Welsh rugby union international
- Simon Jones, Glamorgan and England cricketer
- John McFall, Paralympic sprinter
- Dwayne Peel, Welsh rugby union international
- Rhys Priestland, Welsh rugby union international
- James Roberts, Paralympic rower and sitting volleyball
- David Smith, Boccia
- Chris White, English international rugby referee
Arts
- Annabelle Apsion, television and film actress
- Richey Edwards and Nicky Wire of rock group Manic Street Preachers
- Jonathan Hill, Presenter Wales Tonight on ITV Wales
- Stuart Forster, travel journalist and photographer
- Jason Mohammad, television/radio presenter for BBC Wales
- Mavis Nicholson, writer and television broadcaster
- Jonny Owen, Welsh actor, Shameless and Svengali Internet Series
- Chris Roberts, author of Heavy Words Lightly Thrown: The Reason Behind the Rhyme
- Charlie Williams, author of The Mangel Trilogy
- Urien Wiliam, Welsh language novelist and Playwright
Public Transport
Southbound | ftrmetro | Northbound | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Singleton Hospital | Swansea University | Brynmill Lane |
See also
- Academic dress of the University of Wales
- GLIMPSE Project
- List of universities in Wales
- Singleton Abbey
- Technium
References
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- ↑ The Welsh Boat Race
- ↑ Welsh Varsity
- ↑ "'360' – at the centre of beach and water sports in Swansea Bay.".
- 1 2 setup
- ↑ ILS – Blue C's capabilities
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- ↑
- ↑ "Research centres and institutes".
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- ↑ "Swansea staff make the French connection | Université Joseph Fourier - Grenoble". www.ujf-grenoble.fr. Retrieved 2015-11-18.
- ↑ "Swansea University reaches agreement with French counterpart". South Wales Evening Post. Retrieved 2015-11-18.
- ↑ Links, Wales for Africa - Health. "Wales for Africa - Health Links - Swansea University and University of the Gambia and ABM". www.wales.nhs.uk. Retrieved 2015-11-19.
- ↑ "UN Gold Star Award for Swansea-Gambia Partnership". www.swansea.ac.uk. Retrieved 2015-11-19.
- ↑ Business News Western Australia
- ↑ Euro Studies - International Student Advisor
- ↑ "Xtreme Radio 1431AM". media.info. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
- ↑ Swansea University – Swansea Accommodation Services
- ↑ "Bay Campus". www.swansea.ac.uk. Retrieved 2015-11-17.
- ↑ "Former Swansea student village to be transformed into housing". walesonline. Retrieved 2015-11-17.
- ↑ Swansea University – Singleton Campus Residences
- ↑ Swansea University – Ty Beck House
External links
- Swansea University
- Swansea University Student Union (SUSU) website
- Swansea University Athletic Union (SUAU) website
Coordinates: 51°36′35.00″N 3°58′50.00″W / 51.6097222°N 3.9805556°W