University of Wales, Newport
The University of Wales, Newport (Welsh: Prifysgol Cymru, Casnewydd) was a university based in Newport, South Wales prior to the merger that formed the University of South Wales in April 2013. The university has two campuses in Newport; Caerleon on the northern outskirts of the city and a £35 million campus on the east bank of the River Usk in Newport city centre opened in 2011. In 2012 the university was ranked 111th out of 120 UK universities in the Guardian League Table for university rankings,[2] 105th out of 116 in The Complete University Guide[3] and 104th out of 116 UK universities in the Times Good University Guide.
Newport has been involved in higher education since 1841. Originally a Mechanics Institute, set up to provide further education for workers and tradesmen, the institution was based in Newport’s Town Hall on Commercial Street. Working men and women were able to attend a variety of lectures for two shilling per quarter to study subjects including The Pursuit of Attainment and Knowledge and Popular Superstition.
The institution was later formed as Gwent College of Higher Education by a merger of the Caerleon College of Education (the former Monmouthshire Training College), the Newport College of Art and Design and the Gwent College of Technology in 1975. All three former institutions had established regional and national reputations, most notably the College of Art with many of its students gaining commissions from the BBC and other major organisations in light of the College being amongst a select number of art colleges in the country awarded Diploma in Art and Design status.
The College became an affiliated institution of the University of Wales in 1992, being admitted as a University College in 1996 where there was a ceremony at which trumpeters of the Prince of Wales Division played a fanfare from the top of the University clocktower and balloons were released in the faculty colours.
In May 2004 the University of Wales College, Newport secured Privy Council Approval to use the title University of Wales, Newport, as a full constituent of the federal University.
As of 1 August 2011, the University has a new academic structure. There are now two faculties which each contain three schools each:
The Faculty of Arts and Business
School of Design, Engineering, Fashion and Technology
School of Film, Photography and Digital Media
Newport Business School
The Faculty of Education and Social Sciences
School of Education
School of Humanities and Lifelong Learning
School of Sport, Health and Applied Social Sciences
The Centre for Community and Lifelong Learning (CCLL) will continue to be based in Tredegar and focus on the University’s work to widen participation within the Heads of the Valleys and the wider Gwent region. CCLL is also a key deliverer of the UHOVI (Universities, Heads of the Valleys Institute) project in partnership with the University of Glamorgan and Further Education Colleges