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All Universities | Daily Mail Online

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All Universities | Daily Mail Online

If you want a successful career in business, where better to start than getting a degree in business studies? Right? Well, that depends.

The Daily Mail University Guide shows huge variation in performance between universities offering business studies degrees, which is one of the most popular undergraduate courses every year, with 37,000 enrolling in 2022-23, plus tens of thousands more studying related subjects, such as management.

Around 94% of graduates from the renowned Henley Business School at the University of Reading and the University of Derby’s business school get high-skilled jobs, helping the universities to rank first and second respectively in our business studies ranking. Meanwhile, only 38.1% of business studies graduates at Cumbria are in high-skilled work 15 months after leaving, contributing to Cumbria’s ranking of 80th out of 84 universities for this subject.

Variation in satisfaction with teaching quality in business studies is almost as wide-ranging, from 96.1% at Buckingham (ranked 21st= for business studies overall) to 57.5% at Goldsmiths, University of London (ranked bottom at 84th).

We rank business degrees based on student satisfaction with teaching quality, support and the wider student experience, alongside the proportions of students getting high-skilled jobs and feeling their careers are on track.

1. University of Reading

Reading is the place to go for all matters green. Already one of the leading centres for meteorology and research into climate change, the university practises what it preaches and is top of the People & Planet rankings for environmental and ethical performance. It has reduced carbon emissions by more than 60% against the baseline and aims to achieve net zero in the next six years. Even the food students eat on campus is made up of sustainable choices and healthy ingredients under the university’s Clever Cuisine scheme. Some of that food is locally sourced from the 2,000 acres of farmland owned by the university, which has an outstanding reputation in agriculture and animal sciences. There were a record number of admissions last September. Just under 5,000 enrolled and applications are close to record levels, too. The university is based largely on the 320-acre Whiteknights campus, which has a lake, woodlands and formal gardens. The London Road and Greenlands campuses are smaller, the latter housing the excellent Henley Business School on the banks of the Thames. A new campus in Malaysia will increasingly offer the option for UK students to study abroad. 

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Derby is investing heavily in its estate and reshaping its course portfolio to keep the institution at the academic cutting-edge – and to keep its graduates in demand with employers. A new business school will be open for next September’s intake – a key enhancement for a university that works closely with business and industry. Derby ranks second in our subject tables for business studies. More than 60 new courses and nine new degree apprenticeships will diversify Derby’s appeal, too. They include zeitgeisty degrees such as artificial intelligence, as well as highly relevant twin-subject courses like English and publishing, psychology and sport studies, and popular music and business management. The university has a strong regional identity, recruiting three-quarters of its students from the East and West Midlands. A mid-sized university of around 20,000 students, it is based on four sites in Derby and headquartered at Kedleston Road, with a healthcare outpost in Chesterfield. It provides a significant number of graduates to the public sector (via nursing, teaching and social work especially). This helped its strong performance in our jobs ranking, which is based on the proportion of graduates going into high-skilled jobs within 15 months of leaving. 

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Durham is the darling of the independent school sector, taking comfortably the highest proportion of privately educated students of any British university. But it is working hard to dispel its elitist image, offering some of the most generous bursaries and scholarships, and steadily widening participation. ‘The Durham difference’ is not just an old marketing handle for the university, but a reflection of its unique constitution. It is collegiate like Oxford and Cambridge, but the 16 undergraduate colleges are essentially social groupings rather than academic ones. Colleges are split between the Bailey (the older ones in the streets around the cathedral and castle) and the Hill (just to the south of the city centre, where the newer colleges have sprouted up). Durham Castle itself is home to University College, the oldest college, which is the most popular with applicants. This is closely followed by Collingwood, a Hill college that has benefited from significant philanthropic investment in its social and sports facilities. Durham’s all-round academic strengths span the arts, sciences and social sciences. 

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Being named Higher Education Institution of the Year in 2023 by the National Education Opportunities Network for its work in widening access to university confounds the traditional green wellies and VW Golf GTi image of Exeter students in popular culture. In fact, almost one in four students entered the university last September holding a contextual offer, which undercuts standard offers by two or three A-level grades in recognition of disadvantage. Places on some of the university’s most popular programmes are ring-fenced for students who meet its widening participation criteria. There are also 3,000 degree apprentices, who split their time between paid work and study, more than at any other Russell Group university. Privately educated students make up just under 30% of the intake, and Exeter has undoubtedly attracted a chunk of those students who have been displaced by the recent change in admissions policies at Oxbridge. The main Streatham campus in Exeter – one of the UK’s most beautiful – is home to the majority of students. There are smaller outposts at nearby St Luke’s, which is home to its medical school, and at Penryn in Cornwall, on a campus shared with Falmouth University. 

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Shortlisted for our University of the Year title, Warwick turns out graduates who are among the most sought-after; the university sits sixth in this year’s High Fliers ranking of universities targeted by the largest number of leading graduate employers, ahead of both Oxford and Cambridge. The university celebrates its 60th anniversary next year with applications running at record levels – 58% higher than a decade ago – and admissions are at a level beaten only during the pandemic years of inflated grades. The university recruits nationally and globally, and it is one of the institutions that mops up students who miss out on Oxbridge. The spacious campus university sits not in Warwick, but on the outskirts of Coventry. Academic, sporting, social and residential facilities are all close to hand. The Warwick Arts Centre, which has five spaces for theatre and music, three cinemas and a gallery, is one of the biggest outside London. Sporting facilities are excellent, too, and Warwick is a serious player in inter-university competitions. Academic strength spans the arts, humanities and languages, as well as the social sciences, science and engineering. The recent triple gold award from the Teaching Excellence Framework for overall rating, student experience and student outcomes speaks to that broad-based brilliance.

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There are brains to go with the brawn at Loughborough, our Sports University of the Year. Famed for its sporting prowess, the university is also one of the country’s academic powerhouses, exemplified by the recent success of alumnus Charlie Dobson, the Team GB athlete who took silver in the 400m at the European Athletics Championships in Rome in June. He graduated with a first class degree in aeronautical engineering in 2023. Loughborough-connected Olympians went on to achieve 16 medals in Paris this summer (four gold, four silver and eight bronze) which would have ranked the university 16th in the global medal table, ahead of countries like Sweden, Kenya and Ireland. Loughborough has the best university sports facilities this side of the Atlantic. They’re so good that several sports – athletics, swimming, triathlon, cricket, weightlifting and netball – have their national headquarters onsite. Its students have won the inter-university British Universities and Colleges Sport (Bucs) title for 43 consecutive years. But the university also sits in or just outside the top 10 in all the major domestic rankings for academia, too. It tops the QS world ranking for sports-related subjects, and its design school is one of the best in the UK. For many years, Loughborough has aced the National Student Survey, the results confirming that its students love life on its 523-acre campus. When they leave, they are hugely in demand, earning some of the highest graduate salaries anywhere.

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Northumbria has enjoyed a breakthrough few years, taking on the old-guard universities at their own game. It has established serious research credentials (it was our Research University of the Year in our last edition); a strong employment track record, with around three quarters of graduates landing high-skilled jobs; and an excellent pedigree for social inclusion, with 36% of its intake last year recruited from postcodes among the 40% that send the fewest into higher education. It received a gold for student outcomes in the most recent Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF), alongside slightly disappointing silver ratings for student experience and the overall TEF assessment. It remains a popular choice in its home region, with 57% of the new intake of undergraduates coming from the North East in 2023, and 19% coming from Yorkshire. The university is a key player in the regional economy, providing more graduates into skilled jobs in the region than any other university, including its two local Russell Group rivals, Newcastle and Durham. There are strong ties with local employers in both the public sector (notably the NHS) and private sector (Proctor & Gamble, Nissan), as well as with business and industry more generally. 

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Britain’s most northerly university is among the most prestigious. Founded as King’s College in 1495, it mixes historic, creeper-clad buildings at the heart of the old city with striking, modern facilities elsewhere. Students are based on one of two central campuses – the modern Foresterhill for life sciences and medicine, and Old Aberdeen for arts, social sciences and physical sciences. Aberdeen’s excellent air and rail connections ensure a strong national and international student presence, with more than 130 nationalities represented, despite the university’s relative remoteness. Applications have been falling in recent times, however, with 16,525 seeking places through Ucas for admission last September – the lowest number in the past decade and 10% down on the year before. There are more than 400 degree options, including courses that serve the Scottish economy, such as mechanical engineering with oil and gas studies, and more unusual combinations, such as law with options in music. One in 10 students are eligible for contextual reduced grades offers under widening access criteria.

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Strathclyde, winner of our Scottish University of the Year award last year and runner-up to Imperial College London for the UK title, is an outstanding university with a stellar record for graduate employment, particularly in areas where there is a national shortage of able graduates. It is an engineering powerhouse and one of the UK’s leading technological universities. It is also socially progressive, admitting by both headcount and proportion more students from the 20% of Scottish postcodes considered to be the most deprived than at any other highly selective university in Scotland. More than 225 years after its establishment, it remains the ‘place of useful learning’ envisaged by its posthumous founder, John Anderson. Across all four faculties – engineering, humanities and social sciences, science and the Strathclyde Business School – industry and business routinely have input on course structure and programme delivery, with many of those companies offering placements to students. The university’s commitment to preparing students for the world of work extends to embracing apprenticeships. A total of 650 learners are engaged in six graduate apprenticeship programmes in Scotland, working with 200 employers, and a further 100 learners are enrolled on five degree apprenticeships, working with 46 employers based in England.

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Surrey has upped its game in the past decade to become one of the leading 1960s universities. It now has the rare distinction of having both a veterinary school – opened in 2015, and one of only 11 in the country – and a new medical school. These jewels follow in the footsteps of other, older gems such as the Surrey Space Centre, which was founded in 1979. It has since become a leading global centre of excellence for space engineering and one of the pioneers of small satellite technology. The university is located on two campuses – Stag Hill and Manor Park – a short distance from the centre of Guildford. Despite its leafy, stockbroker-belt location, the university offers the cheapest student accommodation in the country, with more than 200 rooms at just £3,002 for a 38-week let. This is of huge benefit to a surprisingly diverse student population; four in 10 of last year’s intake are the first in their immediate family to go to university. An outstanding graduate jobs record, which sees around 82% of students land high-skilled jobs on well-above-average salaries, is fostered by a flourishing placement programme with more than 2,300 national and international partners.

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Nottingham is a member of the prestigious Russell Group, has a highly respected medical school and strength right across the academic disciplines, and has built a formidable name for itself on university sports pitches. It recruits from across the UK and competition for places is fierce. In light of the university’s stiff entry requirements, the student population is notably mixed, with good representation from ethnic minorities (around one third of last year’s intake) and non-selective state schools (around two thirds). Centred on University Park, a 300-acre green lung at the heart of Nottingham, it has impressive facilities in a mixture of period and modern buildings. A short distance away, the Jubilee campus is home to the business school, the schools of education and computer science, and the Nottingham Innovation Park. Following the murder last year of Barney Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar, two first-year students who were stabbed while on their way home from an end-of-term party, work was completed earlier this year on a memorial woodland walk on the University Park campus to commemorate all students who have lost their lives.

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City St George’s, University of London officially came into being on August 1, bringing together two previously separate members of the University of London federation – City and St George’s. The now-united university is our University of the Year for Graduate Jobs and is runner-up for the overall University of the Year award. It has asked to be listed separately in this edition of our guide, however, as City and St George’s will continue to handle admissions separately for the upcoming September 2025 recruitment cycle. It is in the field of healthcare that the two institutions have considerable shared and complementary experience, but the provision that made the now former City University distinctive will remain in the merged organisation. City has long positioned itself as the university of business, practice and the professions – a marketing handle based around its 200 career-focused degree options, from business management and law to media and communications. Four in five students progress into highly skilled jobs, putting City among the top performers. The merger with St George’s comes as City surfs a wave of popularity, with applications last year topping 30,000 for the first time. 

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13 (joint). Aston University

Aston, which has been a university since 1966, achieves the rare feat of being socially inclusive in its intake, while having a high completion rate and achieving well in the graduate jobs market. It is our University of the Year for Student Success in recognition of this. Making its debut this year after opting out of our inaugural guide last year, it performs strongly in our ranking, which is the only one to measure social inclusion alongside teaching, research and graduate outcomes. Last year it secured triple gold in the Teaching Excellence Framework covering student experience, graduate outcomes and an overall rating, and a near 14% increase in enrolments took recruitment to a new high. More than half the students are the first in their immediate family to go to university and 82% are from ethnic minorities. After Aston secured second place in a recent social mobility ranking of English universities, Professor Aleks Subic, Aston’s vice-chancellor, said: ‘We have proved that it is possible to be an inclusive university that delivers impressive graduate outcomes, regardless of a student’s starting point or social capital.’ It’s hard to disagree.

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13 (joint). University of Sussex

The University of Sussex was ranked among the top UK universities for sustainability in the 2025 QS World University Rankings. Occupying a site that borders the South Downs National Park, the university has committed to giving more than 42% of the land on the Sir Basil Spence-designed campus to nature by 2027. This stuff matters to Sussex’s students. Applications are running high at upwards of 20,000 per year, and admissions have been similarly buoyant, bar last year’s near-1,000 dip. Sussex recruits three-quarters of its students from London and the South East, with around 85% educated in non-selective state schools. The university maintained its overall silver award in last year’s Teaching Excellence Framework, although it will have been disappointed by the bronze for student experience. It is embedding employability into the curriculum in a bid to get more students into high-skilled jobs – currently one of the poorer areas of performance in our ranking. The Career Lab programme offers them internships, mentoring, insight visits to employers and the opportunity to become a consultant to a business or community organisation.

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15. Teesside University

Teesside, which was shortlisted for our University of the Year title last year, wipes out digital poverty on campus at a stroke with its iPads-for-all policy. In perhaps the most socially progressive initiative at any higher-education institution, Teesside’s Advance scheme provides an iPad loaded with Office 365, plus £100 annual credit to spend on online learning resources. It allows the university to standardise digital elements of course delivery and integrate its immersive and simulated course components with the software it knows all students have access to. Teesside is aware such generosity is not misplaced; it has one of the most socially diverse student intakes in the country. A decade or more of investment has transformed the campus, just off Middlesbrough town centre, into a pedestrianised precinct of landmark buildings. Its courses have employability elements embedded into them and courses are designed with considerable input from business. This translates into a strong graduate employment track record and good earnings. Such success also feeds into the latest Teaching Excellence Framework, as Teesside was one of a small minority of institutions to win golds for its overall rating, student experience and student outcomes. 

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16. University of Edinburgh

Edinburgh is one of the destinations in British higher education, with only the University of Manchester attracting more applications. You will need sharp elbows to win a place, with every seat in the lecture theatre coveted by more than 10 prospective students. Its appeal is global, with international students making up one third of undergraduate admissions last year. The combination of a cosmopolitan student body, a stylish city playground and a reputation for teaching and research excellence is a winning formula. Only the consistently poor results in the annual National Student Survey stop the university from ranking in our UK top 10. International rankings, such as the 2025 edition from QS, place Edinburgh 27th in the world (two places higher than we do) on pretty much academic measures alone. And it is not hard to see why. Academics at Edinburgh are constantly rolling back the boundaries of knowledge. Remember Dolly the Sheep? Think also the supercomputer Archer2, which lives here. The university was identified as the preferred location for the UK’s first next-generation exascale supercomputer, which would have been one of just a handful in the world and 50 times faster than any of our existing machines, but the project was cancelled by the new government in Westminster due to lack of cash.

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17 (joint). University of Glasgow

Glasgow is the most Scottish of the big three universities in Scotland, with four in every five UK students recruited from north of the border, much more than at Edinburgh and St Andrews. But just under one quarter of last year’s intake were international students, drawn by Glasgow’s global excellence as a research-intensive Russell Group university with a history going back nearly 600 years. While some of the university’s civic architecture betrays its long history, it is getting more modern by the year thanks to a £1bn decade-long investment programme. This month’s intake of students should be the first to use the new Clarice Pears Building, which brings the School of Health & Wellbeing together on one site. The main Gilmorehill campus is in Glasgow’s fashionable West End, but there is a further campus at Garscube, about four miles away, which is home to outdoor sports facilities, veterinary medicine students and the catered Wolfson Hall student accommodation. In Dumfries, the university teaches social and environmental sustainability, as well as its primary education with teaching qualification.

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17 (joint). University of Sheffield

Shortlisted for our University of the Year award this year and once again the top-ranked university in northern England, Sheffield has seen record numbers of applications for four successive years. Further evidence of its calibre and popularity was provided by this year’s Whatuni Student Choice Awards, which saw it crowned University of the Year and voted best for student life by its own students. It was named as our University of the Year for Student Experience this time last year, based on its excellent results in the National Student Survey. A growing contextual offers scheme cuts two or three grades from the standard offer for most courses for students from under-represented groups, bringing the university within reach for a more diverse student population than you find at most other Russell Group universities. The university is a melting pot, recruiting from across the UK, and one in five undergraduates are recruited from overseas. Students are attracted not just by the university’s fine reputation and facilities; they also love the city and the surrounding area, and many choose to settle here after graduating. Sheffield has all-round academic strength, but its engineering, materials science and medicine courses are especially highly regarded. Students can draw on the university’s careers and employability support services for as long as they need after graduating. 

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19 (joint). Newcastle University

Newcastle is one of the more popular destinations on the higher education map. The university is a founding member of the Russell Group of research-intensive universities able to attract the most academically gifted students. The university is very popular with the privately educated, who make up more than one in five entrants, and it recruits strongly from across the UK. Students from the North East made up just 22.6% of last year’s intake – not so far ahead of the 17.1% who came from London and the South East. The Royal Victoria Infirmary is home to one of the UK’s leading medical schools with outstanding modern facilities. The university’s Centre for Ageing and Inequalities offers world-class expertise in an area of intense national and global focus as society wrestles with the consequences of increasing longevity. Its position in our ranking – and others like it – is depressed by consistently low scores in the National Student Survey. Even though the university’s graduates are among the best paid, with three in four ending up in high-skilled jobs, they score their experience modestly. And last year’s Teaching Excellence Framework outcomes confirmed that view, awarding student experience a bronze, when student outcomes and the university’s overall rating earned silver. 

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19 (joint). University of Birmingham

Birmingham is one of the biggest and most popular universities in the country. That doesn’t make it impersonal, however. Unlike some other universities on this scale, Birmingham seeks to make offer holders feel part of the university from the outset. This year, to boost the number of firm acceptances of places, it reduced its asking rate across all subjects by one A-level grade to offer-holders. The strategy seems to be working, with last year’s 7,040 admissions through Ucas beaten only in the grade-inflated pandemic years. Competition to get an offer is stiff, though, with eight applications for every place. One of the original redbrick universities – so called because of the materials used in the principal buildings which date from the early 20th century- the university is located in the affluent suburb of Edgbaston, a seven-minute train ride from the city centre. The campus has been heavily invested in recently, too. It is a member of the Russell Group of leading, research-intensive universities, and sits behind only Manchester and Nottingham in the latest High Fliers research into the universities most targeted by top employers.

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21 (joint). Oxford Brookes University

Oxford Brookes University (OBU) has one of the best graduate employment records of any modern university, with around three quarters landing highly skilled jobs. It was the first UK university to introduce the Grade Point Average (GPA) system alongside the standard UK degree classifications. The GPA has international currency and allows easy comparison between students’ attainment at OBU and other universities worldwide. The maximum score of 4.0 is based on all three years of studying, and not just on assessments in year two and three, as is the norm in the UK. OBU is different also in its student profile. It is among the 40 universities that recruit the fewest first-generation students (those whose parents did not go to university) and has the same proportion of students recruited from independent schools (around one in five) as plenty of highly selective Russell Group universities. Many of the 12,500 undergraduates are based on OBU’s central Oxford campus in Headington. There are two outlying campuses – Harcourt Hill, home to teacher trainees, and Wheatley, which is due to close, with those studying under the faculty of technology, design and environment transferring to new premises in Headington. There is also a campus for nurses in Swindon.

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21 (joint). University of Buckingham

Buckingham is the only independent university in this guide and it pioneered two-year degrees long ago as a more efficient way of delivering higher education. The cost of a two-year degree here is now the same as a three-year course in the state sector, but the saving of a year of living costs still makes going private a cheaper option. The quid pro quo is that students have to work harder – the academic year is divided into four terms with much shorter breaks between them. The numbers of applications and admissions at the university, which recently marked 40 years of Royal Charter status, have never been higher. However, it remains one of the smallest universities in this guide, with around 3,500 students. Fewer than half of these are undergraduates. Around 50% of the students come from overseas, giving the campus a cosmopolitan feel, but numbers of UK students are increasing. All courses will soon be taught in Buckingham, following the decision to close the university’s costly campus for medicine and health sciences students in Crewe, Cheshire by 2026. 

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23. University of Salford

Salford is in a good place, with the past two years having seen record applications and admissions. The university has comfortably the most diverse student population among the three universities that effectively share a huge student quarter just off Manchester city centre, with high numbers of ethnic minority and mature students. This diversity is reflected in the practical help offered to students, which includes a universal contribution of £450 towards course materials and books over a three-year degree (and as much as £1,500 for some first-generation students), commuter bursaries and parental bursaries to help with childcare costs. A university since 1967, Salford has a history going back more than 100 years before that when it started life as a mechanics’ institute. It continues to serve industry today, building expertise in robotics, automation systems, and digital and smart living. The university has a strong presence in nursing and healthcare, with the new Clinic Building about to add considerably to the facilities on tap. Salford has also gained a strong reputation in media and television, benefiting from its proximity to MediaCity, which is home to BBC and ITV studios as well as numerous independent production companies.

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24 (joint). Ulster University

Ulster celebrates 40 years as a university this year, forging in that time a strong reputation for widening access to higher education. It defines its commitment to social mobility as working ‘to ensure that personal backgrounds do not determine future prospects’. A shortlisting for our University of the Year award last year recognised this work and the institution’s role in regenerating the multiple towns and cities in which it is based. There are three campuses in Belfast, Coleraine and Londonderry, with the university’s sports village in Jordanstown, seven miles outside Belfast. All have been the subject of heavy investment recently, and more improvements are in the pipeline. The university serves a predominantly Northern Irish student population, who make up 99% of the British intake. Just under half of them are the first in their immediate family to go to university. Recent developments such as Ulster’s hugely expanded presence in Belfast – where it has a campus in the Cathedral Quarter – have helped push applications to a level topped just once before, with almost 34,000 applications for a place last year. Many undergraduate courses have transferred to Belfast from Jordanstown, where planning permission has been granted for a £10m sports facility.

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24 (joint). University of Liverpool

Liverpool aims to be a world top 100 university in time for its 150th anniversary in 2031. It will achieve this, in part at least, by improving levels of student satisfaction, securing even better graduate outcomes, increasing research income and hitting sustainability targets. It is a member of the Russell Group of research-intensive universities and has better levels of social diversity on campus than many others in the group. It occupies a city centre site and, with Liverpool John Moores University next door, a large district of central Liverpool is effectively a glorified university precinct. The popular medical school within the Royal Liverpool University Hospital borders one side of this district. Dentistry, veterinary medicine, nursing, architecture and engineering are among the subject areas for which the university is best known. Applications hit a record for the second successive year in 2023 and the total of 6,500 admissions has been topped only once. The university recruits across the UK, with London, the South East, West Midlands and Yorkshire each contributing between 500 and 600 undergraduates. Just over one third of the intake comes from the North West. 

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26. University of Leeds

Despite recent poor results in the National Student Survey, Leeds remains one of the most popular universities in the country, fielding nearly 70,000 applications last year. It occupies a 100-acre campus a short walk from the city centre. The university’s green spaces and modern buildings are interwoven with Victorian grandeur and 1960s brutalism, giving the campus a definite charm. Leeds has shifted back to a focus on face-to-face learning post-pandemic, and its careers service has a great record of supporting students from under-represented backgrounds. Performance is strong when it comes to students achieving good degree classifications and alumni going on to secure high-skilled jobs, all while the university consciously focuses on its renowned Access to Leeds initiative to widen participation. Of last year’s intake, around 25% of students received a contextual offer – many courtesy of this scheme. Leeds has a range of both catered and non-catered rooms available and guarantees an offer of accommodation to all first-year students.

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27. St Mary’s University, Twickenham

St Mary’s – alma mater of Sir Mo Farah – is used to topping the podium, so getting a gold for student experience in the latest outcomes under the Teaching Excellence Framework will not have induced a bout of vertigo. The university also earned two silvers for its overall rating and student outcomes, but it is the student experience that makes the institution stand out. Located on a leafy campus in the affluent south-west London suburb of Twickenham, it is unlike any other university in the capital, with just 6,000 students overall and fewer than 4,000 undergraduates. In a city dominated by large – occasionally impersonal – universities, St Mary’s offers an individual experience, reflected in its consistently excellent scores in the National Student Survey. It has been a university for only the past decade but will celebrate its 175th anniversary in 2025. Originally a Catholic teacher training college, it offers a much broader portfolio of courses now, although teacher training remains a key activity. Sport is important, too. Nineteen athletes based at the university’s Endurance Performance Centre were selected to compete at the UK Athletics Championships in June. 

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28. Nottingham Trent University

Nottingham Trent University (NTU) is among the biggest and most successful modern universities, with its high ranking attracting a well-qualified student population. It works hard to remain accessible, however, and was the first university to sign the Social Mobility Pledge, established in 2018 by the former education secretary, Justine Greening, to promote equality of opportunity. No university has recruited more students than NTU over the past five years, each year welcoming more than 10,000 new undergraduates. Ethnic minority students make up around one third of the cohort, with black students, for whom NTU runs a Black Leadership Programme, the largest minority grouping. A campus investment programme worth £250m over the next five years will add new learning facilities and make further strides in increasing the institution’s sustainability. There are several Nottingham campuses – City campus is home to six academic schools and the new Nottingham School of Art and Design; Clifton campus houses engineering, healthcare and sport students; Confetti Nottingham is home to more than 2,000 creative technologies students; and the outlying Brackenhurst campus is a 500-acre countryside site for animal, rural and environmental sciences and home to NTU’s veterinary nursing centre. There are further sites in London and Mansfield.

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29. University of Hertfordshire

The University of Hertfordshire is centred around two campuses a 20-minute walk apart in Hatfield – the original College Lane campus and the newer de Havilland campus, built on the site of the town’s famous former aircraft factory. Hertfordshire’s location just 20 miles from the centre of London makes it an appealing option for students who want the bright lights of the capital nearby without having to pay its extortionate rents. Four in five students come from London and the counties immediately to the north and north-east of the capital. It is one of the higher-ranked modern universities, scoring consistently well for student satisfaction. It has a diverse student body, too – Asian and black students make up around half of the domestic intake, as do students who are the first in their immediate family to go to university. The university works closely with business and industry, both in the design of its courses and the provision of work experience. Its observatory, at its Bayfordbury campus, houses one of the largest telescopes available to students in the UK, and sports facilities are excellent, too.

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30 (joint). University of Dundee

Dundee is one of the powerhouses of Scottish higher education and our Scottish University of the Year. It is now one of three Scottish universities to be ranked in our UK top 10. The university has a formidable reputation in medicine, biomedicine and the life sciences and plays a key role in the economy of its home city and turns out high-calibre graduates ready to make an impact. It is estimated that the university supports one in 12 jobs in the wider city. Occupying a central campus in Dundee, the university has further outposts at Ninewells Hospital (the medical school) and Kirkcaldy, 30 miles away in Fife, which is home to some of its nursing and midwifery provision. Scores in this year’s National Student Survey have recovered after a few lean years, with students scoring teaching quality particularly highly. However, applications fell by more than 10% for admission in September 2023. Against this background, the university created an education academy last year to put delivering an outstanding education and student experience front and centre. Among its objectives are carrying out a review of student services, further embedding employability and enterprise in degree programmes, and developing Dundee’s digital campus.

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30 (joint). University of Manchester

The popularity of the University of Manchester continues to grow with each passing year. Applications hit a new record (93,450) for admission in September 2023 and are now running 44% higher than they were just six years ago. With nearly 10,000 undergraduates gaining places each year, and more than 45,000 students overall, this is higher education on a vast scale. The recent introduction of 12 student support hubs is an attempt to put a human face on the academic machine. ‘Our students asked us to… provide clearer, consolidated and more consistent student support services delivered by trained specialists,’ the university told us. This might go some way towards addressing the consistently poor student satisfaction scores registered in the National Student Survey. Those scores have had no impact on the university’s popularity with applicants, however. They focus more on the formidable academic reputation of this Russell Group university and the lure of the city of Manchester itself, famed for its nightlife, cultural attractions and the sheer volume of students. The campuses of the University of Manchester, Manchester Metropolitan University and the University of Salford adjoin one other, creating a central student district of more than 100,000 students. 

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32. Buckinghamshire New University

Buckinghamshire New University (BNU) won our University of the Year for Student Support in our last edition, in recognition of the exceptional efforts it makes to provide a positive experience for its students. It has minimised many of the hidden costs of university and provided innovative support structures. In turn, students reward it with high scores for teaching quality, support and experience in the National Student Survey. Record numbers of applications and admissions in 2023 were roughly double their pre-pandemic levels. Headquartered in High Wycombe, the university has further outposts for healthcare courses in Uxbridge, and work-related programmes in Aylesbury. For students with stars in their eyes, it also runs 15 courses from Pinewood Studios, including film production, animation and visual effects. More than half of students are the first in their immediate family to go to university, and it also has the second-highest proportion of students in any English university doing degree and higher-level apprenticeships, accounting for 16% of all learners. It has links with major employers, including Sky, British Airways, Transport for London and multiple NHS trusts and local authorities, too. 

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33. Leeds Beckett University

In key areas of provision, Leeds Beckett offers students outstanding new facilities. Education, law, sport, nursing and health sciences have all seen significant recent investment. Students here are a happy bunch, returning scores in the National Student Survey that are considerably better than its neighbour, the University of Leeds. Student experience, which earned a silver, was the highest-rated aspect in the latest results of the Teaching Excellence Framework. However, the university earned disappointing bronze awards for both its overall rating and for student outcomes. As well as its main city centre campus, Leeds Beckett has a second site in Headingley, which is home to teacher training and sport – two of the areas for which Leeds Beckett is best known. Around half the intake are recruited locally from Yorkshire and the Humber, with 45% coming from homes where parents or carers did not go to university. Leeds Beckett works hard to admit a high proportion of students from backgrounds traditionally under-represented on campus, with its access and widening participation team working with around 10,000 young people in more than 150 schools and colleges each year.

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34. University of East Anglia

The University of East Anglia (UEA) is one of the leading lights among the 1960s generation of universities, with a national and international reputation for everything from creative writing to climate change degrees. It has just celebrated its 60th birthday under something of a cloud, labouring under a £74m deficit to July 2022. However, a new year of accounts shows a small surplus after a big cut in staff costs, and the university is building for the future with this year’s launch of 42 courses with a placement year, year abroad or foundation year added to broaden their appeal, with another 33 programmes rostered for September 2025. The university recruits almost 90% of its socially mixed student population from East Anglia, London and the South East to its parkland campus on the outskirts of Norwich. It’s spacious and dotted with listed buildings, including the iconic Lasdun Wall, and is also home to the Norman Foster- designed Sainsbury Centre, which houses one of the best art collections in the country. UEA’s Sportspark provides outstanding facilities for athletes of all abilities.

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35. Sheffield Hallam University

Sheffield Hallam University (SHU) offers no less than three named support advisers to its students when they enrol – a student support adviser to provide personal help, an academic adviser to assist them with their studies, and an employability adviser for planning the start of their career. The aim is to keep all students on track with their studies and then launch them successfully into their first jobs. It works, too, with the university having one of the strongest graduate employment records of any modern university. Rooted firmly in its community, it trains more than a quarter of the new teachers in Yorkshire annually. Earlier this year, its Institute of Education became the first university to be rated outstanding by Ofsted for its teacher training across four age groups: early years, primary, secondary and post-16. It is one of the biggest suppliers of healthcare graduates in the country, and its business school is the largest in the UK, with some 7,000 students. SHU’s marketing handle – Knowledge Applied – succinctly captures its ethos and approach to higher education. A Civic University Agreement enshrines its commitment to contribute to the region’s economy and jobs, education and skills, health and wellbeing, and community and regeneration. 

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36. University of Kent

Formed in the 1960s, the University of Kent borrowed its collegiate structure from an older generation of universities. Students join one of eight colleges, the majority named after people who pushed back the boundaries of knowledge – Sir Charles Darwin, Alan Turing, Lord Rutherford to name three. The colleges form the social heart of the student experience, breaking down this mid-sized university of around 15,000 undergraduates into bite-sized chunks. Seven of the colleges are on the university’s original campus, a green 300-acre site in the historic city of Canterbury, with the eighth, Medway College, on Kent’s Medway campus, shared with Canterbury Christ Church and Greenwich universities, which takes in the historic Royal Naval dockyards in Chatham. Applications are down by nearly a third from their peak in 2016, but the university achieves admirable diversity on campus. Black students made up almost one quarter of the undergraduate intake last year, with more than 40% overall drawn from ethnic minorities. Partnerships with local schools and colleges help maintain high numbers of students drawn from under-represented groups.

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37. Edge Hill University

The latest piece of the jigsaw that has seen the creation of an ultra-modern, spacious, attractive campus at Edge Hill University (EHU) in Lancashire falls into place this month with the opening of a swathe of new facilities. But EHU has been making waves for some time now. It is one of eight modern universities – those gaining their university title since 1992 – to have its own medical school, which is the cherry on the cake of an extensive and respected suite of healthcare courses. It has one of the strongest records of widening access to higher education and is not afraid to stand out from the crowd by keeping prices low on campus for all rather than offering eye-catching bursaries to help the most impoverished few. The former Times Higher Education University of the Year began life as a teacher-training college. It is the biggest supplier of newly-qualified teachers in the region today and was the first provider in England to be rated outstanding by Ofsted across all three age ranges (primary, secondary and further education) under the new tougher assessments. It also supplies a large number of graduates to other areas of the public sector, notably health and social care and policing.

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38. University of Stirling

The unalloyed beauty of Stirling’s loch-side campus takes some beating. But don’t just take our word for it. The International Student Barometer recently judged Stirling to have the best campus environment in the UK, and third best in the world. What gets everyone so excited? A 330-acre campus on the edge of Stirling, built around Airthrey Loch, with the Ochil Hills piled up behind it and a castle in the grounds. Opened in the 1967, some of the original buildings are now Category A-listed, such is their architectural merit. The university is well aware that the campus is a key recruitment asset and is investing in it on a rolling basis. More than 85% of the 9,000 undergraduates come from Scotland, but the university recruits pretty evenly from across the rest of the UK. Students are also drawn to the courses, which retain a broad-based approach across the first two years of study and often offer a choice of September or January start dates. Stirling’s status as Scotland’s University for Sporting Excellence means its facilities are outstanding. For the culture vultures there is the Macrobert Arts Centre, with its theatre, cinema and exhibition space.

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39 (joint). Liverpool John Moores University

Applications and admissions both fell by more than 10 per cent last year, but with around 22,500 undergraduates Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU) remains one of the country’s bigger institutions. It recruits strongly from the North West – and from Merseyside in particular – with students from the region making up more than 3,500 of the 6,300 UK admissions in September 2023. It is also one of the most popular English universities with students from Northern Ireland, for whom there is an extended, customised induction programme. The university took its name from one of Liverpool’s leading businessmen and philanthropists, Sir John Moores, when it officially became a university in 1992, but it has a history stretching back more than 200 years. There are two campuses in the city centre: Mount Pleasant, which is home to the faculties of business and law, and arts, professional and social studies, and City where health, science, and engineering and technology students are based. There is a choice of more than 200 undergraduate degrees. Copperas Hill, home to the student life and sports building sits between the two campuses. LJMU is a big supplier of graduates to the public sector, especially teachers and nurses, and offers courses with plenty of industry-informed, hands-on learning. The university has one of the more diverse student populations, and a significant spend on bursaries and scholarships provides financial help to many. 

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39 (joint). Manchester Metropolitan University

Manchester Met is one of the largest universities in the country, with around 30,000 undergraduates and a further 8,000 postgraduates. Its numbers were swollen by last September’s record intake of just under 11,000. Only three universities in the UK receive more applications than Manchester Met. A broad and largely vocational course portfolio, strong academic reputation and a ranking in domestic league tables that always sees it among the leading group of modern universities (those created since 1992) keeps the applications flowing. One of the most comprehensive programmes of financial and personal support makes the university particularly appealing to students from families with no experience of higher education. More than half of the intake come from Lancashire, Cheshire, Merseyside and Greater Manchester, but the remainder come from across the UK, many drawn by Manchester Met’s considerable presence in the training of nurses, healthcare practitioners and teachers. The university is also one of the biggest providers of degree apprenticeships, with close to 2,500 learners on campus, and has been the top-rated university training provider for five successive years in the Rate My Apprenticeship rankings. 

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41. University of Portsmouth

Portsmouth hopes the introduction of Connected Degrees this month will prove to be a significant draw for applicants. Uniquely, it offers flexibility around when students take their placement year. Traditionally it slots in before the final (third) year of study, but Portsmouth now offers the option of taking it after the last year. Students will remain part of the university and graduate after completing the placement. It allows students to take more time to explore their career options, study alongside friends throughout their studies rather than go off on placement after two years, and connect their studies directly with their career (as the branding implies) by using the placement year as a direct stepping stone into employment. Almost all Portsmouth degrees can be taken with this flexible placement option. Together with the opening of a London campus, the degree revamp should prompt an increase in applications, which dipped below 20,000 last year to their lowest point in the past decade and 40% below their level in 2014. The university has performed well in domestic rankings for some time, ranking once again this year among our top 10 modern universities (those founded since 1992). Set on a central campus in Portsmouth, this port city provides plenty of entertainment for the university’s 26,000 students.

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42. Royal Holloway, University of London

Situated in the Surrey countryside just beyond the M25, Royal Holloway is the University of London’s country campus. It is a popular combination, with applications and admissions both at record levels last year. Founder’s Building, modelled on a French chateau, is one of the most instantly recognisable university buildings in the world, sitting at the heart of Royal Holloway’s 135-acre campus near Egham. The university serves a largely London and the Home Counties clientele who make up around three-quarters of the UK intake. The university began life as a college for women, and it works hard to maintain that ethos of providing equity in opportunity today. Despite its location in the Surrey stockbroker belt, last year more than a quarter of students benefited from its bursaries, scholarships and hardship support schemes. All students are encouraged to take a placement year during their degree which can be spent studying abroad, working, carrying out voluntary work or boosting employment prospects in other ways. There is a good social scene on campus, and excellent sporting facilities translate into sustained success in inter-university competitions. 

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43. University of Worcester

The awarding of at least 50 government-funded places for British students on the graduate entry medicine degree at the new Three Counties Medical School is a considerable milestone for the University of Worcester. It will help address long-term shortages of doctors in the three counties from which the medical school takes its name (Worcestershire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire), as well as the Black Country borough of Dudley. The medical school is located on Worcester’s Severn campus for health, wellbeing and inclusive sport, which has been the scene of most of the university’s recent expansion. At the heart of the university’s excellent sports provision is the Worcester Arena, also at the Severn campus, which hosts the likes of wheelchair basketball. The university has four sites in the pretty cathedral city of Worcester and recruits heavily from the immediate area, with three-quarters of students hailing from the West Midlands. More than half of its intake come from homes where neither parent went to university, and it was recently shortlisted for University of the Year in the UK Social Mobility Awards for the third time in six years. Worcester is a key supplier of graduates into the public sector, with teaching, nursing and health and social care to the fore, and about three-quarters of graduates are in high-skilled jobs within 15 months of leaving.

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44. University of the West of England

The University of the West of England (UWE) has a physical footprint that spans Bristol, but the university is working hard to ensure that its eco footprint is considerably smaller. New accommodation for 900 students opening this month is claimed to be the largest low-carbon development of its kind in the country, enhancing UWE’s appeal to today’s environmentally aware students. The Purdown View development is on UWE’s main Frenchay campus to the north of Bristol, where most courses are based. There is also the City campus – home to creative and cultural industries courses – which is spread across four sites, offering views of a deer park and the harbourside. It features the Arnolfini and Spike Island arts venues, and the Watershed film culture and digital media centre. The Glenside campus in Fishponds, a 15-minute bus ride from the city centre, is the base for allied health, social care, nursing and midwifery students. With more than 25,000 undergraduates and close to 12,000 postgraduates, UWE is one of the UK’s biggest universities, and applications have never been higher. Roughly half the undergraduate intake comes from the immediate region, but UWE’s reputation draws in students from across the country.

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45 (joint). Birmingham City University

The past two years have seen more applications for places at Birmingham City University (BCU) than ever before. This bustling, uber-urban institution is one of the country’s larger universities, with more than 22,000 undergraduates spread across several sites in central Birmingham. A rolling programme of investment has upgraded many buildings and departments. Over the summer, BCU completed its move to the Alexander Stadium, which hosted the 2022 Commonwealth Games and will now be home to the university’s sports provision. The new facilities are just the latest to benefit BCU students. The City Centre campus, near to the new HS2 station, sits within an Investment Zone, which will pave the way for future developments. The university is home to the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire and the School of Jewellery, which is the largest in Europe. With 70% of students coming from the West Midlands – and many of them living at home – the relatively small number of university-owned student rooms (2,746) is not the problem it might be.

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45 (joint). Swansea University

Swansea’s seafront location, together with its excellent academic pedigree, are key selling points for applicants – with the former so good that the university uses it in advertisements on the sides of London buses. The university’s Singleton Park campus has been joined in recent years by the Bay campus, and both front onto the beach at Swansea Bay. It attracts a UK-wide clientele, with fewer than half of last year’s home intake recruited from Wales. There is a strong international contingent here, too. The university is organised into three faculties – humanities and social sciences; medicine, health and life science; and science and engineering – and has a broad portfolio of courses that includes a graduate-entry medicine degree. Strength in engineering and medicine is balanced by success in the arts and culture. All UK applicants whose predicted grades fall within the offer range for a given course (with the exception of medicine, healthcare and social work) are guaranteed a conditional offer. Outstanding sports facilities, which are a further draw for those with brawn to go alongside brains, sustain a consistently high ranking in the British Universities and Colleges Sport (Bucs) inter-university rankings.

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47. University of Brighton

The University of Brighton sits in the upper echelons of the modern university sector, with a strong academic reputation and graduate employment record. It was the first modern university – those created since 1992 – to be awarded a medical school. Newly centred on the fashionable coastal spot of Brighton alone (following the closure of its Eastbourne campus over the summer), the university has invested in new academic, social and sporting facilities, plus five student halls, to accommodate the influx of students from along the Channel coast. There are three campuses within Brighton – Falmer, Moulsecoomb and City – each with a distinct vibe. The city of Brighton and Hove long ago ditched its ‘kiss me quick’ image and is now one of the most fashionable coastal spots. Although applications for the 2023 admissions cycle fell a little, applications and admissions have been building back to the levels of 10 years ago. The university is one of the latest to introduce a contextual admissions scheme, which should help diversify an intake which sees around 44% of students drawn from homes where neither parents went to university.

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48. Heriot-Watt University

Heriot-Watt University (HWU) specialises in degrees in science, engineering, technology, business and design – and has a first-rate record for its graduates securing well-paid, high-skilled jobs once they leave. It is one of the UK’s top performers in our graduate jobs metrics and other surveys are similarly complimentary. An analysis of UK universities conducted last year by Novuna showed Heriot-Watt had the highest proportion of graduates of any Scottish university in chief executive or managing director roles. The university began life more than 200 years ago as a mechanics’ institute, so the accent here has always been on real-world, careers-focused education. The decision to make its Riccarton campus the home of the new National Robotarium, a partnership with the University of Edinburgh which will explore the practical applications of robotics on everyday life, is no coincidence. Around one in six UK students is recruited from outside Scotland – a more mixed UK recruitment pattern than at many Scottish institutions. Most are based at the main Riccarton campus on the western edge of Edinburgh. There are smaller outposts in Galashiels, where fashion, textiles and design courses are based, and Orkney, home to three postgraduate MScs in marine science and renewable energy, as well as the International Centre for Island Technology. 

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49. University of Lincoln

Student life at Lincoln in recent months has taken place against a backdrop of increasing concerns over the university’s finances, although the university stresses it expects to break even or make only a small deficit in the financial year that ended last month. In January, it took the unusual step of publicly discussing the financial pressure it was under and, when 220 job losses were announced some weeks later, it blamed ‘growing financial headwinds’. This turbulence has been the first real reverse experienced by the university in two decades of near-continuous expansion and investment, transforming the fabric and status of the institution. Lincoln has invested more than £375m in the waterfront Brayford Pool campus to create the mix of old and new that makes it so distinctive. An old warehouse is home to the main university library and a converted train engine shed is now Lincolnshire’s largest entertainment venue and one of the students’ union’s three sites. Alongside these buildings are modern facilities housing Lincoln’s academic schools. It is one of just eight modern universities to have its own medical school, run in conjunction with the University of Nottingham. There is a second campus at Holbeach, which is home to the National Centre for Food Manufacturing. It offers part-time courses, mostly to food-industry employees. 

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50 (joint). Robert Gordon University

For many years, Robert Gordon University (RGU) in Aberdeen has punched well above its weight in terms of graduate employment. It used to be easy to attribute that success to boom times in Oil City, but less so now. These are harder times for the UK oil and gas industry and Aberdeen has had some adjustments to make, but RGU sails on. If you want a university with eminently attainable Higher grade requirements that offers students outstanding career prospects, look no further. Around four in five graduates are in high-skilled jobs within 15 months of leaving, having taken courses that have optional or compulsory placement years that can introduce students to their future employers. Business and industry have input on the design of courses here, and the world of work is never far away from the lecture theatres and laboratories. RGU occupies a modern riverside campus close to the centre of Aberdeen; Garthdee is home to around 10,000 undergraduates and 5,000 postgraduates, as well as 550 graduate apprenticeship learners. The cultural, social and night-time distractions are commensurate with Aberdeen being Scotland’s third largest city. And the surrounding coast and mountains offer endless possibilities for those into the great outdoors. 

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50 (joint). Royal Agricultural University

Celebrating its 180th anniversary next year, the Royal Agricultural University is one of the smallest institutions in this guide, specialising in land-based courses for the farmers and rural workers of tomorrow. The RAU aspires to be the leading small university in its field (no pun intended) but faces stiff competition from the likes of Harper Adams University, in particular. It offers seven core degrees (in agriculture, agricultural business management, business management, environment and sustainability, equine science and business, real estate, and rural land management) plus several complementary foundation degrees, foundation years, top-up courses and professional placement years. The university is working hard to grow the number of students its recruits from state schools by adding more science and business-based courses alongside the traditional farming fare. For many years, the RAU had the biggest proportion of privately educated students, outstripping even Oxford and Cambridge. Just under one third of the intake is drawn from the South West, but such is the reputation of the university – for which King Charles is the patron (and near-neighbour) – that it recruits well from across the UK, with just under 400 new students last September.

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52 (joint). Solent University Southampton

Solent University secured a prestigious triple gold in the latest Teaching Excellence Framework, covering an overall rating, student experience and student outcomes. A mid-sized university, Solent serves a largely local student population, with around two-thirds of the intake recruited from the South East. The university was created from a series of mergers, which brought together the College of Nautical Studies in the nearby village of Warsash, Southampton College of Art and the city’s College of Technology. Solent has seen applications and admissions fall by 50% over the past decade as competition to attract students hots up. Its maritime courses are its defining feature, and it runs cadetship open days for prospective students interested in a life at sea. Facilities are second to none and include bridge simulators and a unique ship handling centre, which features an 11-ship scaled model fleet used for training masters, senior officers and pilots. Solent’s tight portfolio of courses also covers everything from fashion and film to business and nursing.

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52 (joint). University of Gloucestershire

Split between the city of Gloucester and the Regency town of Cheltenham, the University of Gloucestershire has continued its investment in key spaces. With cutting-edge facilities set to open in September 2025, Gloucestershire’s Institute of Education and programmes including social work and psychology will soon be based in the former Debenhams building in the heart of Gloucester city centre. The university’s Park campus in Cheltenham is also set to be revitalised this year, with a £5.8m project under way. These advances, alongside growth in computing-related subjects and active encouragement for students to engage with artificial intelligence (AI), marry up nicely with Gloucestershire’s links with local, cyber-based employers such as GCHQ, Intel and IBM. Despite this focus on all things technological, the university retains a strong programme of arts, humanities and teaching courses. The university draws more than half of its admissions from the surrounding South West region, and a similar proportion are first-generation students in an intake that is overwhelmingly educated in the state sector.

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54. University of Central Lancashire

The University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) is one of the most socially inclusive and progressive universities in the UK. Extensive outreach work, contextual offers and well-structured academic and financial support packages help bring higher education within reach of many who would otherwise miss out. It has high ambitions for its near-30,000 undergraduate and postgraduate students, and it is the only non-Russell Group university to have medical schools for both humans and animals, having admitted its first student vets last September. UCLan’s medical school is one of four piloting the new medical doctor degree apprenticeships from this month. The university is headquartered in Preston, with further (and expanding) campuses in Burnley and Westlakes in Cumbria. The latter offers a range of medicine and nursing courses and is home to the National Centre for Remote and Rural Medicine, which trains clinicians in all aspects of medicine relating to rural environments. Virtually all students come from non-selective state schools, and more than half are the first in their immediate family to go to university. 

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55. Coventry University

Coventry hit the headlines for the wrong reasons last winter, as it became the most high-profile university to be struck by financial problems. The university admitted ‘difficult decisions’ will need to be taken, with £40m of cuts to be made to the 2023-24 budget and a further £55m predicted for 2024-25. The blame was pinned on the recruitment of a smaller than expected number of students in September 2023. Yet Coventry is one of the top-ranked modern universities, having expanded into six campuses in Coventry, London and Scarborough, and the verdict of assessors for the Teaching Excellence Framework in 2023 was glowing. It earned a gold award overall, with a further gold for student experience and silver for outcomes. It was found to have ’embedded outstanding teaching, feedback and assessment practices that are highly effective and tailored to supporting its students’ learning, progression and attainment’. With around 38,000 students, Coventry is one of the biggest institutions in the country. The separate CU Coventry, near to the headquarters, offers a university-lite experience with the option to build slowly towards a degree, module by module.

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56 (joint). Glasgow Caledonian University

Glasgow Caledonian University (GCU) is the top-ranked modern university in our league table and our Modern University of the Year. It markets itself as the ‘University for the Common Good’ based on its founding mission to be for ‘the common weal’ – and it achieves its objectives in some style. GCU has consistently pursued policies geared to academic excellence, social justice and producing graduates who have a better record in gaining high-skilled jobs than those from many Russell Group universities. It caters for a predominantly Scottish intake (98.6% of all UK students recruited in 2023), with more than one in five recruited from postcodes among the 20% most deprived in Scotland. GCU is one of the biggest providers of health, social care and life sciences graduates for the NHS, produces more building and surveying graduates than any other university in the UK, and is the only university to offer a full suite of optometry degrees. It is also Scotland’s largest provider of graduate apprenticeships, with more than 700 learners on campus.

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56 (joint). University of South Wales

If you’ve got a good business idea, then the University of South Wales (USW) could be the place for you. It justifiably lays claim to the title of Entrepreneurial University of Wales for the fourth year in a row, in recognition of it being the Welsh university that has backed the most graduate start-up businesses. Official data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency shows that USW supported 96 new graduate businesses in 2022-23, taking the total number of active graduate businesses it has helped to more than 500. Across the UK as a whole, USW ranks 11th out of 220 institutions for new start-ups and ninth for the number of active graduate businesses. Dr Ben Calvert, USW’s vice-chancellor, said ‘supporting start-ups and small businesses is part of our DNA’. Entrepreneurial success is no accident at a university where courses are designed and delivered with significant input from business and industry. Engagement, collaboration and partnership are the cornerstones on which the institution is founded. It has five sites across South Wales: three in Pontypridd, and two others in Cardiff and Newport. The university is headquartered on the Treforest campus, the biggest of the Pontypridd sites. Cardiff is home to the university’s creative industries courses, while Newport provides education and teacher training, business, computing, social work and psychology degrees. Everything else is taught in Pontypridd.

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58. University of Sunderland

Local, national and global. Sunderland, London and Hong Kong. This is how Sunderland, our University of the Year for Student Support, likes to market itself – a vocationally focused university that has expanded from its original Sunderland headquarters to offer its brand of higher education more widely. With more than 60% of undergraduates recruited from homes where parents did not go to university, there are few institutions in this guide that can better Sunderland’s record for social inclusion. Financial support is strategically targeted to ensure these students are supported best of all, and there is a concerted attempt to diversify the intake for medicine degrees through generous bursaries, subsidised accommodation and lowered entry grades for local recruits living in areas with the lowest rates of progression to higher education. The university is also a leading provider of degree apprenticeships, with more than 900 learners on programmes as diverse as senior journalist, district nurse, engineering and social work. Overall applications last year were at their highest since 2015; more than half of the intake came from the North East and 27% from London – an indication of the buoyancy of the London campus.

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59. Canterbury Christ Church University

The first students will graduate from the Kent and Medway medical school next summer, five years after the collaborative venture between Canterbury Christ Church University (CCCU) and the University of Kent opened. It’s a significant moment for an institution founded in 1962 as a teacher training college, which today has an outstanding record for widening participation in higher education. It recruits nearly two thirds of its students from the South East, most of them from the immediate environs of the university, which include some of the most deprived areas in southern England. The university has one of the highest numbers of first-generation students. Graduate employability is one of CCCU’s strongest areas in our ranking; industry and local businesses work in partnership with the university to ensure courses are relevant to current workplace needs. It is hoped that the new £65m Verena Holmes Building for STEM subjects (science, technology, engineering and maths), named after one of the country’s foremost female engineers, will boost the number of women in STEM, too.

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60. Bath Spa University

A university rebrand aims to dispel the perception that creative arts universities, such as Bath Spa, lack the hard edge needed to produce graduates who achieve well when they leave. ‘Professional creativity’ is the new byword for this university. As vice-chancellor Professor Sue Rigby put it: ‘Creativity is our human superpower’, and with admissions last September up by 1.5% to a new high, Bath Spa seems to be avoiding the kryptonite. Business, computing, teacher training and some science offerings are available alongside the liberal arts degrees. In addition to its three principal sites in and just outside of Bath, there is a new BSU London campus, in fashionable Hoxton, which hosts several BAs in business and management, as well as a BSc in health and social care management. The university is headquartered at Newton Park, four miles outside of Bath, with its grounds landscaped by Capability Brown. Those studying art and design are located at the Locksbrook campus in the city centre, while the textile courses are based at Sion Hill, in the Lansdown district.

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61. University of Westminster

Based on the proportion of former students who go from receiving free school meals to being among the top 20% of earners by the age of 30, Westminster ranks second in England for social mobility. The verdict came from the Institute for Fiscal Studies and education charity the Sutton Trust, and highlights how central social inclusion is to Westminster’s mission: 73% of students come from ethnic minorities, 56% are the first in their immediate family to go to university and 96% are educated in non-selective state schools. The university, based on four campuses – Cavendish, Regent and Marylebone in central London, and Harrow a little further out – has enjoyed record enrolments in the past two years, with applications at their highest since 2015. Three-quarters of the home intake are Londoners, but one quarter of undergraduates come from overseas, making student life here as cosmopolitan as the capital itself. Preparing students for employment is a thread that runs through all courses, which include experiential learning in the first and second years. There are mandatory short-term placements or work-related projects, as well as optional year-long experiences. The university is working to embed virtual internships into courses to ensure equality of access, too.

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62. Kingston University

Based in south-west London, Kingston University has seen a nearly 50% rise in applications since 2019. With its campuses, halls, facilities and course portfolio constantly evolving, the university is successfully attracting a significant number of prospective students. More than half of the student body is made up of first-generation students and an even greater proportion hail from ethnic minority backgrounds – both traditionally under-represented on campus. A modern university in all senses of the word, Kingston targets these groups throughout their earlier years of education and then provides ongoing support once they enrol, with dedicated careers programmes for ethnic minority students, for example. The system works – Kingston was awarded a coveted triple gold in last year’s Teaching Excellence Framework, covering an overall rating, student experience and student outcomes. The university’s main Penrhyn Road campus is undergoing refurbishment, with work expected to finish in mid-2025, and there has been a cool £55m investment in halls of residence to provide 1,330 energy efficient, state-of-the-art bedrooms. The university attracts primarily local students from surrounding London boroughs, with the South East region more widely also well-represented.

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63. University for the Creative Arts

One of five specialist arts institutions included in this guide, the University for the Creative Arts (UCA) is one of the largest, and has a strong regional footprint thanks to its campuses in Canterbury, Epsom and Farnham. The three campuses, set in small towns and cities, lend themselves to creating compact, supportive academic communities, with good bonds between students and staff. There is a further facility at Maidstone Studios for those studying television production. More than 7,500 undergraduates are enrolled on degree programmes spanning the creative industries, including acting, fashion atelier and tailoring, automotive and transport design, games development, jewellery and silversmithing and journalism and communications. The portfolio is expanding to include studio practice (product and furniture design) from this month, with body art (histories, cultures and practices) and fashion (millinery, accessories and shoe design) taking their first students in September 2025. Whether you want to be a tattoo artist or a tailor, UCA has it covered, with graduates inspired by forebears who include Dame Zandra Rhodes, Karen Millen, Dame Tracey Emin and Stephen Webster. 

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64 (joint). Brunel University London

Brunel sits at number 342 in the 2025 QS World University Rankings, up 70 places since the 2023 edition. International success is important for a university which recruited around one in five of its students from overseas last year. This campus university on the north-western outskirts of London offers a higher education in the capital without the claustrophobia and congestion, although applications and admissions in 2023 were at their lowest levels of the past decade. More than 72% of Brunel’s UK students come from Greater London, and it is one of the most socially and culturally diverse universities in the country, drawing around half of its students from homes where parents have not gone to university – a statistic that explains the informative (and rare) Information for Parents and Carers section on the university website. Life sciences, business and computer science are the most popular courses. Sports facilities are excellent, particularly for athletics, and the university punches above its weight in inter-university competitions, sitting inside the top 40 in this year’s national rankings .

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64 (joint). Liverpool Hope University

The smallest of the three Merseyside universities, Liverpool Hope has seen a 35% rise in applications over the past ten years. Its undergraduate population is under 4,400, and this gives Hope the scope to implement a modern, student-focused approach to university education. Hope believes small teaching groups allied with strong student support services allow it to provide a personal education, ensuring that nobody gets lost in the crowd. Hope scores particularly well for student support in the National Student Survey, with student experience not far behind. The university is constantly evolving its degree portfolio and has recently added 16 new programmes to its roster. A range of courses will be delivered in the university’s new multi-million-pound i3 building which is set to open on its main Hope Park campus this year. The campus sits just four miles from Liverpool’s bustling city centre, where a second base – Hope’s Creative Campus – can be found. Aigburth Park is the university’s purely residential campus and is just a 20-minute bus journey away from the city centre. 

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66. Cardiff Metropolitan University

Cardiff Met, our Welsh University of the Year, is benefiting from its home city’s current status as one of the UK’s hottest student destinations. Serving a more local market than its Russell Group neighbour, with more than half of all UK-resident students coming from Wales, a record 12,500 applications were received for courses starting in September 2023. The number admitted was beaten only by the year before. Breaking records is something that comes naturally for this most sporting of universities, which regularly ranks in the top 30 for sport in the UK despite its relatively small size. (There are around 8,500 undergraduates). Its outstanding facilities include a new strength and conditioning suite and the National Indoor Athletics Centre. As well as the two teaching campuses, Cyncoed and Llandaff, there is a third residential campus, Plas Gwyn. The school of education and social policy is based at Cyncoed, to the north-east of the city centre, while the schools of management, technologies and art and design are based at Llandaff. The school of sport and health sciences is split across the two. Cardiff Met was named University of the Year by Times Higher Education in 2021.

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67. London South Bank University

London South Bank University (LSBU) – our University of the Year for Social Inclusion and one of five shortlisted for our overall University of the Year title – achieves the rare feat of both having levels of social diversity on campus that are rare in British higher education and having one of the strongest track records of any university in graduate employment. Being in the cultural melting pot of the capital, which is also home to the country’s best-paid jobs, undoubtedly helps, but LSBU’s success is more than just a fluke of geography. Its admissions policies target historically under-represented and disadvantaged student groups with considerable success. LSBU is part of the wider London South Bank Group, which also includes Lambeth College, London South Bank Technical College, South Bank University Academy and South Bank University Sixth Form. This fusion of higher education, further education and school within one organisation provides pathways to university that might not otherwise exist. As a leading provider of technical education, the university works closely with business and industry to shape courses and qualifications. LSBU has three campuses across the capital. Headquartered in Southwark on the south bank of the River Thames, there are two newer campuses in Croydon (for business and healthcare students) and Havering (for adult and mental health nursing students).

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68. University of Plymouth

Plymouth is the only modern university (those created since 1992) to have both medical and dental schools. A broad portfolio of healthcare courses is about to get bigger still with the addition of foundation years to several courses this month, which will further widen access to these professions. New BSc degrees in osteopathy, chiropractic and social work with a foundation year are recruiting for a September 2025 start, adding to the more than 200 pathways into health and social care careers. The university is also among the pilot sites for the new medical doctor degree apprenticeship. There is further academic strength in marine science, the arts and sustainability. Plymouth is one of a small minority of universities to be awarded triple gold in the latest Teaching Excellence Framework, for its overall rating, student experience and student outcomes. The university is located on a central campus that has seen £100m of new facilities completed in the past year. Aside from the university’s strong academic reputation, many applicants are drawn to Plymouth for the lively maritime city vibe and the spectacular coastal and moorland scenery nearby. 

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69. De Montfort University

One of the larger modern universities, with 21,500 undergraduates, admissions for De Montfort University (DMU) climbed to close to 6,500 last September even as applications fell to their lowest level in a decade. The university takes a holistic view of the student experience, and it is rolling out block teaching across its courses to enhance this. Students are taught one module at a time, as opposed to the more traditional approach of taking a number of them simultaneously. They are examined at the end of each seven-week block of teaching, studying two modules consecutively per term, and four per academic year. ‘Teaching designed around you’ is the marketing pitch DMU deploys for this approach – and it seems to work, with 92% of students saying that working on one module at a time helps their work-life balance. The university sits on a compact campus in the centre of Leicester, one of the UK’s most diverse cities, and attracts half of its UK students from the East Midlands. International students make up around one third of undergraduates overall, further adding to the cosmopolitan feel.

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70. University of Essex

Sixty years ago next month, a little more than 100 students arrived at a new university near Colchester based in three academic schools: comparative studies, physical sciences and social studies. Most of the Brutalist buildings for which the university is famous were still to be built, but from the outset Essex offered something different to the norm, the ‘radical innovation’ promised by founding vice-chancellor, Sir Albert Sloman. This university in the heart of Essex countryside became an unlikely hotbed of student radicalism in the late 1960s and 1970s, and built an international reputation in politics and the social sciences more broadly. Today, it is home to a large international population of students, who make up about one third of the intake. Home students come predominantly from East Anglia and London. Students are split between three campuses: the mothership near Colchester; a second coastal campus at Southend-on-Sea, specialising in health and social care and business; and a third base in Loughton on the fringes of London and Epping Forest, where the East 15 acting school is based. They all offer a great experience and higher education for eminently achievable grades. 

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71. Middlesex University

Middlesex is one of the larger universities in this guide, with around 20,000 undergraduate and postgraduate students, but it offers a commendable level of bespoke education tailored to the individual. ‘To address the needs of our diverse student body, and recognising that many are working or caring for family in parallel with their studies, we offer blended learning options for our students where this is appropriate and feasible,’ the university told us. So, while courses are primarily delivered in person, the university tweaks delivery to suit individual circumstances where possible. This flexibility is backed up by the extensive personal and financial support offered to give students the best chance of success. Recruiting largely from within the capital, Middlesex has one of the most ethnically diverse student populations with just under three-quarters coming from an ethnic minority. Black students are the largest ethnic group on campus, accounting for more than 35% of last year’s intake. Middlesex is based on a single campus in Hendon, north London, and provides many vocational courses devised in partnership with business and industry. Applications are 45% down on where they were in 2016, but admissions stabilised last September with just under 3,000 new starters.

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72. Queen Mary, University of London

Queen Mary is the most socially inclusive of the research-intensive Russell Group universities by some distance. It recruits heavily from within London (more than 70% of last year’s UK undergraduate intake) where participation in higher education is the highest, and yet manages to attract almost half of its students from homes where neither parent attended university. Two thirds of the intake were from Asian, black or mixed-race families and just 7.5% were educated privately. The financial aid offered is significant in both sum and reach, the university has a strong mental health and wellbeing support structure, and it offers mentoring from current students and alumni – all in acknowledgement of the additional challenges many students might face coming from groups traditionally under-represented on campus. Applications were the second highest on record in 2023. The main Mile End campus lies in a trendy part of the capital with an excellent social scene, and there are top-notch sporting facilities onsite and in the nearby Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. The well-regarded medical and dentistry school is a short distance away near the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel, with a second outpost in West Smithfield at Barts hospital.

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73. University of Greenwich

One of the most successful modern universities, Greenwich is in fact steeped in history. Headquartered on the River Thames in the Sir Christopher Wren-designed Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich has one of the most instantly recognisable campuses in the world. All domes and colonnades, it dominates the skyline and provides a stunning backdrop to student life. Greenwich secured an overall gold rating in the Teaching Excellence Framework last year, earning a further gold for student experience and a silver for student outcomes. The accompanying report praised its three-week GREFest student induction programme and a ‘clear alignment between teaching, curriculum and employability support that is coherent and works to support successful outcomes’. Greenwich is one of the most ethnically diverse universities in the UK. There are further campuses at Avery Hill, also in south-east London, which is home to the bulk of health and social care students, and Medway in Chatham, Kent, where the schools of pharmacy, science and engineering are located. The latter campus also has strong naval connections, with many of its buildings historic former Royal Navy premises. 

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74 (joint). University of Bradford

Bradford is the UK’s City of Culture in 2025, acknowledging the cultural diversity of the city and its university, which has long been one of the most socially inclusive in the country. More than one third of admissions gain their place with a contextual offer, and the university recruits four in five of its students from the immediate area and more widely across Yorkshire, ensuring the ethnic, social and cultural mix on campus is aligned with the city beyond. Admissions in September 2023 rose to a new record of just under 3,000 – 10% more than the previous year. Almost 75% of students land high-skilled jobs when they leave – testimony to the input employers have in designing many courses, and the professional accreditation that often comes with the degrees, too.  Bradford offers an extensive range of science, technology, engineering and health-related degrees, and a significant proportion of graduates go into the NHS. The city campus is surprisingly green and has excellent sports facilities on site, with more to be found a five-minute walk away at the Sports Park. 

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74 (joint). University of Huddersfield

Huddersfield has been racking up the awards in recent months. It is one of a small minority of universities to have achieved triple gold in the Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF), for its overall rating, student experience and student outcomes. Things improved further when Ofsted rated its degree apprenticeship provision outstanding – making Huddersfield at the time only the second university to achieve this feat in recent years. The university was praised for ‘[valuing] the role that its apprenticeship programmes play in providing opportunities for people from a wide range of socio-economic backgrounds to access higher education opportunities and in retaining talent in the local region’. The Ofsted inspectors’ words go to the heart of the university’s mission. The emphasis on the world of work extends beyond apprenticeships, with most degrees offering students the chance of industry experience with placements ranging from one to 48 weeks. The university is a big supplier of graduates to the public sector, including health and social care professions and teaching.

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76. University of Roehampton

Roehampton is moving heavily into the provision of online degrees for those who do not want to study on its attractive parkland campus in south-west London. For now, the nine courses on offer are all postgraduate business degrees, but the university will introduce undergraduate options with 100% online studying. The move comes as the number of mature and international students on campus grows. Direct admissions (which are drawn largely mature and overseas applicants) are up 46% since 2016, while admissions via Ucas (largely school-leavers) have dropped to their lowest point in the past decade, 43% down over the same period. Once part of the University of Surrey, it is 20 years since Roehampton became a university in its own right. It is organised into four colleges, Digby Stuart, Froebel, Southlands and Whitelands, which were founded as teacher training colleges in the 19th century, and teacher training is still a central pillar here. However, the introduction of 30 new undergraduate, foundation or top-up degrees this month significantly adds to Roehampton’s portfolio. Roehampton also has a sizeable population of nursing and healthcare students. The colleges create bite-size communities and help Roehampton provide a far more personal university experience than is available elsewhere in the capital. 

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77. London Metropolitan University

London Met has enjoyed some excellent scores in the National Student Survey (NSS) in recent years after sustained investment in the student experience. The university has reinvented itself and now looks optimistically to the future, launching a new school of the built environment last year to supply graduates to one of the capital’s key industries. The establishment of a new adult nursing degree also greatly expands its healthcare offering. London Met reflects the cosmopolitan nature of the capital city it serves, boasting one of the most diverse student bodies of any UK university. But the outcomes of the recent Teaching Excellence Framework were a mixed bag. Gold for student experience confirmed recent successes in the NSS, but a bronze for student outcomes was less good, with the university rated silver overall. Students are split between six academic schools – computing and digital media; human sciences; social sciences and professions; business and law; the built environment; and art, architecture and design. The latter is situated on the Aldgate campus, but the Holloway Road campus is far larger. 

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78. University of West London

The University of West London (UWL) markets itself as The Career University, lest anyone be in any doubt as to the umbilical connection here between studying and getting a job afterwards. Developments such as the new school of medicine and biosciences seek to provide students with hands-on experience tackling the needs of local communities, while students studying for their Airline Transport Pilot Licence as part of their degrees have access to the university’s Boeing 737 flight simulator. UWL’s connections to the nearby Heathrow airport and British Airways are typical of its business links which give students access to more than 1,000 part-time, internship, graduate and volunteering opportunities. The university monitors all placements to ensure that they are of the highest quality, too. In addition to its focus on graduate jobs and making a difference in local communities, UWL has a third key mission which saw it recognised last year as our University of the Year for Social Inclusion. Few can match the diversity on campus here, with 68% from black, Asian and other ethnic minority groups; more than 60% from homes where they are the first to go to university; and around half being mature returners to education.

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79. Anglia Ruskin University

A merger between Anglia Ruskin University (ARU) and the former Writtle University College, on the outskirts of Chelmsford, Essex, was completed earlier this year. ARU Writtle, as it is now known, is renowned for its agriculture, horticulture, animal and environmental courses but had been operating in deficit. Following the opening of ARU Peterborough in 2022, ARU now has a truly regional footprint. Headquarters are on the main campus in Chelmsford and there is a further campus in Cambridge, which traces its origins back to the Cambridge School of Art, opened by patron John Ruskin in 1858. It recruits more than 60% of its students from within East Anglia (a region with few universities), who sign up to courses with key work skills embedded into the curriculum. It is the largest provider of nursing, midwifery and health and social care courses in England. The university will hope that the 21% tumble in applications for September 2023 – and a corresponding 11% drop in admissions – was just a blip given the recent expansion.

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80. University of Cumbria

Cumbria is planning for a vibrant future with two new campuses in the offing and the opening of a graduate-entry medical school in Carlisle scheduled for next September. In the North West, there are two campuses in Carlisle (where a new flagship is planned) and further outposts in Lancaster, Ambleside and Workington, while another is due to open in Barrow-in-Furness next January. It even stretches down to London, where it runs a number of education and health programmes and a global business management top-up degree. Applications and admissions fell again in 2023, and they are both roughly at half the level they were a decade ago, after years of steady decline. However, it is hoped the new campuses and subjects offered will see student numbers start to grow. It supplies large numbers of students to the public sector, with healthcare and teacher training at the fore. The unique Ambleside campus, in the heart of the Lake District, offers courses tailored to its location, including marine and freshwater conservation; forest management; outdoor leadership; tourism management; and woodland ecology and conservation.

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81. University of Northampton

Housed on a new campus close to the town centre, all students at Northampton get a free laptop when they enrol or a £500 accommodation discount or a £500 catering credit. There is further bursary support worth £400 a year in subsequent years of study for students from homes with a household income of £25,000 or less. The universal bursary package reflects the demographic here, which is predominantly students drawn from groups that are traditionally under-represented at university. This kind of support makes a real difference. More than half of the intake are from families where parents did not attend university and half are ethnic minority students, with black students alone making up one third of last year’s entrants. It was the first UK university to be designated a Changemaker Campus in 2012, in recognition of its efforts tackling social injustice and changing the world through supporting innovation and enterprise. Alongside their degree, students can earn a Changemaker certificate which rewards volunteering or paid community work as well as developing and delivering a new project to create a positive social impact. Last year’s Teaching Excellence Framework assessments saw the university downgraded from gold to silver, although it achieved this mark in overall rating, student experience and student outcomes.

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82. University of Bedfordshire

One of the champions of widening participation, Bedfordshire has experienced a sharp downturn in applications in recent times, with the near 8,000 who applied in the 2023 admissions cycle being around half the number that sought a place here a decade ago (and 18% down on 2022). It has invested heavily in student facilities, however, with a medical simulation suite one of the latest projects to come to fruition. The Luton-headquartered university is popular with students, scoring well consistently for teaching quality in the annual National Student Survey, but it was awarded the lowest bronze award overall and for student outcomes in the latest regulatory Teaching Excellence Framework. It did earn a silver for student experience, however. An extensive network of student support structures is in place due to the fact that its intake is made up largely of those from non-traditional backgrounds, although this is not enough to prevent around one in five students dropping out during their first year. The vast majority of students are drawn from the immediate area or from the South East, East Anglia and London.

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83. University of the West of Scotland

For the eighth consecutive year, the University of the West of Scotland (UWS) has recruited a greater proportion of students from disadvantaged backgrounds than any other Scottish institution, according to a report from the Scottish Funding Council which looked at the university destinations of students from the 20% of Scottish postcodes considered to be the most deprived. As the university told us: ‘At UWS ability, not background, matters.’ The latest Times Higher Education Impact Rankings placed UWS second in Scotland (behind the University of Glasgow) and 16th in the world for reducing inequalities, providing further recognition of the university’s game-changing approach. The 99% Scottish intake at UWS is among the most diverse anywhere in the UK, with almost half being from homes where parents did not attend university, and all being educated in state schools. Work-focused degrees are offered across four campuses in south-west Scotland, with the biggest of them in Paisley, Scotland’s largest town, where 10,000 students are based. Further outposts in Ayr, Dumfries and Hamilton (known as the Lanarkshire campus) have seen heavy investment recently. There is a new campus in London’s Docklands, too, offering international business, collaborative health and social care, and professional health studies undergraduate degrees.

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84. Goldsmiths, University of London

Goldsmiths finds itself in the eye of the storm that is blowing through higher education as universities struggle to balance the books. Applications and admissions last September hit their lowest point in the past decade, starkly illustrating the problems that the university is facing. Proposed compulsory redundancies were averted in August only when 67 staff agreed to leave voluntarily following a cash squeeze prompted by falling student numbers and the long-term freeze of UK tuition fees. Unions and students alike are disturbed by the university’s Transformation Programme, drawn up in response to what Professor Frances Corner, Goldsmiths’ warden, describes as a ‘really serious’ financial position. All of which threatens to overshadow Goldsmiths’ reputation as a home of creatives and free-thinkers, drawn to its trendy New Cross campus by its standing in the arts, humanities and social sciences. Mary Quant, Steve McQueen, Lucian Freud, Edward Enninful and Damien Hirst are among a host of illustrious creative alumni. The college offers a full suite of courses in the creative and performing arts, as well as degrees that embrace economics, politics, law, computing, artificial intelligence and management. Two-thirds of the domestic intake come from the capital and a third of the undergraduate population are international students.

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