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Birmingham City University

Birmingham City University
Birmingham City University logo with white tiger.jpg
Former names
Birmingham College of Art,
Birmingham Polytechnic,
University of Central England in Birmingham
Motto Latin: Age Quod Agis
Motto in English
"Do what you are doing; attend to your business"
Type Public
Established 1992—gained university status
1971—City of Birmingham Polytechnic
1843—Birmingham College of Art
Endowment £5.3 m (2015)
Chancellor Sir Lenny Henry
Vice-Chancellor Graham Upton
Students 24,065 HE (2015/16)
Undergraduates 19,715 (2015/16)
Postgraduates 4,345 (2015/16)
Other students
275 FE
Location Birmingham, West Midlands, United Kingdom
52°31′2″N 1°53′53″W / 52.51722°N 1.89806°W / 52.51722; -1.89806Coordinates: 52°31′2″N 1°53′53″W / 52.51722°N 1.89806°W / 52.51722; -1.89806
Campus Urban (multiple)
Affiliations million+, Skillset
Website www.bcu.ac.uk
Rankings
Complete
(2017, national)
95
The Guardian
(2017, national)
105
Times/Sunday Times
(2017, national)
93

Birmingham City University (abbrev. BCU) is a modern university in the city of Birmingham, England. Initially established as the Birmingham College of Art with roots dating back to 1843, it was designated as a polytechnic in 1971 and gained university status in 1992.

The university has three main campuses serving four faculties, and offers courses in art and design, business, the built environment, computing, education, engineering, English, healthcare, law, the performing arts, social sciences, and technology. A £125million extension to its campus in the city centre of Birmingham, part of the Eastside development of a new technology and learning quarter, is opening in two stages, with the first phase having opened its doors in 2013.

It is the second largest of five universities in the city, the other four being Aston University, University of Birmingham, University College Birmingham, and Newman University. It is ranked third of the five according to the Complete University Guide, below both the University of Birmingham and Aston University. Roughly half of the university's full-time students are from the West Midlands, and a large percentage of these are from ethnic minorities. The university runs access and foundation programmes through an international network of associated universities and further education colleges, and has the highest intake of foreign students in the Birmingham area.

In the 1960s, changes were made to the higher education system creating an expansion of polytechnics as a more vocationally orientated alternative to the typical university.

The City of Birmingham Education Committee was invited to submit a scheme for the establishment of a polytechnic bringing together a number of different colleges in the city in 1967. Late in 1969, the post of director of the polytechnic was advertised. Although the city lagged behind other parts of the country, Birmingham finally gained a polytechnic in 1971—then the 27th in the UK—designated by the Education Secretary Margaret Thatcher as the City of Birmingham Polytechnic. This was the second polytechnic in Birmingham, the first — Birmingham Polytechnic Institution — having existed in the mid-19th century for ten years.


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