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Introduction to The University of Nottingham.

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to The University of Nottingham."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to The University of Nottingham

2 International reach 1st in the UK for the number of our students who choose to study overseas, via ERASMUS or other schemes £129.7m economic impact was generated by the off-campus spending of our international students in the Nottingham, East Midlands and UK economies 2,200 jobs are supported directly as a result of the presence of our international students in the UK 150 countries or 77% of the world’s nations were represented by students at The University of Nottingham in 2013/14 and 29 students were the only member of their nation represented at the University 8th most successful university at attracting international students to study in the UK and 1st in the region 250,000 alumni live in over 195 countries across the world 78% of graduates now living abroad have recommended or would recommend studying at and living in Nottingham. 10,396 students studied for Nottingham degrees at our campuses in Malaysia and China in 2014/15

3 Our Global Footprint Nottingham, UK Semenyih, Malaysia Ningbo, China
Established 1948 Now 33,250 students Semenyih, Malaysia Established 2000 Now 4,866 students Established 2000 Now 6,219 students Ningbo, China ~2,500 Chinese students come to UoN to study each year Could mention IAMET, GNAFI and CFFRC

4 Global Reputation - 70th in the QS World Rankings (the 14th highest placed UK university) Research project - Scientists from the School of Medicine identified a previously undetected layer of the cornea, the clear protective lens that sits in front of the eye.The group, led by Harminder Dua, professor of ophthalmology at Nottingham, found a distinct layer deep in the corneal tissue that plays a vital role in the flow of fluid from the eye. The discovery has been named “Dua’s layer” in honour of the Nottingham scientist.

5 World-Class research

6 Industry partnerships are strategically important
Nottingham in numbers… 5 campuses across 3 countries and 2 continents £1.1bn of annual economic impact in the UK 18,000 jobs supported by University activity £593m annual income 2015 £186m in research awards 2015 60% of research income linked to industry Industry partnerships are strategically important

7 Food & Drink Expertise Significant investment > £60M in agricultural and food-related research over the last 12 years: Plant Sciences (2002) Robotic Dairy Unit (2005) Vet School (2006) Food Processing Facility (2010) GFS Glasshouse Complex (2010) Root Imaging (2014) Lead players in Global Food Security Leverage international expertise Multimillion pound investment Centre for Innovative Manufacturing in Food (£10M) Food & Biofuel Innovation Centre (£25M) Dairy Centre (£30M) 200 academic staff 1500 undergraduate students 480 post graduate students (350 PhD/ 130 taught MSc)

8 Sutton Bonington Campus
British Geological Survey Largest community of plant, crop, nutrition, animal & food science expertise in the UK

9 Capability Statement Led by Stephen Parry & internal working group
Captures UoN supply chain expertise across the whole food system Covers primary production to consumption & digestion Aligns with national & international drivers

10 Agri-Tech Investments
“£27M capital investment funding from UK Government matched by universities to revolutionise the UK’s capacity for livestock R&D”

11 CIEL Membership DAIRY lead for CIEL:
Dairy Health and Welfare Unit: a state of the art, totally flexible unit, to conduct research on interactions between environment-genotype-animal physiology-welfare. Dairy Nutritional Research Unit: A cutting edge nutritional research facility for high yielding milking cows. Cows will be individually fed with continuous recording of feed intake, milk yield, live weight, activity and rumination, linked to detailed measurements of cow metabolism and physiology. Dairy Young Stock Unit: facilities for research on nutrition, health and husbandry of dairy heifers. An integrated containment facility (cat 2) for lactating cattle; to conduct research into host pathogen interactions, mammary gland biology,  vaccine  /  therapeutic  development  and other milking and mastitis related issues.

12 Early Lameness detection for Lameness control : ‘EL4L’
Lameness in sheep costs UK industry around £80M Project aim: development and validation of automatic system (accelerometer) to detect lameness in sheep Funded by Innovate UK and BBSRC ( ) Project partners : University of Nottingham (Lead), Intel UK and Farm Wizard

13 Nottingham Geospatial Institute
Annual research awards in excess of €27million and a total research portfolio of over €110m A leading cross-disciplinary research and teaching institute Specialises in spatial and location-based science and engineering, empowered by satellite positioning, remote sensing and integrated technologies Strong heritage in the domains of precision agriculture and livestock farming Current projects integration of Global Navigation Satellite System Geographical Information Systems and Remote Sensing for precision agriculture animal tracking and behavior analysis using innovative sensor networks

14 Partnership Opportunities
Demonstrate an end to end supply chain perspective Access to cutting edge Science & Research capability from soil to health Establish long term strategic partnerships for mutual benefit Experience in leveraging funding opportunities Access to global research funding Global Challenge Research Fund Newton Funds Prosperity Fund

15 Track Record


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