UCAS Code: C15
Location: Cardiff, south-east Wales Show on Map
Site: All sites near city centre, plus hospital site
| Total Students: | 29,683 |
| Undergraduates: | 68% |
| Postgraduates: | 25% |
| FE Students: | 7% |
| Total undergraduates: | 20,116 |
| Male: | 41% |
| Female: | 59% |
| Full Time: | 84% |
| Mature on Entry: | 13% |
| UK Students: | 90% |
| Lower socio economic groups: | 21% |
1414 full-time, 533 part-time.
Business; law; health & life sciences; medicine, dentistry & nursing; professions allied to medicine (including occupational therapy, physiotherapy & radiography); physical sciences; engineering; architecture; town planning; humanities & social studies.
| Admission Information: | Normally at least 3 A-levels, excluding general studies, required; detailed policy depends on subject area. |
| Points on Entry (Mean): | 399 |
| Drop Out Rate: | 5% |
| Accommodation: | All first years guaranteed student accommodation (if apply during the normal UCAS cycle). |
| Founded: | 1883 |
| Site: | Close to Cardiff city centre. Healthcare students also at hospital site, Heath Park Campus, 1 mile away. |
| How to get there: | Cardiff Central Station on the national rail network; coaches to bus station (next to train station); M4 from London and M5 (west country and midlands). For university, frequent trains from Central Station to Cathays station (on campus), local buses from bus station (53, 79, 81 for main campus; 8 or 9 for hospital site). Various park-and-ride services in city. |
| Student advice & services: | Student support centres offer general advice, financial support, counselling, services for disabled and dyslexic students. Health centre. Chaplains (Anglican, Catholic, Methodist) work alongside other local faiths/denominations. Day-care centre. |
| Amenities: | Large purpose-built students’ union with 9 bars, nightclub, concert venue, cafés, TV lounge, shops, hairdressers, letting agency, jobshop, IT shop and repair service, athletic union, societies, student media centre (radio and television station and student newspaper). |
| Sporting facilities: | Indoor and outdoor facilities on 3 sites. Park Place fitness and squash centre at main campus has 6 squash courts, fitness centre, fitness classes, fitness services and well-being clinic. Talybont sports training village (halls of residence site) has 2 large multi-purpose sports halls, martial arts dojo and indoor cricket nets. Llanrumney sports fields (33 acres), including 3 rugby, 1 lacrosse and 6 football pitches, 4 cricket squares, 1 floodlit training pitch and large pavilion. |
| Accommodation: | All first years who apply during the normal UCAS admissions cycle are guaranteed a single occupancy place in university residences (a few places are adapted for disabled students, in particular for wheelchair users and students with a hearing impairment): 5055 self-catering places at £65−£91 per week; 85 catered places (female only) at £92 pw; 193 part-catered places at £74−£85 pw; all September to June (including Christmas and Easter vacations). Most students in private-sector housing for 2+ years, rents locally £60−£65 pw plus bills. |
| Library & information services: | Integrated library, IT and media services: 16 libraries with over 1.4 million books, 16,000 journals (printed and electronic), access to numerous web-based databases; 3800 study places and 1000+ workstations. Specialist collections include Salisbury Library of Celtic and Welsh material; Cardiff Rare Books Collection of British and European works from 1500; Cochrane Archive of evidence-based healthcare; European Documentation Centre. Also special collections in law, architecture, journalism, music. Information provision, £162 pa spent for each student (FTE). IT network, including wireless access, to all parts of campus, 5500 connections in student residences, 24-hour access. IT and library support (on-site or by telephone, email or online); IT and information literacy skills courses, some in liaison with academic departments. |
| Other learning resources: | Virtual learning environment used across the university. |
| Study abroad: | 2% of students spend a period abroad. Active Erasmus programme, with 250+ European links. Student exchange agreements worldwide. |
| Careers: | Information, advice and individual guidance available; workshops, careers talks, employers presentations, skills sessions. Careers library, on-line vacancy bulletin, careers fairs. Careers management skills modules in many departments; work placements and tasters offered. |
| Living expenses budget: | Minimum budget of £6120 (excluding tuition fees) recommended by university for each academic year (Sept–June), £8160 for full calendar year. |
| Term-time work: | Part-time work in university and SU (in bars, restaurants, offices, libraries, labs, sports centre etc) through Unistaff Jobshop; also jobs locally in bars, shops and offices. |
| Financial help: | Bursaries may change in 2012. In 2010, bursaries of £1000 pa were available for students whose family income is up to £25k, of £500 pa where it is £25k−£35k, and £350 where family income is £35−£50k. Some 100 scholarships awarded annually, worth a total of £3000, for high-achieving students in particular disciplines (eg physics, Italian, computer science, earth science ). £1m government funds; also hardship loans. Some charitable trust funds eg for students encountering unexpected hardship (including final-year students from Commonwealth and SE Asia), self-financing students, female students whose health is affected during course. Apply for help at Student Support Centre. |
| University tuition fees: | Students from Wales and the EU pay £3465 for first degree courses, other UK students pay £9000 pa (NHS pays fees on some courses). International students pay £10,700 pa (classroom), £13,750 pa (lab/pre-clinical/music/architecture), £24,500 pa (clinical). |
4-year integrated sandwich degree programmes, 5-year two-tier degree programmes in architecture and town planning. 5-year medical and dental courses, plus foundation year for those without science backgrounds; clinical teaching throughout Wales.
Cardiff University.
BA, BD, BDS, BMus, BN, BSc, BEng, BScEcon, LLB, MArch, MB BCh, MPhys, MChem, MEng, MPharm
3 years; others 4 and 5 years
Sarah Ingram, Academic and University Affairs Officer (studying law)
What's it like as a place to live? Cardiff is an amazing place to live, it is small enough to walk around, but it has everything in it because it is a capital city. Whether it is sport, theatre or shopping you are looking for, you will find it here, as well as being able to be right in the country within a ten minute drive.
How's the student accommodation? Student accommodation is guaranteed for every first year if they make Cardiff their firm choice. Not only is the accommodation of a really good standard, it is comparably very cheap to other major cities and depending on which Halls of Residence you choose can be very close to the sports facilities, close to the Students' Union, close to town or with plenty of green space around it.
What's the student population like? The student population in Cardiff is very friendly − we have 13% international students and a large Welsh contingency. In the main student housing area, 85% of the houses are rented by Cardiff students.
How do students and locals get on? There are so many students that the locals have to get on with us, there is always a good atmosphere in the city centre, though a lot of locals do come down from the Valleys at weekends, so the city is not as student orientated as it is in the week.
What's it like as a place to study? The courses at Cardiff are mostly traditional, but there is plenty of flexibility in module choices and the facilities are fine. There are plenty of libraries and resources and staff give up a lot of time to help students if they need extra help.
What are the teaching staff like? Cardiff is a Russell group institution so all the academic staff are research-based. However, they really do care about the students as well and all staff when they come to Cardiff do a University course which focuses on teaching.
What are student societies like? We have 150 societies and 62 sports clubs, there are thousands of students involved and you can do anything: if it's not out there already then you just need to set one up.
What's a typical night out? Pub in Cathays (the student living area), then either the Union club or a club in town.
And how much does it cost? From a tenner to fifty – it depends how much you spend on alcohol as places are pretty cheap to get into, especially during the week
How can you get home safely? Taxi – all our taxis have white bonnets, so we know that they are registered and official, so it is easy to find a safe way home.
Is it an expensive place to live? It is the least expensive major city to live in; a house is on average £250 per month, but you can get them for £220 a month pretty easily.
Average price of a pint? £2.
And the price of a takeaway? Depends what takeaway − £2.50 to £3.
What's the part-time work situation? The Union has its own jobshop so as a student part time work is really easy to come across. Most is minimum wage, though it is simple to find jobs slightly above that rate.
What's the best feature about the place? It has everything in it and it's all really cheap.
And the worst? On match days they shut some of the roads.
And to sum it all up? Cardiff has a fantastic reputation, but at the same time does not have the prices to go with it. Everyone is friendly, there's a great student ethos and it's so brilliant that 40% of undergrad students who come here, stay here for life.
Neil Kinnock MP, Glenys Kinnock MEP, Tim Sebastian (presenter), John Peters (former RAF pilot and Gulf War veteran), Doreen Vermeulen-Cranch (anaesthetics), Vincent Kane (presenter), Mark Lamarr (presenter and DJ), Huw Edwards (BBC).
Cardiff University Students’ Union (Park Place, Cardiff CF10 3QN), tel 029 2078 1419, email studentsunion@Cardiff.ac.uk or check website www.cardiffstudents.com.
University open day, giving you the chance to inspect the learning facilities, attend taster lectures, see your possible future accommodation, visit the Students' Union and tour the campus. Staff will be on hand to tell you more about the subjects you are interested in and to give you expert advice on handling the application process. Even more importantly, you will get the chance to talk to current students who can tell you what campus life and study are really like.
Cardiff University
Deri House
2-4 Park Grove
Cardiff
CF10 3PA
029 2087 4455
Undergraduate Recruitment Office
UCAS