Profile 2015

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Profile 2015


ING’S COLLEGE LONDON IS

one of the top 20 universities in the world and among the oldest in England. It has more than 26,500 students (of whom nearly 10,400 are graduate students) from more than 150 countries worldwide, and some 7,000 staff. King’s has an outstanding reputation for world-class teaching and cutting-edge research. It was ranked sixth nationally in the ‘power’ ranking in the 2014 UK Research Excellence Framework, and is in the top seven UK universities for research earnings (over £171 million in 2013-14). It has an overall annual income of more than £600 million.

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King’s in brief

Guy’s Campus. 2

Photograph: Nick Wood

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ING’S WAS RANKED 16th IN THE WORLD in the 2014 QS World University Rankings, rising by three places. In the 2014 Research Excellence Framework (REF) 84 per cent of research at King’s was deemed ‘world-leading’ or ‘internationally excellent’ (3* and 4*). King’s has a particularly distinguished reputation in the humanities, law, the sciences (including a wide range of health areas such as psychiatry, medicine, nursing and dentistry) and in social sciences including international affairs. It has played a major role in many of the advances that have shaped modern life, such as the discovery of the structure of DNA and research that led to the development of radio, television, mobile phones and radar.

 King’s is one of the most successful higher education institutions in attracting funding from the Department of Health and the National Institute for Health Research, with five Medical Research Council Centres. It is part of King’s Health Partners, the UK’s largest and recently-reaccredited Academic Health Sciences Centre, in partnership with the leading NHS Foundation Trusts of Guy’s and St Thomas’, King’s College Hospital and the South London and Maudsley; see www. kingshealthpartners.org. It is also a founder member of the Francis Crick Institute, an interdisciplinary medical research institute bringing together six of the UK’s most successful scientific and academic organisations to help understand why disease develops and find new ways to treat, diagnose and prevent illnesses such as cancer, heart disease, infections and neurodegenerative diseases. 3


King’s history ING’S COLLEGE LONDON WAS FOUNDED by King George IV and the Duke of Wellington in 1829. When the University of London was established in 1836, King’s became one of its two founding colleges. King’s has grown through many mergers, including those with the King’s College Hospital Medical School in 1983; with Chelsea and Queen Elizabeth Colleges in 1985; with the Institute of Psychiatry in 1997, and with the United Medical & Dental Schools of Guy’s & St Thomas’ Hospitals in 1998. These mergers have brought institutions with their own distinguished reputations and traditions into King’s. The Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience is closely associated with the South London and Maudsley NHS Trust which includes the famous Bethlem Hospital dating from the 13th century. The original King’s College School of Medicine was founded in 1831, while St Thomas’ Hospital dates from the 12th century, and medicine has been formally taught there since the 16th century and at Guy’s since the early 18th century. King’s Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing & Midwifery is directly descended from the world’s first professional school of nursing, founded by Nightingale in 1860. While remaining part of the University of London, King’s has enjoyed financial and academic autonomy since 1994. Since 2008 it has awarded its own degrees.

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Image: King’s College London Archives

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King’s Futures

King’s campaign

HE KING’S FUTURES PROGRAMME, launched in September 2014 by the President & Principal to refresh and transform King’s strategy, seeks to build on the success of the last 10 years in order to help the university adapt to changing circumstances and to ensure that King’s delivers outstanding research and education. A fusion of existing and new strategic initiatives will place King’s unambiguously among the very greatest of the world’s universities. The range of new academic initiatives under consideration includes developing research and education in business and technology; growing King’s strength in the exact sciences, and offering more programmes using distance learning technologies. King’s Futures will also ensure that the university further advances international relationships and partnerships, and that it offers students and staff a genuinely international experience in the heart of London. King’s Futures will also build on and complement a range of existing major initiatives at the university, such as developing student accommodation and teaching and social space, in particular at the Strand Campus, and continuing proactively to promote equality and diversity amongst staff and students. From autumn 2016 King’s will begin to occupy the Aldwych Quarter: four iconic and recently refurbished buildings, formerly known as the Bush House Complex, next to the Strand Campus. The world-class facilities in the former headquarters of the BBC World Service will help to consolidate King’s position as a global university.

ING’S PUBLICLY LAUNCHED the World questions KING’S answers campaign in November 2010, with the goal of raising £500 million by the end of 2015. Thanks to the generosity of alumni, friends and supporters around the world, that goal was reached a year and a half ahead of schedule. King’s now hopes to raise a further £100 million by the end of the campaign, to support research and teaching addressing some of the world’s most challenging problems, particularly in the areas of cancer, child health, neuroscience and mental health, leadership and society, and the emerging world order.

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Photograph: Suki Dhanda

Research by King’s, supported by the campaign, has identified the gene for motor neurone disease. Linda’s son was the first child in the UK conceived as a result of preimplantation genetic diagnosis for this disease.

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A tradition of excellence

O Professor Sir Charles Lyell

Professor Richard Bright

Florence Nightingale

VER THE CENTURIES, King’s and its constituent institutions have been associated with some of the greatest innovators of their time. In the 19th century these included Sir Charles Lyell, founder of modern geology; Sir Charles Wheatstone, pioneer of current electricity and wireless telegraphy; Thomas Hodgkin, Thomas Addison and Richard Bright: distinguished doctors who identified the diseases named after them; physicist James Clerk Maxwell, Einstein’s predecessor in electromagnetism and relativity; Florence Nightingale, founder of the world’s first professional school of nursing, and Lord Lister, who established antiseptic surgery. Twentieth-century achievers include Chaudry Sir Muhammad Zafrulla Khan, one of the founders of Pakistan and its first minister of foreign affairs; Oscarwinning actress and film-star Greer Garson; Sir Ivison Macadam, founder of the National Union of Students, and Dame Cicely Saunders, founder of the modern hospice movement. Among the many writers educated at King’s are Romantic poet John Keats (once a medical student at Guy’s), WS Gilbert of Gilbert and Sullivan, Thomas Hardy, Virginia Woolf, Sir Arthur C Clarke, Derek Jarman and Dannie Abse.

Nobel laureates Professor James Clerk Maxwell 8

Twelve Nobel Prizes are associated with King’s and its constituent institutions, including two Nobels

awarded in 2013 to King’s alumni Professor Peter Higgs, for the discovery of the mechanism of the Higgs boson, and Professor Michael Levitt, for the development of multiscale models for complex chemical systems. Other King’s Nobel laureates include Professor Sir James Black, inventor of beta blockers and anti-ulcer drugs, and Professor Maurice Wilkins who, with Dr Rosalind Franklin and other King’s colleagues, played a major part in the discovery of the structure of DNA.

Most Reverend Desmond Tutu

Current alumni

King’s current alumni include Nobel Peace laureate Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu; Nobel Literature laureate Mario Vargas Llosa; Dame Nancy Rothwell, President and Vice Chancellor of the University of Manchester; writers Susan Hill, Alain de Botton, Hanif Kureishi and Michael Morpurgo; leading business figures including Sir Deryck Maughan and Rory Tapner; composer Michael Nyman, conductor Sir John Eliot Gardiner and musicians John Deacon of Queen and Kele Okereke of Bloc Party; Naveen Selvadurai, founder of the mobile social networking venture Foursquare; members of the House of Commons, House of Lords and of the Judiciary; impressionist and political satirist Rory Bremner, and Olympic Gold medalwinner Dr Katherine Grainger CBE.

Virginia Woolf

Professor Peter Higgs

Dr Rosalind Franklin 9


King’s Worldwide

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ING’S IS A WORLD-LEADING INSTITUTION with a truly global perspective. It has: a School of Global Affairs comprising a network of Global Institutes to promote understanding of fast-changing parts of the world and encourage engagement with 21st-century powers. These include King’s Brazil Institute; the Lau China Institute; King’s India Institute; the Institute of North American Studies; King’s Russia Institute; King’s African Leadership Centre, King’s International Development Institute the National Autonomous University of Mexico’s Centre for Mexican Studies at King’s over 200 partnerships and innovative collaborations with leading universities and institutions across the globe, including key relationships with the University of California, San Francisco; the University of Hong Kong; Jawaharlal Nehru University; the National University of Singapore; the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Renmin University of China; the University of São Paulo; Peking University Health Sciences Center and Georgetown University joint PhD programmes, involving more than 20 academic departments across King’s, with the University of Hong Kong, the National University of Singapore, Humboldt University, the University of Stuttgart, the University of Göttingen, the University of São Paulo and Université Paris-Sorbonne offices in Brazil, China, India, and the USA: part of a global network that will develop deeper relationships with local

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research, commercial, student and alumni communities in these key countries and regions training programmes for students and staff in 29 foreign languages more than 9,300 international students from some 150 countries (including the EU), making up over 35 per cent of the total student body 1,479 academic and research staff from outside the UK, from 84 different countries, representing more than 40 per cent of the academic staff more than 48,000 international alumni in 174 countries worldwide, with the largest groups in the USA, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong SAR, France, Canada, Malaysia, Australia and the Republic of Ireland delivered overseas undergraduate summer schools in Delhi, Mumbai and Jakarta in 2014 alongside the flagship summer schools in London delivered professional development for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office’s prestigious Chevening Gurukul and Parliamentarians programmes been instrumental in promoting academic excellence and co-operation between European universities as the UK member of the Network of Universities from the Capitals of Europe (UNICA) received more than £57 million in international research grants in 2014: an increase of over 24 per cent on 2013 offered 1,272 of its students the opportunity to go abroad for part of their study in 2014.

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At the heart of London

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ING’S HAS FOUR THAMES-SIDE CAMPUSES within a single square mile in the heart of London, together with a major presence at Denmark Hill in South London in the form of the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, and of biomedical research and teaching at King’s College Hospital. King’s uses its location to build and consolidate partnerships with many key cultural, political, professional and business entities and communities in the capital. The Cultural Institute at King’s connects the university with practitioners, producers, policy makers and participants across arts and culture, in London and beyond, creating space where conventions are challenged and original perspectives emerge. King’s central London location and its wide network of connections attract many eminent visitors and speakers. Visitors in 2013-14 included the Secretary of State for Education, Nicky Morgan MP; US Ambassador to the UK, Matthew Barzun; former UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan; Chief Medical Officer, Professor Dame Sally Davies; comedian Jo Brand FKC; Monty Python stars Terry Jones and John Cleese; leading international architect Lord (Richard) Rogers; editor, author and historian Sir Max Hastings, and business leaders including Cath Kidston MBE, Roger Saul (founder of Mulberry), Dr Ulrich Bez (CEO of Aston Martin) and Richard Reed (founder of Innocent Smoothies). King’s Defence Studies Department provides academic support to the UK Joint Services Command and Staff College (JSCSC) in Shrivenham, Wiltshire and to the London-based Royal College of Defence Studies (RCDS). See www.kcl.ac.uk/schools/sspp/departments/dsd 12

Strand Campus The Maughan Library Guy’s Campus Waterloo Campus St Thomas’ Campus Denmark Hill Campus Strand Campus The Maughan Library Guy’s Campus Waterloo Campus St Thomas’ Campus Denmark Hill Campus

Denmark Hill Ca 2.3 miles due so Guy’s Campus

Denmark Hill Campus lies 2.3 miles due south of the Guy’s Campus


Senior officers of King’s at January 2015

Chairman of Council

The Duke of Wellington MA OBE DL President & Principal

Professor Edward Byrne AC Vice-Principals

Professor Sir Robert Lechler KBE PhD FRCP FRCPath FMedSci FKC (and Executive Director of King’s Health Partners)

Mr Chris Mottershead BSc MSc Dr Joanna Newman MBE BA MA PhD FRSA Professor Karen O’Brien MA DPhil FRSA Professor Evelyn Welch MBE BA PhD FRHS FRSA Deputy Vice-Principal (Health) and Dean and Head of the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience

Professor Shitij Kapur MBBS PhD FMedSci Head of Administration & College Secretary

Mr Ian Creagh BA Dip Ed MA FKC Dean of the College

Looking east from Waterloo Bridge.

Photograph: Nick Wood

The Revd Canon Professor Richard Burridge MA PhD FKC

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Facts & figures Student numbers by faculty and level of study Headcount on 1 December 2014 Faculty

Campus

UNDERGRADUATE

Arts & Humanities

Strand

3,317

1,047

Dental Institute

Guy’s, Strand, Denmark Hill, Waterloo, St Thomas’ Strand

729

393

112

1,234

5%

234

0

0

234

1%

45

178

95

318

1%

0

253

10

263

1%

884

861

54

1,799

7%

4,439

1,031

1,537

341

218 2,096

8%

2,124

693

38 2,855

11%

33

697

437

1,167

4%

2,297 2,089

565

4,951

19%

5

547

2%

Nobel Prizewinner and King’s alumnus Professor Michael Levitt (right) with President & Principal Professor Edward Byrne AC in November 2014, when Professor Levitt received an honorary doctorate of King’s.

Photograph: Tempest Photography

English Language Centre Global Centres & Institutes King's Learning Institute The Dickson Poon School of Law Life Sciences & Medicine Natural & Mathematical Sciences Nursing & Midwifery Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience Social Science & Public Policy Incoming Study Abroad Students* Total postgraduates GRAND TOTAL

Strand Guy’s, St Thomas’, Denmark Hill, Waterloo Strand

Waterloo Denmark Hill

Waterloo, Strand Strand, Waterloo

POSTGRADUATE Taught Research

485

57

16,124

7,640

TOTAL

% of total

582 4,946

19%

629 6,099 23%

10,385 2,745 26,509 100%

* The full-year enrolment for Incoming Study Abroad Students in 2014-15 is 888.

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Student numbers by gender 2014-15 Number of students

Total

% of total

Gender

UNDERGRADUATE

Taught

Research

Female

10,160

4,753

1,455

16,368

62%

Male

5,962

2,879

1,287

10,128

38%

Undisclosed GRAND TOTAL

POSTGRADUATE

2

8

3

13

0%

16,124

7,640

2,745

26,509

100%

Student numbers by age at start of programme 2014-15 Number of students UNDERGRADUATE

Total

Taught

Research

20 and under

12,168

58

–

12,226

46%

21 to 29

2,959

5,147

1,654

9,760

37%

30 to 39

611

1,579

764

2,954

11%

40 to 49

295

620

216

1,131

4%

50 and over

90

234

111

435

2%

Undisclosed

1

2

0

3

0%

16,124

7,640

2,745

26,509

100%

GRAND TOTAL

20

% of total

POSTGRADUATE

Photograph: Nick Wood

Age


Students’ country of domicile 2014-15 King’s has a strong international community including students from some 150 countries worldwide. Number of students Domicile United Kingdom

UNDERGRADUATE

11,377

Total

% of total

POSTGRADUATE Taught

Research

4,300

1,516

17,193

65%

European Union

1,951

1,126

482

3,559

13%

Other International

2,786

2,208

747

5,741

22%

Undisclosed TOTAL

10

6

0

16

0%

16,124

7,640

2,745

26,509

100%

Members of staff on 1 January 2015 excluding senior students, dormant, honorary and occasional staff. Faculty

Academic and research staff

Other staff

Number of employees

Arts & Humanities

366

322

688

Dental Institute

279

106

385

75

82

157

1,298

506

1,804

202

88

290

119

68

187

Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience

865

284

1,149

Social Science & Public Policy

401

202

603

44

1,588

1,632

3,649

3,246

6,895

The Dickson Poon School of Law Life Sciences & Medicine Natural & Mathematical Sciences Nursing & Midwifery

Professional Services

The Maughan Library, Chancery Lane, Strand Campus.

Photograph: Paul Grundy

GRAND TOTAL

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Finances

Franklin-Wilkins Building, Waterloo Campus.

Consolidated income & expenditure account for the year ended 31 July 2014. King’s credit rating was confirmed by Standard & Poor’s as ‘AA/stable’ for 2014. INCOME

£000

Funding body grants

122,426

Tuition fees and education contracts

201,076

Research grants and contracts

171,547

Other operating income

102,845

Endowment and investment income

5,774 TOTAL INCOME

603,668

EXPENDITURE Staff costs

376,770

Other operating expenses

189,880

Depreciation

26,946

Interest payable

12,213 TOTAL EXPENDITURE

(Deficit)/surplus on ordinary activities

– (Deficit)/surplus on ordinary activities after taxation

Receipts from property transactions Profit on sale of shares Surplus after depreciation of assets at cost and tax

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(2,141) (2,141) 5,963 – 3,822

Photograph: Nick Wood

Taxation

605,809


How to contact King’s Main telephone switchboard +44 (0)20 7836 5454 www.kcl.ac.uk

Faculty of Life Sciences & Medicine Weston Education Centre, 10 Cutcombe Road, London SE5 9RJ

Main address & Strand Campus

Guy’s Campus

Faculties of Arts & Humanities, Natural & Mathematical Sciences, Social Science & Public Policy and The Dickson Poon School of Law Strand, London WC2R 2LS The Maughan Library Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1LR Faculties of Arts & Humanities and Social Science & Public Policy Virginia Woolf Building, 22 Kingsway, London WC2B 6LE

Faculty of Life Sciences & Medicine King’s College London First floor, Hodgkin Building Guy’s Campus, London SE1 1UL Dental Institute Central Office, Floor 18, Tower Wing, Guy’s Hospital, London SE1 9RT King’s Health Partners Ground Floor, Counting House, Guy’s Hospital, London SE1 9RT Tel: +44 (0)20 7188 8794

Waterloo Campus

St Thomas’ Campus

Principal’s Office, Professional Services, and Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing & Midwifery James Clerk Maxwell Building, 57 Waterloo Road, London SE1 8WA Faculties of Life Sciences & Medicine, Nursing & Midwifery and Social Science & Public Policy (Departments of Management and of Education & Professional Studies) Franklin-Wilkins Building, Stamford Street, London SE1 9NH

Dental Institute and Faculty of Life Sciences & Medicine King’s College London, St Thomas’ Campus, Westminster Bridge Road, London SE1 7EH Defence Studies Department King’s College London, Joint Services Command and Staff College Faringdon Road, Shrivenham Swindon, Wilts SN6 8TS Tel: +44 (0)1793 788746 King’s College London Students’ Union Macadam Building, Surrey Street, London WC2R 2NS Tel +44 (0)20 7848 1588

Denmark Hill Campus Dental Institute King’s College London, Bessemer Road, London SE5 9RW Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience 16 De Crespigny Park, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8AF 26

For other King’s addresses including halls of residence, see www.kcl.ac.uk


www.kcl.ac.uk External Relations King’s College London pr@kcl.ac.uk © King’s College London April 2015


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