annual review 2009 - 2010
Scottish University of the Year a n nua l r e vi e w
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annual review 2009 - 2010
contents the year in focus Introduction overview masterplan teaching & learning student success research & commercialisation working with Business staff success working with the community VIP visits honorary awards university appointments Staff and student statistics Financial Summary executive roles & responsibilities donors 3
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annual review 2009 -2010
STUDENTS BENEFIT FROM OVER £100,000 SCHOLARSHIP FUNDING
From September 2009 – August 2010 students from across the University have benefited from over £100,000 Scholarship funding from businesses including AMEC, Bureau Veritas, KCA, Petrofac, Poyry, Sparrows, Talisman, Technip, TOTAL, Wood Group and FMC. UNIVERSITY CONTRIBUTES £300 MILLION TO SCOTTISH ECONOMY
An independent report by BiGGAR Economics has revealed that the University currently contributes over £300 million annually to the economy of Scotland.The total contribution to the economy of the North-east is £227.5 million every year, while the total national contribution is calculated at £302.2 million. OBESITY RESEARCH SHOWCASED AT NATIONAL EXHIBITION
An exhibit entitled “Fat Body Slim: Shape Matters!” by Dr Giovanna Bermano, members of the Institute for Health & Welfare Research and its Centre for Obesity Research and Epidemiology (CORE) was selected to exhibit at the Royal Society’s 350th Anniversary Summer Science Exhibition in London. SUNDAY TIMES NAMES ‘SCOTTISH UNIVERSITY OF THE YEAR’
The University has been awarded the accolade of ‘Scottish University of the Year’ by The Sunday Times. The supplement commended the University’s excellent academic provision, consistently strong graduate employability levels and bold, strategic masterplan.
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annual review 2009 - 2010
the year in focus
TRUMP TARTAN
Fashion Design students from Gray’s School of Art are embarking on a project to create a corporate tartan for Trump International - Scotland.
UNIVERSITY RECEIVES £40,000 TO IMPROVE LEARNING AROUND MENTAL HEALTH NURSING
The School of Nursing and Midwifery, in partnership with NHS Grampian Mental Health Services, has been granted £40,000 to develop nurse education practices that will ultimately improve services for mental health service users. UNIVERSITY FOCUSES ON BIG IDEAS
The University launched a new institute dedicated to research in Innovation, Design and Sustainability (IDEAS). IDEAS is already providing a unique base to further research into areas such as renewables, creative industries, digital economy and the environment. UNIVERSITY COURSE IS FIRST IN UK TO ACHIEVE GLOBAL ACCREDITATION
Aberdeen Business School is the very first UK institution to achieve accreditation from the Project Management Institute’s (PMI) Global Accreditation Center.
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annual review 2009 -2010
Introduction
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annual review 2009 - 2010
THE LAST THREE YEARS HAVE SEEN THE UNIVERSITY CONSOLIDATE ITS POSITION AS ONE OF THE TOP MODERN UNIVERSITIES IN THE UK AND CONSISTENTLY BE IN THE TOP FIVE UK UNIVERSITIES FOR GRADUATE EMPLOYMENT.
The role of the Governors is to ensure that this ability to perform and deliver is matched by self confidence and aspiration. The University is in excellent shape and I have every confidence that it will continue to excel and successfully rise to the challenges it will face in the coming years.
This Annual Review marks the end of my three-year term as Chair of Robert Gordon University’s Board of Governors and it is with real pride that I look back at the University’s achievements during this period. The last three years have seen the University consolidate its position as one of the top modern universities in the UK and consistently be in the top five UK universities for graduate employment. In addition, Robert Gordon University is the best modern university in Scotland for research, with over 70% of its research being classified as of international quality. I was particularly proud when The Sunday Times recently recognised the University as ‘The Scottish University of the Year 2011’.
I wish all those involved with this great University the very best for 2011 and a successful ongoing future.
This success is down to the staff and how they interact with the students, external stakeholders, and indeed each other. My fellow Governors and I make no claim to have done anything other than lend background support to the leadership team in the way they have managed and led the University. Everyone at Robert Gordon University should be very proud of what has been achieved.
MELFORT CAMPBELL PRO-CHANCELLOR AND CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS
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annual review 2009 -2010
IT IS WITH GREAT PLEASURE THAT I INTRODUCE THE 2009/10 ANNUAL REVIEW.
It has been another excellent year for Robert Gordon University culminating in The Sunday Times awarding us the accolade of ‘Scottish University of the Year 2011’. This award was in recognition of the University’s development since its formation in 1992 to become ‘one of higher education’s shining stars’. This includes a graduate employment record which has consistently been one of the best in the UK over the last decade and our commitment to invest in our masterplan.
Throughout this review you will see evidence of the University’s strong commitment to business in the North-east and beyond. Indeed, an independent report recently revealed that the University contributes over £300 million annually to the economy of Scotland. This, along with the high priority we place on engaging with and improving the lives of people in the local community, will ensure that Robert Gordon University continues to have a lasting and meaningful impact, both locally and nationally.
The University’s Estates masterplan continues to progress with the detailed planning application for a 34,000m2 development at Garthdee being approved by Aberdeen City Council in 2010. The new facilities will all be based at the Garthdee Campus and will include a new library, and formal and informal learning and social spaces for students. Phase 1 of the masterplan will be complete by 2013.
Our students have continued to flourish on a myriad of fronts including international sporting successes, winning prestigious prizes in industry and community settings, and being recognised for their contribution to research. The majority of our students carry out industry placements and their valued contribution to the placement provider often results in an offer of employment by these organisations after graduation, a student achievement the University is extremely proud of.
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While this review details the successes and achievements of the past year, it has also been a challenging time, not least because of the sad loss of our Principal, Professor Mike Pittilo, who passed away in February 2010. We take with us the lasting impact of his commitment to the institution while looking to the future to ensure the University’s continued success. I hope you will enjoy reading the review and if there are any aspects of it you would like to know more about, please do not hesitate to contact me.
PROFESSOR JOHN HARPER ACTING-PRINCIPAL AND VICE-CHANCELLOR
annual review 2009 - 2010
overview
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annual review 2009 -2010
UNIVERSITY CONTINUES TO GROW GARTHDEE CAMPUS The University’s detailed planning application for a 34,000m2 development, which will cost £170 million, was approved by Aberdeen City Council early in 2010. The development will be connected to the existing Faculty of Health and Social Care, which neighbours RGU: SPORT and Aberdeen Business School. The new development will see all of the University’s academic activities located at the Garthdee campus within state-of-the-art teaching and learning facilities, including a new library, as well as formal and informal learning and social spaces for students. It will also allow staff and students from different disciplines to benefit from co-located inter-disciplinary working in a manner that has previously not been possible with two separate locations.
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masterplan
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teaching & learning
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SUNDAY TIMES NAMES ‘SCOTTISH UNIVERSITY OF THE YEAR’
NEW CONSTRUCTION DISPUTE RESOLUTION QUALIFICATION LAUNCHED
COURSE IS FIRST IN UK TO ACHIEVE GLOBAL ACCREDITATION
FIRST IN UK TO GAIN IMECHE APPROVAL FOR PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT MODULES
The University has been awarded the accolade of Scottish University of the Year by The Sunday Times.
The Department of Law has launched a new qualification as part of its highly successful online LLM/MSc Construction Law and Arbitration course, and students on the Masters course are now able to obtain a formal qualification in Construction Adjudication in an interactive online environment.
Aberdeen Business School is leading the way in project management education, as the very first UK institution to achieve accreditation from the Project Management Institute’s (PMI) Global Accreditation Center.
A suite of engineering and business Masters-level modules has been approved by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IMechE) for use in Further Learning Plans for both individuals and companies working towards Chartered Engineer registration. The University is the first in the UK to have been awarded this approval.
The supplement commended the University’s excellent academic provision, consistently strong graduate employability levels and bold, strategic masterplan. The Sunday Times highlighted the University’s “flourishing reputation for research” and “high student satisfaction rates”, but explained that it is the University’s exceptional graduate employment record that sets it apart from its peers. Last year just 3.6% of the University’s graduates were unemployed six months after collecting their degree, ranking it second among multi-faculty institutions in the UK.
Aberdeen Business School’s MSc Project Management programme is already highly regarded by employers, assessment bodies and academics alike, and this accolade from one of the world’s leading project management organisations sets it apart from similar courses elsewhere in the UK.
Adjudication is a popular method of dispute resolution in the UK construction industry and provides for a fast-track and specialist resolution of disputes which often arise in the context of timecritical construction contracts. An experienced adjudicator will deliver on the practice and procedure of adjudication, including decision writing, while specialist staff will develop and deliver the law content.
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The suite comprises 18 modules that are currently delivered at the School of Engineering and 13 from Aberdeen Business School. Each module has been deemed to meet the requisite content, academic level and academic rigour expected of an approved individual Further Learning Plan for registration with the IMechE. The suite can, therefore, provide a framework of Masters level modules from which an applicant might develop an individual Further Learning Plan for Chartered Engineer registration.
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MIDWIFERY PIC TO FIND
UNIVERSITY AND ABERDEEN COLLEGE SECURE SIX-FIGURE GRANT FOR SKILLS PROJECT
PUPILS BECOME OIL BARONS AT UNIVERSITY
PARTNERSHIP PROGRAMME RECOGNISED AT NATIONAL TRAINING AWARDS
MIDWIFERY VISITORS TO ROBERT GORDON UNIVERSITY
The University and Aberdeen College secured £255,000 in a competitive process led by the Scottish Funding Council (SFC), to achieve higher workplace productivity through businesses and organisations fully utilising employees’ skills. The project also aims to identify employees’ potential to develop new skills to further increase the effectiveness of the business.
Pupils from across the North-east of Scotland desended on the University to pit their wits against each other at Petrochallenge 2009, where they fought to become successful oil and gas operators in the UK heat of the major international competition.
The School of Applied Social Studies and Aberdeen Business School received the Partnership and Collaboration Award at the prestigious National Training Awards (Scotland) in Edinburgh Castle in November 2009.
The School of Nursing and Midwifery played host to 28 student midwives visiting from Vroedkunde Limburg University, Belgium in May 2010.
The project focuses on the oil and gas sector. It began with a research phase to fully understand the lack of correlation between increased levels of skills and increased productivity. The research outcome will be used to set up a number of pilot projects involving local companies which will be formally monitored and evaluated.
The award was in recognition of ‘Leading to Deliver’, a bespoke training programme created in collaboration with The Taylor Clarke Partnership Ltd, a Glasgow based leadership and organisational development consultancy.
Pupils from 37 secondary schools in the Northeast took part in the online event which saw pupils around the world battle it out as oil barons. Around 350 S5 and S6 pupils participated in the third annual two-day event. Formerly known as OilSim, the 2009 challenge was re-launched by OPITO – The Oil & Gas Academy, in partnership with educational specialist Simprentis, with prizes being presented at Offshore Europe.
The Programme is a postgraduate course designed specifically to help social services managers across Scotland to focus on leadership, change, service delivery and partnership working.
The winning team was Aboyne Academy who went on to represent the UK in the international final in London. 14
Co-ordinated by lecturers Anne Marie Rennie and Carole Jackson, the visit allowed the Belgian cohort to enjoy a study tour and meet with representatives from both the University and NHS Grampian. It enabled students from both sides to share their experiences of midwifery and talk about their ideas for the future.
annual review 2009 - 2010
Sue Fairburn
GRAY’S HOSTS INTERNATIONAL SUMMER SCHOOL
MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING WITH CURTIN UNIVERSITY
UNIVERSITY RECEIVES £40,000 TO IMPROVE LEARNING AROUND MENTAL HEALTH NURSING
FROM SUBSEA TO SPACE SCHOOL
A host of high-profile international artists visited Aberdeen when Gray’s School of Art launched its first Printmaking Summer School in 2010.
Professor Jill Downie, Pro Vice-Chancellor of Health Sciences at Curtin University of Technology in Perth, Western Australia, visited the University in September 2009.
The School of Nursing and Midwifery, in partnership with NHS Grampian Mental Health Services, has been granted £40,000 to develop nurse education practices that will ultimately improve services for mental health service users.
Gray’s School of Art lecturer Sue Fairburn played a key role in Skills Development Scotland’s Scottish Space School visit to Houston, Texas in November 2009, as 14 young people from across Scotland were given the chance to visit NASA’s Space Centre.
North-east creatives, as well as those drawn to the events from across the globe, were able to attend a series of workshops to gain expertise from innovators in printmaking. As a pilot to this, New York artist and educator, Dan Welden, provided a taster session at Peacock Visual Arts, Castle Street. A number of other leading artists, including Don Messec, director of Makingartsafely in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Elspeth Lamb, a Scottish artist who works with papermaking and traditional Japanese woodblock printing, attended the event.
The University has developed a working relationship over a number of years between the two institutions’ respective health faculties.
The funding from NHS Education for Scotland will enable lecturers, alongside their NHS partners, to implement and evaluate an innovative approach to learning in practice for mental health nursing students.
During the visit, Professor Downie signed a Memorandum of Understanding for the development of academic co-operation, with former Principal and Vice-Chancellor, Professor Mike Pittilo.
Whilst on placement, students will be based within two services for the duration of their studies. It is also anticipated that the relationships students develop with mental health service users will be more beneficial because they will be working together over a much longer period of time.
The two institutions hope to co-operate in an exchange of information in teaching and research fields of mutual interests as well as promoting appropriate joint research projects and providing opportunities for student exchanges.
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As a Design Advisor to Skills Development Scotland (SDS), Sue is working to develop a new model for the Scottish Space School and sees some big opportunities for the North-east of Scotland to become more involved. S5 pupils and four Modern Apprentices took part in the Space School and were selected on the basis of their academic abilities, career interests, and interpersonal skills. As well as visiting NASA’s Space Centre, they had the chance to rub shoulders with astronauts, engineers, and flight surgeons at a variety of events and workshops.
annual review 2009 -2010
NEW IT MANAGEMENT COURSE BRIDGING THE SKILLS GAP
MSC ASSET INTEGRITY MANAGEMENT CREATES 21ST CENTURY BUSINESS LEADERS
HEALTH PROFESSIONALS OF TOMORROW TAKE PIONEERING STEPS AT ABERDEEN PRISON
The School of Computing has launched a new Masters course in IT Management, designed to fill a growing shortage of technical leadership skills across all sectors.
An MSc Asset Integrity Management (AIM) has been launched by the Energy Centre. It is designed to equip students with the skills and competencies to manage assets using an optimised business, safety and compliance approach.
Two third-year students delivered life skills workshops for a group of offenders at Craiginches Prison in Aberdeen. Currently there is no occupational therapy (OT) service at Craiginches Prison but the knowledge and contribution of OT is becoming more widely recognised by many sectors, and the students’ efforts are helping to highlight this.
With the need for skilled IT professionals already outstripping demand, market analysis has shown that this is going to continue to increase in the UK for at least another five years. In particular, there is a serious shortage of skilled IT managers, and there are very few courses available that offer the blend of industry-relevant material needed by managers.
The MSc AIM, which is accredited by the Energy Institute, fulfils industry requirements for a practical course delivering the benefits of applying a life-cycle approach to asset management.
The new postgraduate course is delivered by online distance learning, supplemented with oncampus teaching days.
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The role of the OT involves an integrated assessment of a person’s daily life and its context which then provides a comprehensive assessment of how and why the person may be experiencing specific problems. In addition to the project at Craiginches, students are also supporting elderly people by working alongside Alzheimers Scotland and Inchgarth Community Centre in the local community, as well as working with people who have learning disabilities, drugs and alcohol issues, and with individuals who are in the criminal justice system.
annual review 2009 - 2010
Dr John Park
OBESITY MANAGEMENT PROGRAMME SHORT-LISTED FOR NATIONAL AWARD ‘Counterweight’, an obesity management programme led by the Centre for Obesity Research and Epidemiology (CORE), won the Public Policy and Service Impact Award at The Impact Awards, organised by PraxisUnico, in June 2010. ‘Counterweight’ provides an education and mentoring programme for practice nurses to upscale their knowledge and skills in the management of obesity. Staff in the programme are supported for up to a year by weight management advisors who have been specially trained in obesity management, and who form the Counterweight team in primary practice. Counterweight is also being delivered in the workplace and in the community, as well as through primary care centres.
SCOTTISH OBE AND EX-PEPSI DIRECTOR JOIN FORCES
NHS COLLABORATION GIVES SCHOOL PUPILS THE CHANCE TO SAMPLE CAREER PROSPECTS
Counterweight has proved profoundly successful, with 40% of patients followed up by the programme in Scottish health boards losing more than 5% of their body weight. This has major implications for health spending, as it reduces the risk of developing Type II diabetes alone by 50%.
Scottish businessman, entrepreneur and Honorary Professor of Aberdeen Business School (ABS) Charles Skene OBE and ex-Research and Development Director for Pepsi Europe, Dr John Park, have joined forces to kick-start a new initiative at the University offering all students real-life experience and tuition in entrepreneurial skills.
Senior secondary school pupils from across the North-east attended a Nursing Summer School in July 2010 as the result of collaboration between NHS Grampian and the School of Nursing and Midwifery.
This award recognises the substantial cost savings and cost avoidances associated with the programme. Indeed, a health economic analysis carried out by the York Health Economics Consortium demonstrated that it was cheaper for the NHS to implement Counterweight than do nothing at all.
Professor Skene is now funding the new initiative to bring these sought-after skills to every scholar at the University. Dr Park, who also ran graduate internship programmes at Fortune 500 multinational corporation, Procter & Gamble, will take the helm. As well as a series of lectures, workshops and master-classes, the programme is supported by key activities including creating a unique business incubator to help students transform embryonic ideas into fully fledged business opportunities. Students are also now able to develop and run their own businesses for a year as a fully-credited industrial placement. 17
Twenty-one S4 and S5 secondary school pupils from across Aberdeen City and Shire, Fife and Lanarkshire, took part in a week-long programme which was designed as an educational experience to help interested school pupils make informed decisions about whether nursing is the right career choice for them. Pupils learned and practised core nursing skills, gaining an insight into student life, observed nursing work within real clinical settings and interacted with professionals and patients of NHS Grampian. They also worked with members of the public who acted as volunteer patients and visited Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Woodend Hospital, Royal Aberdeen Children’s Hospital and Royal Cornhill Hospital.
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student success
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annual review 2009 - 2010
Rick Burney
(l to r): Grant Maxwell, Associate Head of the School of Engineering, Steven Nicol and Tony Bradford, Project Engineering Group Leader at FMC.
A YEAR OF SUCCESS FOR SWIMMING SCHOLAR MILEY
FASHION SHOW FOR CLAN
ENGINEERING STUDENT AWARDED PRESTIGIOUS SCHOLARSHIP
SCOTT SUTHERLAND SCHOOL END OF YEAR SHOW
Health Sciences student and RGU: SPORT scholar, Hannah Miley, has hit the big time, taking gold in the 400 metre Individual Medley (IM), finishing in 4:25.66 at the European Short Course Championships in Istanbul in December 2009.
Third year communication and media students from Aberdeen Business School raised £13K by putting on ‘The Walk of Fame’ charity fashion show in support of CLAN in May 2010.
Third year Mechanical and Offshore Engineering student Steven Nicol was selected from 19 candidates as the recipient of the FMC Technologies Scholarship.
An award ceremony to recognise the top students at the Scott Sutherland School of Architecture and Built Environment launched the School’s 2010 End of Year Show in June.
The students transformed the Garthdee building into the Hollywood Hills for the night, and the audience was treated to the latest summer trends, Oscar worthy evening wear and a host of live entertainment and attractions.
He will receive a bursary of £1,750 for each of the final two years of the degree programme; vocational placements in the summers following third and fourth years, and the dedicated mentorship of a representative from the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. He will also have the opportunity of employment following the successful assessment and completion of the degree programme.
One prize-winner was Master of Architecture student, Rick Burney, who received two awards - the John B. Johnstone prize for best overall student, and the Aberdeen Society of Architects (ASA) Silver Medal (jointly with fellow MArch student, Raju Noor).
In February 2010, Hannah performed well at the 2010 British Universities & Colleges Sport (BUCS) Long Course Swimming Championships where she took first place in the 400 and 200 metre IM events, coming in at 4:40.91 and 2:15.80 respectively – both new British Universities Record times. Hannah also struck gold for the GB team at the European Championships in August when she swam to Championship record-breaking success in the 400m IM coming in at 4.33.09 minutes.
The show raised money for CLAN’s ‘1, 2, 3’ campaign to build a new CLAN House and Haven for families affected by cancer. The Fashion Shows have run for the last three years and raised a total of £30k.
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The ASA Silver Medal was awarded to Rick in respect of the outstanding quality of his final year project - designs for a local produce market located within the fish processing area of Aberdeen. Rick’s project proposed the return of a lost institution, ‘A market for the city’ which would radically transform the life of the area.
annual review 2009 -2010
Padraig White in action.
STUDENT ATHLETES STRIKE GOLD AT OUTDOOR CHAMPIONSHIPS
OUTSTANDING STUDENTS BENEFIT FROM INDUSTRY BACKING
Students, Alison Wylie and Padraig White,claimed multiple wins at the Scottish Universities Outdoor Athletics Championships in April 2010.
Three recent graduates of the Masters in Project Management programme who excelled in their area of study, benefitted from a share of £5,000 in the form of the annual Balmoral Offshore Engineering Prize.
Third-year nutrition and dietetics student, Alison Wylie, took double gold in the 100m and 200m with personal bests of 12.60 sec and 25.95 sec (wind assisted) respectively. Alison’s success follows from her achievements in February’s Indoor Championships where she also sprinted to double gold victory in the 60m (8.04 sec) and 200m (26.68 sec). MSc Physiotherapy student and RGU:SPORT Scholar, Padraig White, achieved a triple win in shot, hammer and discus, reaching distances of 11.80m, 62.73m and 30.91m respectively.
A HUB FOR COMMUNITY LIFE
Sara Kavanagh was awarded first prize and a cheque for £2,500 that will help to support her as she looks for a job in London. Her project management proposal centred around measuring the extent of the application of project governance and its relationship to project success in the oil and gas service sector.
2009 was the second year running that the Aberdeen-based subsea equipment manufacturing company has sponsored the prize for Aberdeen Business School students, viewing it as an important link between industry and academia, as well as providing a real boost to students on the project management course.
Babatunde Odunlami and Christiana Fowode took second and third place and were awarded cheques for £1,500 and £1,000 respectively.
Padraig recently made his debut for the Aberdeen Amateur Athletic Club (AAAC) in the opening Scottish men’s track and field league meeting of the season, where he won with a personal best and city club record of 59.19m in the hammer throw.
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Student Rowan Morrice received acommendation from the Inverness Architectural Association for his fifth year architecture project which explored the development of a rural community and education facility in Lochaline, a remote village overlooking the Sound of Mull. Rowan’s brief involved creating new facilities for the primary school and new community facilities such as a library and cafe. A new multi-purpose hall was incorporated to replace and combine the three existing halls in the village which were small, dilapidated, poorly proportioned and thus underused. Through a series of complex spatial relationships maximum use has been extracted from each square metre of building, with many spaces serving different functions to a variety of users at different times of the day.
annual review 2009 - 2010
Tim Smith, BP’s Director of External Affairs with the winning students
RGU: SPORT SCHOLAR RETAINS BRITISH STUDENT WOMEN’S STROKE-PLAY GOLF TITLE
COMPUTING STUDENT WORKS TO IMPROVE PERFORMANCE OF POPULAR SEARCH ENGINE
GRAY’S DEGREE SHOW BP FINE ART AND DESIGN AWARDS
RGU: SPORT scholar, Jane Turner, won the British Universities and Colleges’ women’s stroke-play golf championship for the second year running in April 2010.
Recent computing graduate Maryam Kontagora has found a way to improve the performance of one of the world’s leading search engines.
The winner of the 2010 BP Design Award was Daniel Gear for his exploration of the debate about wind farm developments on Shetland. Daniel produced a book and video programme illustrating the views of Shetlanders who are passionately involved in both sides of the debate. Shetland Museum has requested to retain his work.
In June of the same year, Jane was selected to represent Great Britain and Ireland at the 13th World University Golf Championships in Malaga. Her performance in the Championships was strong, coming in joint 19th out of 53 with a total score of 317 across the four rounds (79, 83, 77, 78). Jane also took first place at the Riccarton Rosebowl, a 36-hole Scottish Ladies Golf Association (SLGA) order of merit event at Hamilton in August. She performed consistently, with 71 in the first round, followed by 72 in the second, making a total of 143.
Using the spare cycles of the computers at the University, Maryam ran a myriad of concurrent MapReduce jobs to simulate hundreds of users searching and sorting on Google at the same time, ultimately improving the results of these searches.
The BP Fine Art Award was won by Catherine Weir for her thought-provoking work on the construct of time and our technological society. The basis of her work was a quote from Shuji Terayama the Japanese writer and photographer that ‘people cannot see time, they can only see clocks’. Catherine’s work combines modern and obsolete technology such as a box brownie camera and candles together with digital technology.
Her work describes how to improve benchmarks of the search engine’s MapReduce environment on multiple virtual machines. Thousands of MapReduce jobs are executed on Google’s clusters every day, meaning lots of the searches we run on restaurants and TV shows will be executed by using a MapReduce tool. An article based on the findings she has put together for her Masters dissertation was accepted at the IEEE International Conference on Complex, Intelligent and Software Intensive Systems (CISIS), in Krakow, in February 2010. 21
The winners were presented with specially commissioned trophies and a cheque for £500. In addition, Alex Gordon was highly commended in the BP Fine Art category, and Jill Patterson and Margaret Gray were both commended in the BP Design Award. Each received a cheque for £250. They were presented with their prizes at the opening night of Gray’s School of Art Degree Show 2010, sponsored by BP for the seventh year.
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research & commercialisation
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annual review 2009 - 2010
Dr Alan Owen, Director of CUSP, with Dr Walker
EXHIBITION FEATURES PIONEERING UNIVERSITY RESEARCH Two of the University’s pioneering research projects were featured in a photographic exhibition of dramatically striking images which are set to ‘change our tomorrow’ in November 2010. Where Tomorrow Begins: Reflections of Scottish Innovation showcased examples of innovation taking place in Scotland’s universities, which places them at the forefront of knowledge, research and technology, to tackle the big issues of the 21st century. The first project aimed to address the fact that approximately three million people die annually as a result of unclean water and researchers have developed an advanced photochemical technology that could help.The process uses a material called a photocatalyst that, when illuminated with light, can completely destroy the pollutants in water. The treatment is low-energy and non-toxic offering a safe and effective solution to the global water challenge.
The second is a small portable pollution detection device featuring bright non-toxic tracers. Each tracer emits light to detect the presence and movement of pollutants - even in tiny quantities - in a variety of sites including harbours, marine and freshwater environments and sewage treatment works. The brightness of tracers means that an individual pollutant can be carefully monitored and its source of origin pinpointed, allowing scientists to prevent potentially dangerous future damage.
CENTRE FOR UNDERSTANDING SUSTAINABILITY IN PRACTICE LAUNCHED
NEW TRIAL REVEALS BREAKTHROUGH IN OBESITY BATTLE
The University has launched the Centre for Understanding Sustainability in Practice (CUSP) which aspires to educate and inspire people to embrace sustainable practice in their daily lives in a time where issues such as climate change and energy efficiency are at the forefront of important global issues.
A new trial has proven that a very low calorie diet (VLCD) is far more effective at tackling obesity than conventional diets, potentially putting an end to years of losing battles among dangerously overweight Britons.
To mark the occasion, esteemed broadcaster, writer and speaker Dr Gabrielle Walker, who specialises in energy and climate change, delivered an inaugural lecture, entitled ‘Sustainability and the Future’.
The exhibition was on display at the Aberdeen’s Satrosphere Science Centre as part of a national tour.
In the first of its kind, a 12 month study, carried out at the Centre for Obesity Research and Epidemiology (CORE), saw adult men and women with BMI greater than or equal to 35, referred to the University’s obesity clinic. They were entered into a randomized controlled clinical trial of differing dietary interventions, including the LighterLife VLCD. Average weight loss for the LighterLife VLCD was 31kg, compared to just 4 kg on the lowcarbohydrate high-protein diet. Meanwhile the conventional dieters lost an average of 18kg.
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annual review 2009 -2010 Dr Allan Owen, Director of Cusp with Dr Walker.
A SMALL STEP FOR ACADEMICS COULD MEAN A GIANT LEAP FOR MANKIND Researchers at the School of Engineering are devising plans for a radically different type of spacecraft engine, which could one day allow conventional aeroplanes to fly into space, and replace the rocket motor as a means of escaping the Earth’s atmosphere. Unlike traditional aerospace engines which burn fuel, this new system, which is still at the theoretical design stage, uses microwaves to generate heat - rather like a microwave oven heats food.
The system is still at the stage of mathematical modelling and simulation - a process which involves working out all the equations governing the problem and programming them into a computer to simulate what will happen in reality. As such it still requires further work to solve its practical problems and make it a reality. Chief among these is providing a suitable power supply for the system, but Dr MacLeod confirmed that they are currently working on a number of possible solutions to this.
RESEARCHER PASSES £ 1/2 MILLION GRANT INCOME MARK
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN NUTRITION AND DEPRESSION DURING PREGNANCY EXPLORED
Dr John G Love, from the School of Applied Social Studies, has passed a milestone in research funding with the award of a grant of £15,000 from Aberdeenshire Council Choose Life Planning Partnership to examine coping strategies amongst young people. The grant takes Dr Love’s research income to more than £500,000 and is the 27th research grant he has received since first carrying out research at the University in 1996.
Iolanda Serci, from the School of Nursing and Midwifery, received two funding awards to support her current research which has the potential to improve maternal health and, ultimately, enhance fetal and infant health.
Researching in the broad area of social exclusion Dr Love has examined issues of homelessness, mental health, substance misuse, young people and migration and ethnicity.
The main advantage of the method is that it should eventually reduce the cost of space vehicles and make them reusable and potentially cleaner. The resulting craft would look and be used like conventional aircraft.
His funders have included Aberdeen City and Aberdeenshire Councils, NHS Grampian, Grampian Police, the Scottish Health Council and the voluntary sector.
Entitled ‘The Relationship Between Nutrition, Increased Inflammation and Depression in Pregnancy and Following Birth: Assessment of Depression Scores, Inflammatory Cytokines and Omega-3 Fatty Acids’, Iolanda received £5,300 from the NHS Endowment fund and £1,000 from the Iolanthe Trust. The Awards enabled Iolanda to undertake a period of research education and attend the 8th International Society for the Study of Fatty Acids and Lipids Congress, ‘From Lipidomics to Human Health’, held in Kansas. The research is ongoing as a PhD.
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OBESITY RESEARCH SHOWCASED AT NATIONAL EXHIBITION An exhibit entitled “Fat Body Slim: Shape Matters!” by Dr Giovanna Bermano, members of the Institute for Health & Welfare Research and its Centre for Obesity Research and Epidemiology (CORE) was selected to exhibit at the Royal Society’s 350th Anniversary Summer Science Exhibition in London. The exhibit was designed to showcase the University’s cutting-edge research in the field of obesity in a highly engaging and interactive fashion. Members of the public were able to explore this research by taking part in various body size and composition measurements using methods such as bioelectrical impedance and air-displacement analysis, otherwise known as the BodPod.
SCIENTIST RECOGNISED FOR PIONEERING RESEARCH INTO WOUND-HEALING WAFERS Olga Labovitiadi, a researcher from the School of Pharmacy and Life Sciences, has been commended by a prestigious European organisation for her innovative work on the use of antimicrobial wafers to control infection in wounds.
The exhibition took place at the Southbank Centre in London. Around 30,000 members of the public and 4,000 school students attended the prestigious exhibition. Dr Bermano’s exhibit was one of only 26, and was selected from over 120 applications.
Olga delivered her presentation at the European Wound Management Association 2010 (EWMA) annual meeting, in Geneva, Switzerland, and was presented with the award for a ‘First-time Presenter at an International Conference’.
The announcement of the University’s involvement in the Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition follows on from recent news that the team has also received a £25,000 grant from the Scottish Government Science Engagement Fund to deliver a series of workshops to more than 10,000 teenagers in the North and Northeast of Scotland. The workshops constitute one of seventeen projects funded by the Science Engagement Fund which is designed to get the public more involved and interested in science.
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Her work concerns the formulation of antimicrobial wafers - freeze-dried dressings made from natural materials which look like sponge and can contain substances such as antiseptics or antibiotics. The wafers work by absorbing all the fluid produced by the wound, while at the same time releasing the antiseptic or antibiotic to kill the bacteria in the infected wound bed.
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working with Business
The designs at Trump International - Scotland, Menie Estate, Balmedie.
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Cheryl Paul and Professor Marcella with the expert panel.
TRUMP TARTAN: GRAY’S STUDENTS WEAVE THEIR WAY INTO GLOBAL BRAND
RIDING THE RAPIDS
INDUSTRY - ACADEMIA COLLABORATION SHORT-LISTED FOR ENERGY INSTITUTE AWARD
IT LEADERS COME TOGETHER AT UNIVERSITY
Fashion Design students from Gray’s School of Art have embarked on a project to create a corporate tartan for Trump International - Scotland.
An event entitled ‘Riding the Rapids’ took place in September 2009 as a result of a global research project commissioned by PSN and McGrigors LLP, by Aberdeen Business School, to examine how some companies continue to prosper despite these times of volatility and uncertainty.
An innovative degree programme run jointly by Shell International Exploration and Production and the University was short-listed for an award at the prestigious Energy Institute Awards 2009.
The School of Computing, in association with ScotlandIS, the trade body for the information and communications technologies industry, has formed an IT Leaders’ Forum for the North-east of Scotland.
Intended to complement the existing Trump family tartan (Macleod), the new design will be produced in association with leading Scottish manufacturers and local mills, with a view to it being used within the club house and hotel interiors at the site in Scotland. It may also be incorporated into golf wear and resort merchandise, and will become part of the identity and branding of Trump International - Scotland. Having been invited to develop initial designs, the students have been dealt the task of weaving together the Trump brand, Trump ancestry and the Trump golf vision. Their brief was to take inspiration from Donald Trump’s golf vision and passion for Scotland, using colours that reflect the North-east coastline, Trump’s worldwide portfolio and 500 years of golfing heritage.
The Programme enables Shell personnel to gain an MSc academic degree as part of their learning and development programme. Fifty staff have joined up since the pilot stage, studying for either MSc Well Design and Engineering or MSc Completion and Intervention Engineering. The first cohort graduated in July 2009.
The event explored the research, addressing how oil and gas industry leaders are steering and sustaining their businesses through the current global recession. A panel of industry experts including Professor Rita Marcella, Dean of Aberdeen Business School, Tom Smith, Managing Director of Nessco and Alec Carstairs, Oil and Gas Partner at Ernst & Young, took part in the discussion which was chaired by Cheryl Paul from STV.
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Co-sponsored by HEAD, the IT resourcing group, and law firm McGrigors, the aim of the Forum is to grow and support a network of IT managers. The Forum will allow members to share ideas and deal with issues together, as well as receiving expert input from leaders in the field at tailored networking events.
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(From left): Chris Rigby, Business Development Manager, C4DI Project Director Professor Julian Malins and Principal Designer Graham Grant.
STUDENTS BENEFIT FROM OVER £100,000 SCHOLARSHIP FUNDING
NATIONAL AWARD FOR INDUSTRYACADEMIA PARTNERSHIP
THINKING SPACE
AMOR GROUP ENTERS EXPERTISE SHARING PARTNERSHIP WITH UNIVERSITY
From September 2009 – August 2010 students from across the University have benefited from over £100,000 Scholarship funding from businesses including AMEC, Bureau Veritas, KCA, Petrofac, Poyry, Sparrows, Talisman, Technip, TOTAL, Wood Group and FMC.
A cutting-edge collaboration between Aberdeen based Gas2 Ltd and the School of Engineering won the top accolade at the Knowledge Transfer Partnership (KTP) Scotland Awards in February 2010.
The multi-disciplinary team at the University’s Centre for Design and Innovation (C4DI) ran a three month workshop programme entitled ‘Innovation by Design’ to help Scottish Small to Medium Enterprises (SMEs) strengthen their ability to find innovative solutions to common business problems.
Scottish business technology solutions provider Amor Group has entered into an innovative new expertise sharing partnership with the University.
As well as funding, students receive a range of assistance including paid placements, mentoring and the opportunity to be considered for permanent employment at their Scholarship provider.
The Awards recognise and honour the best projects involved in the KTP scheme, which aims to help businesses improve their competitiveness and productivity through the better use of knowledge, technology and skills that reside within the UK knowledge base. The award-winning partnership received financial support from KTP, which in turn is funded by the Technology Strategy Board along with the other government funding organisations.
The series aimed to help business professionals of all levels develop creative solutions to problems with products and services by applying a designer’s way of thinking.
Gas2 develops novel solutions for the gas to liquid fuel market, and has been working with Professor Edward Gobina from the School of Engineering, to optimise the operation of a miniature pilot unit which produces an output of high quality hydrogen and carbon monoxide (Syngas) from natural gas. This can then be reacted to produce a number of products including liquid fuels.
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The Knowledge Transfer Partnership (KTP) agreement is the start of a two-year project that will bring together academic expertise in information management (IM) and the experience and skills of companies working in the energy sector. The aim is to improve IM through sharing best practice and taking a group approach to problem solving. This innovative development helps businesses save money and represents a move away from the more common consultant led approach.
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BiGGAR Economics
REPORT QUANTIFIES UNIVERSITY’S £300 MILLION CONTRIBUTION TO SCOTTISH ECONOMY
FREE BUSINESS TRAINING IS BIG BOOST FOR SMES
The University’s total contribution to the economy of the North-east is £227.5 million every year, while its total national contribution is calculated at £302.2 million.
A University initiative, which received more than £400,000 backing from the European Social Fund last year, is proving to be a success in providing free business training for small, medium and social enterprises (SME’s) across Aberdeen City and Shire.
In addition to core impacts such as staff employed, student spending and capital projects, the report emphasised the impact of the University’s relationships with business and industry. Its strong links with both local business and the public sector enable a high proportion of students to undertake work placements as part of their course and 18% of the total economic contribution is directly related to student placements. This, combined with the University’s provision of corporate training programmes to industry, not only enhances graduate employability, but also improves workforce skills and provides opportunities for knowledge transfer.
FLAGSHIP UNIVERSITY EVENT BRINGS TOGETHER BUSINESS LEADERS Beth Duff is founder of ‘the red horse speaks’ programme where horses help to teach personal development to clients of all ages and abilities. She is currently working towards a PhD on the impact of horses on human learning as a result of all the positive feedback she has received from participants. She met with David Gibbons-Wood, Director of the University’s Centre for International Labour Market Studies, Project Manager for ‘Business Skills for Growth’ and Senior Lecturer within Aberdeen Business School.
The team running the ‘Business Skills for Growth’ project from Aberdeen Business School set a target of recruiting 175 individuals to the programme in November 2008 and have more than exceeded this number. Supported by a steering group, including representatives of the University, Enterprise Trust North East, Aberdeen and Grampian Chamber of Commerce, and Learndirect, the central objective of the project is to provide short courses to improve SME business skills in specific areas.
Business leaders from across the Northeast came together for the prestigious 2009 Entrepreneurship Dinner, sponsored by AMEC, in October 2009 at The Marcliffe Hotel and Spa. Entitled ‘Riding the Storm’, the flagship University event which is now in its 14th year, included keynote speeches from Bernard Looney, North Sea Managing Director at BP, and Leo Koot, Managing Director of TAQA Bratani Ltd. The dinner culminated with a panel discussion including Neil Bruce, Executive Director for AMEC, and chaired by Jeremy Cresswell, Editor of the Press & Journal’s Energy supplement. The panel discussed lessons learnt from the latest economic downturn and touched on some very real issues facing the North-east and the wider oil and gas industry.
The University also impacts positively on the health of the community both nationally and internationally, as it trains healthcare professionals, undertakes healthcare research and provides sports and exercise facilities for staff, students and the community. It houses the Centre for Obesity Research and Epidemiology, and is recognised internationally for its research into obesity. 29
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staff success
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Heather with colleagues
UNIVERSITY DIRECTOR APPOINTED CHAIR OF MORAY TOURISM DEVELOPMENT
PROFESSOR APPOINTED TO CBI JUDGING PANEL
£12,000 INTERNATIONAL SCHOLARSHIP FOR GRAY’S ALUMNUS AND LECTURER
Andrew Martin, Director of the University’s Scottish Centre of Tourism (SCoT), has been appointed Chair of Moray Tourism Development.
Justin Greenwood, Professor of European Public Policy at Aberdeen Business School, was a member of the Final Awards judging panel for the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) Trade Association Forum UK Best Practice Awards 2010.
Heather Ross, a lecturer at Gray’s School of Art, has been awarded the Royal Scottish Academy’s (RSA) Alastair Salvesen Scholarship of £12,000 and a solo exhibition at the Royal Scottish Academy in Edinburgh.
With support from Highlands and Islands Enterprise and Moray Council, the group’s directors reflect a range of interests in the tourism sector. As Chair of Moray Tourism Development, Andrew will develop partnerships to build upon the region’s global reputation as the home of malt whisky, its heritage and its natural environment.
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Open to painters across Scotland, and sponsored by the Alastair Salvesen Trust in association with the RSA, the Scholarship is a major initiative intended to encourage young painters who have made the transition from college to a working environment to prosper. The Scholarship allowed Heather to venture to Japan for three months.
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UNIVERSITY ACADEMIC PUBLISHES BOOK EXAMINING BRITAIN’S BLOGGING PHENOMENON
ABERDEEN’S SHERLOCK HOLMES COLLECTS HONORARY DEGREE FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF HULL
Dr Sarah Pedersen, a Reader from the Communication, Marketing and Media department at Aberdeen Business School, has published a book that takes a fresh look at the UK blogging phenomenon.
Professor Dave Barclay, senior lecturer at the School of Pharmacy and Life Sciences, received the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Science from the University of Hull.
Why Blog - Motivations for Blogging includes original research on British blogging practices and motivations from one of the most well-respected practitioners in the field. Weblogging or ‘blogging’ has joined e-mail and internet home pages as one of the most popular uses of the Internet. Dr Pedersen’s book focuses on a number of themes relating to contemporary uses of this global social media platform, including comparing British bloggers to their more researched US counterparts.
SCOTT SUTHERLAND PROFESSOR’S PRACTICE COMMISSIONED FOR NEW NUCLEAR ARCHIVE Professor Barclay is now a senior lecturer at the University, as well as giving presentations to forensics students and lay audiences across the UK, and is a regular adviser and interviewee on crime and science television programmes.
Professor Barclay was Head of Physical Evidence for the National Crime Faculty, leading forensic reviews of 235 murders, including high-profile cases in the UK and abroad. In 2005 the International Homicide Investigators Association named him ‘Investigator of the Year’, an unprecedented honour a non-police officer. His style of investigation led to a major shift away from the production of hard evidence for use in court and towards a much wider investigative input, providing intelligence across the whole enquiry.
Professor Barclay has worked on some of Britain’s highest profile murder cases. He is also a former head of physical evidence for the UK National Crime and Operations Faculty, where he was involved in reviewing more than 200 murder investigations, cold case reviews and inquiries into alleged miscarriages of justice, including the Bloody Sunday inquiry, the Omagh bombing, the World’s End murders in Edinburgh, and the Millie Dowler and Soham murders. His extensive experience also led him into becoming an adviser for the BBC television series ‘Waking the Dead’. 32
Neil Gillespie, Director and Principal Architect at Reiach and Hall architects and a Visiting Professor at the Scott Sutherland School of Architecture and the Built Environment, has had his practice awarded a prestigious commission by the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority for the development of the national nuclear archive, a new £15 million facility in Wick. Reiach and Hall propose completion of the project by summer 2013.
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GEOLOGIST JO ENGINEERS ROCK FAME Energy Centre Online Distance Learning (ODL) Lead Lecturer and e-Learning Enhancement Coordinator for Postgraduate Studies Jo McCafferty is simultaneously pursuing her University and music careers. Jo has supported Marillion, toured with Midge Ure and performed to a growing band of loyal followers in Aberdeen and across Scotland. Meanwhile she has also found the time to write, record and release six original acoustic albums.
DUNOON DEVELOPMENT IS FIRST IN SCOTLAND Professor Gokay Deveci, from the Scott Sutherland School of Architecture and Built Environment, has applied his world-renowned expertise in sustainable housing to design the first certified Passivhaus in Scotland.
For the last seven years, Jo has combined her music career with working at the University looking after the ODL students to varying degrees, teaching the Subsurface module and facilitating the Business Essentials module.
Professor Deveci has designed ‘Tigh-Na-Cladach’ or ‘house by the shore’ - an affordable housing scheme for Fyne Initiatives, the commercial subsidiary of Argyll based housing association, Fyne Homes, comprising 14 semi-detached houses overlooking the beautiful Firth of Clyde in Dunoon.
Jo, who is based in the School of Engineering, has recently released her seventh, and first full band album, Overtaking on a Bend.
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The scheme is the first in Scotland to be officially accredited by the Passivhaus Institut in Germany. This voluntary construction standard is only awarded to buildings meeting rigorous energy efficiency criteria.
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working with the community Street Sport workers with members of Grampian police.
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RGU: Rag President, Stephanie Dowling
ART MEETS SPORT TO GET KIDS ON BOARD
PHYSIOTHERAPY CLASS FOR THE OVER-50’S
MURDER, MYSTERY AND MICROSCOPES
UNIVERSITY VOLUNTEERS GET THEIR HANDS DIRTY IN LOCAL GARDEN PROJECTS
Street Sport, a community youth diversion initiative in Aberdeen, is now incorporating street art into its mobile pitches.
As part of Aberdeen’s 50+ Festival in October 2009, the School of Health Sciences held a physiotherapy exercise session.
The initiative, co-ordinated by the University in collaboration with Grampian Police, takes sport to young people, within their own communities, promoting healthier lifestyles and alternatives to alcohol, drugs and antisocial behaviour. It gives young people the opportunity to channel their energies into sports in a structured and safe manner, and the versatile pitches can be set up on any sizeable area of tarmac or grass with the help of a dedicated team of volunteers.
The event took place at RGU: SPORT and acted as a taster session for those interested in joining the regular class which is run as a service to the over-60s community by students studying physiotherapy.
Around 300 members of the public attended a sold out ‘Murder, Mystery and Microscopes’ event which took place at the University as part of TechFest in September 2009. Hosted by Damien McLeod of Original 106 FM, the event gave adults the chance to hear from some of the most high-profile and knowledgeable experts in the field.
Student volunteers from the University’s Charities Society RGU: RAG (Raising and Giving) Society have been getting their hands dirty to help two local community projects, the Milltown Community Project near Laurencekirk and the Community Orchard, managed by the Aberdeen Forward Project in Garthdee.
Now with the addition of street art boards, which hang from the sides of the pitches, organisers hope to encourage those who go along to the sessions who aren’t interested in sport to engage creatively instead.
A collaborative initiative between the Macaulay Institute and Aberdeen’s two universities, the event formed a basis for the discussion of the forensic implications of a number of extracts from the fictional works of Scottish crime writer, Stuart MacBride.
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The students planted and staked trees and helped out with general garden tasks. The RGU: RAG Society was recently awarded ‘Society of the Year’ at the University’s Student Achievement Awards, and has already raised over £5000 for various local and national charities in the past year.
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STUDENT PROJECTS REVAMP VILLAGE CENTRE
FASHION STUDENTS DESIGN FOR THEIR FUTURE
SCHOOL TEAMS AIM FOR NEW IDEAS IN WASTE MANAGEMENT
Architecture students presented their final year project ideas to revamp Banchory’s town centre to it residents in a public presentation in July 2010.
Fashion Design students from Gray’s School of Art hosted an exclusive black tie fashion show event entitled ‘Shooting stars never stop even when they reach the top’ at Aberdeen Art Gallery for members of the local community in March 2010.
Eleven school teams from Aberdeen City and Shire attended the Go4SET Launch Day in November 2009 to take part in Go4SET programme, hosted at the University. Each school fielded a team of six S2 pupils who were supported by their teacher and a company mentor throughout the project.
The student project was chosen following an invitation from members of the Banchory and District Initiative (BDI) in 2009. Working in partnership with various agencies including Aberdeenshire Council and local groups including Banchory Community Council (BCC), the Initiative supports the development of a sustainable, diverse, inclusive and vibrant community in Banchory and surrounding districts.
From working with BP to local charities, international brands and key players in the Scottish textiles industry, such as Johnstons of Elgin, the students have benefited from a varied remit and showcased many of the live projects they have been working on.
Student proposals included the reinstatement of the Royal Deeside, Aberdeen to Ballater railway line and the creation of a cycle path, the redevelopment of Scott Skinner Square, a school of music, affordable housing, flats, studios and retail located between Bridge Street and the Golf Course.
The theme was ‘Waste and Your Environment’ and the teams were tasked to conduct a waste audit in the school and produce an account of the waste collection and treatment sites in their local district or town, in order to understand how the local waste sector operates. They also met their mentor companies, BP, AMEC, ConocoPhillips, WellOps and TOTAL to investigate how they handle the amount of waste they produce. Go4SET is a national programme aimed at stimulating the interest of young people in science, engineering and technology (SET) at a key stage in their education.
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ABERDEEN ARCHITECTURE STUDENTS HELP REALISE DELHI DREAMS A group of altruistic students from the Scott Sutherland School of Architecture and Built Environment head off to India in summer 2010 to design a school for a charity. Architecture student David Fleck, first became involved with the Delhi charity, Anusaran, three years ago, when he spent six months teaching and helping in the schools and the small local church. The charity is run entirely by local couple, John and Abha, and David has remained in close contact with them since then. He was impressed with their long term vision for a centre that could bring together their work, and be a shelter for girls in the surrounding communities, but other more urgent things and a really tight budget always delayed its progress. David was inspired to use his building design expertise to help them realise their dream, and persuaded a number of his third year classmates to join him and work on the project.
PUPILS BENEFIT FROM FREE SCIENCE WORKSHOPS The School of Pharmacy and Life Sciences offered two exciting, free workshops to senior secondary school pupils across Scotland during the school holidays in October 2009. The speciallydesigned taster sessions provided pupils with an opportunity to decide whether studying at the School is for them.
During their three weeks in Delhi, the group thoroughly researched the local area and developed the brief and vision for the project with the charity. They also ran focus groups and workshops with women and children at the existing schools, to aid producing designs for the school. They also explored rural Delhi, collecting photos, film footage and drawings, and generally getting to know the community at the school as much as possible.
‘The Medicine Journey, Pharmacy Focus,’ gave pupils an insight into the hands-on skills required to become a pharmacist. They experienced patient monitoring, and had the opportunity to practise the basic principles of medicines management, and the varied career paths open to pharmacists.
David and his fellow students have committed to the project for the long term, and hope that the funds will become available to complete it. David has also forged a partnership with humanitarian architecture organisation, Article 25, in a bid to start up a student society at the University which will run arts events, design competitions, lectures and workshops centred around live projects in the developing world.
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‘A Day in the Life of a Forensics Science Student’ included a lecture on ‘How to Investigate a Crime Scene’, as well as a practical exercise in which pupils were fully kitted out as crime scene investigators making their own findings in the University’s stateof-the-art mock crime scene facility.
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VIP visits
VIP visits
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FIRST MINISTER ON PANEL AT ABERDEEN’S FIRST YOUTH SUMMIT
WORLD WIDE WASTE – TALK ON GREEN IT HIGHLIGHTS ENERGY ISSUES
WORLD LAND SPEED RECORDBREAKER JETTED TO UNIVERSITY
CLOTHES SHOW HOST STRIKES A POSE
Scotland’s First Minister Alex Salmond addressed the next generation of private and public sector leaders at the Aberdeen City and Shire Economic Future’s (ACSEF) first economic summit for young people at the Aberdeen Business School in February 2010.
Mary Vincent, one of the world’s leading experts on green IT innovation, visited the University in April 2010 to deliver two lectures. The first was tailored towards students, the other took place as part of the North-east’s IT Leaders’ Forum which was launched in February 2010.
Richard Noble OBE, the man behind bringing the world land speed record back to Britain and achieving the first ever supersonic land speed record programme, inspired the next generation of engineers at a lecture in April 2010.
Caryn Franklin, one of the UK’s most well-known fashion experts, visited the University in March 2010 to give a talk as part of the Guests @ Gray’s lecture series at Gray’s School of Art.
Entitled ‘Future Makers’ the event was designed to attract a range of University and College undergraduates, young professionals and senior secondary pupils between the ages of 16 – 24.
Serial entrepreneur Mary Vincent, founder and CEO of Green Star Solution, a global business and technology firm, examined why innovation methodologies for IT are so important.
Mr Noble delivered the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET) Scotland Prestige Lecture 2010. In the free event, the record-breaking challenger and entrepreneur discussed his latest project – Bloodhound SSC. The Bloodhound project is pushing the very boundaries of technology in a bid to develop the world’s first ever 1000 mph car.
The summit combined presentations on ACSEF’s plans to grow the economy and enhance quality of life with interactive workshops to determine if those plans meet young people’s expectations for the future.
The event was sponsored by BP, Wood Group, CORE Oil & Gas, Simpson’s Hotel, in Aberdeen, and the University.
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Caryn, who presented The Clothes Show on BBC 1 for more than a decade, has produced many documentaries and books on the subject of fashion. She is also co-founder of the award winning campaign All Walks Beyond the Catwalk. As a hugely successful practitioner, Caryn focused the lecture on fashion and the body, questioning her industry’s attraction to the emaciated woman.
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Professor David Alexander
GUEST LECTURE BY BP’S GROUP HEAD OF ENGINEERING
DISTINGUISHED VISITORS COME TO ABERDEEN CENTRE FOR TRAUMA RESEARCH
Staff and students attended a guest lecture by John Baxter, Group Head of Engineering at BP and honorary graduate of the University in March 2010.
The Aberdeen Centre for Trauma Research (ACTR) welcomed the visit of Major Wajid Malik and Captain Khalid Shah in August 2010. Each visitor distinguished himself during and after the catastrophic 2005 earthquake in the Pakistan controlled area of Kashmir. Their visit further cemented the academic link between the University and Pakistan and further advanced the University’s international standing.
John’s lecture, entitled ‘In at the Deep End’, reviewed the engineering challenges facing the industry as oil exploration and production moves from fixed platforms on the continental shelf to floating structures in deep water. The latter presenting a wide range of unique challenges requiring intense professional expertise and innovation.
During their visit, both Major Malik and Captain Shah received intensive research training from Dr Susan Klein, Reader in Trauma Research, and clinical experience from Professor David Alexander, Director of ATCR.
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In addition, meetings were arranged for Captain Khalid with the Adult Psychiatric Service at the Royal Cornhill Hospital and the local ambulance service. The visitors were also able to draft papers representing collaborative research efforts under the aegis of the Pakistan-Aberdeen Collaborative Trauma Team (PACTT). This was established by Dr Klein and Professor Alexander in conjunction with Professor/ Brigadier Rana, who is the Head of the Department of Psychiatry in Rawalpindi and is now one of the University’s Honorary Professors.
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Students Glenn Buchan and Ruth Chapman with Ken Milroy (centre)
Mike Russell with Acting Principal John Harper Pascal Flammer
CONVERSATIONS IN ARCHITECTURE
YOUTH LEARNING, EMPLOYMENT AND ENTERPRISE ANGEL LEADS BUSINESS LECTURE
CABINET SECRETARY VIEWS UNIVERSITY’S CAMPUS DEVELOPMENT
Architecture students benefited from the insight of up and coming international practitioners Pascal Flammer, who runs his own practice in Switzerland, and London-based James Payne, in March 2010.
Ken Milroy, chief executive of renowned social enterprise organisation Aberdeen Foyer, delivered the 2010 Absoft Entrepreneurship Lecture at the University in March 2010.
Mike Russell MSP, Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning, saw at first hand the beginning of enabling works for the University’s £170 million development of its Garthdee campus when he visited in August 2010.
During the annual event, entitled ‘Conversations’, the students delivered presentations on their work and had the opportunity to gain feedback on the projects they are working on whilst they are still in the formative stages.
Ken is the founding leader of one of Scotland’s most successful youth learning and enterprise charities. He has been at the helm of the Foyer since 1996, overseeing its rise to become one of the most important charitable organisations of its kind in the country.
The development will be characterised by: • A clear, vibrant campus heart; • State-of-the art flexible learning spaces; • Increased accessibility; • Energy efficient and environmentally sustainable solutions; • Enhanced landscaped qualities and a stronger relationship between buildings and the riverside setting; • A confident presence for the University and the region and • A spectacular new pedestrian and cycle bridge over the River Dee.
Ken spoke to over 300 students during the annual lecture.
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honorary awards 42
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SIR RANULPH FIENNES DOCTOR OF SCIENCE Perhaps Sir Ranulph’s most famous trek was the Transglobal Expedition from 1979 to 1982, which comprised a journey around the world on its polar axis using surface transport only, covering 52,000 miles. Other huge challenges included leading the first hovercraft expedition up the Nile and achieving the world record for unsupported northerly polar travel. In 1992, Sir Ranulph led the team that discovered the lost city of Ubar in Oman as well as completing the first unsupported crossing of the Antarctic continent with Mike Stroud. This was the longest unsupported polar journey in history. In 2003, again with Mike Stroud, Sir Ranulph ran seven marathons in only seven days on all seven continents. In 2005, he climbed Everest (Tibetside) while in March 2007 he climbed the North Face of the Eiger followed by Everest (Nepal-side) in 2008. In May 2009, aged 65 years, he conquered Everest and became the oldest Briton to summit Everest. Through these expeditions he raised significant funds for the British Heart Foundation and Marie Curie Cancer Care and to date he has raised nearly £14 million for these and other UK charities, including the Multiple Sclerosis Society and Breakthrough Breast Cancer.
STEWART SPENCE - DOCTOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
MARK MCALLISTER DOCTOR OF TECHNOLOGY
BARBARA DICKSON DOCTOR OF MUSIC
Stewart is one of the leading hoteliers and businessmen in Aberdeen. He entered the hospitality industry at the age of fifteen as a trainee chef in Aberdeen. A period of training from 1962 - 1968 then followed with British Transport Hotels in Aberdeen, an exchange in Paris and then the Great Western Hotel in London.
Mark is Chief Executive of Fairfield Energy. He had previously been a member of the senior management team at LASMO plc and was Managing Director of Europe and North Africa, at the time of the acquisition of LASMO by Eni in 2001. Previously, Mark had been on the executive team at Monument Exploration where he was Director of Operations.
Barbara is a singer, musician and actress. She is a multi-million selling recording artist and the biggest selling female Scottish album artiste of all time. An Olivier Award winning actress and an O.B.E conferred in 2002 for her services to music and drama, combine to firmly establish Barbara Dickson as one of Britain’s most talented and versatile of artists.
Led by Mark, Fairfield was created to pursue opportunities provided by the restructuring of asset ownership in the UKCS, as the majors and other long-term acreage holders began to shift their focus to different parts of the world. Fairfield is an innovative upstream oil producer focused on the appraisal and development of hydrocarbon accumulations in the North Sea.
Barbara started singing in the pubs and folk clubs of Scotland and the North of England working with artists such as Gerry Rafferty, Billy Connolly and Archie Fisher which led to her singing role in the 1974 musical ‘John, Paul, George, RIngo ...and Bert’, which opened in the West End. She had her first top ten hit in 1976 and a plethora of musical and theatrical successes followed.
Stewart became assistant manager at the Treetops Hotel in 1968, then general manager in 1970 at the brand new Commodore Hotel in Stonehaven. Along with his father-in-law, Dick Donald, he purchased his first hotel, the Atholl, in 1972. Over the years, he has been the owner and proprietor of a number of the North-East’s leading hotels including the Queens Hotel, the Marcliffe in Queens Terrace, the Belvidere (now Simpsons), the New Marcliffe, Invery House in Banchory and The Marcliffe at Pitfodels.
Since the 1990s she has concentrated on the acoustic and folk roots in her music.
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DR DAME CLAIRE BERTSCHINGER DOCTOR OF EDUCATION
DONALD EMSLIE - DOCTOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
KAREN MATHESON DOCTOR OF MUSIC
After training as a nurse, Claire became a nurse/ medic for the Scientific Exploration Society Expedition to Panama, Papua New Guinea and Sulawesi.
Donald was a main Board Director of SMG for seven years and Director of Broadcasting at STV before becoming Chief Executive of the Television Division and latterly the Chief Executive of SMG plc.
In 1983 Claire joined the disaster relief group of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). It was Claire’s work during the famine in Ethiopia in 1984 that brought to the world’s attention the horror of famine, starvation and suffering.
He left the Group in March 2007, leaving behind a legacy of merging and rebranding Scottish and Grampian Television, installing state-of-theart new studios in Aberdeen and Glasgow and launching the beginnings of their digital strategy, as well as helping ITV through its first broadcast review. During his time at SMG Donald was also the Chair of ITV Network Ltd and GMTV Ltd.
Karen is widely recognised as the haunting vocals of Celtic super-group Capercaillie. She was given an OBE in the 2006 New Years Honours list, an astonishing achievement to add to her award of “Best Gaelic singer” from the inaugural Scottish folk awards.
Claire has since worked in over a dozen war-torn countries including Afghanistan, Kenya, Lebanon, Sudan, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast and Liberia.
Since leaving SMG Donald has developed his career as a Non-Executive Director and sits on the Board of Scottish Water as well as the Scottish Rugby Board.
Claire is currently the Director of the Diploma in Tropical Nursing at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and is also an Ambassador for the African Children’s Educational Trust and a voluntary worker in the UK for Age Concern.
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Capercaillie have sold more than a million albums across the world, performed in over thirty countries and written and starred in the blockbuster movie ‘Rob Roy’, with Liam Neeson and Jessica Lange, in which Karen performed a solo rendition of a Gaelic lament. Karen has released three solo albums, The Dreaming Sea, Time to Fall and Downriver, providing the perfect platform for the vocal delights that have stunned audiences around the world and introduced the beautiful Gaelic language to countless thousands of people.
annual review 2009 - 2010
PROFESSOR SIR ANDREW MOTION - DOCTOR OF LETTERS
ALASDAIR LOCKE - DOCTOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
GABRIELLE WALKER DOCTOR OF SCIENCE
In 1980, Andrew become editor of the Poetry Review and, in 1982, produced the Penguin Book of Contemporary British Poetry in collaboration with Blake Morrison. He also produced critical works on two poets who have influenced him particularly, Edward Thomas and Philip Larkin. Between 1982 and 1989 he was Editorial Director and Poetry Editor at Chatto and Windus. During this time, he published three collections of his own verse, Secret Narratives, Dangerous Play and Natural Causes. He also won the Somerset Maugham Award for his biography, The Lamberts: George, Constant and Kit.
Entrepreneur Alasdair began his career in corporate banking at Citybank. After time in Singapore he became Chief Executive at Kelt Energy. In 1992 Alasdair left to set up in business himself, buying a majority shareholding in KCA through Abbot Holdings Ltd. In 1995, an opportunity presented itself to do a reverse takeover of a quoted cash shell, Unigroup Plc, which on completion was renamed Abbot Group plc.
Gabrielle has made a significant contribution to heightening awareness and influencing key leaders on the challenges that climate change poses.
In 1996, Andrew took a post at the University of East Anglia and, since 2003, has been Professor of Creative Writing at Royal Holloway, University of London. In 1999, following the death of Ted Hughes, Andrew was appointed Poet Laureate, a post held by the likes of Dryden, Wordsworth, Tennyson and Betjeman.
Gabrielle studied a BA in Natural Sciences, and a PhD in Heterogeneous Catalysis at Cambridge. On completion of her PhD, Gabrielle started working as a freelance journalist, subsequently taking prestigious positions such as Climate Change Editor at Nature and Features Editor at New Scientist, for whom she now acts as consultant.
In 2001 Abbot Group acquired Deutag AG, becoming KCA Deutag. It was acquired by First Reserve and taken back into private ownership in 2008.
More recently Gabrielle has presented flagship BBC radio programmes, such as “Oceans: What lies beneath”. Gabrielle is also a consultant to the UK Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser and to the Government Office of Science. In June 2010 she took up the position Chief Scientist of Xynteo, a consultancy specialising in advising companies about low-carbon growth.
Alasdair was recognised as the Scotland Overall and Master Entrepreneur of the Year in 1999 and received the International Business Achievement Award from the Scottish Business Achievement Award Trust in 2009.
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annual review 2009 -2010
university appointments
46
annual review 2009 - 2010
UNIVERSITY APPOINTS NEW HEAD OF NURSING AND MIDWIFERY
NEW UNIVERSITY BOARD MEMBERS
UNIVERSITY WELCOMES NEW DIRECTORY OF LIBRARY SERVICES
HONORARY RESEARCH FELLOW APPOINTED WITHIN THE INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH AND WELFARE RESEARCH
Professor Brian Webster has joined the University as Head of the School of Nursing and Midwifery.
The University has made four new appointments to its Board of Governors, the body responsible for overseeing the strategic direction of the University and taking the necessary steps to ensure its continued success.
Michelle Anderson has joined the University as Directory of Library Services. Previously, Michelle worked at the University of Lincoln, initially as Customer Services Manager, and then as Head of Library and Learning Resources for eight years.
Dr Mark Cheesman, Director of Outlook Medical Ltd, has been appointed as an Honorary Research Fellow within the Institute for Health & Welfare Research.
Peter Nicholson, Group Head of Human Resources for John Wood Group PLC, will join international postgraduate student Victor Meme, Course Leader Susan Lawrie and James Dunphy, a member of staff within the University’s Academic Affairs department, on the Board.
Michelle is a professionally qualified librarian, gaining an MA from Leeds Metropolitan University and a Postgraduate Diploma from the University of York, before working in both HE and FE libraries, and as an information professional in commercial research and development.
Brian joins the University from his previous role as Deputy Head of School and Director of Education within the School of Health Sciences at the University of Southampton. There, he was responsible for nearly 250 members of staff and looked after all the School’s educational contracts, worth around £27 million.
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Dr Cheesman is Senior Medical Advisor to TAQA Butani and in this capacity is responsible for leading on development and delivery of a strategy to meet the offshore medicine and health needs of the business.
annual review 2009 -2010
Professor Ken Mackinnon
PROFESSOR KEN MACKINNON APPOINTED HEAD OF LAW AT ABS
BOB THACKWRAY APPOINTED AS HONORARY PROFESSOR
BUSINESS LEADER TO BECOME ABERDEEN BUSINESS SCHOOL PROFESSOR
Professor Ken Mackinnon has joined the University as Head of Law at Aberdeen Business School, leaving his previous role as Head of Law at the University of Waikato in New Zealand.
Bob Thackwray, the Leadership Foundation’s Director of Membership and Networks, has recently been appointed Honorary Professor at the University.
Neil Bruce, one of the north-east’s most influential businessmen, is tutoring corporate leaders of the future as Honorary Professor at Aberdeen Business School.
Ken previously taught at the University of Aberdeen and as a member of the Social Security Appeal Tribunal in Aberdeen in the 1980s, he formed an enduring interest in access to justice and in alternatives to the court system.
Bob is also a Visiting Professor at the University of Hertfordshire, and has responsibility for developing collaborations with professional associations, groups and networks for the Leadership Foundation.
Mr Bruce is Chief Operating Officer, Natural Resources and Power & Process at AMEC, the international engineering and project management company, which has revenues of more than £2.6billion and employs almost 22,000 people in around 40 countries worldwide.
In 1990, Ken moved to New Zealand as a foundation staff member for Waikato’s new Law School. He was involved in an effort to bring more Maori people into the legal profession by developing a new curriculum, ensuring personal support for students, and most recently by increasing distance learning options. When he left, more than one quarter of the student population studying law were Maori. 48
He has more than 25 years experience of the oil and gas industry and has been with AMEC since 1997, becoming COO of the organisation’s Natural Resources business in 2006 and COO of its Power & Process business in December 2009. He is also an Executive Director of AMEC plc.
annual review 2009 - 2010
New University President Elected Ryan Maclean
NEW UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT ELECTED Ryan Maclean who is studying for a Postgraduate Masters degree in International IT Law at Aberdeen Business School, has been elected as the Student President of the University’s Student Association, RGU: Union. Ryan, who took up his post at the beginning of August 2010, was elected by his peers who voted online and across the University campus during RGU: Union’s election week in March 2010.
AWARD-WINNING ARTS LUMINARY APPOINTED HEAD OF GRAY’S SCHOOL OF ART Ryan’s campaign aims to ensure students receive more effective feedback from University coursework and assessments; establish an International Students Forum to better engage the University’s growing international student population and also to campaign for extended library and IT facility access.
Professor Paul Harris, a British Academy and Scottish BAFTA award-winning photographer and film-maker, was appointed as the new Head of Gray’s School of Art in June 2010.
Professor Harris joins Gray’s from the University of Abertay, where he was Creative Director of the Institute of Arts, Media and Computer Games from 2002. During his tenure, he attracted over £9 million in funding to support Scotland’s creative industries and also established the National Centre for Excellence in Computer Games Education. Following an illustrious career in television, working for Channel 4, Central Television and the BBC, Paul began teaching media production and was Head of Film and Television at Edinburgh College of Art from 1996 to 2002.
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annual review 2009 -2010
Staff and student statistics UNIVERSITY STAFF STATISTICS Data as at 1st October 2010
AGE PROFILE
STAFF HEADCOUNT AND FTE Headcount Percentage % FTE
Academic
Professional
Research
All
20 and Under
0.0%
2.0%
0.0%
2.0%
100%
21 - 25
0.3%
6.0%
0.1%
6.4%
1195.63
26 - 30
1.9%
6.5%
0.7%
9.1%
31 - 35
3.7%
7.6%
0.5%
11.8%
36 - 40
4.8%
6.1%
0.4%
11.3%
Academic
Professional
Research
All
567
873
41
1481
38.28%
58.95%
2.77%
473.22
689.55
32.86
GENDER PROFILE
41 - 45
6.4%
7.1%
0.6%
14.1%
Academic
Professional
Research
All
46 - 50
7.2%
6.8%
0.4%
14.4%
Female
19.2%
37.3%
2.0%
58.5%
51 - 55
6.7%
7.2%
0.1%
14.0%
Male
19.0%
21.7%
0.8%
41.5%
ETHNIC PROFILE Academic
Professional
Research
All
Asian
1.4%
0.5%
0.5%
2.4%
Black
1.4%
1.1%
0.1%
2.6%
Chinese
0.6%
0.5%
0.1%
1.2%
Not Known
0.5%
0.2%
0.0%
0.7%
Other/Mixed
0.7%
0.3%
0.0%
1.0%
White
33.8%
56.2%
2.1%
92.1%
50
56 - 60
4.5%
6.0%
0.0%
10.5%
61 - 65
2.0%
3.3%
0.0%
5.3%
over 65
0.7%
0.4%
0.0%
1.1%
annual review 2009 - 2010
ACADEMIC YEAR 2009/10 STUDENT PROFILE OUG
UG
PGT
PGR
Total
Overall
FT
PT
FT
PT
FT
PT
FT
PT
FT
PT
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
Aberdeen Business School
0
270
2196
312
1192
2121
50
56
3438
2759
Faculty of Design and Technology
1
308
2251
269
845
480
52
33
3149
1090
4239
Faculty of Health and Social Care
1
1009
2992
818
263
820
44
24
3300
2671
5971
2
1587
7439
1399
2300
3421
146
113
9887
6520
16407
Total
Data as at 1st October 2010
6197
ACADEMIC YEAR 2009/10 GENDER
ACADEMIC YEAR 2009/10 AGE - NEW UG ENTRANTS
OUG
UG
PGT
FT
PT
FT
PT
FT
PGR
Overall
PT
FT
PT
FT
PT
Total No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
Aberdeen Business School
Male
0
142
818
126
719
1269
28
32
1565
1569
Female
0
128
1378
186
473
852
22
24
1873
1190
3063
Faculty of Design and Technology
Male
1
77
1385
224
691
417
37
24
2114
742
2856
Female
0
231
866
45
154
63
15
9
1035
348
1383
Faculty of Health and Social Care
Male
0
116
509
144
100
195
21
8
630
463
1093
Female
1
893
2483
674
163
625
23
16
2670
2208
4878
2
1587
7439
1399
2300
3421
146
113
9887
6520
16407
Total
Aberdeen Business School
Faculty of Design and Technology
Faculty of Health and Social Care
Total
UG
FT
PT
PGT
FT
PT
FT
PGR
Total
Overall
PT
FT
PT
FT
PT
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
No.s
UK
0
259
1775
285
183
1122
12
25
1970
1691
EU
0
4
274
8
53
187
3
9
330
208
538
Overseas
0
7
147
19
956
812
35
22
1138
860
1998
UK
0
302
1917
249
90
237
19
13
2026
801
2827
EU
1
3
198
9
16
34
6
6
221
52
273
Overseas
0
3
136
11
739
209
27
14
902
237
1139
UK
0
993
2498
789
136
659
23
21
2657
2462
5119
EU
1
12
468
19
41
75
8
2
518
108
626
Overseas
0
4
26
10
86
86
13
1
125
101
226
2
1587
7439
1399
2300
3421
146
113
9887
6520
16407
51
Course Level
3134
ACADEMIC YEAR 2009/10 GEOGRAPHIC ORIGIN OUG
UNIVERSITY STudent STATISTICS
3661
Mode of Study
Age on Entry
No.s
%
FT
Under 21
1844
66%
21 or over UG
952
34%
2796
100%
Under 21
43
3%
21 or over
1367
97%
1410
100%
Total PT Total
annual review 2009 -2010
Financial Summary 2009-10
Total Income increased by £2.61m or 2.8% to £94.41m.
Tuition fees increased by £0.93m or 2.9% to £33.64m.
Funding Council grants received were substantially flat over the prior year. Within this total, teaching grants fell by 3.3% to £36.1m while research grants increased by 52.5% to £3.3m.
Home/EU fees increased by £2.0m, or 13.3%, to £17.04m. This partly reflects a continuation in the move to a higher fee element in the gross Funding Council teaching unit of resource but is also caused by an increase in Home/EU students of approximately 5% over 2008/9.
The decrease in teaching grants is driven by: • the reduced numbers of students on the nursing and midwifery courses; • the continuing move to a higher tuition fee element of the gross funded unit of resource per student; •
the absence of funding for increased Student Teachers Superannuation Scheme contributions which has now been fully embedded into the main teaching grant. This overall reduction is partially offset by an underlying inflationary increase in the teaching unit of resource of 2.0% for the year.
Income from research grants and contracts has decreased by £0.16m or 3.9% to £3.95m. This is an encouraging result nevertheless as, on the back of last year’s 30% increase, it provides the University with evidence that research activities have stabilised at the higher post RAE 2008 levels. Other income increased by £1.31m or 11.3% to £12.91m. Growth here was driven by high occupation levels and increased volumes in the University’s residential accommodation business.
Increasing competition and the world-wide economic recession hit international student markets badly with the result that international student numbers were 9% down on 2008/9 on a full time equivalent basis. Allowing for the offsetting effect of international fee increases, overall income in this category of University activity was down by £1.1m or 6% over 2008/9. The University continues to focus on international markets and is currently pursuing collaborations with its international partners, Hobsons and Navitas, in an attempt to ensure it can enjoy future growth in international student participation.
Endowment and investment income has increased by £0.42m to £2.82m. Although interest incomes were down as the historically low interest rate regime took its full year toll, this was more than offset by improved market returns on University investments and endowments as stock market performance picked up considerably over 2008/9.
Total expenditure decreased by £0.45m to £90.62m.
Staff costs increased during the year by £1.16m or 2.2% to £52.92m due to the combined effects of basic pay awards, incremental progression, social security costs and pension contributions. Offsetting this rise is a reduction in total full-time equivalent staffing levels in the current year. Underlying pay costs rose by around 3.5% for the year. Other operating expenses, excluding depreciation and interest, decreased by £2.36m or 7.5%. The prior year operating expense total is inflated by non-recurring costs of around £2m in relation to enhanced retirement provision. Adjusting for these non-recurring costs leaves an underlying increase in other operating costs of approximately 1.5%. The net group result for the year was a surplus of £4.53m.
The increase in research grants is driven fundamentally by the University’s outstanding performance at RAE 2008. All three of the University’s Research Institutes benefited from this significantly increased core funding and it is expected that this will generate further growth in the University’s research activities over the coming years. 52
annual review 2009 - 2010
GROUP INCOME £’000
GROUP EXPENDITURE
£’000
41,008
Staff Costs
52,916
Academic Fees & Support Grants
33,637
Other Operating Expenses
29,967
Research Grants & Contracts
3,951
Depreciation
6,431
Interest payable
564
Funding Council Grants
Other Operating Income
12,988
Endowment Income and Interest Receivable
2,823
94,407
89,878
Group Surplus before tax 4,529
3%
1% 7%
14% 43% 43%
4% 33% 36%
53
annual review 2009 -2010
executive roles & responsibilities Principal & Vice-Chancellor Secretary to the Board
University Solicitor
Policy Advisor
Senior Vice Principal & Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic Development & Quality)
Vice Principal & Pro Vice-Chancellor (Student Experience) & External Relations)
Vice Principal & Pro Vice-Chancellor (Research & Commercialisation)
Dean for the Enhancement of Learning, Teaching & Assessment
Dean of Students
Department for the Enhancement of Learning, Teaching & Assessment
Student Services
Vice Principal & Pro Vice-Chancellor (Planning & Resources)
Finance & Procurement
CREDO
Estates & Property Services RGU: SPORT
Academic Affairs Library Services
Marketing, Communications and Student Recruitment
Planning
Vice Principal & Pro Vice Chancellor (Planning & Resources)
Dean of Aberdeen Business School
Dean of Faculty of Design & Technology
Dean of Faculty of Health & Social Care
Department of Accounting, Finance & Economics
School of Computing
School of Applied Social Studies
School of Engineering
School of Health Sciences
Department of Communication, Marketing & Media Department of Information Management
Development Office
Department of Law
Student Administration
Department of Management
54
Gray’s School of Art The Scott Sutherland School of Architecture & Built Environment
School of Nursing & Midwifery School of Pharmacy & Life Sciences
Executive Director (Information Technology & Communication)
Executive Director (Human Resources)
IT Services
Human Resources
Univation Records Management
Organisation Development & Leadership Occupational & Environmental Health & Safety The Gatehouse Design & Print Consultancy
annual review 2009 - 2010
donors DONORS TO ROBERT GORDON UNIVERSITY Throughout the year Robert Gordon University has received support from many generous donors including: Lindsay Stewart Friends of Gray’s Fund BP Exploration and Operating Company Ltd SMD Tritech Triton Group Subsea UK Acergy UK Ltd ConocoPhillips UK AGR Group AMEC
FMC Technologies Bureau Veritas KCA Deutag Drilling Ltd Petrofac Pöyry Sparrows Offshore Talisman Energy UK Plc Technip UK TOTAL Wood Group OPITO/Offshore Training Foundation Nylacast 55
Robert Gordon University is a Scottish charity registered under charity number SCO13781
Designed by The Gatehouse - Design & Print Consultancy at Robert Gordon University
annual review 2009 -2010
Robert Gordon University Schoolhill Aberdeen AB10 1FR Scotland UK Telephone: +44 (0) 1224 262000
TH E P R O F E S S I O N A L U N I V E R S I T Y
www.rgu.ac.uk
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