Validation
The University Of Wales
The University of Wales validates the following courses offered
by the School:
- MA/PGDip in Psychotherapy and Counselling
- DCounsPsy in Counselling Psychology
- MPhil/PhD in Psychotherapy and Counselling Studies
Founded by Royal Charter in 1893, the
University of Wales is the degree-awarding body for the majority of
higher education students in Wales, as well as for many at other
higher education institutions in the United Kingdom and
overseas.
The University’s position enables it to focus
not only on its primary functions as a degree-awarding body and
provider of services to the Welsh higher education sector but also,
as a national institution, on playing an enhanced role in
protecting and promoting the economy, culture and language of
Wales.
Recently, the University has signed a
memorandum of understanding with six of the university institutions
in Wales, with whom it will be working closely on collaborative
ventures, research groupings and other new initiatives. These
institutions are:
- Glyndŵr University
- Swansea Metropolitan University
- University of Wales Institute, Cardiff
(UWIC)
- University of Wales, Newport
- University of Wales, Lampeter
- Trinity University
College
The latter two institutions are set to merge
in 2010 to become University of Wales, Trinity St David.
The University is also maintains links with
Aberystwyth University, Bangor University, Cardiff University and
Swansea University.
The University is also the degree-awarding
authority for more than 120 other higher education institutions
both within the United Kingdom and overseas, with which it also
enjoys close links. Annually, it awards around 15,000 initial
degrees and more than 4,000 higher degrees, making it the second
largest degree-awarding body in the United Kingdom. The
number of students, from all over the world, pursuing University of
Wales degrees is around 70,000, and their studies cover a wide
range of subjects.
The University is a major national institution
in Wales. While it is, of course, committed to helping to
fulfil the educational and economic needs of Wales and to
supporting its linguistic, cultural, and national heritage, the
University is also committed to its international role and to
enhancing its standing across the UK and overseas. As well as
its validation role and the international projects undertaken by
its Global Academy, the University sponsors a number of cultural
initiatives, such as the prestigious Dylan Thomas Prize, for young
writers, which attracts entries from all over the world.
The University of Wales Centre for
Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies is a dedicated research centre
whose staff are engaged on major multidisciplinary research
projects. Its work has won universal acclaim and it has, in
the past two years, attracted two of the largest grants ever made
by the Arts and Humanities Research Council to a higher education
institution in Wales. In the 2008 Research Assessment
Exercise the Centre received the accolade of having 35 per cent of
its work rated as “world-leading” and 45 per cent as
“internationally excellent”. This result both recognised the
exceptional research carried out by its staff and confirmed its
status as an international centre of excellence for Welsh and
Celtic Studies.
The University of Wales Press was set up by Statute of the
University in 1922. Within its educational mission it
publishes dictionaries and reference works, as well as books for
schools and for students. It also aims to promote the
development and expansion of Welsh culture through academic and
educational publishing both in the Welsh language, and on Welsh
topics in English. Joint publication ventures are undertaken
with national bodies in Wales, as well as with University Presses
in North America.
Gregynog, the University’s study and conference centre in the
Welsh countryside, is held in trust by the University under the
terms of the will of the late Miss Margaret S Davies.
Standing in 750 acres of gardens and woodland, it provides
residential accommodation for up to 100 people, and can host
non-residential conferences for up to 200 people. Gregynog’s
primary purpose is to be a study and conferencing facility for
university staff and students, but it also provides a commercial
conference and hospitality service, as well as hosting an annual
classical music festival.
The University of Wales Global Academy was
formed with the purpose of helping to boost the economic
performance and innovative capacity of Wales, enhance research
excellence and capability and improve links between businesses and
university institutions within Wales.
The first of the Academy’s initiatives, the
Prince of Wales Innovation Scholarships, was formally launched by
the Prince of Wales, the University’s Chancellor, in May
2009. This ground-breaking programme matches the best
students from around the world to cutting-edge research and
development projects within Welsh companies, and to related
university departments, thus providing unique industrial-based PhD
scholarships. Between 2009 and 2012 one hundred of these
prestigious Prince of Wales Innovation Scholarships will be
offered.
The second major programme within the Global
Academy, The Prince of Wales Distinguished Visiting Professorships
Programme, will provide awards to enable overseas-based
distinguished senior industrialists and academics from some of the
world’s leading technological and innovative organisations to spend
between three and six months in Wales, working with companies,
universities and government to increase open innovation
culture.
The Validation Annual Graduation Celebration
The tickets for this event are free and all
graduates of validated programmes are invited to join in this
annual Celebration. The next event is to be held in Spring 2010 at
Cardiff City Hall.
For further details regarding the University
and its validation services, please log on to University Of Wales website.
Page last updated 4/20/2010