UCAS - UCAS The Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS), is an agency operating in higher education in the UK. It acts as a clearing house for applications for virtually all undergraduate degree programmes in UK universities and other degree-awarding institutions. In all normal circumstances, all those wishing to study for first degrees in the UK have to apply through UCAS. This applies to all categories of applicants - UK residents, residents of the Channel Islands and Isle of Man, European Union citizens and international applicants. They submit a single application and a limited list of universities of other higher education institutions where they would like to study. The application is then forwarded by UCAS to those institutions, who decide whether to make an offer of a place.
University of Surrey Roehampton - Surrey, the other partner being the University of Surrey (UniS). Whilst working closely together, Roehampton and UniS remain independent, self-regulating universities. Both register students independently and Roehampton students are taught on a Roehampton campus. Because each institution controls its own property, employs its own staff and registers its own students, applications are made to each institution separately. Applicants use distinct UCAS codes for both Roehampton and UniS. In late 2003, University of Surrey Roehampton announced that it would submit an application for independent university title to the Department for Education and Skills. Consultation is underway regarding a new name to reflect this change, the most likely proposal being Roehampton University London. The application will be considered by the Privy Council, and March 2004 is the earliest an outcome is expected. External.
British university - Northern Ireland are also eligible for a means-tested grant, and many universities provide bursaries to poorer students. International students are not subsidised by the state and so have to pay much higher fees similar to those paid at Ivy League universities in the USA. In principal all postgraduate students are liable for fees, though a variety of scholarship and assistantship schemes exist which may provide support. The University of London and the University of Wales are unusual in that their colleges/constituent institutions are treated as universities in their own right. Undergraduate applications to UK state universities are managed by UCAS - the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service. Reputations British universities tend to have a strong reputation internationally, although this is limited to a small amount of internationally known universities (principally Oxford.
Leeds - It is the home of the Royal Armouries Museum North (the main museum is at the Tower of London). Leeds has two universities, the University of Leeds, with around 28,000 students and Leeds Metropolitan University with around 26,000 (according to UCAS; the LMU website claims 37,000) as well as various higher education colleges, giving it one of the largest student populations in the country. The main campuses of both universities are near the city centre. An inhabitant of Leeds is locally known as a Loiner. However, the mock-classical adjectives Leodensian and Leodiensian are used by some local sports clubs..