1. The
universities, which were founded between 1850 and 1930, including London
University, are known as redbrick universities. They were called so
because that was the favourable building material of the time.
2. the
London School of Economics and Political Science, the Imperial College
of Science and Technology, the School of Slavonic and East European
Studies, the School of Oriental and African Studies, the School of
Architecture.
3. Whereas
colleges within a university teach all subjects, and schools – a group
of subjects, these institutes specialize more narrowly, and are often
more occupied with research than teaching undergraduates.
4. Most
of the redbrick universities founded in the nineteenth century are
scattered throughout the country and are to be found in Birmingham,
Bristol, Exeter, Hull, Leeds, Manchester, Liverpool, Nottingham,
Sheffield, Southampton and some others.
5. The
redbrick universities organize their academic work in a va-riety of
ways. Subjects are taught in individual departments which are in turn
grouped into faculties covering the main subject grouping, like arts,
science, engineering, social science.
6. The “new universities” were all founded after the Second World War. They are Keele Uni-versity (in Staffordshire), the universities of
East Anglia, Essex, Kent, Lancaster, Sussex, Warwick, York.