University of Strathclyde Faculty of Science

Summary

The Faculty Of Science is one of the four faculties which make up the University of Strathclyde, in Glasgow, Scotland.[1] The faculty contains a number of departments offering various undergraduate and postgraduate courses.[2]

Introduction edit

The Faculty of Science is based on the John Anderson Campus of the University. The faculty has over 3,000 students and receives a grant income for research of over £20million.[3]

The Faculty offers courses at both undergraduate and also postgraduate level, at which teaching and research options are available.

Departments edit

The faculty consists of five departments, namely:

Pure & Applied Chemistry edit

Most recently, greater than £10 million was spent on the departments buildings and laboratories. Many graduates from the department work worldwide in research, industry and education.[4]

The Department is home to a number of Centres, namely: - The Doctoral Training Centre in Synthetic and Medicinal Chemistry - The Centre for Nanometrology - The Centre for Process Analysis & Control Technology (CPACT) - The Centre for Physical Organic Chemistry - The Centre for Forensic Science

Mathematics & Statistics edit

This department was previously two separate entities; the Department of Mathematics, and the Department of Statistics and Modelling Science. However, they merged to form the single Department of Mathematics and Statistics.[5]

Research is focused on applied mathematics in the broadest sense, with an emphasis on nonlinear systems and solution of problems with industrial relevance.[6]

Computer & Information Sciences edit

The Department is engaged in research across Computer and Information Sciences, spanning Artificial Intelligence, Software Engineering, Information Retrieval, Mobile and Ubiquitous Interaction, Functional Programming, Dataflow Systems, Database Indexing and Information Science.

In addition to their research, the Department offers a wide range of undergraduate and postgraduate courses. Many of these are cross disciplinary, with courses jointly run with the Strathclyde Business School and the University's Law School, for example.

Physics edit

The Department offers undergraduate courses which lead to both the award of BSc and MPhys. They also offer a number of postgraduate taught courses, including Masters courses in: - High-Power Radio Frequency Science and Engineering - Nanoscience - Optical Technologies - Photonics and Device Microfabrication - Quantum Information and Coherence

The research portfolio of the Department of Physics is among the best in the UK. Based on the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2014 GPA Scores, Times Higher Education ranked the Department as number one in the UK for physics research.[7][8] Since 2014 the University's Institute of Photonics has been incorporated within the Department of Physics.

Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences (SIPBS) edit

SIPBS is a major research centre in Scotland and is amongst the UK's top Schools of Pharmacy. It benefited from a new £36 million purpose-built building to harness this department's research in drug discovery and development. The building was completed in 2011.[9]

SIPBS research is focused on New Medicines, Better Medicines and Better Use of Medicines.

Research within the Institute is advanced through six Research Groups: • Cardiovascular Research • Cell Biology • Infection, Immunity and Microbiology • Medicines Use and Health • Neuroscience • Pharmaceutical Sciences

Dean of Faculty edit

The current dean of the Faculty is Prof. Iain Hunter.[10][11] He replaces Brian Furman who retired.[12] After being a professor of Molecular Microbiology for 13 years at Strathclyde University he became the dean of the faculty in 2008. Based in the SIPBS department the professor took up his post with "a determination to strengthen links between faculties and with industry."[13][14] Originally Hunter graduated from Glasgow University with an honours degree in Biochemistry before undertaking a phD in Microbial Physiology (the study of how the microbial cell functions biochemically) again at University of Glasgow.

The professor also works with the Scottish Qualifications Authority in creating the new Curriculum For Excellence Framework in Biology.[citation needed]

Research edit

The Faculty of Science has the largest number of research students in the University. The Faculty of Science collaborates with many external groups such as the European Space Agency, NASA, NHS Scotland, and the Metropolitan Police.[citation needed]

Former Departments and Research Units edit

Centre for Digital Library Research edit

The Centre for Digital Library Research (CDLR) was a research unit based within the then Information Resource Directorate (IRD) and later the Department of Computer and Information Sciences.[15] It was established in 1999 by Prof. Derek Law, Head of the Information Resources Directorate, as a centre of expertise in digital library research and digital library development activities. It later contributed to the research portfolio of the Department of Computer and Information Sciences, including the Research Assessment Exercise and Research Excellence Framework.[16][17] The Centre was disbanded in 2011 following organisational changes at the University of Strathclyde.

The Centre was originally established to further the application of web technologies within the context of digital libraries, thereby contributing to the development of national and global networked information services. This often entailed the concept of holistic approaches to system development [18] whereby tangible technical outputs were interconnected and used to further research of a specific issue or problem.[19] During its operation the Centre received numerous grants from a wide variety of funders, including the Jisc, the Scottish Funding Council (SFC), the European Commission, the British Academy, the New Opportunities Fund and others. A number of these grants, particularly those from the Jisc, funded the creation of service nodes within the Jisc's Information Environment,[20] such as terminology services [21] and federated search tools.[22] Research specialisms for the Centre were varied but included topics such as digital content creation and maintenance, resource discovery, syntactic and semantic interoperability across distributed digital libraries and repositories, metadata schema, digitization and digital preservation.[23]

Although the Centre ceased operations in 2011, some of its technical outputs from research and development activities, such as the Glasgow Digital Library, remain available and supported by the University of Strathclyde Library.[citation needed]

Perhaps the best known of the Centre's technical outputs was the BUBL Information Service.[24] Originally predating the advancements in web searching offered by emergent services like Google, BUBL offered a searchable directory of specially selected and described web resources, covering all subjects of academic relevance for the UK higher education community. The directory BUBL operated was similar to the Yahoo! Directory but was instead organised, described and navigable according to the Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC) system [25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Departments & Faculties". Archived from the original on 23 July 2010. Retrieved 18 November 2009.
  2. ^ "Departments within the Faculty". Retrieved 20 November 2009.
  3. ^ "Faculty Science Homepage". Retrieved 19 November 2009.
  4. ^ "Pure & Applied Chemistry - About Us". Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  5. ^ "Decision to Merge Departments (Point CM 4217, Page 3 of Document)" (PDF). Retrieved 18 November 2009. [dead link]
  6. ^ "Maths Department involved with Applied Maths". Archived from the original on 13 December 2009. Retrieved 20 November 2009.
  7. ^ HEFCE (2015). REF2014 Results and submissions (Report).
  8. ^ Jamie McIvor (2014). "Scottish university research praised". BBC News.
  9. ^ "New SIPBS Building". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 20 November 2009.
  10. ^ "New Dean takes up post". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 20 November 2009.
  11. ^ "Dean of Science". Archived from the original on 25 October 2009. Retrieved 20 November 2009.
  12. ^ "Former Dean Brian Furman". 21 August 2008. Retrieved 24 November 2009.
  13. ^ "Strathclyde's science dean signals more industry links". Retrieved 24 November 2009. [dead link]
  14. ^ "New Science Dean's formula for success". Archived from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 24 November 2009.
  15. ^ Dennis Nicholson (2000). "Researching and developing Virtual Scotland : a perspective from the Centre for Digital Library Research" (PDF). Electronic Library. 18 (1): 51–62. doi:10.1108/02640470010320461. ISSN 0264-0473.
  16. ^ RAE2001 (2002). Structure, environment and staffing policy (Report).{{cite report}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ RAE2014 (2014). Impact Case Studies: Improved user experience of the Europeana Digital Library through user-centred evaluations (Report).{{cite report}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ Derek Law; Dennis Nicholson (2001). "Digital Scotland, the relevance of library research and the Glasgow Digital Library Project". Program. 35 (1): 1–14. doi:10.1108/EUM0000000006939. ISSN 0033-0337.
  19. ^ Dennis Nicholson; George Macgregor (2002). "Learning Lessons Holistically in the Glasgow Digital Library". D-Lib Magazine. 8 (7/8). ISSN 1082-9873.
  20. ^ Andy Powell; Liz Lyon (2002). "The JISC Information Environment and Web Services". Ariadne (31). ISSN 1361-3200.
  21. ^ Dennis Nicholson; Emma McCulloch; George Macgregor (2007). High-level Thesaurus (HILT) Phase III [Project] : Final Report. Ariadne (Report).
  22. ^ Gordon Dunsire (2003). "Joined up indexes : interoperability issues in Z39.50 networks". International Cataloguing and Bibliographic Control. 32 (3). ISSN 1011-8829.
  23. ^ Gordon Dunsire (2004). The Centre for Digital Library Research and the Common Information Environment. 8th Seminar on Archives, Libraries, Museums.
  24. ^ Andrew P. Williamson (2000). "BUBL LINK / 5:15 : Smarter Than the Average Search Engine". The Serials Librarian. 37 (4). doi:10.1300/J123v37n04_03. ISSN 0361-526X. S2CID 60569568.
  25. ^ Dennis Nicholson; Alan Dawson (1999). "BUBL Information Service (BUBL)". The Amazing Internet Challenge: How Leading Projects Use Library Skills to Organize the Web. American Library Association. ISBN 9780838907665.

External links edit

  • Official website