If you claim to have the ¡°freshest university campus in Britain¡±, you had better have some pretty strong evidence to back it up.
However, if you proffer classrooms inside the biomes of the Eden Project, few would argue to the contrary.
Sir Tim Smit, Eden¡¯s co-founder, made the claim during an announcement relaying that the Eden Project would be opening its doors to university students this autumn.
In partnership with the Cornwall College Group, the Eden Project will house undergraduates on horticulture, garden and landscape design, event management, performance, storytelling and interpretation programmes.?Plymouth University will validate the degrees.
ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ
¡°We started with our partners at Cornwall College and the courses fitted in well with Plymouth,¡± said David Harland, executive director of the Eden Project. ¡°We¡¯ve got quite well-publicised partnerships with the University of Exeter and Falmouth University and we also have MSc students from Anglia Ruskin University, but this is taking us into a new place and Plymouth fits the bill [as it¡¯s] South West-focused.¡±
Eden¡¯s famous ¡°biomes¡± recreate varying climatic conditions, such as a Mediterranean environment, giving students the opportunity to study plants and ecosystems from around the world.
ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ
¡°We got into a dialogue originally about the state of horticulture in the nation,¡± Mr Harland said. ¡°There¡¯s a view that it has become either very specialist or a profession that you wouldn¡¯t necessarily want to recommend to your children, because [parents assume that they are] going to end up digging in a ditch in the rain.
¡°We wanted to change that perception, because if there is an issue that¡¯s going to come up in the 21st and 22nd centuries, it¡¯s going to be about feeding the world. Plants are going to play a very big role in that.¡±
He added that the new programmes offered a ¡°chance for students to engage with real-life activities¡± as opposed to being taught a ¡°[solely] theoretical module¡±.
Miriam Venner, director for cultural and visitor economy at Cornwall College and responsible for events management and the performing arts programmes at the Eden Project, agreed.
¡°Working alongside [professionals] at the same time as having [the] academic rigour of the university and our teaching staff is the perfect combination,¡± she said. ¡°What we try and do with all our higher education courses is to give [students] that real experience rather than just a simulation. That gears them up far better for employment.¡±
Ms Venner added that after a successful year of putting apprentices into the Eden Project, a number of whom she was responsible for, higher education was the ¡°next logical step¡±. Despite the Eden Project¡¯s national draw, the possibilities afforded to Cornish students made the collaboration even more important. The Eden Project has contributed more than ?1 billion to the local economy since opening in 2001, and Ms Venner has always seen its academic potential.
¡°My main involvement has been with events, such as the Eden Sessions (music concerts), conferences [and] weddings,¡± she said. ¡°I saw it [the Eden Project] as an instant fit for the range and breadth of activities that our students need to engage in. For them to learn all aspects [of their subject area] they need to work in all sorts of different contexts.¡±
Mr Harland said that getting to the current position had not been an easy journey, and that the process took a lot of ¡°intellectual rigour and energy¡±, adding that it¡¯s not just about having ¡°physical facilities¡±.
ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ
However, that does not detract from the fact that the Eden Project¡¯s learning spaces are unique, he said. ¡°I¡¯m not a horticulturist, but I [go through] at least three, four, five temperate zones in one day. There are almost no places in the world [where] you can do that, in that way,¡± he said. ¡°We have the largest rainforest in captivity, the world¡¯s largest collection of economic plants. It¡¯s a different type of horticulture from many other institutions.¡±
ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ
Although the partners did not want to get ahead of themselves, they have plans to develop the courses and grow student numbers. The programmes have attracted 65 students so far and there are hopes that this will stretch to more than 70 over the first year.
¡°We¡¯ve got a raft of areas [that] we could look at, [including] land reclamation, remediation and regeneration; conservation and sustainability,¡± said Mr Harland.
¡°Horticulture is in a state and the world needs horticulture right now to make sure that we can grow the population to 9 billion. Imagining those students going forth and developing their careers further¡there isn¡¯t [anything] much better for us as a social enterprise than giving back to society.¡±
<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>In numbersÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>
9 billion: the global population is expected to exceed this figure by 2050, according to UN estimates
<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>Campus newsÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>
University of Leicester
Trees in cities significantly decrease pollution levels by dispersing road traffic emissions, according to a study. While previous reports suggested that trees trap pollution by constructing wind flow in street canyons, the new study from researchers at the University of Leicester highlights the effectiveness of trees at dispersing emissions on a city scale. It found that trees reduced the concentration of road traffic emissions by an average of 7 per cent at pedestrian height in Leicester.
University of Oxford/University of Cambridge
The London Underground strike of February 2014 actually produced a net benefit to the economy because it forced commuters to find more efficient routes to work, according to a major analysis of data. Researchers from the universities of Cambridge and Oxford looked at more than 200 million data points from the Oyster card system, and found that one in 20 commuters stuck with their new route after the strike, ultimately outweighing the economic damage of the strike.?
University College London/University of Oxford
Sports fans have unrealistically high expectations of their team¡¯s chances, a study shows. Asked to predict how many games their teams would win in an upcoming season, about 1,100 US-based fans of the country¡¯s National Football League consistently overestimated the likely tally of victories, according to researchers at University College London and the University of Oxford. Expert reporters assigned to cover teams by broadcaster ESPN are just as over-optimistic, says the paper published in the journal Plos One.
Cardiff University
A joint degree where students will divide their time between Wales and China has been developed by Cardiff University and Beijing Normal University. Undergraduates enrolled at the Cardiff-Beijing Chinese Studies Joint College will follow a collaboratively developed course in Chinese language and cultural studies, leading to the awarding of a dual qualification from both institutions. The first and final years of the four-year programme will be taught in Cardiff, with the intervening years taught in Beijing. Students will also be required to undertake a work placement or internship in China.
University of East Anglia
Urinary tract infections could be treated using a DNA sequencing device the size of a USB stick, according to a study. Researchers at the University of East Anglia used a new device called MinION to characterise bacteria from urine samples four times quicker than using traditional methods. Academics discovered that the new approach also detects antibiotic resistance, allowing patients to be treated more effectively.
University of Bath
Scientists have taken a step towards better treatment of genetic disorders after the discovery that ¡°silent¡± mutations of genes, which do not affect the resulting protein and so were previously considered harmless, do actually reduce patients¡¯ chances of survival. Research into these mutations by a team led by Laurence Hurst, director of the University of Bath¡¯s Milner Centre for Evolution, could lead to earlier diagnosis of disease and help make better replacement genes for patients.
University of York
A UK university is to work with two European institutions to investigate the clinical and economic challenges of personalised medicine. A team from the Centre for Health Economics at the University of York will collaborate with researchers from the University of Twente in the Netherlands and the Luxembourg Institute of Health in a ?1.2 million project investigating whether the one-size-fits-all approach to medical treatment is outdated. The team from York will focus on developing clinical and economic models to determine which treatment is the most cost-effective for different individuals.
ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ
City University London
A social science project to collect useful and reliable data on Europe¡¯s population has won a ?6.1 million (€8.4 million) European Commission grant. Based at City University London, the European Social Survey will lead a collaboration of three leading European social research bodies for the Synergies for Europe¡¯s Research Infrastructures in the Social Sciences initiative. The main aim of the four-year project is to offer governments a stronger body of evidence on Europeans¡¯ attitudes, experiences and behaviours by strengthening cooperation between research infrastructures and improving methods of data collection.
Print headline: Eden sprouts HE shoots as biomes become classrooms
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Õ±á·¡¡¯²õ university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber? Login