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Which Is Better University Of Bradford Or University Of Wolverhampton

Is Bradford university good?

The opinion of this university is somewhat biased for the majority of people.As a current student myself I entered the university with the same stereotypical opinions and having read everything online I can't say I was looking forward to it.4 years on and I'm dreading leaving, it's cheap accommodation and cheap food make it brilliant for broke students, everything is easily accessible with the town centre having all the main shops. Entertainment from cinema to bowling to parks is all within 10 minutes, if you go further out the scenery and country is stunning.Aside from this Yorkshire people are lovely, you can chat to anyone and have a conversation with most people. However the central part of Bradford is abit more ‘rough’ and you can generally tell the difference as you move outwardsThe university provides continual support. It's a great campus, there's a variety of societies to get involved in, end of year party on the amp brings everyone together, it has a newly built central hub accommodation and it's eco friendly AND to some up I genuinely believe it is under-rated

Where to go for nightlife in Walsall / Wolverhampton?

Does anyone know where is good to go round these areas? Have just moved over here and going out on sat night but don't have a clue where to go. In the centre of wolverhampton and walsall are there a group of clubs / Bars or is everywhere pretty spread out?

Thanks

What are the best things for University of Wolverhampton students to do on weekends?

It’s been a long time (20 years exactly) since I was a student at the University of Wolverhampton, but what we’d do would depend on what Campus we lived on - as when I was there Wolves had 6 campuses - 3 in Wolverhampton (North, South, and Compron Park), Telford, Dudley and Walsall. The nightlife in Wolverhampton was more varied in scope than Walsall (which at my time only had one decent nightclub, but many bars and wine bars, which tbh I favoured anyhow), but the good thing about the area was that within 13–20 miles of any of the Campuses were stuff we could do. There was a 10-screen UCI cinema in Dudley, a 13-screen Showcase outside Walsall, and another big one in Telford (can’t remember the size). If you’re a football fan, Wolverhampton has the Molineux Stadium. Birmingham is only about a 20 minute bus/taxi ride away, which obviously has vastly better night life and entertainment than Wolverhampton, Telford, Dudley or Walsall if you like theatre, nightclubs, concerts, etc… You will likely find that unless things have changed, the students union or student groups organise regular trips to concerts and nighclubs. The student’s union also has a bar on every campus - and at the time I was there Wolves boasted it had the 2nd-biggest student union pub in the UK.In short, there’s plenty to do if you’re in one of the bigger city campuses; or if you have a car or West Midlands bus pass so you can move around a bit.

What are the best universities in England for History?

The Sunday Times Good University Guide gives you the following as the top 12:I notice you also asked about the worst universities for History, but so long as you avoid Bradford, Brighton, Greenwich, Sunderland, Worcester, Wolverhampton, Bath Spa, Salford and (rather surprisingly) Kingston, you should be fine. And you probably didn’t want to go to most of those anyway.

Where can I find the course guide for university of Derby, Wolverhampton and Manchester metropolitan?

For University of Wolverhampton you can easily find it on this link Course Guides - University of Wolverhampton and you select your year of entry then the course you are after.Hope it helps

University Choices!!!?

Soooo I changed my course last minute to social work... and have managed to narrow down the list of universities that UCAS supplied to ones that I could ACTUALLY get into, however I still have bloomin 35!!!
Im looking them up but I need a bit of help as dont know much about some of them... Which univeristies would you recommend for a social work course? Or just in general? I plan to stay on campus so obviously id like the area to be nice etc...
Thank you!
Here are the 35 univeristies! ahaa:
Anglia Ruskin
Univerity of Bedfordshire
Birmingham City University
Univeristy of Bradford
University of West England Bristol
Brunel University
Buckinghamshire New University
Univeristy Wales Institute Cardiff
University of Central Lancashire
Coventry University
University of Cumbria
University of Derby
University of Glamorgan, Cardiff and Pontypridd
University of Greenwich
University if Hertfordshire
Kingston University
University of Leeds
University iof Lincoln
London Southbank
Middlesex University
New College Durham
Nottingham Trent University
Oxford Brookes University
Plymouth University
University oof York
Southampton Solent University
Staffordshire Univeristy
University of College Suffolk
University of Sunderland
Swansea University
Teeside University
University of West London
University of Wolverhampton

Which college is better to study abroad in?

All of them have great reputations, but personally I would go for LSE. Apart from Oxford & Cambridge it seems to be the most instantly recognised in the rest of the world - everyone has heard of it. Have a look here -
http://education.guardian.co.uk/universityguide2009/0,,2276673,00.html
It doesn't have international relations but for politics, which is the closest thing, LSE is second only to Oxford. The cost of living will be higher in London but then Edinburgh is fairly expensive too - plus, you will presumably be living in university accommodation, and rent is the biggest expense. Most of the other students will be living on tight budgets too so it's not like you'd be going to the more expensive bars/ restaurants/ nights out etc. In terms of sights, Edinburgh is meant to be lovely but, well, London's the capital! You'd never be at a loss for something to do. Kings College is good too but doesn't have quite as good a reputation as LSE. As for the person who said Birmingham is second only to Cambridge academically, I have no idea where they got that from...
P.s., I don't study at LSE, so this is unbiased!

In which subjects do UCL offer graduate courses?

Post graduate taught courses can be found hereUCL graduate taught degrees (MA, MSc, MRes)Research courses can be found herehttp://www.ucl.ac.uk/prospective...

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