Question:
best UK university for chemical engineering?
anonymous
2009-08-17 01:10:56 UTC
what is the best UK university for chemical engineering?

i know Cambridge and Manchester are good for chemical engineering. are there any other good ones?

and is there a demand for chemical engineering in UK?
Three answers:
Squirl
2009-08-17 03:05:53 UTC
the top 10 unis in england for chemical engineering are (according to the times league tables):

1.cambridge.

2. imperial

3. manchester

4. surrey

5. leeds

.6 newcastle

7. loughborough

8. sheffield

9. nottingham

10. birmingham
anonymous
2016-05-24 07:48:27 UTC
1 Cambridge 2 Imperial College 3 Birmingham 4 Surrey 5 Bath 6= UCL 6= Manchester 8= Swansea 8= Heriot-Watt 10 Queens, Belfast 11 Loughborough 12 Newcastle 13 Aston 14 Edinburgh 15 Sheffield 16 Nottingham 17 Leeds 18 Strathclyde 19 London Sth Bank 20 Paisley Ratings are based on: Student satisfaction: a view of the learning experience at the university, taken from part of the National Student Survey in 2005. The survey It is a measure of student opinion, not a direct measure of quality. Scottish universities were not included and a small number of English ones had insufficient data. Research assessment: average quality of researchby all staffat the university, from the 2001 Research Assessment Exercise. Entry standards: average fullfull UCAS tariff score of new students under age 21, from the HESA (Higher Education Statistics Agency) in 2003/04. At A level, an A grade is 120 points, B 100, C 80, D 60, and E 40. AS grades are worth halfas much. Student-staff ratio: average number of students per staff member at the university, taken from HESA data for 2003/04. Library/computing spend: average expenditure per student on library and computing facilities, from HESA data between 2001 and 2004. Facilities spend: average expenditure per student on facilities such as sports, careers services, health and counselling, from HESA data between 2001 and 2004. Good honours: percentage of graduates achieving a first or upper second class degree, from HESA data for 2003-04. Graduate prospects: the percentage of a university’s UK graduates in “graduate” employment or further study, from HESA data for 2003-04. Only occupations that normally need a degree were included. Completion: the percentage of students at each university who areexpected to graduate, including those who transfer to other institutions to complete courses, mainly from HESA data for 2003/04 and earlier years.
anonymous
2009-08-17 01:27:59 UTC
Imperial College is also good.


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