The university has 20 academic departments and over 100 research groups, institutes and centres currently divided between nine schools. Previously the departments and research institutes had been split between three faculties: Science, Engineering and Social Science & Humanities. It has students; of whom are undergraduates and are pursuing postgraduate courses and/or research (based on figures). Its current
Chancellor is Lord
Sebastian Coe. Loughborough's vice-chancellor and president is
Nick Jennings, who took up the post in October 2021 following the departure of
Robert Allison. The university has won seven
Queen's Anniversary Prizes for Higher and Further Education for work with the aeronautical and automotive industries (1994); support for developing countries (1998); for a pioneering role in developing applications of modern optics and laser technologies (2000); for its world leading roles in sports research, education and development (2002); for its world leading role in social policy in recognition of its outstanding and widely respected work in evaluating and helping develop social policy-related programmes, such as those for cared for children, social security policy, crime prevention, education initiatives and young carers (2005); for recognition of its vehicle, road and driver safety research (2007); and for its impact through research and skills development in High Value Manufacturing to create economic growth (2013). The university has the largest sports scholarship programme in the UK, with over 250 international athletes studying and training.
Admissions In the academic year, the student body consisted of students, composed of undergraduates and postgraduate students. The university is consistently designated as a 'high-tariff' institution by the
Department for Education, with the average undergraduate entrant to the university in recent years amassing between 144–150
UCAS Tariff points in their top three pre-university qualifications – the equivalent of AAA to A*AA at
A-Level. In the 2016–17 academic year, the university had a domicile breakdown of 79:5:16 of UK:EU:non-EU students respectively with a female to male ratio of 39:61.
Rankings and reputation performance over the past ten years Loughborough was named
University of the Year 2019 in The Times and Sunday Times University Good University Guide. Loughborough is one of only four universities, along with Bath, Oxford and St Andrews, to have won the title twice. Loughborough also moved up to 5th overall in the Good University Guide. Loughborough was also given the title of university of the year at the Whatuni Student Choice Awards 2018. In the 2020 ranking exercise by Times Higher Education, Loughborough was ranked 59th in the world for the Best 'Golden Age' Universities, defined as those universities established for over 50 years, but less than 80 years. In 2018 Loughborough was named best in the UK for student experience in the Times Higher Education Student Experience Survey for the fifth time since 2009. Loughborough kept its position as the best university in the world to study sports-related subjects in the global 2018 QS higher education league table.
Sports (ECB)Loughborough is renowned in the UK for its sports provisions. Loughborough University has been ranked number 1 in the world for sport-related subjects for in the QS World University Rankings by Subject since 2017. As of the 2024 league, Loughborough is ranked first in the British Universities and Colleges Sport league table. Loughborough Sport is the brand identity for the sport-related activities and facilities at the university. The university is host to a number of sports governing bodies including England cricket, British swimming, British Triathlon, England Netball, British athletics and British weight lifting The university is home to the country's largest concentration of world-class facilities across a wide range of sports. Facilities include an indoor athletics centre and outdoor stadium, sports halls and all-weather pitches, a 50-metre swimming pool, squash, badminton and netball courts, an indoor tennis centre and outdoor courts, and two gyms. In March 2023, the university opened an extension to its Powerbase gym. The new facility spans a combined 3,200 m2 and includes 46 lifting platforms, 8 fully instrumented racks and platforms with integrated VALD force plates, Output Sports velocity-based training systems, and Performance Analysis technology. It is home to the University's Boxing Centre of Excellence and the Athletic Union Boxing club. The
ECB National Academy which is also known as the
National Cricket Performance Centre has been based at Loughborough since 2003 and provides indoor and outdoor training facilities for cricketers. Loughborough was chosen by the
British Olympic Association as the training base and official Preparation Camp for Team GB in the run-up to the
London 2012 Games. Students and graduates of Loughborough won four bronze medals and six Paralympic medals (one gold, three silver and two bronze) in the 2012 Summer Olympics. At the
2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, over 120 athletes from Loughborough represented 8 teams, across 10 sports. In total, 35 medals were won by athletes with Loughborough connections; 13 bronze, 13 silver and nine gold medals. If Loughborough was a country, the university would have finished 11th on the medal table at the 2014 Games. In 2016 over 80 students, graduates and Loughborough-linked athletes travelled to Rio to participate in both the
Olympic and Paralympic Games. In the Olympic competition their athletes secured 12 medals, including 5 golds. Loughborough-linked coaches also played a key role in the Games, with alumni guiding Team GB, Canada and Fiji to gold medals. During the Paralympic competition Loughborough-linked athletes secured a further 22 medals. At the Paralympic Games, 21 medals – six gold, six silver and nine bronze – were won by athletes with Loughborough connections. Loughborough is home to the world's largest university-based sports technology research group, which is part of the Sports Technology Institute. SportPark, based at the university provides a home for national sporting bodies including Youth Sport Trust, British Swimming and several other national governing bodies.
Research centres and groups Loughborough has a wide range of research centres and institutes, including: •
Centre for Renewable Energy Systems Technology • Centre for Research in Communication and Culture •
Centre for Research in Social Policy • Centre for Mathematical Cognition • National Centre for Combustion and Aerothermal Technology • Sport Technology Institute • Centre for Sustainable Transitions: Energy, Environment and Resilience In 2023, The
Times Higher Education Impact Rankings, which assess universities against the
United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals, placed Loughborough first in the UK and 15th globally for affordable and clean energy (
SDG 7). The Centre for Renewable Energy Systems Technology, or CREST, runs the internationally recognised masters programme in renewable energy. The Centre for Research in Social Policy is an independent research centre based within the Department of Social Sciences. It is responsible for calculating the Minimum Income Standard in the United Kingdom for the
Joseph Rowntree Foundation. The Department of Politics, History and International Relations, or PHIR, is home to researchers in European politics and international relations. It evolved from the Department of European Studies, which was established in 1972. In 2003, the department took the decision to invest in the study of Politics and International Relations and began to offer undergraduate degrees in
International Relations. It was after this that the department had a change of name and became the Department of Politics, International Relations and European Studies (PIRES). PIRES was declared a
Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence by the
European Commission. Notable alumni of PHIR include
Paula Radcliffe,
Tanni Grey-Thompson and
James Gibson. Academics include
Ruth Kinna, Professor of Political Theory. == Student life ==