Faculties Manchester Metropolitan University comprises four faculties led by faculty pro-vice-chancellors, 10 Professional Services Directorates and a range of departments, schools and institutes. The four faculties are:
Arts and Humanities The Faculty of Arts and Humanities has more than 11,000 undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral students. Home to
Manchester School of Art (f. 1838),
Manchester School of Architecture and Manchester Writing School, the faculty is one of the largest in the UK. It offers a range of subjects, from design to fashion, creative writing to architecture, linguistics to languages, digital arts to journalism, and history to sociology, across 9 departments and schools.
Business and Law The Faculty of Business and Law has more than 10,000 undergraduate and postgraduate students enrolled on 120 different degree programmes. The faculty consists of the
Business School, which holds accreditations from EQUIS, AACSB and AMBA, and the Manchester Law School. The faculty is also home to the majority of the university's Degree Apprenticeship programmes, with more than 2,400 apprentices studying across 15 programmes with 530 employer partners.
Health and Education Home to around 9,000 students across 5 departments, the Faculty of Health and Education is based in the Brooks building.
Science and Engineering More than 6,000 students in the Faculty of Science and Engineering can take nearly 100 undergraduate and postgraduate degree programmes in a variety of subjects. A new, £115m base for the faculty opens in 2024, which will include teaching and research spaces, a 200-student super lab, study areas and green spaces.
Governance In common with most universities in the United Kingdom, Manchester Met is headed formally by the chancellor, currently
Antony Jenkins but led by the vice-chancellor, currently
Malcolm Press. The university's board of governors is responsible for determining the educational character and mission of the university. It also falls to the board of governors to ensure that the university's resources are used in line with the university's Article of Government. It also safeguards the university's assets and approves the annual estimates of income and expenditure. The board of governors is responsible for broad policy, but the vice-chancellor, along with the University Executive Group, is responsible for overall management, policy implementation, organisation, operations and direction of the university. In December 2014, it was announced that
Malcolm Press had been appointed to succeed John Brooks as vice chancellor on 1 June 2015.
Finances In the financial year ending 31 July 2021, the university had a total income of £369m. ==Academic profile==