University of Sheffield Students' Union
Sheffield Students' Union, officially known as the University of Sheffield Students' Union,[3] is the representative body of students at the University of Sheffield. It is run by a team of thirteen elected officers (7 full-time officers and 6 part-time officers).
Institution | University of Sheffield |
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Location | Western Bank, Sheffield, England |
Established | 1906 |
Members | 30,307 student members[1] (2023) |
Affiliations | National Union of Students, Aldwych Group, National Postgraduate Committee, Nightline, UKCOSA, Sheffield Chamber of Commerce |
Societies | Over 300 Clubs, Societies and Working Committees |
Website | Sheffield Students' Union |
Student Executive Committee 2024/2025 [2] | |
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In Office | |
30 June 2024 – 30 June 2025 | |
Full-time Sabbatical Officers | |
President | Daisy Watson |
Activities and Development Officer | Anna Campbell |
Education Officer | Maria Jose Lourido Moreno |
International and Community Officer | Jephtah Ekogiawe |
Liberation Officer | Tomás Rocha-Lawrence |
Welfare and Sustainability Officer | Nadya Ghani |
Wellbeing and Sports Officer | Annie Henderson |
Part-time Officers | |
Ethnic Diversity Officer | Kiara Alejandra Delgado Derteano |
Disabled Students' Officer | Nick Michau |
LGBT+ Students' Officer | Anmol Dubey |
Mature Students' Officer | Benito Hart Prieto |
Postgraduate Students' Officer | Beth Hayward |
Women Students' Officer | Eloise Taylor |
Senior Management | |
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Effective from 1 September 2023 | |
Chief Executive | Daryl Ormerod |
Director of Social Enterprise | Chris Aucott |
Director of Digital Data and Marketing | Richard Copley |
Director of Student Community Development | Lauren Simpson-Smillie |
Director of Student Influence | Memunat Ayinla |
Director of Finance and Facilities | (Vacant) |
Director of People, Equity, and Organisational Development | Bethany Rogers |
History
editThe forerunner of the university was Firth College (1879) which had both a Student Common Room and student societies including an Athletics Union. The Common Room Committee specifically had a 'chairman/woman' indicating equal status (unusual for the time) with a woman student winning the earliest known election in 1896.[4] However, for the university itself, a Student Representative Council (SRC) was formed in 1906, with the name 'The University of Sheffield Union of Students' being first used in 1923. The first SRC had 20 men and 10 women elected, with 4 men and 3 women as officers. There was a Student President and two Vice-Presidents, one male and one female.[4] For some periods it was called the Guild of Students.[4]
The building for the new university, now called Firth Court, had two common rooms for students, one for men and one for women in which events could be organized. There was initial reluctance to hold dances on university property, but eventually dances were held in the main hall at lunchtimes and evenings.[4] The university acquired two small buildings in 1928 to serve as student clubs, but the Union did not get a separate building till 1936, the Graves Building (funded by J. G. Graves and designed by the Professor of Architecture, Stephen Walsh). This building is still present within the complex, though the interior is much altered.[4]
Because of the expansion in numbers, a new building was constructed in 1960–61 adjacent to the Graves Hall and linked to it, which is the basis of the current Union building. A link block had what was claimed to be the longest Union bar in the country.[5] A further expansion of the building took place in 1978, and various refurbishments occurred thereafter until 1993–6 when there was extensive reconstruction and extension, to accommodate a further increase in numbers, creating a substantially new building, designed by Mott Architecture.[4]
In addition to the Union building, the Union shared facilities with the university in adjacent buildings; University House and the Octagon Centre. A major development project was completed in 2013, integrating University House into the Union building and providing an enclosed bridge to the Octagon Centre.[6]
Aims and policies
editThe Students' Union aims to "advance the education of Students" by "representing the students of the University locally and nationally, organising services and activities to meet their needs" and "taking positive measures to encourage and build a student community which respects and celebrates the diversity of its membership".[7]
The Students' Union, its officers and staff are bound by democratically chosen policies and are reviewed every three years (unless circumstances warrant a more frequent review).[8]
Education policies
editThe Students' Union campaigns for the abolition of all tuition fees, introduction of financial support for postgraduate students, reinstatement of public investment in education as a social good, and against cuts to education.[8]
Environmental and ethical policies
editThe Students' Union maintains an environmental policy, undertaking the Students' Union to: educate its members on the issue of climate change, implement an Environment Code of Best Practice, call on the university to reduce its environmental footprint, lobby local authorities to work towards a sustainable Sheffield.[8] Nestlé products are banned within the Students' Union and its commercial services and the Students' Union has no dealings with the company due to its "unfair exploitation of third world countries".[8] As the result of a referendum in 2012, the Students' Union has introduced a 'strong anti-arms trade policy', and has consistently lobbied the university since to divest itself of any involvement with the international arms trade.[9] In a referendum in 2011, students of Sheffield Students' Union approved a policy to stop selling bottled water and replace it with a series of free drinking fountains and affordable, re-usable bottles.[10] The bottled water ban was upheld following a referendum in October 2014,[11] and will remain in place until 2017. The Students' Union council gave its support to the Go Fossil Free campaign by passing a motion in spring 2014.[12] This global divestment movement, initiated by 350.org, encourages investors to remove their financial support for companies involved in the extraction and combustion of fossil fuels; activities which must be stopped in order to limit anthropogenic global warming.
Representative policies
editThe Students' Union has LGBT friendly policy, ensuring that all activities, facilities, services, organisations and events are LGBT friendly.[8]
Policies pertaining to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict
editThe University of Sheffield Students' Union has two policies relating to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, entitled "End Israeli Occupation" and "Twinning with the Islamic University of Gaza".[13] The Students' Union, according to these policies, lobbies the university to "divest itself from ... companies that are complicit in the occupation of the Palestinian territories"[14] and ensures that the university fosters links with the Islamic University of Gaza, offering a scholarship programme to one of their students on an annual basis. It further commits the Students' Union to "raise awareness of the global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement", although does not explicitly endorse it as was the case prior to March 2019.[15]
On 16 January 2018, the Students' Union released a statement condemning the decision of US President Donald Trump to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. In the statement, on behalf of the Students' Union Council, President Kieran Maxwell condemned the move as resulting in "the human rights of Palestinians [being] undermined and violated" and called for "an end to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories, and for East Jerusalem to be recognised as the Capital of Palestine".[16]
Representation
editThe Union is run by a variety of working, representative and standing committees, presided over by the Student Union Council (SUC), seven elected full-time officers and six part-time officers (prior to the 21/22 academic year there were eight full-time officer roles and no part-time officers). These elected officers are supported by a number permanent staff led by the Chief Executive Daryl Ormerod who took over the reins from Chris Aucott (who, in turn, succeeded Jaki Booth). Paul Blomfield, ex-MP for Sheffield Central constituency, was in the role for a number of years before stepping down in 2010. It is a constituent member of the NUS.
A full list of the SU's Elected Officers can be seen on the SU's 'Year Book' website page – this list goes back to 1906.
Role | 2021–22 | 2022–23 | 2023–24 | 2024–25 |
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President | Evie Croxford | Liam Hand | Lily Byrne | Daisy Watson |
Liberation | Shona Tulloch | Grace Cleary | Tomás Rocha Lawrence | Tomás Rocha Lawrence |
Education | Savannah Hanson | Alison Romaine | Maria Jose Lourido Moreno | Maria Jose Lourido Moreno |
International and Community | Taylor Ogle | Anna Fedotova | Derick Liew | Jephthah Ekogiawe |
Activities and Development | Morgan McArthur | Rose Franchi | Anna Campbell | Anna Campbell |
Wellbeing and Sport | Charlotte McGinley | Iwan James | Annie Henderson | Annie Henderson |
Welfare and Sustainability | Anesu (Ness) Mantanda Mambingo | Samuel Timson | Jo Campling | Nadya Ghani |
Role | 2021–22 | 2022–23 | 2023–24 | 2024–25 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ethnic Diversity Students | Blair Jamila | Dhyasa Morgan | Ahmad Arshad Waris | Kiara Alejandra Delgado Derteano |
Disabled & Neurodiversity Students | Iz Ostrowska | Shona Tulloch | Laura Edwards | Nick Michau |
LGBTQIA+ Students | Phob Unsworth | Jamie Shipp | Jephtah Ekogiawe | Anmol Dubey |
Postgraduate Students | Lissi Abnett | Alice Patterson | Louise Stevenson | Beth Hayward |
Women Students | Hannah Budd | Riya Chauhan | Zoe Lancaster | Eloise Taylor |
Mature Students | Tom Hill | Freya AJ Vanevery | Yasin Hussain | Benito Hart Prieto |
Role | Academic year | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
2017–2018 | 2018–2019 | 2019–2020 | 2020–2021 | |
President | Kieran Maxwell | Lillian Jones | Jake Verity | Beth Eyre |
Education | Stuart McMillian | Anna Crump Raiswell | Charlie Porter | Ellie Lynas |
Development | Megan McGrath | Mel Kee | Harry Carling | Jordan Weir |
Activities | Tom Brindley | Cecilia Hudson-Molinaro | Martha Daisy Evans | Joel Kirk |
Sports | Flo Brookes | Sarah Morse | Brittany Bowles | Matt Graves |
Women | Celeste Jones | Mayeda Tayyab | Rosa Tully | Lily Grimshaw |
Welfare | Reena Staves | Katherine Swindells | Beren Maddison | Holly Ellis |
International Students' | Santhana Gopalakrishnan | Rex Béchu | Sissi Li | Iuri Montenegro |
[18] | [3] | [19][20] | [21] |
Facilities
editThe Union has a turnover of around £11,000,000. It provides for over 270 student societies,[22] and contains a student employment service, two bars, four club venues, and outlets for food and drink, clothing and stationery.[23]
'Bar One' is a traditional student bar, while 'The Interval' is described as a "laid back and sophisticated café bar".[24] Both bars hold pre-club nights with music and special events, and serve food and drinks. 'Bar One' was previously the longest union bar in the country. The union contains one of the largest beer gardens in Sheffield.[citation needed]
Activities
editEvents
editThe Students' Union holds a variety of student club nights throughout the week at the main club venue, Foundry. These include pop music nights ROAR on Wednesday, Pop Tarts on Saturday. On Tuesdays, The Tuesday Club is a night focusing on underground dance music, usually Drum and Bass, UK Garage or House. Various other nights including LGBT+ night "Grapefruit" and "Soul Jam which are held in the Foundry monthly on alternating weeks. Live music events and gigs are also regularly held in the Foundry, along with conference events and fairs.
Several times a year, larger, multi-venue events encompassing the entire Students' Union site, such as Halloween Freaks Festival in October and Summer Social in June, attracting over 4,000 students.[25]
The Union, under its obligation as part of the NUS to provide 24-hour support for students, funds Sheffield University Nightline, a telephone and email based listening and information service run by student volunteers from the university.
Societies and clubs
editThe Union has a list of approximately 320 societies and clubs, all run through a section of the union named "The Activities and Sports Zone".
Film Unit, the Union's Film Committee, shows three films a week during term time on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. Films are played in a cinema with a capacity of nearly 400, equipped with commercial 35 mm film projectors and a Dolby Digital sound system. SUTCo (Sheffield University Theatre Company) produce six plays a year at the Drama Studio, a studio theatre converted from a church, as well as the biennial 24 Hour Charity Musical – rehearsed, choreographed, designed and produced within a 24-hour period. They also produce two alternative venue productions per year. The Technical Services Committee (TSC) Archived 19 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine are volunteers responsible for the setting up and running of equipment at the aforementioned club nights and live events at the Union.
Charity
editThe union has an active volunteering and charity community. The RAG (Raising and Giving society) raised over £180,000 in 2011–12, through general fundraising and several larger events; the union is host to the world's largest student organised charity hitchhike, Bummit, which runs every year.[26] Another RAG tradition is Spiderwalk, a 12.5-mile trek through the city and the Peak District through the night; other societies run fund-raising activities throughout the night, such as a 24-hour role-playing event. The Union's "SheffieldVolunteering" scheme is one of the country's most active and well-recognised student volunteering schemes, with over 26,269 hours logged in 2011–12, and has won various national acclaims over the years.[27]
Publications and broadcasting
editThe union's publication and broadcasting is branded under the name of Forge Media.
The Forge Press newspaper (formerly The Steel Press) is published fortnightly, while Forge Radio is the union's own radio station which broadcasts throughout the Union building during term-time and over the internet. Forge TV – the newest part of Forge Media – is the Union's own television station, broadcasting online and around campus, as well as producing on-demand content.
As of September 2010, former Radio 1 DJ Mary Anne Hobbs joined the Forge Media team.[citation needed]
Sports
editThe union supports a large number of sports teams, which compete in the BUCS championships. The annual Varsity Challenge takes place between teams from the university and its rival Sheffield Hallam University in over 30 events.
Awards
editIt has won a succession of prestigious awards, including:
– Students' Union of the Year in the Whatuni Student Choice Awards every year since 2017 [28]
– Best Higher Education Students' Union in the country at the first ever NUS awards ceremony in 2008 [29]
– Top UK Student Union: in the 2001 Virgin Alternative Guide to Universities
– #1 Students' Union in the UK in the Times Higher Education annual awards, every year from 2009 until the SU category was removed.[30]
References
edit- ^ "Facts and Figures". University of Sheffield. 30 September 2023. Retrieved 8 July 2024.
- ^ "SU Officers". Sheffield Students' Union. 2024. Retrieved 8 July 2024.
- ^ a b "University of Sheffield Students' Union Constitution" (PDF). Sheffield Students' Union. Retrieved 11 August 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f Mathers, H., (2007) Standing up for Students University of Sheffield Union of Students
- ^ Mathers, H., (2005) Steel City Scholars James & James ISBN 1 904 022 01 4
- ^ University of Sheffield Estates and Facilities Management Recent Projects.
- ^ "University of Sheffield Students' Union Constitution" (PDF). University of Sheffield Students' Union. May 2013. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
- ^ a b c d e "Current Policy". University of Sheffield Students' Union. Retrieved 13 February 2013.
- ^ "'Fund Education Not War' proposal voted in, as record turnout chooses new union councillors". 18 October 2012. Archived from the original on 21 August 2014. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
- ^ "Sheffield Students' Union".
- ^ "StudentVoiceShef on Twitter: "Bottled water. Policies need 50% to pass. Yes to ban 2108. No to ban 1718. Ban stands."". twitter.com. Archived from the original on 23 January 2016.
- ^ "Sheffield Students' Union backs Fossil Free! | People & Planet". Archived from the original on 24 July 2014.
- ^ Berestova, Anna (25 January 2017). "Policy discussion: Twinning with the Islamic University of Gaza". Retrieved 17 October 2022.
- ^ "End Israeli Occupation". Google Docs. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
- ^ "Sheffield Students' Union votes to support boycott of Israel". BDS Movement. 25 October 2012. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
- ^ "Sheffield Students' Union". www.facebook.com. Archived from the original on 26 February 2022. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
- ^ "Student Leadership – Sheffield Students' Union". su.sheffield.ac.uk. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
- ^ "SU Officers' Year Book @ Sheffield Students' Union". su.sheffield.ac.uk. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
- ^ Wilde, Robin. "Jake Verity elected President as 2019/20 Officer results announced | Forge". Retrieved 16 May 2019.
- ^ Warner, Ben. "At last, new SU International Students' Officer is… | Forge". Retrieved 16 May 2019.
- ^ Marple, George (13 March 2020). "Record turnout sees new Sheffield SU Officer team elected". Forge Media.
- ^ Student Voice, Sheffield Students' Union
- ^ "Outlets and services", Sheffield Students' Union
- ^ "Interval Kitchen & Bar", Sheffield Students' Union
- ^ "Why is our Summer Social so dire?". The Tab Sheffield. 8 May 2015. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
- ^ "About Us". 20 May 2013. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
- ^ "About Us". 20 May 2013. Retrieved 20 May 2013.
- ^ "Results of the 2023 Whatuni Student Choice Awards for University of the year". www.whatuni.com. Retrieved 27 April 2023.
- ^ "NUS Awards winners announced". National Union of Students. Retrieved 11 May 2009.
- ^ "Students' Union | Study at Sheffield". The University of Sheffield. Retrieved 16 May 2020.