Pembroke College St. Aldates, Oxford OX1 1DW

Pembroke College

60 Reviews
Pembroke College St. Aldates, Oxford OX1 1DW

About the Business

Pembroke College - University of Oxford |

Contacts

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+441865276444
St. Aldates, Oxford OX1 1DW

Hours

Features

  • Wheelchair-accessible entrance
  • Wheelchair-accessible car park

Recommended Reviews

Ronald Schmitz
12.03.2024
Pembroke College
Attending a graduation. Loved it.
Nikki_J76
04.03.2024
Pembroke College
Spend two weeks at a study abroad program at Pembroke College and it was amazing. From the Dining Hall Staff to Housekeeping and Porter Lodge, Pembroke was welcoming, gracious and amazing hosts. Summer 2022
Edward
09.02.2024
Pembroke College
Named after William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke, Lord Chamberlain and then-Chancellor of the University. Pembroke offers the study of almost all the courses offered by the university. Dame Lynne Brindley, former head of the British Library, has been Master of the College since 2013.
Gary Donnelly
13.01.2024
Pembroke College
I was a PGCE student here during the lockdowns of the pandemic; obviously this meant missing out on just about everything because all events had to be suspended. This was not the fault of the College, and we just had to make the best of it.But it also meant that I jumped at the opportunity to visit post-pandemic, when things are 'normal', for an alumni reunion.I already knew the splendour of this old place, but what a fantastic weekend of great food, drink, and events. The College was aa welcoming as I remembered, and we had a fantastic weekend staying in the old Master's lodgings.I will be back as often as possible. The lifelong association we enjoy as an Old Member looks to be very exciting.
YK YK
12.01.2024
Pembroke College
Tried to visit last year and there was a horrible female porter who said I wasn't allowed. Which is fine, but you don't have to bark at people and be so rude. Are you a prison guard or an Oxford college porter lol.
George Chalhoub
23.12.2023
Pembroke College
Pembroke College is an excellent college at the heart of Oxford and has very good facilities to use.
James
22.12.2023
Pembroke College
There is something very special about this place. After my visit this is the location in Oxford that stood out the most.
Daniyal Ahmed
20.12.2023
Pembroke College
I stayed here as a student. During the pandemic they started construction work at Geoffrey Arthur Building, and the noise was unbearable. There was no reduction in rent, only one free meal was provided and that too was abruptly taken away. The college charges £500 if you vacate and go to other facility but the terrible noise from the construction was more than a handful. During my stay, the drill work was extensive, it made me sleep deprived. Finally, the lodge can be more kind and courteous to students.The good things are the dining halls, and the chapel. Unfortunately, everything remained closed due to Covid, even when restrictions were lifted. Overall, the college can do better, if it becomes more responsive to student needs.
12 34
19.12.2023
Pembroke College
LOVELY people! Maxi is especially great. Exquisite vibes. The bar as corridor blew my socks off! What an experience. I'll defo be back soon...
Tom Ward
19.12.2023
Pembroke College
Pembroke is one of the less outstanding colleges which make up the University of Oxford by reputation; however, this is most undeserved. Admittedly, it has some amazing teaching and welfare staff, and a far nicer crop of students than the usual Oxford cohort of home-county privately educated mishaps. Under this seemingly tranquil surface, huge cracks aren’t too hard to find. As with most central university administrations, Pembroke’s management team don’t care about the welfare of staff or students. They are more bothered with conference profits, alumni donations from dodgy regimes, and renaming buildings to fund the latest unnecessary innovation. There are not enough cheap rooms for students whose families can’t afford to go on holidays and not too long ago Pembroke’s management tried to knock down most of the remaining cheapest rooms made available for students. This point is made again and again by the student body and yet management refuses to act.To add insult to injury, Pembroke’s much talked about Access programme is wholly inadequate. The scheme does some good work yet is limited in scope. It goes no where near to addressing massive structural problems in the wider education system. The college still spends its own, and students’ resources, showing private school pupils around at the expense of those who don’t already have a structural advantage in society. Pembroke also give large scholarships of £1000 a year to those who get the best first-year results. The correlation between those who get the best first year results and those who went to private schools (and therefore don’t need an extra £1000 off accommodation costs p/a) is worryingly high. This money could be far better spent helping poorer students who need it. This is to say nothing of the link College is making between financial rewards and academic achievement.Perhaps the most outstanding contribution Pembroke management has made to the education sector in the last few years is its shameful role in bringing about the largest strike in higher education history by having no regard for the welfare of its staff in retirement. Management manoeuvred to stifle democratic votes in college on the USS pension reforms and collaborated with the ‘money-above-all-else’ central university team of Louise Richardson to push for reforms which undervalue the hard work of pension participants. Putting student results ahead of their welfare isn’t something unique to Pembroke, or even Oxford, but shows how complicit in maintaining an exploitative, repressive educational status-quo Pembroke management are. Marketisation of education and educational facilities is the name of the game.In short, the culture in the management of Pembroke College is rotten to the core and this adversely impacts on students and staff. It’s a shame the college isn’t stand-alone in this regard throughout the rest of Oxford University.

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St. Aldates, Oxford OX1 1DW
Pembroke College