University of Sussex Falmer, Brighton BN1 9RH

University of Sussex

474 Reviews
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University of Sussex Falmer, Brighton BN1 9RH

About the Business

University of Sussex - a leading, research-intensive university | Choose from over 500 undergraduate and postgraduate courses and degrees at a highly ranked, research-led university in Brighton, UK.

Contacts

Call Us
+441273606755
Falmer, Brighton BN1 9RH

Hours

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Features

  • Wheelchair-accessible entrance
  • Wheelchair-accessible car park

Recommended Reviews

Namse Udosen
12.03.2024
University of Sussex
Excellent learning spaces on a vibrant campus
Babylips Maybelline
11.03.2024
University of Sussex
Had high hopes coming here. But strike action in this place is a joke. I was in for 3 months out of last year, feel as though I’ve been let down. £9,000 to be in for 3 months. And when you are in the teaching is that of a primary level. No extra help, no advice or guidance. I am just about to start my 3rd year and I am honestly scared I won’t pass it, going from straight 80% in first year to just about pass this year all due to strikes, really really diasspointed. If anyone is looking at this university, please do not go to Sussex it is absolutely awful big regrets here
Paola Dama
10.03.2024
University of Sussex
The campus is very nice. Quite place to work and study. A lot of activities, good food, bar. It is located in a park, you can appreciate the local wildlife.
Alfie Loftus
29.02.2024
University of Sussex
Soon after I started at the university COVID hit. We were left in the dark about our accommodation and if we would be returning to our halls - we weren't. The second year was okay - some fieldtrips were cancelled due to COVID which wasn't the university's fault, but their making up for this was poor. The third year was relatively normal but we still had some online and/or recorded lectures which showed minimum effort from various teaching staff. When finishing in May 2023, a marking boycott was underway at many UK universities. This was due to teaching staff striking for better pay and conditions. I understand their reasons, but the university has not done a single thing to support us students. Our last assessment went unmarked for a month or two and we were told that we may graduate without Honours. The work was later marked, probably by people who have never critically marked university-level work before, so many people received anomalously low grades and were of course unhappy. Despite actually having a grade, we are still of the belief that we won't be graduating with Honours. The university has been most unhelpful in answering our concerns or informing us of their plans to sort out this mess. Plus, we will be 'graduating' with a temporary certificate which makes the entire graduation ceremony pointless. Luckily for the university, they can profit further off us regardless of our disappointment - since many people (including myself) want to have a graduation and feel like we've had a good university experience, it is still going ahead, but of course guest tickets and gown hire are expensive. This was initially understandable as the university would have to pay for the facility to host the ceremony, but the amount of students and their families being in Brighton around the ceremonies will undoubtedly bring lots of sponsors for the university. The least they could do is provide free guest tickets.Overall, the university campus is nice, as any campus would be, as are the majority of staff. Many teaching staff have been great and I appreciate them, contrary to many others often providing harsh marking and/or negligible useful feedback on assessments, while providing minimum effort and support.The people who run this university are money-hungry, lazy and unsympathetic. Please don't go and fund them.
Jorge Mayorga
15.02.2024
University of Sussex
As an international student doing an MSc in the Business School, my experience was not as affected by the strikes to other people. Bear in mind that higher education in the UK is (apparently) more of a real-estate business now. Asides from that, I lived on campus and pretty much had all the facilities there, groceries (local and intl), pharmacy, health centre, sports complex, etc.Living on campus was an overall nice experience, however, that all depends on the accommodation that you manage to secure. The Uni is undergoing construction work now, so that might negatively affect some sectors of the accommodation (particularly Lewes Court and Northfield). The East Slope accommodation is nice itself but it's the pricier alternative, so if you're looking for a little something more affordable, Stanmer Court might be the best option, however, I've heard it's quite...neglected in a sense.However, plenty of things to do on campus and having Stanmer Park next to Uni is an absolute blessing. Nice walks from Uni to Lewes on a weekend always helped me reset. Stanmer Park is also a beauty in itself, with the Walled Garden and other fun bits to do around the pathways.I must admit, I had the best year of my life here (so far).
Huncho Muni
12.02.2024
University of Sussex
I am a 2nd year law student, since I started going Sussex it has constantly been affected by strikes. Lecturers say this aimed and supposed to affect the people in power but really and truly it hurts us students more than them!To add on, majority of the lecture/seminar content is recycled, if you go on studoc it will show you all the past seminar and lecture notes, you will realise that they have been recycling their learning material for 3-5 years, it is actually hilarious.To anyone who plans to go here in the future please do not, think twice before submitting an application here.
Lydia Robinson
02.02.2024
University of Sussex
Absolutely disgusting behaviour from the lecturers, leaving students without grades and degrees, meaning they cannot go into their masters or begin building their careers. Shame on you. Your actions do not affect to government, but the students who pay so much money to attend your institution and work hard for years to be left with nothing to show for it.
Daniel Th
01.02.2024
University of Sussex
One star isn't low enough. Awful teaching and a campus so lacking in facilities you wonder what they spend student tuition on, absolute joke considering the money university costs.
Carmelo Rossitto
04.01.2024
University of Sussex
I applied for the course of biomedical science with foundation year on clearing several years ago. They rejected me because I had not studied biology and chemistry during the final school year. This university, like all British universities, is a private institution. For this reason, students are charged £9,250 per year. Private universities accept all students to make money regardless the subjects they study and/or their grades. I cannot believe the decided to lose £37,000. Nobody refuses money in this world. If I had gone to a private university in Europe, they would have accepted me. If this university had been public, it would have lost nothing by rejecting me. Public universities do not care if they lose students as they are owned and funded by Governments, not by students. The government is very generous because it pays for students’ university fees.I have now biology and chemistry A-Levels. I can apply to study biomedical science at this university. Although I studied hard and did excellent exams twice, I was awarded Us in Biology and Chemistry. I was awarded Us because I did not pay bribe to exam boards. Exam boards use the word “review” to hide the fact that they request bribe to award students their grades. The more money they receive, the better students' grades will be. Exam boards sell grades because they are private commercial companies (Limited). My internet provider is a Limited company. I give them money and, in return, they provide me with access to the internet. Colleges are also private companies. Education in the UK is just a business. Grades are, therefore, based on money; not on students’ mental skills and knowledge. In Europe, sixth form colleges are government owned institutions and award grades. For this reason, there are no exam boars and no expensive exam fees to pay. Meritocracy is in public institutions only.People consider Eastern European countries i.e. Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Russia etc. bad and underdeveloped places. In these nations, sixth form colleges and universities are government owned institutions. As a result, they are public institutions. They are free of charge for indigenous students only. They request money from foreign students only because their national currencies (Polish Zloty, Romanian Leu, Bulgarian Lev, Russian Ruble etc.) are weak compared to the British Pound, Euro and US Dollar. Polish, Bulgarian and Romanian medical schools accept British students although they obtain Us at A Level. They do so to make money.Meanwhile, British universities refuse students obtaining Us. I cannot believe that in the UK, a developed nation, FE is monopolized by private institutions. Exam boards are a legalized form of corruption. I can easily study biomedical science and succeed at undergraduate level despite exam boards’ false judgement about me. I am also capable of studying and succeeding at medical school. Unfortunately, universities consider exam boards’ judgement about students a dogma and they do not take into account students’ skills and knowledge when making them offers. The most important things to succeed at university are mental skills and knowledge, not letters printed on a piece of paper by private commercial companies.Bad students, having money, buy grades but they do not have the skills required to succeed at university. Meanwhile, good students, having no money, are rejected. This is extremely unfair. Universities should accept everyone in order to make money and fill places in science courses. They have empty places every year. Universities complain about empty places but they reject good students. This is a paradox. Maybe I am not suitable to study in the UK because I am a studious person. Meanwhile, British Education is just a business. This is the first time in my life that I am requested money to be awarded grades.
oliver bodilly
17.12.2023
University of Sussex
You will pay full price for strikes every other day and your work wont be graded afterwards. People have finished their graduation ceremony without knowing their grades, after years of hard work and thousands of pounds of debt. Staff aren’t paid properly so the students suffer as a result.

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Falmer, Brighton BN1 9RH
University of Sussex