Grants awarded by the Convocation Trust
Over the past 10 years, the Convocation Trust has awarded over £1.4 million in grants, which have supported more than 50 projects across the University of London Federation.
The Convocation Trust has played a crucial role within the University of London Federation by providing philanthropic support to a wide range of projects and initiatives which have substantially and demonstrably benefitted the community of the Federation. You can learn more about the projects the Trust has supported below.
You can learn more about how to apply for funding from the Convocation Trust here.
Grants awarded by the Trust - 2023/2024
Senate House Library sought funding to support an exhibition celebrating the Library’s Caribbean Collection. The exhibition considered ideas of independence, the Cold War, the legacy of slavery, racism and Black Power, activism, the Windrush scandal and the idea of subjects and citizenship. Alongside the exhibition, funding was awarded to support an engagement and acquisition programme.
The Convocation Trust awarded £10,000 to support this project.
The Warburg Institute sought funding to enhance the gallery space which would hold the permanent installation of Edmund de Waal’s ‘library of exile’. Gifted by the artist, the flagship installation exists as a place of contemplation and dialogue, a resonant room housing volumes relevant to current exhibitions and, in the artist’s words: ‘a space to sit and read and be’.
The Convocation Trust awarded half of the grant requested to the sum of £5,278.
The project sought funding to create a soundproofed, fully equipped digital content creation studio to enable the production of high quality multimedia resources focused on student and staff wellbeing. The project also aimed to enable the recruitment of student wellbeing brand ambassadors to produce student-led and student-focused wellbeing content.
The Convocation Trust awarded £15,000 to support this project.
The project sought funding from the Convocation Trust to cover three Mary Stiasny Scholarships in recognition of Mary Stiasny’s contribution to the University’s mission to transform lives and societies globally through the power of education. The scholarships were awarded to students in markets around the world where the cost of study is a significant barrier to access and participation.
The Convocation Trust awarded £21,000 to support this project.
The Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (IALS) sought to increase the number of bookable study spaces available within the IALS Library to meet increasing demand for private study spaces. The project enhanced works undertaken as part of the successful transformation project, which reengineered spaces and developed new technology solutions to improve the experience for users.
The Convocation Trust awarded £9,440.40 to support this project.
History Day is a free annual event bringing together students and researchers with collections professionals from galleries, libraries, archives, museums and research organisations. Funding was sought to provide travel bursaries to organisations who may not otherwise be able to participate in History Day due to their geographic location or financial capacity.
The Convocation Trust awarded £1800 to support this project.
Generative AI has the capacity to transform university education and the working life of graduates, particularly those in professional services and creative industries. This project aimed to refine the University’s understanding of the future needs of knowledge and creative industry sector employers, and develop and explore ideas on how course structure and contact can help meets these needs – for all students. The project also aimed to develop working relationships with London’s businesses, and offer thought leadership to the higher education community.
The Convocation Trust awarded £10,320 to support this project.
Queen Mary, University of London (QMUL) School of Law sought funding in support of the Pathways to Law programme. The programme is designed to provide key stage 5 students from under-represented backgrounds with an understanding of pathways into legal professions. The objective of the programme was to encourage more students from under-represented backgrounds to pursue a legal education and career in the law.
The Convocation Trust awarded £9000 to support this project.
The Royal Veterinary College (RVC) sought funding to enable students from low-income households to attend open days and other events at the RVC through the provision of travel bursaries. The scheme aimed to improve access to higher education by reducing the cost of attending open days for potential applicants and their supporters.
The Convocation Trust awarded £10,000 to support this project.
The Botanic Laboratory Garden project aimed to provide an outdoor research space for researchers and students interested in investigating how plants can be used to support sustainable practices in the performing arts. The botanic garden would also provide a space for researchers to engage with local community and school groups.
The Convocation Trust awarded £25,000 to support this project.
The project aimed to develop an exhibition exploring long-term and abrupt climate change, evolution, biological extinctions, and the extent of anthropogenic influence on the environment, as well the history of science, collectors and collecting and the wider Geohumanities. Alongside the exhibition, the project planned to hold additional outreach activities, including public events and a light installation.
The Convocation Trust awarded £20,830 to support this project.
The project aimed to improve access to higher education by improving student attainment at GCSE level. As part of this project, the RVC delivered a set of six curriculum linked online sessions for GCSE students, accompanied by supplementary resources. The RVC worked with teachers and pupils to create programme content, with the intention that this content be shared with other schools who could use the programme content flexibly. The project was expected to reach over 1500 students from a minimum of 20 non-selective schools.
The Convocation Trust awarded £2,536.56 to support this project.
The project aimed to grow the federal community by creating opportunities for students and staff across the federation member institutions to come together for student-led performances on the (Convocation Trust funded) Senate House Steps. The project aimed to give three federal members the opportunity to promote their institutions and showcase the talent and expertise of their students through a significant performance in an iconic venue.
The Convocation Trust awarded £30,000 to support this project.
The project aimed to produce a series of events focussed on enabling meaningful engagement between federation member institutions, government officials and experts, regarding the risks and benefits of new technologies in the field of international relations. Through this series of events the project aimed to significantly advance policy discussions in this area.
The Convocation Trust awarded £34,253 to support this project.
The project aimed to diversify the collection of portraiture on display at Senate House. In so doing, the project sought to ensure the Senate House collection better reflects the progressive history of the University of London as the first university to admit students regardless of their gender, race, or religion and the first university to give the opportunity for students around the world to study remotely. The project intended to reproduce portrait photography of recent honorary degree awardees to address the historical gaps in the University of London’s portrait collection. In addition, federation member institutions would be invited to identify artists to capture these candidates and produce new art for the walls of Senate House.
The Convocation Trust awarded £21,050 to support this project.
The project sought funding to commission Workwise, an independent apprenticeship charity, to support the University of London and federation member institutions in establishing more apprenticeship programs. The project reflected, and sought to strengthen, UoL’s reputation as a civic university, focussed on developing innovative methods to ensure a career higher education is attainable for everyone.
The Convocation Trust awarded £22,000 to support this project.
Grants awarded by the Trust - 2022/2023
Funding was sought for the creation of a fully searchable database of UK-wide policy-relevant historical expertise. By embracing H&P’s existing network and building outwards from it, the proposal aimed to address the pressing need for an easily-accessible online tool for identifying such expertise. In turn, it would provide an essential bridge between academic colleagues and a range of policy-makers and commentators. Funding would be used to employ an external consultant for 40 days to develop the database.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full sum of £20,940 to enable the development of the database.
The application sought funding to cover the costs of installing a screen for sporting, live, student and community events in front of the Senate House Steps in Malet Street. This facility would be rentable for private and public events and also for Member Institution use at reduced hire rates.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full sum of £25,000 to cover the costs of the project.
The application sought funding to support the Ecologies of Publishing seminar. The seminar aimed to establish a forum for the development of practical and theoretical knowledge relating to emerging priorities and challenges for publishing beyond the traditional frameworks of university presses. The seminar would support the University’s increasing commitment to open-access publishing and advocacy for public humanities.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full sum of £9,000 to support the seminar.
The application sought funding for the third phase of the Programme which aimed to facilitate engagement within and between the academic community and practitioners of diplomacy by creating timely, accessible, and inclusive opportunities for participation and knowledge exchange. The funds from the Convocation Trust would be used to fund a part-time researcher for 8 months.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full sum of £14,880 to support this initiative.
Five years ago, the government introduced a new policy requiring all businesses with a wage bill of more than £3 million to pay 0.5% of their total annual bill as an Apprenticeship Levy to be used to fund the expansion of apprenticeship programmes. The Levy covered costs of apprenticeship training, and any unused Levy went to the Treasury.
The application requested funding for a project which would explore how the University and interested member institutions might develop a joined-up approach to increasing the number of apprentices employed and trained and/or directing a proportion of the University’s Levy to small and medium sized businesses in its supply chains or local areas.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full sum of £30,240.
The project sought to widen participation, increase attainment, and address the attainment gap between Black and White students in engineering, by covering the cost of a four week summer research placement for 10 black engineering students. By funding summer research placements, the project sought to ensure students had the opportunity to develop critical skills which would directly benefit their employability and academic attainment.
The Convocation Trust awarded £10,000 to support this project.
Grants awarded by the Trust - 2021/2022
The application requested funding to support a new programme called ‘University of London Scholars’, with up to 30 new scholarships being awarded every year across the University of London federation in support of access and widening participation. The initiative would support a mix of undergraduate and postgraduate students from London who were registered for a course of study at the University of London or one of the Member Institutions.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full sum of £30,000 to support the scholarship programme.
The application sought funds to establish a Virtual Reading Room service in Senate House Library (SHL) for remote researchers, to support the development of Virtual Teaching Spaces in collaboration with researchers in the School of Advanced Study, and to support the development of digital platforms to share Special Collections with not only the Federation’s Member Institutions, but a wider community of users both nationally and internationally. The funding would be used for the purchase of the necessary equipment.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full sum of £28,440 to enable the purchase of equipment.
The application sought funding for diagnostic reports to formally assess any additional study support required for UoL Worldwide applicants/students.
The Inclusive Practice Office within UoL Worldwide provides services to applicants and students who require additional support to study. In order to best assess those needs, the University requires documentary evidence of the condition, disability or circumstance that necessitated the additional support. This routinely takes the form of a diagnostic report from a qualified health or medical practitioner. However, the cost of obtaining a diagnostic report can be prohibitive to many students. Therefore, funding was requested to support applicants and students in purchasing the required medical or diagnostic reports to aid their future or further study.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full sum of £10,000 to the initiative.
Grants awarded by the Trust - 2020/2021
This application sought funding to develop a scheme to widen access to rowing for under-represented groups. The scheme’s central objective was to mitigate barriers of entry by creating demonstrable routes of entry into the sport. The proposed funding would, in part, be used to provide up to 100 students of Member Institutions and the Central University with the opportunity to undertake an intensive ‘learn to row accelerator course’ through ULBC.
The Convocation Trust awarded the sum of £4,000 to facilitate the development of the scheme.
This application proposed the target covering of travel costs to on-campus Offer Holder and Open Day events to support the widening of access and inclusion.
Through their Access and Participation Plan 2020-2024, the Royal Veterinary College (RVC) were striving to significantly increase numbers of students from the Access and Participation Priority Groups identified as lacking in the current student cohort. One particular barrier for these students was the prohibitive cost of travel to RVC campuses to experience in-person Open Days and/or Offer Holder events. These events were identified as providing students with critical immersive experience allowing them to ‘try before they commit’ in a way that was not entirely replicable through an online platform. The targeted covering of these costs was proposed as an effective means of eliminating this barrier to entry.
The Convocation Trusted awarded the full sum of £6,000.
This application sought funding to develop a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) entitled Is a PhD Right for Me? to be delivered on the FutureLearn platform.
The course would seek to dispel misconceptions that potential applicants had about doctoral degrees and would run for three weeks, with a new cohort each month. The two main project goals were to improve the prospects of doctoral students and to promote widening participation. No similar initiative existed previously within Member Institutions or internally at the University of London.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full sum of £10,000 to enable the development and production of the course.
The application sought funding to support a series of co-curated events to be held in 2022-23, entitled Inclusive Acts: People, Poetry and Performance in Senate House, University of London.
It was proposed that, between September 2022 and July 2023, Inclusive Acts would commission and deliver in Senate House a programme of three events co-curated by the three Institutes of Classical Studies, English Studies and Modern Languages Research in collaboration with UoL Member Institutions and local community and cultural partners in the visual arts, performance, and literary sectors.
The project aimed to make visible the work of the UoL in inclusive and participatory research in 2022-23 and attract audiences from Member Institutions as well as local community and cultural organisations in London who would not routinely engage with Senate House and the University of London.
The Convocation Trust awarded the sum of £4,000 to support the production of the series of events.
This application for funding related to Phase 2 of a 3-Phase scheme which sought to establish a sustainable Paris-London-Berlin network of research into knowledge diplomacy and its relationship to the work of universities.
The KDCP aimed to establish a network of important partners across London, Paris and Berlin to help rebuild European cooperation post-Brexit; establish the UoL as a key player in the emerging concept of knowledge diplomacy; build the visibility and reputation of the UoL through its public events and engagement; raise research funds; and develop a body of reported knowledge that would help to take the discipline forward.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full sum of £10,000 to support the programme.
Great Grad Job Hunt
Grants awarded by the Trust - 2018/2019
The proposed project "Nationality, Identity and Belonging: An oral history of the ‘Windrush Generation’ and their relationship to the British State, 1948-2018." fell within the mission of the ICwS to explore the history and contemporary concerns of the Commonwealth.
The request was for funds towards hiring a research fellow and staging a Witness Seminar as well as producing an accompanying pamphlet.
This specific study of the relationship between Caribbean communities in London and post-war immigration legislation represented an important attempt at outreach to parts of the capital’s Caribbean diaspora which have traditionally been underrepresented in the HE sector.
It would demonstrate the tangible ways in which Humanities research carried out by the University can address specific problems faced by the capital’s residents and policy-makers.
It would also enhance the University’s engagement with the BAME community, helping to build confidence in the ICwS’s ability to conduct research on Commonwealth diaspora communities in a sensitive and effective manner.
The Convocation Trust awarded £22.042 towards the project.
The College Hall & Connaught Hall Garden Redevelopment Project requested funds from the Convocation Trust to oversee the re-planting and improved landscaping of both garden spaces.
This would have a direct and measurable impact on the students of both Intercollegiate Halls.
It would also provide a direct and continued opportunity for students to volunteer and contribute to the community in which they live, thereby supporting the University’s commitment to ensuring that its students play an active role in enhancing the community in which they live and study.
The installation of the insect hotels that were proposed would provide a habitat for new wildlife, helping the University maintain, protect and increase value of its green spaces in the Bloomsbury area.
This project would provide demonstrable and substantial benefit to approximately 600 new residents on an annual basis for the next 35-50 years.
The Convocation Trust awarded the requested £22,000 towards the running of the project.
The Convocation Trust has supported the Cumberland Lodge with an annual grant for a number of years. From 2010 to 2015/2016 the grant was to the value of £5,000. For 2016-17 the award was increased to £6,000.
The Cumberland Lodge was asked to approach the University in the autumn of each year so that such proposals could be considered at the December meetings.
In June 2016 the University Secretary wrote to Cumberland Lodge, recognising the importance of the Lodge’s work and informing the Lodge that the Committee would be receptive to bids in future which should be submitted to the University in the autumn of each year so that such proposals could be considered at the December meetings of the Trustees.
For 2018/2019 Cumberland Lodge was awarded £6,000.
Grants awarded by the Trust - 2017/2018
On 5 December 2017 the Royal Veterinary College Performing Arts Society requested £500 from the Convocation Trust, to help cover the costs of microphone hire, costumes, and stage, seating and lighting hire to stage their annual musical. The production that year was ‘High School Musical’
The college advised that the musical is an inclusive project, bringing together students across all years and courses and giving a separate focus from their normal studies, helping to promote wellbeing, so the money being requested from the Trust would assist in a highly positive enterprise.
The musical provided entertainment for the entire university community.
The Convocation Trust Committee of Management awarded the requested £500.
Managed by a small team at the School of Advanced Study, University of London, Being Human is the UK’s only national festival of the humanities, and one of the largest free festivals in the UK.
As the Being Human festival grows in scale and visibility there is an increasing focus on developing the festival infrastructure to ensure that it continues to deliver on its aims,
To this end, the SAS requested £17,439 towards the appointment of an intern to work with Member Institutions to produce content such as event blogs and to share best practice in public engagement, being involved in the press launch and public relations work.
The Convocation Trust awarded £8,720 towards the total amount requested.
The Council for Academics at Risk (CARA) requested financial assistance from the Convocation Trust for the funding of a CARA scholar on an annual basis.
The CARA fellowships programme acts as a lifeline to academics at risk, helping them to reach a place of safety where they can continue their work. Most of them are passionate about returning home when the situation allows.
CARA also supports academics who have been forced to flee and have already reached the UK. CARA receives 10-20 new enquiries a week and is now supporting people from 27 countries and some 270 academics and 350 dependents.
The Convocation Trust awarded £25,000 towards the £150,000 requested by the Council.
The University’s ‘Leading Women’ commemorative plaque scheme aimed to create a permanent legacy for the 150th anniversary of women’s admission to the University, in 1868.
The scheme intends to commission and install commemorative ‘blue plaques’ to commemorate notable alumnae and/or historical women faculty members on the sites of the University of London and Member Institutions.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full £6,500 requested for the scheme.
The Living Literature initiative was inaugurated in May 2016 with ‘Living Gatsby’ and followed in May 2017 with ‘Living Proust’.
The event was designed specifically to showcase research expertise in a variety of public engagement formats, bringing in different subject areas from across the School and university.
The aim was to break down the barriers between researchers and audiences, showcasing research expertise in innovative and accessible ways, and transforming the public's expectations about what it means to encounter serious academic research in the humanities.
The 2018 Living Literature focus was Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley. Not only was 2018 the bicentenary of Frankenstein’s publication, it also marked 150 years since the University of London admitted women to university education.
The Convocation Trust awarded £4,500 towards the estimated £13,000 costs of staging the event.
In 2018 the University celebrated the 150th anniversary of women bring admitted to the University of London, to enrol for a “special examination” course, with a series of events and activities, and by creating a permanent public memorial to be developed through a student competition.
A project was proposed a project to create a piece of public art as a lasting memorial to the first admission of women to university level education. Suggested themes with a focus on women included aspiration and achievement, learning and scholarship, access to education, social good, heritage, progress and leadership. The artist chosen by competition to create the work was Arielle Tse of the Slade School of Art at UCL and the work, I am rooted but I flow, is installed in Torrington Square.
The Convocation Trust awarded the £25,000 requested.
In December 2015, the newly created University of London Development Office submitted a proposal to the Convocation Trust for a four-year programme (2016-17 through to 2019-20) to support up to nine scholarships across all three Central Academic Bodies of the University (School of Advanced Study, University of London International Programmes and the University of London Institute in Paris) for a total commitment of £67,500.
The Convocation Trust made a two-year commitment of £30,000 for:
- two scholarships (of £7,500 each) at the School of Advanced Study (commencing in 2016-17);
- one scholarship (of £7,500) in 2017-18 for each of the University of London International Academy and the University of London Institute in Paris in 2017-18.
These awards are as important to the institution as to the recipients themselves. Student numbers are a critical measurement as outlined in the University’s Operating Plan, and scholarships enable students to take up the offer of a place that they would not have otherwise been able to do.
The Development Office submitted a second bid for funding of these scholarships to be extended to 2018-19 and 2019-20.
The Convocation Trust again awarded a further £15,000 for these scholarships in both 2018-19 and 2019-20.
The Convocation Trust awarded £20,000 to the School of Advanced Studies in 2017 for their involvement in the Being Human Festival.
Grants awarded by the Trust - 2016/2017
In 2016, the Convocation Trust awarded the School of Advanced Study’s Being Human festival a sum of £26,551 to enable the University of London to act as a central London festival Hub and to establish a University of London communications and public engagement network – all of which were successfully achieved.
This new bid aimed to build on that success and to consolidate further the University of London as a showcase and the Being Human festival as a fixture in the UK-wide university calendar.
The Convocation Trust awarded £20,000 of the £24,000 requested for the festival.
The Conference of Astronomy and Physics Students (CAPS) is an annual, four-day long physics conference, the largest of its kind in the UK, directed at undergraduate students.
In 2017 the conference was to be hosted at UCL from 27-30 June. The organising committee is made up of undergraduate and Master students at UCL and they were looking to raise at least £10,900.00 to ensure the conference would go ahead.
The Convocation Trust awarded £3,000 towards the conference.
The Convocation Trust has supported Cumberland Lodge with an annual grant for a number of years. From 2010 to 2015/2016 the grant was to the value of £5,000. For 2016-17 the award was increased to £6,000.
The award to Cumberland Lodge for 2016-17 was £6,000.
Senate House Library (SHL) marked the 500th anniversary of Martin Luther’s publication of 95 Theses with a major exhibition and programme of events that explore the impact of ‘the first Brexit’ on culture, society, piety, communications and the new world order in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
SHL had already secured some funding to support the majority of their planned expenditure. However, an opportunity arose to purchase some bespoke display boards as part of the overall design package. These would be used to support the main exhibition in Convocation Hall, throughout the library, and on the ground floors.
The Convocation Trust awarded the full £11,760 requested for the exhibition display stands.
The Institute of Historical Research (IHR) is a world-renowned centre promoting the study of history through academic research, the provision of primary resources and support offered to historical scholars.
The heart of the IHR is a 200,000 volume open-access library, specialising in the history of Britain, Western Europe and North America, from the fifth century to the present featuring an unparalleled collection of printed primary sources.
These collections have been digitised as British History Online and in recent years the IHR has become a digital operation as much as a physical space with 25 major resources online and over 5 million unique users annually.
In 2008, a professional Archivist completed a small-scale survey with recommendations for the IHR Archives, which was generously funded by the Friends of the IHR. One of the key outcomes was a report detailing the steps needed to properly catalogue and conserve the collection as well as guidance on data protection and privacy.
However, at that time, the IHR was preparing for the redevelopment of its premises and was subsequently relocated to the South Block of Senate House until autumn 2014. Since moving back, the Archive has become
a high priority and had recently received a matched funding award from the Foyle Foundation for £25,000 in support of the project.
The IHR applied to the Trust for funding to unlock the Foyle grant and support an Archivist who would manage the conservation and cataloguing process, and integrate the Archive into the IHR Library’s
infrastructure.
The Convocation Trust awarded £50,000 towards this project.
Grants awarded by the Trust - 2015/2016
In 2016 the Careers Group applied to the Convocation Trust for a project focusing on giving students and graduates relevant, easy-to-access information on job hunting.
The project was to be entitled “The Living History of Job Hunting” and the Careers Group proposed the following:
- Students and recent graduates from across the University of London Federation were to be recruited to video document their experiences of job hunting across a range of different sectors.
- These videos, supplemented with advice and guidance from University of London Careers Consultants, were to become a comprehensive resource for young people graduating from university to find jobs.
- The videos would then be accessible to the 180,000 strong student body of the University of London, as well as recent graduates and young people from other institutions.
The short, succinct videos, shot in the style of YouTube vloggers, would demonstrate to students how to hunt successfully for jobs, giving students and graduates live, real-time examples and understanding of how their peer group were job hunting.
Students and graduates were encouraged to use the comments section on YouTube’s platform so that they could engage with each other directly as well as with this project’s social media and marketing coordinator.
It was stipulated that the videos were to be made accessible even after the project had finished so that an ongoing number of students and graduates could benefit from them.
The Convocation Trust awarded Careers Group the £97,636 requested for this initiative.
Building upon the success of the 2016 Shakespeare season, Senate House Library sought funding to support its next two seasons, Utopia (October to December 2016) and Radical Voices (January to March 2017).
These were shorter seasons, which primarily aimed to engage with their existing academic audience during term-time, although wider public engagement was included in the supporting events programme through a range of activities proposed such as street art, performance and song.
£5,000 was sought for each season which would be matched from the Library's engagement budget for 2016-17.
The Convocation Trust awarded £10,000 towards the two seasons.
The small team at the School of Advanced Study have established Being Human as the UK’s only national festival of the humanities, and one of the largest free festivals in the UK.
The festival has drawn increasing participation from University of London Colleges, and Senate House has featured as a coordinating centre of activity.
In previous years however the funding and human resource have not been available to unlock the building’s full potential as a national hub of activity.
Additional funding was sought to create a festival Hub in Senate House that would:
- raise public awareness of Senate House’s history and current status as a central academic hub;
- showcase humanities research from across the University of London Colleges;
- act as a catalyst for cross-college collaboration during and beyond the festival;
- establish a year-round University of London public engagement network that will last beyond the duration of the festival.
The theme for the festival in 2016 was ‘Hope and Fear’. Drawing on Senate House’s history as the WWII Ministry of Information and its popular association with George Orwell, but also the ‘utopian’ founding principles of the University: in 2016 programming in Senate House was developed around this theme to create a ‘Ministry of Hope and Fear’.
The Convocation Trust awarded £26,550 to the Being Human Festival.
Senate House Library applied for funding to mark the 400th anniversary of the death of Shakespeare with a season of events, supported by an exhibition, around the theme 'Metamorphosis'.
The aim of the exhibition was to examine how the canon of Shakespearean text changed from performed scripts to first folio, with further appraisal and change through the eighteenth and nineteenth century, leading to today's recognition that they are iconic cultural treasures.
The exhibition was to showcase the Library's collections to a global audience via online exhibition galleries and digital resource, and offer great opportunity for collaboration with SAS Institutes and academics from the federal member institutions.
The Convocation Trust awarded £50,000 towards the exhibition.
In December 2015, the newly created University of London Development Office submitted a proposal to the Convocation Trust for a four-year programme (2016-17 through to 2019-20), to support up to nine scholarships across all three Central Academic Bodies of the University (School of Advanced Study, University of London International Programmes and the University of London Institute in Paris) for a total commitment of £67,500.
These awards are as important to the institution, as to the recipients themselves. Student numbers are a critical measurement as outlined in the University’s Operating Plan, and scholarships directly enable students to take up the offer of a place that they would not have otherwise been able to do.
The Convocation Trust made a two-year commitment of £30,000 for:
- two scholarships (of £7,500 each) at the School of Advanced Study (commencing in 2016-17);
- one scholarship (of £7,500) for each of the University of London International Academy and the University of London Institute in Paris in 2017-18.
Since the refurbishment of Convocation Hall in the Senate House Library it had been the intention to hang the portraits of the former Chairmen of Convocation in the room.
Some of the portraits were in need of restoration, a request was made to the Convocation Trust for funding for the restoration of the portraits.
The Convocation Trust awarded the £10,000 requested for the portraits restoration.
From 2010 to 2015/2016 the Convocation Trust supported Cumberland Lodge with an annual grant of £5,000.
For 2015-16 Cumberland Lodge was granted £5,000.