Pembroke College located at St. Aldates, Oxford OX1 1DW, UK Book an appointment or need answers to a question, please feel free to contact us by phone 01865 276444

Do you own this listing ? make sure you claim this business and free listing, once claimed you will be able to amend the description and contact information

Need to know more about this business, please call us during business hours or visit our website and can get more information – of Pembroke College by https://www.pmb.ox.ac.uk/

Rate us and Write a Review

Your Rating for this listing

angry
crying
sleeping
smily
cool
Browse

Your review is recommended to be at least 140 characters long

image


Note: Data fetched from Google is temporarily stored and can change on latest API request every month.

Google Images

Note: These Images are displaying via Google Maps Api, If you see any Copyright violation on our website please contact us ASAP. Attributions: Séverine Cornillon Pembroke College C W Roberto Aldera Andrew Billen Ian TM
Pembroke College oxford
Pembroke College oxford
Pembroke College oxford
Pembroke College oxford
Pembroke College oxford
Pembroke College oxford
Pembroke College oxford
Pembroke College oxford
Pembroke College oxford

Google Review

Note: these reviews will not count in overall rating.
blank

Edward

4 Google Rating

Named after William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke, Lord Chamberlain and then-Chancellor of the Un

4/ 5

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.

blank

S Felix

5 Google Rating

I was here for a meeting. Very excellent environment.

5/ 5

I was here for a meeting. Very excellent environment.

blank

Tom Ward

1 Google Rating

Pembroke is one of the less outstanding colleges which make up the University of Oxford by reputatio

1/ 5

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.

blank

Ian TM

4 Google Rating

Nice intimate dining hall, try to get yourself an invitation to eat at one of Oxford's Colleges.

4/ 5

Nice intimate dining hall, try to get yourself an invitation to eat at one of Oxford's Colleges.

blank

James McGee

5 Google Rating

There is something very special about this place. After my visit this is the location in Oxford that

5/ 5

There is something very special about this place. After my visit this is the location in Oxford that stood out the most.

blank

Daniyal Ahmed

2 Google Rating

I stayed here as a student. During the pandemic they started construction work at Geoffrey Arthur Bu

2/ 5

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 was abruptly taken away. The college charges £500 if you vacate and go to other facility but the terrible noise from the construction is our own headache. During my entire stay, the drill work was extensive, it made me sleep deprived. Finally, the lodge needs to be trained, they have to be kind and courteous to students. At times, I felt intimidated by them. 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.

blank

George Chalhoub

5 Google Rating

Pembroke College is an excellent college at the heart of Oxford and has very good facilities to use.

5/ 5

Pembroke College is an excellent college at the heart of Oxford and has very good facilities to use.

blank

Javier Garcia

5 Google Rating

Just impressive.

5/ 5

Just impressive.

building Own or work here? Claim Now! Claim Now!
image
Just Visits

Visit Profile

imageYour request has been submitted successfully.

Just Visits Top Stories
  • Things to do in Newcastle
  • In Roman times, Newcastle – then called Pons Aelius – was a fort on Hadrian’s Wall, and during the Saxon period, it was known as Monk Chester on account of its many religious houses. The city owes its present name to William the Conqueror who, like Hadrian before him, recognized its strategic importance.

  • Things to do in Brighton
  • Brighton is a seaside resort on the south coast of England that is part of the City of Brighton and Hove, located 47 miles south of London. Archaeological evidence of settlement in the area dates back to the Bronze Age, Roman and Anglo-Saxon periods.

  • Things to do in Liverpool
  • Things to do in Bristol
  • Bristol in the UK has plenty of famous sights & attractions to choose from. Find out the best places to visit in Bristol.

  • Things to do in Manchester
image