UCOL was founded in 1907 and was known as the Palmerston North Technical School. In 1971 it became the Palmerston North Technical Institute and in 1983 the ManawatuPolytechnic. At the time it specialised in trade apprenticeship courses, and in hobby, art, and craft classes, along with a range of night school programmes in business studies for working adults. As successive governments placed emphasis on vocational education, the Polytechnic broadened the courses offered, but retained a focus on core vocational programmes. It now delivers Foundation and Certificate programmes, Diplomas, Degrees and Post-Graduate options in a range of subjects as well as community based programmes. In 1987 the Manawatu Polytechnic opened a small campus in Levin and the 1996 approval by government of a $22 million capital injection, enabled the rebuilding and consolidation of the Palmerston North campus onto a central city site. In late 1998 the Manawatu Polytechnic changed its name to the Universal College of Learning. UCOL expanded in January 2001 with the incorporation of the Masterton Regional Polytechnic and the integration of the Wanganui Regional Community Polytechnic on 1 April 2002. On 1 April 2020, UCOL was subsumed into New Zealand Institute of Skills & Technology alongside the 15 other Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics.
Facilities
There are four campuses: , , and .
Palmerston North campus facilities
Whanganui campus facilities
Masterton campus facilities
Strategic priorities
UCOL is focused on delivering the six priorities of the Tertiary Education Strategy 2014–2019.
UCOL is the first to employ a relationships-based teaching approach in a tertiary education setting. Called Te Atakura, the programme was developed with the support of education consultancy Cognition Education Limited and Emeritus ProfessorRussell Bishop. It is designed to enhance Māori success, develop high performing teaching teams and provide ongoing support services for learners.
Study offerings
at certificate, diploma and degree level in the following subject areas:
In late 2016 UCOL secured funding from the to give a limited number of eligible refugees the opportunity to study New Zealand Certificate in English at or free of charge.
Council awards
Each year UCOL recognises people in the community who have made significant contributions to their local areas and society in general, with the . In 2019 UCOL recognised the contribution of their graduates with their inaugural .