As far as locations go, you can鈥檛 get much better than that of
The university – founded just five years ago by Lancaster University and Manchester United鈥檚 famed Class of 92 football stars – is situated a stone鈥檚 throw from the Theatre of Dreams.聽
Directly next door to the other Old Trafford – Test venue and home of Lancashire Cricket Club – the sparkling campus also plays host to a base for Microsoft, one of more than 70 industry partners which help to shape its curriculums for students.
鈥淥ur employers have been legendary in helping us frame and set out what the needs of industry are,鈥 director of disruptive learning Aaron Saxton (pictured, right, with Jonathan Symcox) tells 老九品茶Cloud of a higher education institution focused on core subject areas sport, media, digital and business.
鈥淲e are working with KPMG, JD Sports, Manchester United, The Hut Group, Amazon Web Services, CompTIA, Microsoft, Disney Streaming, TalkTalk聽 – some of the biggest organisations globally who have the largest workforces on the planet, and biggest needs in tech in particular.聽
鈥淭hey help us write our curriculum, deliver insights, masterclasses: Disney Streaming [for example] is delivering a workshop on cloud alongside the idea of Disney Streaming as a cloud platform.鈥
Neighbour Lancashire Cricket has been a partner from the start. Coaches at the Manchester United Foundation have also delivered coaching sessions for students.

Old Trafford, in background, and UA92
Disadvantaged & marginalised
UA92, which for now awards degrees from Lancaster University,聽 was described by The Times as 鈥渁 venture setting out to help disadvantaged young people in Manchester get a better education鈥 explicitly drawing on the strategies and mindset of elite sport鈥.
鈥淲e deliberately and boldly target the most disadvantaged and marginalised communities: for example Wythenshawe, Hulme, Moss Side, Partington, Wigan,鈥 Saxton explains.
鈥We have an outreach team with roots in these communities – I grew up in Moss Side myself – who do a lot of connection at that level to get under the skin and into those communities and bring them here. We run events, bring the kids on site, feed and get them used to campus, host church events. We want to deliberately differentiate ourselves from those universities in the city centre that don’t necessarily serve those communities.

Dr Anthony Gorman with UA92 student
鈥淚n a lot of these communities, they’re struggling to heat and eat, live and survive. These kids may be from single-parent backgrounds: so how do we raise their confidence and trust that we will help them?
鈥淲e give them the realisation and belief that they really can work with these huge organisations鈥 that’s massive! For a student to come in here with a Microsoft HQ on campus, it’s within touching distance for them.聽
鈥淭hey then believe: ‘I can work for Microsoft. I could possibly work for聽 Disney Streaming. How do I know? I’ve met their lead principal engineer.’鈥

The end of the harvest
An approach that stands UA92 apart from traditional universities are its multiple entry points in the year: September, November, January, February, April and June.
鈥淭he reason we start school in September is from the harvest days – it’s centuries old! The kids were needed to bring in the harvest, and once that was done, they started school. It鈥檚 insane! Why haven鈥檛 we changed that?
鈥淚n life you might start a family early; you might lose a job; COVID happened… starting an academic year in September does not serve the modern lifestyle.聽
鈥淪o we have six entry points in the year which enable anybody to join within a few weeks of their situation changing and access education and continue to be inspired by what we’re offering.鈥

Enabled by cutting-edge technology, its approach to teaching also feels revolutionary. 鈥淗ow do we deliberately utilise innovative methods to shake up the traditional academic model?鈥 asks Saxton.
鈥淲e integrate forms of learning through Web3, the metaverse, AI, data analytics, DevOps, Linux, cloud computing – these mediums allow us to deliver truly global education to meet the needs of modern society.鈥
Its Igloo Vision 360-degree immersive space, for example, 鈥渋mmerses our students in what a business, a scenario, a technology, a problem, a human body, a cardiovascular system looks like鈥 immerse them, see it, engage鈥.
Metaverse
And in what UA92 calls a first for higher education, its newly launched metaverse – built with international agency DigiSomni and its Vircadia open source platform – provides unique NFT achievement awards.聽
The aim is to open its campus to global audiences and better serve international and remote students. With a vision for autonomous learning and AI, it provides lectures, presentations, character and personal development advice zones, wellbeing activities, campus tours and events on the virtual platform, with each student given access through individual avatars, allowing them to meet, learn, chat and socialise.
Saxton adds: 鈥淓ven launching our metaverse in the Igloo is incredible because students can stand in there and be in the metaverse with global students [rather than watch it on a computer screen].鈥
A sport performance hub – which brings back memories of my Sport & Exercise Science undergraduate days – is among the best available for the study of scientific disciplines such as biometrics.


Jonathan Symcox undergoes Vo2 Max test at UA92
Tip of the iceberg
Life itself, however, is not a perfect science, says Saxton. 鈥淲e need to move away from formulas and frameworks. I’m sick to death, to be honest with you, of people thinking there’s a utopia of how people get to where they are – this 鈥榯ip of the iceberg鈥 sort of viewpoint that people have of life. Because that isn’t it – all that s*** below the surface is what takes you there.
鈥淲e are fully focused on transferable skills. How do you really truly build confidence and resilience? You need to help people feel uncomfortable, but in a safe environment – whether it be in sport, public speaking, networking.
鈥淲e’ve got to create a space for failure – the most powerful asset for growth. We’ve created a society where failure is deemed as bad and negative. In the nicest possible way, people like you and me have had great parents and role models, a lovely upbringing – but a lot of our students haven’t had any of that wraparound care.聽
鈥淪o we’re using tech and this environment to create those safety nets or bubbles where failure is good. We celebrate it: learning from failure is the most important thing. Use it to push yourself.鈥

Sir Alex鈥 the Jedi master!
In conclusion, Saxton cites the story of one of UA92鈥檚 founders – Manchester United and England legend Gary Neville – likening former United boss Sir Alex Ferguson to a Jedi Master.
鈥淭he hero’s journey in Greek mythology is a formula developed thousands of years ago: look at Luke Skywalker in Star Wars, Harry Potter; is there any difference between Voldemort and Darth Vader? It’s the same story, same characters!聽
鈥淲hat we’re creating here is that hero’s journey: we watch these films, these books, these stories of people who have succeeded in business, in sport. You don’t get to where Gary Neville is without adversity, without coming to know yourself, without the direction of a guide like Sir Alex Ferguson.聽
鈥淚’m a massive believer that technology is the biggest accelerator and disrupter in inspiring people and supporting people, and creating those careers and opportunities.鈥


