National University of Distance Education


The National Distance Education University, known in Spanish as Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia , is a distance learning and research university founded in 1972 and is the only university run by the central government of Spain. It has headquarters in Madrid, Spain, with campuses in all Spanish autonomous communities. In addition, there are 14 study centres, and 3 exam points, in 13 countries in Europe, Americas and Africa. The University awards undergraduate and postgraduate degrees, as well as non-degree qualifications such as diplomas and certificates, or continuing education units.
UNED combines traditional onsite education with distance learning programs. With over 150.000 students, UNED is the largest university in Spain and the second largest in Europe.

Origins and methodology

UNED was founded in 1972 to provide quality higher and continuing education opportunities to all through a distance education system. It awards the same qualifications as other Spanish universities and has the same entry requirements. This implies that it is not "Open". Even though the study is at distance, admissions are as strict as for "onsite" education and exams are supervised as in the other Spanish universities. However, some special features of UNED make it different from most other Spanish universities: it is nationwide in scope, and has a wide social influence with radio and TV programming.

International presence

UNED's mission is to be present as a centre of excellence throughout the world. UNED currently has 61 study centres in Spain and 14 abroad, thanks to the co-operation of local institutions. These centres provide face-to-face sessions with professors once a week. The international centres are in Bata, Bern, Brussels, Buenos Aires, Caracas, Frankfurt, Lima, London, Malabo, Mexico City, Paris and São Paulo. Additionally, there are exam points in Bogotá, Berlin, New York, Rome and Santiago de Chile.

Affiliation

Later 2012 the Spanish newspaper El País featured the story about the launch of UNX, a new online platform for teaching entrepreneurship through building mobile apps with App Inventor. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for Mobile Learning is a collaborating partner in this project, along with Spanish partners UNED. The UNX online courses are intended to bring open learning about technology and entrepreneurship to the entire Spanish-speaking world.

Academic profile

Advantages

A number of factors have been cited to justify the public prestige of UNED:
The university maintains an excellent standard of higher education: in the last 30 years, it has awarded almost 2,000 PhD degrees.
Its international prestige is also illustrated by the fact that, since 1997, UNED has held the UNESCO chair in distance education which promotes research, development and documentation in the field of distance education.

Organisation

Undergraduate

Today, UNED comprises 11 faculties and the following bachelor's degree studies:

Notable current and former academics

1985-19901991-20002001-20102011–present

  • Jordi Solé Tura
  • Miquel Roca I Junyent
  • José Pedro Pérez-Llorca
  • Gregorio Peces-Barba
  • Miguel Herrero y Rodríguez de Miñón
  • Manuel Fraga Iribarne
  • Gabriel Cisneros
  • Max Kaser
  • Mario Talamanca
  • Miquel Batllori i Munné
  • Manuel Alvar López
  • Adolfo Sánchez Vázquez
  • Bernard Pottier
  • Kenneth S.W. Sing
  • José Luis Pinillos Díaz
  • Hermann Mosler
  • Jay Seth Rosenblatt
  • Derek Ernest Blackman
  • Francisco Ayala y García-Duarte
  • Manuel Royes I Vila
  • Emilio Alarcos Llorach
  • José María Álvarez del Manzano
  • Manuel Lora-Tamayo
  • Carlos Fuentes Macías
  • Karl Johan Åström
  • Philip N. Johnson-Laird
  • Rafael Canogar
  • Daniel E. Rosner
  • Fernando Reinoso Suárez
  • Antonio Béthencourt Massieu
  • Mozart Víctor Russomano
  • Jean Rouverol
  • Marye Anne Fox
  • Salustiano del Campo Urbano
  • Marc Barbut
  • Gianni Vattimo
  • Susan George
  • Ulrich Beck
  • Juan Velarde Fuentes
  • Manuel Varela Parache
  • Enrique Fuentes Quintana
  • Avelino Corma Canós
  • María Cascales Angosto
  • Juan Bechmans Vallet de Goytisolo
  • Helio Carpintero
  • Ramón Bayes Sopena
  • Humberto López Morales
  • Antoni Mª Badia i Margarit
  • Xesús Alonso Montero
  • Federico Mayor Zaragoza
  • Ricardo Diez Hochleitner
  • Hans Küng
  • Santiago Grisolía García
  • Margarita Salas
  • Juan Díez Nicolás
  • Victorio Valle Sánchez
  • José Manuel Caballero Bonald
  • Eduard H. Hovy
  • Göran Therborn
  • James W. Fernandez
  • Stanley Brandes
  • Salvador Giner
  • Pedro Duque
  • Per-Olof H. Wilkström
  • Giuseppe de Vergottini
  • Ángel López García-Molins
  • José Elguero Bertolini
  • Maria Ziółek
  • Darío Villanueva Prieto
  • Almudena Grandes Hernández