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  1. Study at a unique Cambridge College for undergraduates aged 21+ who have curiosity, creativity, and a desire to make an impact. Find information about applying to study as a mature undergraduate at Wolfson.

    • About Wolfson

      Wolfson College Cambridge. Search Menu. Main navigation....

    • Accommodation

      Wolfson College is situated within a picturesque ten-acre...

    • What's On

      Explore Wolfson's newest exhibition, 'Life Within...

    • Current Students

      Wolfson’s student support includes academic and pastoral...

  2. Wolfson College ( / ˈwʊlfsən /) is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge [6] in Cambridge, England. The majority of students at the college are postgraduates. The college also admits "mature" undergraduates (aged 21 and above), with around 15% of students studying undergraduate degree courses at the university.

  3. Wolfson College has the largest number of part-time postgraduate students in Cambridge, over 600 in all across a range of programmes. Many part-time applicants choose to study at Wolfson because we offer dedicated support for our part-time students.

  4. Wolfson is a unique Cambridge College for 21+ undergraduates, a place for grownups with curiosity, creativity and the desire to make an impact. Our undergraduate students come to us from many locations and all walks of life.

  5. Explore the College on our Virtual Tour. Come to an Open Day. Our College is for mature students who are actively engaged with the world. At Wolfson, you'll live, study, and socialise with mature students from around 100 different countries.

  6. www.wolfson.cam.ac.uk › undergraduate-studyEnglish | Wolfson

    We teach English through a combination of College supervisions (the Cambridge name for small-group teaching) organised and often taught by your Director of Studies, and lectures and seminars conducted centrally by the Faculty of English.

  7. The creation of Wolfson College Cambridge followed a circuitous route, beginning in 1967, with a tentative approach to the Wolfson Foundation from the classicist John Sinclair Morrison (1913-2000) of the then-University College, Cambridge.