The merger, which will create Londonās largest university with about 35,000 students between the two Bloomsbury institutions, was finalised on 25 November after it was approved by the IoEās council.
The council officially agreed to rescind the instituteās charter, granted in 1987, with effect from 2 December.
Under the new arrangements, the IoE will become a faculty of UCL and will be known as the UCL Institute of Education.
It will remain at its current premises and both institutions have confirmed there will be no redundancies at either institution as a result of the merger.
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Boris Johnson, the mayor of London, welcomed the move, saying it would help the capital to āattract the brightest students from around the worldā and āfurther reinforce Londonās status as a global leader in higher educationā.
Michael Arthur, UCL president and provost, called the merger āone of the most significant events in UCLās historyā.
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āThe driver behind this proposal is academic, prompted by the sense that the world-leading research undertaken by the IoE was highly complementary to many areas of work undertaken by UCL,ā said Professor Arthur.
āThere is genuine excitement within both institutions as we believe this planned merger will deliver significant advances in the fields of social science and education, whilst further advancing the work both universities undertake to develop education across London.ā
Following the merger, UCL will become the UKās largest postgraduate institution in the UK, with 19,000 postgraduate students. It will also have more than 11,000 staff and a combined income of more than Ā£1 billion.
Chris Husbands, director of the UCL Institute of Education, said the merger will āhelp to secure the IoEās lasting influence and missionā.
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It would also offer the IoE āhuge prizesā, such as the āopportunity to extend global influence, to work with our traditional stakeholders in schools and colleges in new and more imaginative ways, and the chance to build cross-disciplinary work across the full range of higher educationā, he added.
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