- City of Bath College
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City of Bath College is a Further Education college in the centre of Bath, Somerset, England.
Contents
History
The college was formed in 1892 under the combined names of Bath City Science, Art, and Technical Schools. Its creation arose out of the need to encourage young people to take an interest in the Sciences, and for them to be made aware of the Technical innovations that were occurring at the end of the 19th century. In April 1896 these new Schools occupied the new north extension of the Guildhall, Bath. In 1910 Long Acre, Walcot was taken over as additional accommodation for technical training mainly as a domestic science college. In 1914 the Old Jail at Twerton was converted and opened as Twerton Technical Institute. In 1927 a Junior Bath Technical School opened at Bath Technical College and in 1929 a Junior School of Art, (Bath School of Art and Design) followed with the Junior School of Homecrafts being established in 1933. In 1934 the Domestic Science College moved from Long Acre, Walcot to Brougham Hayes, Lower Oldfield Park. This building originally housed the Somerset Industrial School for Boys in 1832. [1] It was founded to accommodate 180 boys, it had originally been built as a barracks. These Technical Schools evolved into the new Bath Technical College, which moved from the North Wing of the Guildhall in 1935 to Lower Borough Walls, taking over the buildings that were vacated when the Royal United Hospital moved to the new hospital in Combe Park.[2][3] Avon Street became the latest site of the College, when it was constructed as a new purpose built facility during the 1960s re-development of Bath.
Present Day
City of Bath College now has approximately 2,000 full-time and more than 6,000 part-time students. It employs nearly 500 staff. [4]
Curriculum
The College offers a range of vocational courses covering business and professional courses, computing, IT, media, performing arts, music, catering and hospitality, hairdressing, beauty and complementary therapy, floristry, construction, engineering, carpentry, stonemasonry, sport, travel and tourism, uniformed public services, art and design. In January 2011, Ofsted once again graded the College's Art and Design department as 'outstanding'. Courses are also offered at a range of levels from Entry Level through to Foundation Degrees, HNDs and professional qualifications. [5]
Campus
The College occupies several buildings. The Allen building (A block) houses the refectory and Shrubbery restaurant which is a training restaurant for catering students. The building is also home to sports and hair and beauty students. On the top floor is the Academy, a training hairdressing and beauty salon. Macaulay building houses the College learning resource centre, the Student Advice Centre, additional learning support departments, the student participation team and the students' union. Herschel building was formerly the sixth form centre, and now houses art, media and the College management team. The Westgate building currently houses Sixth Form classes. The classrooms are also used as exam rooms. John Wood building provides some addiitonal classrooms. The Construction Skills Centre at Bath Trade Park provides state of the art carpentry and stonemasonry workshops, plus classrooms and study areas.
MAPA is the newest building. It is home to the College's music and performing arts courses and replaces the Gainsborough building. This building is split into three different sections, performing arts takes around half of the space with its rehearsal room, performance space and sprung-floor mirrored dance studio. Music is next door with three professional recording studios, performance venue, four rehearsal rooms and film editing facilities. College House is mostly staff offices and the International Office.
In early 2011, Kings building, which used to house the gym, was demolished to make way for a new three-storey building due for completion in November 2011.
Notable alumni
- Emma Pierson, actress (Hotel Babylon, Grange Hill)
- Jason Gardener, athlete (60m / 100m)
- Nathan Catt, Bath Rugby player
- Danny Byrd, Drum and Bass DJ and producer
References
- ^ "Somerset Industrial School, Lower Bristol Road 1832". Central Library Collection. Bath in Time. http://www.bathintime.co.uk/image.php?id=205216&idx=23&fromsearch=true. Retrieved 2010-11-19.
- ^ A potted History of the RUH [1] Retrieved 2009-08-20
- ^ Medical Heritage [2] Retrieved 2009-08-20
- ^ "Bath: City of Bath College". London: The Independent. 2009-07-06. http://www.independent.co.uk/student/into-university/az-uni-colleges/bath-city-of-bath-college-458858.html. Retrieved 2009-09-06.
- ^ "Profile of City of Bath College". Universities UK.net. http://www.uk-universities.net/Colleges/City-of-Bath-College.html. Retrieved 2009-09-06.
External links
Universities and colleges in South West England Universities University colleges Further Education colleges Bath · Bicton · Bournemouth & Poole · Bridgwater · Bristol · Cirencester · Cornwall · Exeter · Filton · Gloucestershire · Hartpury · Kingston Maurward · New Swindon · Norton Radstock · Petroc · Plymouth · Plymouth Art · Somerset · South Devon · Strode · Stroud · Swindon · Truro & Penwith · Weston · Weymouth · Wiltshire · YeovilSixth form colleges Education in the ceremonial county of Somerset Middle (deemed secondary) Fairlands Middle School · Hugh Sexey Church of England Middle SchoolSecondary (maintained) Broadoak Mathematics and Computing College · Broadlands School · Brymore School · Chew Valley School · Chilton Trinity Technology College · Clevedon School · Court Fields Community School · Culverhay School · East Bridgwater Community School · Frome Community College · Heathfield Community School · The King Alfred School · King Arthur's Community School · Nailsea School · Ralph Allen School · Robert Blake Science College · St Gregory's Catholic College · St Mark's CofE · Wadham School · Worle Community SchoolSecondary (academy) Ansford School · Backwell School · Beechen Cliff School · Bishop Fox's Community School · The Blue School · Bucklers Mead Community School · The Castle School · Churchill Academy and Sixth Form · Crispin School · Gordano School · Hans Price Academy · Haygrove School · Hayesfield Girls' School · Holyrood Academy · Huish Episcopi Academy · The Kings of Wessex Academy · Kingsmead School · Norton Hill School · Oldfield School · Preston School · Priory Community School · Sexey's School · Somervale School · Stanchester Academy · St Dunstan's Community School · The Taunton Academy · Wellsway School · Westfield Community School · Whitstone School · West Somerset Community College · Writhlington SchoolIndependent (preparatory) All Hallows Preparatory School · Downs Preparatory School · King's Hall School · Millfield Preparatory School · Hazlegrove Preparatory School · Paragon School · Springmead Preparatory School ·Independent (secondary) Bruton School for Girls · Chilton Cantelo School · Downside School · King Edward's School, Bath · King's College, Taunton · King's School, Bruton · Kingswood School · Millfield · Monkton Combe School · Park School · Prior Park College · Queen's College, Taunton · Royal High School, Bath · Sidcot School · Taunton School · Wellington School · Wells Cathedral SchoolSpecial schools Former City of Bath Technical School · Ladymead Community School · Ravenscroft School · The St Augustine of Canterbury School · St Brandon's SchoolUniversities For complete lists of establishments in each area see: Somerset, Bath & North East Somerset, North Somerset This article relating to education in the UK is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. Categories:- Educational institutions established in 1892
- Education in Bath, Somerset
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