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Deeside College merged with the Welsh College of Horticulture, located in Northop, on 1 August 2009 [1] [3] [6] forming the Deeside College Group, with 20,000 students, more than 800 staff, and an income of almost £30 million. [3] By 2010, the Northop campus spanned 225 acres (910,000 m 2). [6]
Coleg Cambria was created following the merger of Deeside College and Yale College, Wrexham. Coleg Cambria began operating on 1 August 2013. [2] It serves three local authority areas with a total population of almost 400,000: more than 12% of the population of Wales. [3]
In February 2012, it was announced that the college would merge with Deeside College, [14] [15] later announced in December to be called Coleg Cambria. With the merged college having 27,000 students and 2,000 staff. [16] Following the merger, the name Yale, in reference to the former independent college, would be retained at the campus. The ...
The school launched its first course as such in May 1920. In the 1960s, the school renamed itself the Llysfasi College of Agriculture. In 2010, the college was merged into Deeside College as the Deeside College Group, which also included Northop College. In 2013, the Deeside College Group, merged with Yale College, Wrexham to form Coleg Cambria.
In an inspection in 2007 the college gained the highest possible grade 1 inspection ratings for its work-based learning provision. The college was formed in August 2013 through a merger between Deeside College and Yale College Wrexham; it is now one of the largest colleges in the UK and the largest in Wales. [citation needed]
Deeside (Connah's Quay), Northop, Llysfasi and Yale Grove Park/Bersham Road : Formed in August 2013 as a merger of Deeside College and Yale College: Coleg Ceredigion: Aberystwyth, Cardigan: Constituent of University of Wales, Trinity Saint David [1] [2] Coleg Gwent: Newport, Crosskeys, Ebbw Vale, Pontypool, Usk: Largest FE college in Wales ...
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2010–2013 Merging Colleges Following Welsh Assembly Government approval Deeside College and Coleg Llysfasi in Ruthin merged on 1 August 2010. The new institution which was one of the largest in Wales and the UK, provided courses for almost 22,000 students each year, employing over 1000 staff, and with an annual income approaching £40million.