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The original emphasis on establishing the University of Ghana was on the Liberal Arts, Social Sciences, Law, Basic Science, Agriculture, and Medicine. [11] However, as part of a national educational reform program, the university's curriculum was expanded to provide more Technology-based and Vocational courses as well as Postgraduate Training.
The college was relocated at its present site at East Legon on 10 January, It became a boarding institution in 2001. By 2022, a clinic with a resident nurse had been added to the college's infrastructure. [10] The College has run the following programmes since its foundation: Certificate ‘A’ 4-year Post Middle
East Legon, Greater Accra: Knutsford University College Knutsford East Legon, Greater Accra: Lancaster University: LUG 2013 Accra, Greater Accra: Methodist University College Ghana [21] MUCG 2000 1,887 Dansoman, Accra, Greater Accra: Presbyterian University College [22] PUC 2003 Abetifi-Kwahu, Akropong-Akuapem, Agogo Asante-Akyem and Tema
Radford University College is a private university in East Legon, Accra, Ghana. [1] It is affiliated with Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, and was most recently accredited in 2019 by the Ghana Tertiary Education Commission. [2]
The Trinity Theological Seminary is a Protestant seminary located on a 70-acre campus in Legon, Accra. [1] As an ecumenical theological tertiary and ministerial training institution, it serves students in Ghana and the West African sub-region.
It was established as a public university by an Act of Parliament in 2004. The institute was established in 1961 by the Government of Ghana with assistance from the United Nations Special Fund Project and was initially called the Institute of Public Administration, intended as a specialist training graduate school for civil servants in Ghana. [4]
[1] [2] Within a year of the programme, the American Dean informed the government that he was unable to find lecturers in the basic sciences. In February 1964, Ghana's first president decided to wholly rely on domestic sources of funding and manpower to establish the full medical school.
In September 1968, the new campus at Legon just north east of the University of Ghana campus at Mile 9, received its first set of students. [12] At the new campus, it continued as a boys' boarding secondary school until the mid-1970s when the sixth form was upgraded to the National Science College.