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Langside College website (archive version, 2011) 55°49′35″N 4°15′49″W / 55.82639°N 4.26361°W / 55.82639; -4 This United Kingdom university, college or other education institution article is a stub .
On 1 August 2013, Anniesland College, Cardonald College and Langside College was merged to form Glasgow Clyde College. In June 2019, officials from Glasgow Clyde College revealed that, "due to issues and decisions outside of the college's control we are required to absorb an additional £1 million of costs in the year ahead without any ...
This is a list of current further education and higher education colleges in Scotland. Most colleges provide both levels of qualification. Further education colleges offer courses for people over the age of sixteen, involving school-level qualifications such as Higher Grade exams, as well as work-based learning.
"I went to study acting at Langside College and we did a play about professional wrestling," she recalls. "My uncle had connections in Scottish wrestling and put me in touch with [local wrestlers ...
Cardonald College was a medium-sized Further education institute located in Glasgow's South Side, in Scotland. Officially opened in 1972, it had over 12,000 full-time and part-time students. Cardonald College merged with Anniesland College and Langside College in 2013 to become Glasgow Clyde College.
On 14 December 2012, Cardonald College principal Susan Walsh was appointed principal of the new college. [6] On 1 August 2013, Anniesland College, along with Cardonald College and Langside College, were absorbed to form Glasgow Clyde College. As a result of the merger, Anniesland College became Glasgow Clyde College Anniesland Campus.
] The college offers up to 2,000 professional and technical courses annually from access level to masters level. In 2013, construction began for a new £228 million campus for the college. The Riverside Campus was extensively rebuilt, while the site of the Alan Glen's Campus was demolished and replaced with the new City Campus building. [ 13 ]
The Open Syllabus Project (OSP) is an online open-source platform that catalogs and analyzes millions of college syllabi. [3] Founded by researchers from the American Assembly at Columbia University, the OSP has amassed the most extensive collection of searchable syllabi.